Yea, I buy that.  The liberty movement probably needs the anarchists right now 
for numbers and fundraising.  In NH, the Dems exploited the anarchists as 
extremists and carpetbaggers in order to win back a few seats recently.  It 
works well as a strategy. But as the movement grows further I think the cooler 
heads will socialize the anarchists into a more mainstream expression.

I had a conversation recently with a friend who is a liberty leader here in NH 
and he was railing against an adolescent idiot who was making a big stink 
during a Ron Paul event at a pub that he should not have been required to show 
identification in order to buy beer. This leader had been in that spot a few 
years ago but has since matured - my word not his.

But I'll say when I read about the Congress insider trading scandal, anarchism 
starts to look pretty good to me.  This is so egregious, yet it continues.

Kevin


  Kevin :
  This is actually apropos to your e-mail.

  Someone I never could stand was William F Buckley. However, he once
  did something important that contributed to the successes of the Conservative
  movement. This was back in the 1950s  and into the 1960s. All of the fringe
  groups that were claiming affiliation with the Republican Party were
  summarily disavowed. Including, maybe especially, the Birch people.

  The point is that there is such a thing as the mainstream and that is where 
elections
  are won, not on the margins. Who controls the center, controls.

  By this way of thinking, today neither party CAN control the center because 
neither
  party disavows extreme elements. The public sees this and understands that 
their
  choice is always some lesser of two evils.

  How different is this principle for Libertarians ?  Not a problem for Radical 
Centrists
  so far, the movement is still small and no chance yet for a bandwagon effect, 
but 
  I don't see where we would be immune. As it is, here and there "anti-Radical 
Centrists"
  have arisen, like a homosexual activist in Iowa, think this is the location, 
which recasts
  the homosexual cause as RC in nature , which is ridiculous. Much less 
negatvely, there 
  was a journalist in California who rode the coattails of Schwarzenegger's 
popularity
  and called himself a Radical Centrist for a few years. He actually was sorta 
RC,
  in fact. But he had no interest in the movement at all, just in capitalizing
  on the then-popularity of the phrase in California.

  In the future we can expect this kind of thing many times over.

  So, how do we keep RC "pure" ?  

  Strikes me that the problem for Libertarians is that they are willing to
  play ball with various Anarchists. Not that, say, Anarcho-Syndicalists 
  are bad news, you can make a case for them, maybe also for the
  pacifists influenced by Tolstoy-Kropotkin, but beyond that you get
  into Never-Never Land territory with all kinds of Anarchist idiots.

  The Left has this problem, too, with its own Anarchist faction, the
  really violent ones, which are never disavowed either.

  -------------------------------------------

  About religion,. let me defer comment until  Christian believers have
  the chance to comment on the Great Commission and the Kingdom.

  Billy


  ==================================================





  11/21/2011 5:25:50 A.M. Pacific Standard Time, [email protected] writes:
    I think this is correct, Billy - and why Deism by so many other names is 
becoming more popular.  It is the evangelism/supremacy aspect of all revealed 
religion that is most troubling to Deists.  Our coupling at A Place for 
Possibilities, classical liberalism and Deism is onto something dontcha think?

    As the article you sent earlier illustrates there was an earlier coupling 
of energies at the beginnings of libertarianism.  Supremacists and anarchists 
found a home.  Many of those folks are still around (and attracted to Ron 
Paul).  The John Birch'ers for instance are Christian Libertarians for the most 
part.  The anarchists and anarcho-capitalists, akin to Rothbard are also 
attracted to Paul.  Objectivists, similarly.  Each of these groups sees Paul as 
about the best choice out there right now.

    I like him because I believe a libertarian sensibility is what we need 
right now to unwind the inevitable statist buildup that happens in all systems 
over time.

    Kevin


      Christianity is a missionary religion. This statement ought to be 
non-controversial.
      Unfortunately, I think because of libertarian influence more than any 
other factor,
      this viewpoint is denied.  That is, at least as I understand it, 
Libertarians tell us that
      religion should be a private affair, that no-one should seek to convert 
others,
      and especially should keep their noses out of non-Christian cultures 
because
      what Muslims or Hindus, etc, may do, is their own business and Christians
      should respect their rights to practice their traditional faiths.

      Indeed, some ( or most ) Libertarians go further and deny any value to 
religion
      whatsoever, and hence want religious believers not to proselytize at all. 
Murray Rothbard
      noted this kind of attitude at one time :

      "...I am getting tired of the offhanded smearing of religion that has 
long been endemic 
      to the libertarian movement. Religion is generally dismissed as imbecilic 
at best, 
      inherently evil at worst. The greatest and most creative minds in the 
history 
      of mankind have been deeply and profoundly religious, most of them 
Christian.”

      At any rate, I have heard the refrain from Libertarians that seeking to 
convert others
      to one's religion is objectionable. Leaving aside the fact that Buddhism 
is also a missionary
      religion, as is Islam, the Baha'i Faith, that in the past so was Judaism, 
that sometimes
      Hinduism has a missionary dimension, etc., this prohibition effects 
Christians directly
      and is most relevant here.

      It so happens, of course, that the New Testament commands believers to 
seek to convert
      others AND to persuade everyone to follow Biblical morality. Here ( 
emphasis added )
      is the quote :

      Matthew 28:16-20

      So the eleven disciples went to Galilee to the mountain Jesus had 
designated.  When they saw him, they worshiped him, but some doubted. Then 
Jesus came up and said to them, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been 
given to me.  Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in 
the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit,  teaching them to obey 
everything I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end 
of the age” 

      Libertarians are fond of citing other verses, and while other passages 
are clear that people should not be coerced into religion nor in any way 
sacrifice their legitimate personal freedoms, the Great Commission carries 
special weight. Christians who actually believe in the Bible are supposed to 
convert others. Not only this, they are supposed to seek to bring about a 
massive social movement that converts the world to Biblical morality. That is, 
rather than being "morally libertarian" the New Testament commands Christians 
to seek a common morality for everyone.

      To make this clear all you need to do is read I Corinthians some time. 
The Apostle Paul criticized the Corinthian congregation for tolerating 
"anything goes" morality. To Paul such liberty was the exact opposite of what 
Christian faith should be all about.

      I simply do not see where actual Christian faith, or actual Buddhist 
faith, etc., can be compatible with Libertarianism. The foundation of 
Libertarianism is anything goes ( minus punching out the other guy ).

      The foundation of Christian faith is the over-reaching goal of converting 
the world to faith in Christ and to observance of a clearly defined set of 
moral principles. It is not OK by this morality to do or favor any number of 
things that Libertarians say are perfectly OK. In fact, Christians are supposed 
to oppose a number of the things Libertarians advocate. 

      Such as anti-statism. The great model of society that we are presented 
with in the Bible is the Hebrew monarchy, after all. Jesus, furthermore, seeks 
to bring the Kingdom of Heaven to the world and partly is justified as messiah 
because of his royal lineage, a descendent of King David. The subtext surely is 
that any state to which we give authority ought to be as well-conceived and 
well-managed as the Kingdom of Israel in Solomonic times. That, as model for 
political order, is a far cry from Libertarian preachments about a minimalist 
state with no ( or very little ) centralized authority. The entire book of 
Deuteronomy is about the necessity of establishing a centralized state with a 
virtuous and strong government.

      So it seems to me

      Billy








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  Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
  Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
  Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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