I quite like L. Neil Smith

If he makes you uncomfortable, then that's good and the next question is 
"Why?"

http://www.ncc-1776.com/tle2005/tle307-20050220-02.html

http://tinyurl.com/66wmy

Under False Colors
by L. Neil Smith
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Attribute to: The Libertarian Enterprise
http://www.ncc-1776.com

I received a message the other day from my old friend-call him 
"Russell"-warning me that somebody named "Mike" was misrepresenting me, or 
rather my ideas, online. There followed about a hundred lines of dialog 
between another old friend of mine, "Anton", and this "Mike" individual, of 
whom I had heard, although I'd never conversed with him, myself. Sad to 
tell, he's a vice chairman of a state Libertarian Party.

The exchange begins when "Mike" asserts, "It is clear that if you believe 
that [the] ZAP is a universally objective principle you hold to ... "

Let's stop here for a moment and examine the mistake "Mike" has already made 
in his eagerness to get to the point he really wants to establish.

For those uninitiated in the ways of libertarians, the acronym "ZAP" stands 
for "Zero Aggression Principle", a slightly different term some of us have 
settled on lately for what the movement has long called the "Non-Aggression 
Principle". What it says is that nobody has any right to initiate physical 
force against anybody else, for any reason.

Skipping over a lot of nitpicking that goes on among libertarians about 
formulation and implementation, what it means is that we're not pacifists. 
We will fight, we just won't start it. And if everybody acted that way-not 
starting it-about 90 percent of the world's problems, give or take the 
occasional volcano or tsunami-would be solved. I changed the name simply 
because I thought that the acronym "ZAP" was a lot more dynamic and 
attractive than the more traditional "NAP".

One of the best and, to me, most interesting features of the Zero Aggression 
Principle is that so many different folks arrive at it from so many 
different angles. I'm not sure where it came from originally. I first read 
of it in Ayn Rand's essays, but later heard it explained in greater detail 
by Robert LeFevre. Other teachers have taught it, as well.

In Independence Day, Will Smith puts it in terms his character might well 
have learned from his mom: "Don't start nothin', won't be nothin'!"

I wonder how that would look, rendered in Latin.

Now it's undoubtedly true, in many instances, what "Mike" asserts about the 
Zero Aggression Principle being held by some as "universally objective", by 
which I think he means "rooted in natural law" like the Pythagorean Theorem, 
or Newton's laws of motion, but it certainly isn't by every libertarian, and 
possibly not even by a majority. Many libertarians just see it as the only 
practical way killer apes can get along.

Thus when "Mike" continues, "... then [meaning 'therefore'] you are morally 
obligated to contribute to liberating those who [have been] initiated 
against and [are] unable to defend themselves ... " he skates out onto thin 
ice, breaks through, and falls in. Like so many others who labor to make a 
point they know damn well is spurious, he doesn't deserve that "therefore", 
and with a ceremonious drumroll I pretend to be hearing, I hereby take it 
away from him and break it in half.

Why?

Because even if there were a "universally objective principle" that nobody 
has a right to initiate force-I suppose you might be able to derive it from 
self-ownership-it doesn't logically follow that individuals have a moral 
obligation to protect others. At best, that's a non-sequitur, and at worst, 
it's altruism, one of the three legs (with mysticism and collectivism) that 
support totalitarianism. Most of us who call ourseleves libertarians swore 
off of it long, long ago.

Knowing his audience, "Mike" tries to dodge it, to make it seem like an act 
of enlightened self-interest: " ... because as history has shown, initiators 
will eventually get to initiating against you, always."

No they won't. History doesn't show any such thing. Some will and some 
won't. Recent studies, for example, demonstrate what we knew all along, that 
the U.S. was never in any danger of invasion by Japan or Germany, and that 
we could have sat out World War II in perfect safety.

What history does show is that warmongering tyrants from Lincoln to Wilson 
to Roosevelt to Bush have always made the same claim that Mike does in order 
to get what they want. What they want, of course, is war, which is the 
health of the state, and of their political careers.

Following a long series of historical "examples", nearly every one 
fallacious, he goes back to misrepresenting collectivism as a form of 
individualism:

"So in the end, it is really self-defense ... If you refuse to act on your 
principles, you are a hypocrite and externalizing the costs of your 
self-defense on others as well as endangering them. Inaction in the presence 
of tyranny against anyone breeds more tyranny against everyone."

The inconvenient fact for "Mike" is that blocading somebody else's borders 
and letting upwards of half a million kids die for lack of medicine and 
proper nutrition, invading two countries that never did anything to America, 
and murdering tens of thousands of pregnant women and ten-year-old goatherds 
can hardly be considered acts of self- defense.

More than that, his attempt to tell real libertarians what their principles 
consist of and whether they're living by them properly or not, is pathetic 
and laughable. It might work on liberals, or freshman philosophy majors (I 
was one of those once, myself) but it won't with grownups. His gabble about 
"externalizing the costs of self-defense" and endangering others may go over 
great in dormitory bull sessions, but it is nothing but words, meaningless 
assertions he doesn't even respect his correspondents enough to try 
demonstrating with facts and logic.

But the really fun part is when he finally pulls his pants down and shows us 
what he's got. It isn't very much, sadly enough, but this is what he has 
been leading up to, all along: "The national LP," "Mike" whimpers, "has put 
itself so far out to lunch with its idiotic anti-war message that it is 
simply not being listened to by the GOP anymore ... "

Gasp!

Horrors!

The country's right-wing socialists are being put off by the truth!

He wabbles onward, " ... where once we had significant influence (the 
presence of our people writing the tax cuts is a lingering influence) ... "

I don't know who "our people" are supposed to be. Anybody who writes policy 
under which even one individual has a cent stolen from him is not "our 
people", simply another enemy who has to be dealt with.

And here comes the reason I was sent this tantrum: " ... but the LP's loopy 
treatment of our own government as the bigger threat to liberty, and in some 
cases (like L. Neil Smith) saying we deserved 9-11 ... "

Wrong again. In the first place, whenever you say something like "our 
government", speak for yourself. I didn't order it. I don't want it.

Moreover, "Mike" doesn't deserve to use the word "loopy" until he actually 
makes the case, so I'm confiscating it from him until he does.

It's embarrassing to see him proving himself to be so completely ignorant of 
American history. From the War between the States until this very day, the 
US government has always been a bigger threat, not just to liberty, but to 
life and property, than any foreign tinpot.

Tell me, who was a greater threat to Americans, Kaiser Bill or Woodrow 
Wilson who continued the American Lenin's work, turning this handful of 
independent republics into a socialist dictatorship? Hitler and Mussolini or 
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who built on what Lincoln and Wilson hd done, 
while giving half of the world away to "Uncle Joe" Stalin? Ho Chi Minh or 
Lyndon Johnson who read our mail, infiltrated anti-war groups, and had 
political opponents silenced, using the IRS? Saddam Hussein or George Bush, 
who uses the Bill of Rights as toilet paper?

Just for the record-and if you remember nothing else I've written here, 
please remember this-to the best of my recollection, I've never said that we 
deserved what happened on September 11, 2001. A collectivist like "Mike" or 
his philosophical buddy Ward Churchill might make such a mistake, but a 
genuine individualist would not.

What I have said is that previous administrations going back more than fifty 
years are responsible for what happened on that day, first because they 
threw in with European nations and corporations that treated people in the 
Middle East like dirt, switching their borders around, replacing their 
leaders at whim, even rounding them up in concentration camps, and killing 
anybody, man, woman, or child, who resisted.

Finally, despite poverty and relative helplessness, they found a way to 
strike back effectively. Washington and its various up-suckers ran around 
like shortened chickens attempting to deny the plain truth, mostly by 
blaming everything and everybody else ("They hate our freedom").

"... has prevented us," "Mike" exposes himself more, and it isn't pretty, 
"from having any constructive contribution to the debate over how the war on 
terrorism is prosecuted domestically. The GOP is only listening to the 
police chiefs associations while the LP is talking conspiracy theories and 
the ACLU is conspiring with terrorist prisoners."

Okay, let's dissect this tangled ball of headworms. First, it is not 
Republicans who determine who gets to debate anything. And what good would 
debating do, if we were only allowed to say whatever it is Republicans want 
to hear? Most importantly, there can be no legitimate debate over the War on 
Terror, aside from stating the fact that it is illegal.

And exactly like their identical evil twins the Democrats, where civil and 
constitutional rights are concerned, Republicans never listen to anyone but 
police chiefs, anyway. We weren't going to change that.

"Mike" apparently believes he can defeat his opponents with magic words, 
like "conspiracy theories". Yet the First Continental Congress was a 
conspiracy, and an illegal one at that. The Jekyll Island conference that 
gave us the Federal Reserve, the Income Tax, and ultimately World War I and 
the Depression was a conspiracy. So was the Manhattan Project. And what was 
that in Dave Nolan's living room in 1971?

The current conflict started, 9/11 was only an excuse, because George Bush, 
his friends, and family wanted to drive an oil pipeline across northern 
Afghanistan for a decade before the airplanes hit the buildings. They also 
wanted control of the world's second largest supply of oil, tucked neatly 
under Saddam Hussein's penny loafers. If that doesn't meet the definition of 
conspiracy, I don't know what does.

"... the ACLU is conspiring with terrorist prisoners ... " "Mike" informs 
us. I never realized that it was possible to get so many lies, errors, and 
inanities into a little sentence fragment only seven words long.

In the first place, the ACLU is more like a gigantic law firm than anything 
else, specializing in civil rights cases. I have a number of arguments with 
them, serious ones, but I'm glad they're there in times like these. I would 
point out to "Mike" what he knows perfectly well already, that conferring 
with a lawyer-especially when you've been kidnapped without due process and 
are being tortured on a daily basis-can hardly be described as "conspiring". 
And being described as a "terrorist prisoner" before you've even been 
charged, let alone tried and convicted, lies at the very heart of what makes 
these perilous times-and "Mike" something other than the libertarian he 
claims to be.

"If anyone is to blame for the current state of affairs, it is the LP 
national leadership and the purist pacifists posing as zapsters in the 
movement."

Now what movement would that be? If it's a movement that includes "Mike" it 
certainly isn't the libertarian movement. "Purist" is what people who have 
and act on principles get called by those who don't, themselves.

It's what crypto-Republicans like "Mike" call libertarians.

The same people fondly parrot the line, "The perfect is the enemy of the 
good," meaning that those of us who insist on the "perfect"-by standing on 
principle and avoiding compromise with evil-get in the way of those whose 
view is "more realistic". But what I've noticed is that if it weren't for 
those of us who insist on the perfect-embarrassing the gradualists and 
compromisers by reminding them why we all got into politics in the first 
place-there'd never be any good.

I'll repeat that thought for the benefit of those like "Mike" who didn't get 
it the first ten thousand times I said it. If it weren't for those of us who 
insist on the perfect, there'd never be any good.

"What am I doing?" Mike asks rhetorically, to contrast himself with the 
"purist pacifists posing as zapsters" and the ACLU, those 
Islamofascistsymps.

"I wrote a five-page bill for my state legislature to establish a citizen 
anti-terrorism marksmanship program mandating that any resident of the state 
can purchase an automatic rifle provided it is entirely ... manufactured 
[in-state], without going through BATFE hoops, so the residents can fulfill 
their [state] constitutional right/responsibility to keep and bear arms 'for 
defense of themselves, their family, their property or the state.' Of 
course, nowhere in the bill," he gloats smugly, thinking he's clever, "is 
the word 'militia' mentioned."

Good for "Mike". (I hear they're trying this in Montana, too. I wonder who 
thought of it first.) This country really needs another law-almost as much 
as it needs another lawyer-and when the feds find out, I'm sure the same 
forces who murdered Vickie Weaver and her boy, and all those kids at Waco, 
who robbed, raped, murdered, and burned a path across the South over the 
issue of nullification won't mind a bit.

It's long past time that individuals like "Mike" were made to understand 
that the Libertarian Party is not now, and never was an appendage of the 
Republican Party. The latter is a warm, loving friend of huge, voracious 
government and a vicious, bloody-handed opponent of individual liberty. It's 
always been that way, since its inception in the middle of the 19th century. 
Any claim Republicans make to wanting less government and more freedom is a 
low, belly-crawling, barefaced lie.

So to "Mike's" libertarian constituents, I suggest that it's time to remove 
him from the office he holds under false colors and find somebody to replace 
him who believes in the ZAP and really is a libertarian. I've heard that 
he's a big supporter of the Free State Movement, but, frankly, I wouldn't 
care to live in any state he'd "freed".

To "Mike" I say, you're not a libertarian of any kind, and you don't deserve 
to be in the Libertarian Party, let alone be one of its officers. I've known 
a hundred of you who believe with Lenin that freedom is so precious it must 
be rationed, but who don't have the cojones to be a little fish in the 
Republican Party pond where they belong.

Go away. Crawl back under the rock you came from. Or go play in traffic. At 
the very least pay attention to the .sig I was amazed to find at the bottom 
of your message. Mr. Pitt was talking about you, "Mike":

"Necessity [George Bush's phony war on terrorism being a perfect example] is 
the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of 
tyrants; it is the creed of slaves." - William Pitt (1759-1806)



Three-time Prometheus Award-winner L. Neil Smith is the author of 23 books, 
including The American Zone, Forge of the Elders, Pallas, The Probability 
Broach, Hope (with Aaron Zelman), and his collection of articles and 
speeches, Lever Action, all of which may be purchased through his website 
"The Webley Page" at http://www.lneilsmith.com. Autographed copies may be 
had from the author at [EMAIL PROTECTED]


-- 
Jay P Hailey ~Meow!~
MSNIM - jayphailey ;
AIM -jayphailey03;
ICQ - 37959005
HTTP://jayphailey.8m.com

"Baseball is 90% mental. The other half is physical."



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