This is the "X-Box Age" when kids grow up to think reality is a video 
game, with point scores and multiple characters that they can be "All 
You Can Be".  Death is pixilated on a computer monitor far away from the 
injuries and pain of the battlefield; where strategy and tactics aren't 
the unpredictable, messy things that actually happen in war;  where the 
goals are nice little short-range "Game Over" entries on the screen; and 
where there are no long-term effects from the weapons--no children 
killed, no financial loss, no dreams ended.  That's not war.  Never 
was.  Never will be.

War doesn't go after a single "Saddam" or "Adolph" or whoever, war goes 
after an entire society, with countless men, women and children lined up 
as cannon fodder on both sides.  It is a violent, unjustifiable, 
irrational action for any individual to advocate.  No libertarian in 
their right mind would urge this on any country, state or city.

How many Americans, Brits and Europeans, and innocent Iraqis, have been 
killed in the last six months or a year?  How many maimed or injured?  
Do you really think killing one man, is worth all of the harm that has 
occurred during this period?  Do you really think it is worth all of the 
additional billions of taxpayer dollars that have been spent by the 
Federal government?  Do you really think that passing the line from a 
Republic to an Imperial empire even further is worth this?

I don't.  I fought against the VietNam war, against the impressment of 
our citizens, and against the anti-libertarian imperialism that was 
framed by LBJ and Nixon and their minions, and am proud of what I have 
done.  If there is anything further that I could do to put a halt to the 
anti-freedom, imperialist, statist policies of our current 
Idiot-In-Residence, the freedom-hating Bush Jr, I would do it.

Even conservatives, outside of the pretend conservatives, the 
ex-trotskyite neocons, hate what Bush has done.

When I listen to pro-war "objectivists" and their lines of 
argumentation, I'm reminded of the objectivist/libertarian discussions 
in the 1960's-70's about the nature of government, and whether an 
"objectivist government" would have to be a "one-world" government, or 
whether individual, local governments could be allowed to exist.  
Individual sovereignty, as such, would not be a consideration because 
"objective law" was the criterion for government action.  How could you 
have "competing governments" under an "objective law"?  You couldn't!  
There would be inherent differences between the content and structure of 
different governments.  This means that some governments will be less 
"objective" than other governments.  Thus, "objectivist" logic leads to 
all of humanity under the direction of a "one-world" government.

This is pretty much what I hear underlying pro-war objectivists.  
America must force our system of laws onto every continent and tiny 
island of the world, because our laws more "objective" than any other 
government, and we cannot allow any "competing government" to exist.  If 
we did, we would be acting immorally, from an objectivist standpoint.  
War is a necessary method to attaining this "one-world" government 
condition.  Bush certainly likes his position as Leader of American War, 
so pro-war objectivists, the ones who dominate ARI, are more than happy 
to follow his lead, although for their own reasons.  Today's arguments 
are just a repeat of arguments upheld some two score ago.  As far as I 
can recall, there were no articles on it in the major objectivist 
journals, although I seem to recall some in the minor ones, and there 
was certainly discussion and debate about this in objectivist groups.

It's an argument which I've found pointless for many years, particularly 
since I began working in the field of mediation.  Now I look at law as 
being built from the ground up, through bargaining and mutual 
agreements.  One can induce general rules from such individual activity, 
but these relatively simple rules are far from the sense of "objective 
law" which many objectivists promote.  While I like Tibor's 
"meta-ethical" view of proper action, the Douglas's (Rasmussen & Den 
Uyl) "virtues ethics" and what I've seen of Michael Huemer's "Ethical 
Intuitionism," my anarchistic view of law is much different from even 
those with a less than standard objectivist notion of law.  Once you go 
beyond VOM and VORP (victim/offender mediation and victim/offender 
reconciliation programs--google on them sometime), law is pretty much an 
ass.  Crime should be individualized, not socialized by the state.  
Lysander Spooner has much to say about this in his essay, "Natural Law; 
or The Science of Justice" (1882) in his concluding paragraph:

"What, then, is legislation? It is an assumption by one man, or body of 
men, of absolute, irresponsible dominion over all other men whom they 
call subject to their power. It is the assumption by one man, or body of 
men, of a right to subject all other men to their will and their 
service. It is the assumption by one man, or body of men, of a right to 
abolish outright all the natural rights, all the natural liberty of all 
other men; to make all other men their slaves; to arbitrarily dictate to 
all other men what they may, and may not, do; what they may, and may 
not, have; what they may, and may not, be. It is, in short, the 
assumption of a right to banish the principle of human rights, the 
principle of justice itself, from off the earth, and set up their own 
personal will, pleasure, and interest in its place. All this, and 
nothing less, is involved in the very idea that there can be any such 
thing as human legislation that is obligatory upon those upon whom it is 
imposed."

Is libertarianism dead?  I don't regard myself as a determinist, but 
there is one thing that I am certain about. Change will happen, again 
and again, and the funny thing about it is that change occurs in some 90 
degree tangent from what we expect.  The current libertarian movement 
died with the rise of the Libertarian Party, which has destroyed any 
possibility of libertarian success with their going, hat in hand, upon 
bent knee into the political process of today.

The radicalism of libertarianism was smashed by the LPers and we 
couldn't prevent it. That is our fault, the fault of the antipolitical 
libertarians. We failed to provide a sufficient vision and opportunity 
for young libertarians to see a realistic alternative to ballot boxing.  
There are so many pro-war (and Beltway) libertarians today who have 
grabbed onto the slimy coattails of the Republican Party, blinded by the 
hint of a possibility of a chance to grab a tiny drop of political power 
that they are unable to see that liberty is in another direction!

And the LPers are worse! They realize that the DemGops are wrong, but 
they idiotically slide into some self-congratulating, masturbatory 
activity that everyone else laughs at. Do they feel the ridicule? LPers 
are so dense they are unable to get out of the rain and, like the 
proverbial turkey, stare up at the clouds with their mouths open until 
they drown! Thank you, LP, for the Darwinian process of killing off the 
fools!

There will be change, but not before this current generation has come 
and gone, and, for us, that will be too late. There are some good 
alternatives for the future, if they are not destroyed as "persons of 
interest" or somesuch: Mises Institute, Independent Institute, Liberty 
(under Cox), and a few other places. These I look at for their future 
potential, not for any chance that they will make a change today.

I have studied the freethought movement for as long as I have studied 
libertarian history. Its rises and falls generally come around the same 
time as libertarianism's does, and for probably similar reasons. They 
are connected in ways too long to discuss here, save that many of the 
same people are involved in both.  Both movements go up and down. There 
have been times when one or the other have come to dominate culturally, 
but not forever. It is possible that one person or a small group will 
come to affect a cultural change for the better, and may do far better 
than previous individuals or persons.

Radical libertarians blew it in the current anti-war, anti-Bush 
movements, and it is unlikely that some libergreen will step up, just 
like there is almost no chance that some liberdem or libergop will take 
the lead. I hope for change, but have no clue as to what direction it 
will come from. Change always comes. Perhaps it will be for the best 
next time.

In the meantime, I try to take care of my girls (they are now both 
teenagers in high school) as best as I can, get some writing done, and 
try to keep up with the bills (ugh!).

Just a thought.
Just Ken
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://classicalliberalism.blogspot.com/
http://spencerheath.blogspot.com/
http://charlestsprading.blogspot.com/
http://hnn.us/blogs/4.html



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