Jim Devine writes:

>> BTW, why is it that money libertarians like the word "liberty" while
>> most other people like the word "freedom"? Most people seem to use the
>> two words interchangeably.

Here is a theory.  "Money libertarians," as you call them, are the contemporary 
descenants of 19th Century "Liberalism," which term is rooted in "Libertas," 
and Libertas is at root a legal status of a free-man (i.e. not a slave).  The 
term "freedom," on the other hand, through the efforts of Germans like Hegel, 
and then transmitted to the English speaking world through interpreters like 
T.H. Green, became associated with what you call "positive freedom"  (i.e. a 
free-man who makes a bad choice, or is limited by circumstance in making 
choices, is not really "free").  Therefore, to "money libertarians." liberty is 
a status relationship between man and the state, while for the modern day 
Hegelians, freedom is more of a psychological state of a man.  Money 
libertarians, aware (contra Mr. Andrews) of the efforts of the modern day 
Hegelians to minimize the importance of legal status in order to justify state 
power, therefore, prefer "liberty" rather than "freedom" as the ideal.

David Shemano


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