You're making some fundamental misreadings about independents.

All that independent means, in the context of politics, is you're not a 
member of a party. The majority of us are already centrists and moderates, 
but some are roughly as ideologically to the left and right as democrats 
and republicans, while a very vocal minority are off on the fringes, like 
Libertarians and Greens (among smaller groups).

There is no such thing as a default for such a diverse classification. 
People change their minds slowly, and emotionally. Spending time trying to 
reason someone out of an opinion that is hard wired into their brains 
because of ideological reasons is almost always a waste of time. You'd get 
much more out of finding people who already largely agree with you and 
working to get them more involved in politics. 

Libertarians aren't competing for the same people as centrists are - not 
even close. They're farther away from the center than your average democrat 
or republican. Rejecting the two major parties does not mean you share 
common goals on a wide range of issue. Plus libertarians are a truly small 
subsection of the American Electorate. You're wasting your time with them, 
when there are geometrically more people out there who already are in 
agreement with centrist ideals - they just are used to not having any 
political actors represent their views and have become largely disengaged 
in politics.

-- 
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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