Well, crypto-* is different from people who don't really understand the 
categories. With my friend's hard right uncle who shocked me by claiming he was 
"more libertarian", I suspect he had someone who called themselves that and he 
liked the conversation(s) they had *or* has done some shallow reading on what 
it meant ... maybe listened to Rand Paul or somesuch. He's not crypto-right. He 
just doesn't understand the categories.

A crypto-* actively asserts they are whatever their cover is. They *encrypt* 
what they are. So a crypto-righty who claims to be a libertarian will actively 
deny that libertarians believe there are appropriate roles for the state. They 
may allow the military, but disallow any other state function. Whether their 
assertions are *lies*, where they're hiding their true beliefs on purpose, or 
simply delusional or embedded in confirmation bias or whatever, isn't that 
important. But they actively work against any persuasion or data.

An innocent righty will succumb after you explain what libertarianism actually 
is: the attempt to optimize for maximal liberty, including the right to do 
heroin, the right to engage prostitutes, the right to health care, the right to 
be taken seriously even when wearing a tutu, etc. A crypto-righty's prejudice 
against heroin addicts and tutu-wearing philosophers will show up subtly. An 
innocent righty's prejudices will be obvious.

One of the reasons I'm drawn to the neoreaction elites is that they *do* seem 
to understand libertarianism and still reject it in favor of more rigid command 
and control structures like monarchies and dictatorships. They don't really 
hide their fascist tendencies. They try to proffer fascism in its more pure 
sense, as a valid (however unsound) ideal. So while my answer to your explicit 
question is "no, crypto-*'s cannot be persuaded with patience and data" an 
non-encrypted-* can be persuaded with patience and data. You just have to play 
their game for long enough to actually persuade them ... and retain your sanity 
in the process.

But to go back to the BREATHE act, programs like universal health care and 
basic income *are* libertarian if they end up maximizing liberty. Of course, 
whether they do or not is and should be subject to test and criticism.

On 11/24/20 1:26 PM, Steve Smith wrote:
> 
>> The trick is you have to separate the actual libertarians from the ones who 
>> *call* themselves "libertarians". And then you have to argue patiently, with 
>> data, over and over again, until they finally see the need for the state in 
>> that context. It's exhausting and I don't blame you if you usually give up 
>> before reaching that point.

> I acknowledge your distinction between Libertarian(tm)s and the more
> pure-to-conception version (though I don't know any of the latter except
> from "just-so" anecdotes told mostly by the former who don't realize how
> transparent they are).  I'm also reminded of the They Might Be Giants 
> verse in a song: "I know politics bore you, you and your racist
> friend"...   it takes on more significance every time I try to speak in
> depth with a crypto-racist (or crypto-classist, or crypto- anythingist)
> who uses one thing to obscure another thing that prevents/excusing them
> from engaging in a meaningful/thoughtful conversation/thoughts.   Maybe,
> as you say, it just takes more patience and data, even with them?

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