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Subject: Libertarian FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions
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Summary: This posting contains a list of Frequently Asked Questions
        about libertarianism.
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Copyright: (c) 1995-1999 Advocates for Self-Government


             FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT LIBERTARIANISM

    _________________________________________________________________

  Many USENET readers encounter libertarianism for the first time on
  USENET. The following is a list of answers to many of the frequently
  asked questions about libertarianism.

  These answers have been compiled from several sources. Most of the
  answers are derived or quoted from writings by David Bergland
  including "Libertarianism in One Lesson" and "America's Libertarian
  Heritage." Quotes were used with permission from David Bergland and
  the Advocates for Self-Government as long as proper credit was
  retained. All quoted answers will be marked and the source referenced
  in the bibliography.

  If you want more information about libertarian ideas and the Advocates
  for Self-Government, sign up for the "Liberator On-Line" which is sent
  out every two weeks.  Send an E-Mail message to:

  [email protected]

  with only the word 'subscribe' in the body of the message.

  Advocates for Self-Government
  1202 N. Tennessee St., Suite 202
  Cartersville, GA 30120
  (770)386-8372, (800)932-1776
  Fax: (770)386-8373
  <URL:http://www.self-gov.org/>


Contents:

   1. What is libertarianism?
   2. Are libertarians liberal or conservative?
   3. How do libertarians approach the issues?
   4. What is the libertarian position on the military draft?
   5. Should the government regulate radio, TV, or the press?
   6. Why do libertarians want to repeal regulations on sex by
      consenting adults?
      6a.  Does this apply to prostitution also?
   7. Does libertarian support of personal liberty extend to drug use?
      7a.  But if drugs were legalized, wouldn't there be millions more
           drug addicts?
   8. Do libertarians support gun ownership as a personal liberty?
   9. How do libertarians want to handle immigration?
  10. What position do libertarians have on subsidies for farm and
      business?
  11. Are people better off with free trade than with tariffs?
  12. What position do libertarians take on minimum wage laws?
  13. What about the poor?
  14. Don't we need affirmative action to keep bigoted employers from
      refusing to hire minorities and women?
  15. How do libertarians feel about taxes?
      15a. I'm for cutting taxes, but as a practical matter, how do we
           do it?
  16. Aren't you going too far?
  17. Won't these ideas work only if everybody is good?
  18. In a libertarian society, wouldn't polluters get away with
      destroying the environment?
  19. Where would a libertarian fall with respect to laws outlawing
      smoking in bars?
  20. Isn't any destruction of the earth a direct threat to the
      existence, -- and thus, the rights -- of future human beings?

  Bibliography



1. What is libertarianism?

  Libertarians want a win-win world of peace and plenty. And we believe
  that the only way to get it is through self-government... NOT others-
  government.

  Self-government is the combination of personal responsibility and
  tolerance. Responsibility means you govern yourself. Tolerance means
  you don't force your values on peaceful, honest people.

  Today, however, others-government is giving us insecurity, conflict
  and poverty. Let's revitalize our heritage of self-government to
  create a win-win world where everyone comes out ahead. [4] -- Carole
  Ann Rand



2. Are libertarians liberal or conservative?

  You have a better choice than just left or right. The libertarian way
  gives you more choices, in politics, in business, your personal life,
  in every way. Libertarians advocate a high degree of both personal and
  economic liberty. Today's liberals like personal liberty but want
  government to control your economic affairs. Conservatives reverse
  that, advocating more economic freedom but wanting to clamp down on
  your private life.

  Libertarian positions on the issues are not "left" or "right" or a
  combination of the two. Libertarians believe that, on every issue, you
  have the right to decide for yourself what's best for you and to act
  on that belief so long as you respect the right of other people to do
  the same and deal with them peacefully and honestly.

  Today's liberals and conservatives have rejected America's heritage of
  liberty and personal responsibility. They want to put us all in their
  straitjacket. Americans built a great country without shackles. It's
  time to take them off again. Break free of the useless left right
  spectrum. Think freedom on all issues. Think libertarian. [2]



3. How do libertarians approach the issues?

  Libertarians use a caring, people centered approach to politics.
  Politicians too frequently forget that their laws and regulations
  affect real, live human beings. Libertarians never lose sight of that
  fact. We see each individual as unique, with great potential. We want
  a system which encourages all of us to discover the best within
  ourselves and make the most of it. A system which encourages the
  development of the most harmonious relationships among all people.

  In dealing with political issues, libertarians focus on the people
  involved. Who is having a problem? What is it? What is the government
  doing already, if anything, and might that be the cause of the
  problem?

  Most importantly, Libertarians ask: is anyone violating another's
  rights? Is someone committing murder, rape, robbery, theft, fraud,
  embezzlement, arson, trespass, etc.? If so, then it's proper to call
  on government to help the victim against the wrongdoer. But, if not,
  the government should not get involved.

  In most instances, people are better off if allowed to work out their
  own problems through voluntary cooperation without introducing the
  coercive tool of government. [3]



4. What is the libertarian position on the military draft?

  History shows that free people can be counted on to defend their homes
  and their country. But the draft is slavery, and slaves make lousy
  defenders of freedom.

  I like knowing I'm being protected by people who are in the military
  because they want to be there, not because they were forced against
  their will to be there.

  A military focused on defending America instead of policing the globe
  would reduce manpower needs and further eliminate any reason to have a
  draft or draft registration.

  Let's let free people defend freedom. [3]



5. Should the government regulate radio, TV, or the press?

  America's free press is envied by freedom-starved people everywhere.
  Dictators use a controlled press to silence opposition and to feed
  lies to their citizens.

  Americans would not like it if the government here owned or controlled
  the newspapers. Why should we like government control of TV and radio
  any better? As with printed words, broadcast words can and should be
  regulated by the free market.

  Americans should be able to freely choose what they will watch or
  listen to, without Big Brother making those decisions for them. [3]



6. Why do libertarians want to repeal regulations on sex by consenting adults?

  Nothing is more personal than the way people chose to shape their
  sexual relationships. Government has no business intruding into
  people's bedrooms.

  This doesn't mean we must personally approve of the sexual behaviors
  of others. It simply means that as long as the participants are
  consenting adults, no one has the right to use the force of government
  laws to try to stop or punish them.

  There is no justification for throwing peaceful Americans in jail
  because of their sexual choices. Let's respect people's right to
  control their own bodies. [3]



6a. Does this apply to prostitution also?

  Every day millions of adult Americans agree to make love. There is no
  justification for throwing them in jail. These are peaceful voluntary
  agreements between consenting adults. A tiny fraction of these involve
  money.

  Criminal penalties do not stop prostitution. They just create real
  problems. One study showed it costs taxpayers two thousand dollars
  every time a prostitute is arrested. Let's respect people's right to
  control their own bodies.

  Decriminalize sex, and let it be a private affair. [3]



7. Does libertarian support of personal liberty extend to drug use?

  Alcohol prohibition tore America apart once. Now it is the war on
  drugs. Harsh laws and the threat of jail and fines will not stop drug
  use. All they do is make it harder to help people. And just as
  Prohibition created organized crime, today's drug laws keep organized
  crime alive -- with all the violence and corruption that goes along
  with it.

  Before drugs were illegal, Americans handled them with few problems.
  Let's respect the right of people to control their own bodies.

  Decriminalize drugs, help those who need it, and let the police spend
  their time protecting us from real crime. [3]



7a. But if drugs were legalized, wouldn't there be millions more drug addicts?

  I, too, want to live in a society where people are healthy and
  productive, not destroying their lives with addictive drugs.

  All of the hard drugs were legal before 1914, and there were few
  addicts. Studies show that even addicts can be productive, and also
  that they do not engage in crime when they can get their drugs
  inexpensively.

  We have addicts today despite drug criminalization. We also have the
  violence that is caused by drugs being illegal. Let's decriminalize
  drugs so we stop the violence and get help to those who need it. [3]



8. Do libertarians support gun ownership as a personal liberty?

  Libertarians,, like other Americans, want to be able to walk city
  streets safely and be secure in their homes. We also want our
  Constitutional rights protected, to guard against the erosion of civil
  liberties. In particular, Libertarians want to see all people treated
  equally under the law, as our Constitution requires. America's
  millions of gun owners are people too.

  Law-abiding, responsible citizens do not and should not need to ask
  anyone's permission or approval to engage in a peaceful activity. Gun
  ownership, by itself, harms no other person and cannot morally justify
  criminal penalties.

  A responsible, well-armed and trained citizenry is the best protection
  against domestic crime and the threat of foreign invasion. America's
  founders knew that. It is still true today.



9. How do libertarians want to handle immigration?

  People have the right to travel anywhere, and to take any job offered
  them, so long as they do it at their own expense and without violating
  the rights of others.

  A way to help the poor is to let them go where the work is, regardless
  of borders. Studies show that immigrants don't take jobs from others,
  they add to the economy and help create more jobs.

  America was built by immigrants who came here seeking nothing but
  opportunity and freedom -- and created the greatest, most productive
  society ever.

  Respect for human rights and compassion for the world's poor require
  that we relax immigration restrictions. [3]



10. What position do libertarians have on subsidies for farm and business?

  All business people, including farmers, should be able to offer their
  products in a free market without being subsidized by others. The way
  to help both producers and consumers is to remove government programs
  and restrictions which have damaged America's free enterprise system.

  Subsidies are harmful and unfair. Why should some businesses be taxed
  to give handouts to others? Why should you pay higher prices to
  support government favored businesses?

  Let's stop this nonsense. Then business could operate in a free market
  and all of us could be better fed, clothed and housed at lower cost.
  [3]



11. Are people better off with free trade than with tariffs?

  Free trade provides consumers with better goods at lower prices. Trade
  restrictions produce the opposite: shoddy goods and higher prices.

  With free trade, consumers pay lower prices for products and thereby
  have more money left to spend on other goods, domestic as well as
  foreign.

  Free trade also helps the cause of world peace. In the 1920's and
  30's, trade barriers went up everywhere, directly contributing to the
  outbreak of World War II. If goods don't cross borders, armies will.

  Let's end all trade restrictions and free the world's resources to be
  allocated in the most efficient and productive manner. [3]



12. What position do libertarians take on minimum wage laws?

  Skilled, experienced workers make high wages because employers compete
  to hire them. Poorly educated, inexperienced young people can't get
  work because minimum wage laws make them too expensive to hire as
  trainees. Repeal of the minimum wage would allow many young, minority
  and poor people to work.

  It must be asked, if the minimum wage is such a good idea, why not
  raise it to $200 an hour? Even the most die-hard minimum wage advocate
  can see there's something wrong with that proposal.

  The only "fair" or "correct" wage is what an employer and employee
  voluntarily agree upon. We should repeal minimum wage now. [3]



13. What about the poor?

  I want to break the chains of poverty and help the disabled. First
  remove laws that prevent work. Second, privatize welfare.

  Permits, licensing, zoning, labor laws. They all stop people who want
  to work, especially minorities. Repeal those laws. Private charity is
  more compassionate and delivers the goods better than the government
  welfare plantation.

  We can't make a perfect world. We can do more for the poor by
  replacing inefficient government programs with effective voluntary
  assistance. [1] -- David Bergland



14. Don't we need affirmative action to keep bigoted employers from refusing to
hire minorities and women?

  Libertarians want to see people of all types working in the most
  harmonious relationships. "Affirmative action" refers to laws which
  force people into relationships whether they want them or not. Not too
  many years ago, there were laws in many states which prevented people
  of different races from doing a variety of things together, working,
  eating, marriage, etc. Libertarians oppose all such laws because the
  people involved have the right to decide for themselves whether or not
  to enter a relationship or association.

  An old saying states: "it takes two to tango." Relationships or
  associations require at least two people. We cannot justify using
  force to keep people out of voluntary relationships and we cannot
  justify forcing private citizens into relationships against their
  will.

  Government employment is a different case. The only criteria for
  employment or advancement in government work should be merit. The
  Constitution requires that we all be given equal treatment under the
  law. Since governments are created by law, they are Constitutionally
  required to be absolutely even handed. Private citizens or companies
  on the other hand have the right to be stupid and suffer the
  consequences.

  Attempts to correct bigotry with affirmative action haven't worked
  very well. Such laws are easy for bigots to circumvent and people tend
  to think minority employees did not earn their positions on merit even
  if they did. They also make it possible for bigots to harass
  minorities by demanding employment at minority owned businesses. [2]



15. How do libertarians feel about taxes?

  Americans already obtain a host of services from private providers.
  There is every reason to think that other services, from postal
  delivery to education to road building and maintenance, could be
  provided more efficiently and at lower cost by the private sector.

  We should support all moves to reduce and repeal taxes because taxes
  are obtained immorally, by force. The income tax is particularly evil,
  since it penalizes productivity and forces all of us to expose our
  private affairs to government snoopers.

  We had no income tax before 1914 and America prospered. Replacing the
  income tax with voluntary methods for financing services should be our
  goal, and we should begin right now. [3]



15a. I'm for cutting taxes, but as a practical matter, how do we do it?

  Think of government as a conglomerate of service businesses. The
  providers of those services do not have to be government employees,
  and the services do not have to be paid for with tax dollars. Whether
  it is education, security, transportation, charity, energy, or
  whatever, the private sector is already doing it for less. To cut
  taxes, we must allow private service providers to replace inefficient
  bureaucracy. Market competition will give us better service at lower
  cost, and put the consumers in control. [3]



16. Aren't you going too far?

  I want you to be able to govern yourself. The libertarian way lets you
  decide how much independence is good for you and lets others decide
  for themselves.

  Replacing political controls with self-government will only go as far
  as you let it. So let's experiment. Cut foreign aid. Deregulate
  transportation. Repeal one drug law. Cut farm subsidies. Cut taxes.

  As you gain self government, you will probably want more. That's for
  you to decide. No one can force you to be free. [1] -- David Bergland



17. Won't these ideas work only if everybody is good?

  You don't have to believe people are always good for freedom to work.
  Most people, most of the time, deal with each other on the libertarian
  premise of respect for the rights of others. You don't want to be
  pushed around or to push your neighbors around. You don't steal, cheat
  or mug people. Very few among us commit all the crime. Society would
  collapse if most people were evil most of the time.

  If people are basically evil, the last thing you'd want is a big
  government staffed by those evil folks exercising control over you.
  [1] -- David Bergland



18. In a libertarian society, wouldn't polluters get away with destroying
   the environment?

  "Today, the biggest polluter of all -- the U.S. military -- gets away
  with murder -- literally. When courts found the military liable for
  illness and death after careless nuclear testing in Utah, the
  government claimed sovereign immunity and refused to pay damages. In a
  libertarian society, no one would be immune from the consequences of
  their actions -- especially not a government charged with protecting us."

  "Libertarians believe that people and governments should right their
  wrongs by restoring, as much as possible, what they've damaged. Today,
  instead of making polluters pay, our government makes the taxpayers
  shoulder the burden. Sometimes it requires whoever buys a polluted
  property to bear the cost of the clean-up. If polluters don't pay for
  the damage they do, why should they stop polluting?"

  "Since government is the biggest polluter of all, putting government in
  charge of stopping pollution is like putting the fox in charge of the
  hen house." [5] -- Mary Ruwart



19. Where would a libertarian fall with respect to laws outlawing
   smoking in bars?

  "In a libertarian society, the smoking policy would be set by the bar
  or restaurant owner. Customers would patronize the establishments
  that had the policy they preferred, much as they do today. For
  example, I avoid places that are smoke-filled, and opt for restaurants
  that are smoke-free or have separate accommodations for smokers and
  non-smokers. As a customer, I have no right to dictate smoking policy
  any more than I have a right to dictate the color schemes for clothing
  manufacturers. However, I let both know my preferences by voting with
  my dollars to do business with them or their competitors." [5] -- Mary
  Ruwart



20. Isn't any destruction of the earth a direct threat to the existence,
   -- and thus, the rights -- of future human beings?

  "The best way to protect the earth is to honor property rights of
  individuals. People care for things they own and can sell later, but
  are not so careful about things they rent. If you go out West and
  compare grazing land owned by individuals with that administered by
  government, the benefit of individual ownership becomes apparent.

  "When I was a member of the Kalamazoo Rain Forest Action Committee,
  environmentalists recognized that helping the native people defend
  their property rights was the best protection the rain forests could
  have. The government is the biggest polluter and despoiler of our
  lands, yet we've been fooled into letting this fox guard our hen
  house." [5] -- Mary Ruwart




Bibliography:

  [1] "Liberty Communicator Course," Advocates for Self-Government,
  1988.

  [2] Bergland, David, "America's Libertarian Heritage: The Politics of
  Freedom," Orpheus Publications, 1773 Bahama Place, Costa Mesa, CA
  92626, (714)751-8980, 1991.

  [3] "The Liberator," Spring 1992, pp. 18-19, Advocates for Self-
  Government, 3955 Pleasantdale Road, No. 106-A, Atlanta, GA 30340,
  (800)932-1776.

  [4] "The Liberator," Summer 1993, p. 13, Advocates for
  Self-Government.

  [5] "The Liberator OnLine," http://www.self-gov.org/liberator.