Dear Dr. Misted:  You are saying that the trouble with having no government is 
that it precipitates a swift onset of government.  You are right.  Still, you 
have not shown that government is in any way desirable.

marc guttman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:  
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By Dr. Carl S. Milsted, Jr.
Member, 2006 LP Bylaws CommitteeFeb 1, 2006


Are Libertarians anarchists? It's time to decide


For the sake of argument, let us assume that the initiation of force is the 
highest evil, that no social cause, be it feeding the poor or protecting an 
endangered species, can justify the initiation of force.

Does this assumption lead to a moral requirement for anarchy? Is all taxation 
forbidden?

The answer is no! Abolish a government and the most likely scenario is war. 
Someone will try to fill in the power vacuum. Either it will be another 
government or warlords within the region of anarchy.

This is a net increase in the amount of force used.

Recorded history has shown this time after time. When a government collapses, 
either the people resort to tribalism, with every able-bodied male a soldier; 
the rich use their personal bodyguards to become feudal lords; neighboring 
peoples send in raiders to pillage, loot, and capture slaves; other governments 
conquer the region; and/or warlords within the region fight civil wars until a 
new government is established. None of these outcomes are pleasant.

All of them are less libertarian than a modern welfare state.

Yes, there are some rare cases in recorded civilized history where people have 
prospered without government as we know it. But these were the aberrations, not 
the norm. And they happened in isolated areas and/or among peoples who had 
shared traditions and religion.

These conditions do not apply to the United States of the 21st Century. The 
idea that well-behaved private protection services will peacefully fill the 
power vacuum is highly speculative, unsupported by experiment. Modern 
experimentation with zero government is best tried with a small isolated 
country — not a huge superpower.

To abolish government in the U.S. would be an incredibly dangerous experiment, 
likely leading to more tyranny, not liberty.

Most freedom lovers favor some government, even though that means supporting 
some taxation and regulation. For this reason, most freedom lovers reject the 
Libertarian Party as it currently stands.

The current LP membership pledge does not allow for limited government. Some 
initiation of force is required for a government to do its job. Some taxation 
is necessary. 

To obey the LP membership pledge requires calling for the effective abolition 
of government. And many of the provisions in our current platform reflect this 
mandate, especially our call for the "repeal of all taxation."

There is a moral libertarian case for some government. The initiation of force 
will always be with us. The option of no such force is not available; 
advocating such is equivalent to advocating free energy or time travel.

The best we can do is minimize the initiation of force, and the overwhelming 
historical evidence indicates that this minimum requires some government — 
with some war, police and taxation authority.

Should we succeed in implementing the current LP platform, our nation will be 
at great risk of conquest and civil war.

But we won't succeed, because most libertarians — and virtually all Americans 
— refuse to support such a risky experiment. Most libertarians understand the 
need for some government, for some taxation. This is a major reason why our 
vote totals are so small. At present, we are not a libertarian party, we are an 
anarchist party.

It is time to decide: If we want to continue being an anarchist party, we 
should practice truth in advertising, and change the name to Anarchist Party. 
Or, if we want to be a truly libertarian party, we need to either change or 
eliminate the membership pledge.

We also need to update the platform to allow for that minimal state that 
maximizes liberty.

Which will it be?

-- About the author: Dr. Carl S. Milsted, Jr., of Asheville, N.C., is a member 
of the LP's 2006 Bylaws Committee, a former LNC alternate representative, and 
Webmaster for the Libertarian Reform Caucus.


- Published in the February 2006 issue of LP News -

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