Do Libertarians Have Answers for Economy?
Libertarianism: If Not Now, Then When?
Joel S. Hirschhorn
With the meltdown of the American economy, what better time to ask: Can libertarianism come to the rescue? Perhaps the most interesting statement in the Wikipedia discussion of libertarianism is that "There is no single theory that can be reliably identified as the libertarian theory, and no single principle or set of principles on which all libertarians would agree."
Nevertheless, I think it is fair to say that libertarianism includes the belief in economic freedom that emphasizes removing corporate subsidies and other favoritism to special interests and provides maximum freedom to individuals to pursue financial success and security.
It also seems to me that authentic libertarians would be agonizing over the current historic growth in governmental ownership of what we thought were private, corporate enterprises. We seem to be seeing more authoritarian government being justified by the current economic recession and the public demand for rescue of the economy and alleviation of the considerable pain inflicting so many millions of Americans.
What I find myself intrigued by is this central question: In these terrible economic times, is it not reasonable to think that if libertarianism was ever to have a chance of attracting very broad public support as an alternative to what the
So I have been examining websites with a libertarian orientation to see whether there is a serious effort to offer an alternative to what President Obama and Congress seem totally committed to do with the aim of stimulating the collapsing US economy,
I found a very thoughtful article by Sheldon Richman in The American Conservative critiquing the New Deal that current politicians seem intent on replicating. Here is an excerpt from it: "Yet with all this government activism, the
If minimizing the role of government in our lives and economy is an essential feature of libertarianism, then it does not that appear to be much public or political interest in it.
If greed and irresponsible economic behavior by both government and private entities in past years has brought us to the current awful recession, then is anyone interested in selling a libertarian alternative based on sound money and free markets?
Who better to look to than Ron Paul. He recently addressed the House Financial Services Committee's hearing on the Madoff Ponzi scandal. He noted out that Bernard Madoff was operating under the supervision of the SEC, that more regulation will only make the fraudulent operations easier because they can claim to be approved by the government, and that two of the biggest government-run Ponzi schemes are the Social Security system and even the monetary system itself. Paul supports abolishing the Federal Reserve and the SEC, and returning to an honest monetary system based on gold and/or free competition in currencies. He says outright that "we need to get rid of the bad policies, the monetary system, and these mountains of debt. ...we're gonna hire more bureaucrats and we're gonna appropriate more money we don't have. ...We've been doing this for 78 years, and we'll do it again, but believe me, this will not solve our problems."
I did not notice any significant media coverage of Paul's views and certainly no rush of politicians with far more power to him or his views. In other words, if Paul is probably the best spokesperson for libertarianism in the country, and if he is right, then there clearly is no significant public or political interest in libertarianism in these historic and terrible economic days.
Personally, when Paul said: "We could return to sound money. We could balance our budget. There's a lot of things that we can do. But the worst thing that we can do is perpetuate the bad policies that gave us this trouble in the first place. And that is that we no longer, over the last quite a few decades, believed in free-market capitalism." I think he got it right. But I am forced to conclude that libertarianism is dead as a door nail and doomed to remain a marginalized and insignificant movement offering a home for the relatively few that seek intellectual shelter in a true alternative to the current dominant economic system. Paul's revolution is going nowhere, yet another marginalized effort that does not threaten the status quo plutocracy. After all, when the
If libertarianism offers the better solution, then the path that President Obama and Congress are on, with the support of the mainstream media, corporate
[Contact Joel S. Hirschhorn through delusionaldemocracy.com]
















The answer to the collapse of the free markets is not to make the markets even freer. Libertarianism is an empty rhetoric; untenable in the real world, trading corporate masters for private entities from which citizens would have no protections.
Paul is an irresponsible whackjob, and so are those who parrot his ideas.
January 12, 2009 2:26 PM | Reply | Permalink
Here is just my take on the libertarian philosophy, small l, by the lowliest of low:
We are all free to starve to death,
We are all free to die without medical care that could have saved us,
We are all free to work for a buck an hour, if the market dictates such,
We are all free to drive our vehicles without license requirements, without governmental interference including air bags, brakes, seat belts
or any other safety device,
We are all free to stand and watch our homes and places of business burn down without benefit of fire departments,
We are all free to send packages to the far corners of our country and the world and let the market tell us where and when and how much it will take to get that package to its destination,
We are all free to pay wages without any contribution for withholding,
We are all free to make our work place as safe or unsafe as we may deem necessary to meet our bottom line,
Like Walmart, we are free to deny our employees overtime or lunch breaks or a decent livable wage,
etc. etc. etc.
January 12, 2009 3:04 PM | Reply | Permalink
"We are all free to stand and watch our homes and places of business burn down without benefit of fire departments,"
Ben Franklin began the public fire departments, if my memory of history serves me. At the time, there were fire companies who sold "insurance". A complete coincidence to the lack of "insurance" was that a high percentage of those not making payments were "all free to stand and watch [their] homes and places of business burn down without benefit of fire departments,"
In my home town, we recently had a levy proposed to get more money to the fire department. It failed, so now there is a proposal out there for a private company to collect monies that will make the duties of the fire department easier, more efficient. I'm just curious whether we might see a return to the 18th century situation, and whether we get to know what happens to all the money with this organization the same as we would with the actual fire department. But then again, I am not curious enough to support it.
January 12, 2009 3:40 PM | Reply | Permalink
Uh. No, not really, no.
Maybe if they got rid of the bodice-ripper fiction writer worshippers faction, and grew up, I'd take them seriously.
January 12, 2009 10:26 PM | Reply | Permalink
I think you got this right on the money. Government has had its hands deep in our economy and health care system for many years, and yet many have the gall to say that we have a "free market". Heavily regulated markets do not equal free markets.
There are millions of lines of law for the financial industries, the health industries, and just about any other industry. Government has a major role in the foods that we eat, the roads that we drive on, the medications that we take, the house in which we live... the list goes on and on. When things go to pot, some people scream for *more* regulation. As if 144,000 PAGES of laws concerning health care were not enough! The government has controlled way too much for way too long. Yet we do not blame them for wasting BILLIONS of dollars and giving money to the super-rich while they say they are taxing us to support the poor. The biggest reform needs to come from the way government operates: basic protection services and truly universal services should probably stay (but each should be considered). Services that require individualized attention (like health care!) are probably not best handled by some bureaucrat thousands of miles away.
And for hell's sake, quit playing favorites with the tax system.
September 9, 2009 10:10 PM | Reply | Permalink