Downsizing government is not a bad idea when  --but only when--   it is 
necessary
"Right-sizing" is a far better philosophy. 
 
Case in point, many Republicans are now angry at Obama's plans to make  
major cuts
in defense spending. By their reasoning, DOD needs to be the right size,  
and that size
is about the same as now, and could well be larger if circumstances  
warrant.
 
Conversely, Homeland Security, which obviously is important, is nonetheless 
 bloated,
incredibly wasteful, and grossly oversized. About which Republicans are  
virtually silent.
 
Which is to say that Libertarian rhetoric is simplistic and  does not  
address our real problems.
Its very simplicity explains much of its appeal. Many people are  
professionals in occupations
in which it is a high virtue to simplify as much as possible. Things may  
still be complicated
but simplification remains a primary goal. 
 
This leads to a question about how professional background conditions our  
politics,
anyone's private politics. But the fact is that contemporary government in  
the United States
is incredibly complicated and must be addressed as such. The fact is also  
that, IMHO.
a populist appeal would be superior to a libertarian approach to the  
problems of
excess size & excess gvt spending.
 
Here is the crux of the situation :  A populist  appeal identifies the 
culprits and, hence,
allows for targeted remedies that have promise of actually  getting  the 
job  done.
A libertarian appeal simply targets size and spending ;  the culprits  go 
free, as has
been the case with probably thousands of Wall Street finance  speculators
who were largely responsible for bringing us the mess that commenced in  
2007 - 2008, 
and who, today,  are still bringing home million dollar bonuses. Let  us 
not overlook
other guilty parties, corrupt administrators at Fannie and Freddie, and  
members
of Congress like Barney Frank. They certainly deserve their share of the  
blame.
But in what way does libertarian philosophy help us deal with the actual  
issues ?
 
Enough of my editorializing. The article below is interesting in  
identifying the
role that Reagan has played in popularizing libertarian ideas in the  ranks
of the Republican Party.  Any theory that says that Libertarianism is  not
a major factor in US politics  --even when we may not like it-- 
simply cannot be taken seriously.
 
Billy
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
------
 
Christian Post > _Politics_ (http://www.christianpost.com/politics/) |Thu,  
Jan. 05 2012 05:40 PM EDT  
Similarities Between Reagan Conservatives and Libertarians
By _Amanda Winkler_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/amanda-winkler/)   
| Christian Post Reporter

 
With  the unexpected rise of devout social conservative Rick Santorum  and 
the previous surge of self-proclaimed libertarian Ron Paul, it is clear that 
 the GOP base is not only looking for answers on how to  
(http://www.christianpost.com/topics//) steer the country but their own  
Republican Party as 
well.
 
Conservatives and libertarians have many differences in ideologies,  
especially when it comes to foreign policy. However, the two schools of thought 
 
are more intertwined and more similar than one may think. 
On Tuesday, Santorum’s own nephew, 19-year-old John Garver, wrote an op-ed 
in  the Daily Caller criticizing his uncle in support of Paul’s more 
libertarian  views. 
“If you want another big government politician who supports the status quo 
to  run our country, you should vote for my uncle Rick Santorum,” wrote 
Garver. 
In a light-hearted response to his nephew, Santorum told The Daily Caller  
that Garver is “just going through a phase.” 
“He’s a Ron Paul supporter, God bless him,” he said. “I mean, it’s a 
phase. I  understand it. And so we all go through those things. God bless 
Johnny, it’s  wonderful.”  
Like us on _Facebook_ (http://www.facebook.com/ChristianPost.Intl)   
Later on in the discussion, The Daily Caller reports that Santorum said  
explicitly that he is not a libertarian. 
“I’m a conservative,” he said. “I am a Reagan conservative. I am not a  
libertarian. And the people who are calling me a big government guy are  
libertarians.” 
However, what Santorum may not have recalled, at least in the moment he 
made  this declaration, is that Ronald Reagan, a hero to many conservatives, 
thought  of himself as a libertarian. 
“I believe the very heart and soul of conservatism is libertarianism,” 
Reagan  said in 1975. 
“The basis of conservatism is a desire for less government interference or  
less centralized authority or more individual freedom and this is a pretty  
general description also of what libertarianism is.” 
He continued, “Now, I can’t say that I will agree with all the things that 
 the present group who call themselves Libertarians in the sense of a party 
say,  because I think that like in any political movement there are shades, 
and there  are libertarians who are almost over at the point of wanting no 
government at  all or anarchy. I believe there are legitimate government 
functions. There is a  legitimate need in an orderly society for some 
government to maintain freedom or  we will have tyranny by individuals. The 
strongest 
man on the block will run the  neighborhood. We have government to insure 
that we don’t each one of us have to  carry a club to defend ourselves. But 
again, I stand on my statement that I  think that libertarianism and 
conservatism are travelling the same path.” 
Reagan correctly pointed out that libertarianism, just like any other brand 
 of thought, has many different splinters. The libertarian that Reagan was  
discussing is someone that recognizes the need for government only in 
situations  that are absolutely necessary and is not an advocate of no 
government 
at all.  There is a term for someone who wants no government at all, and it’
s not called  libertarianism. It’s called anarchism. At least that is what 
Reagan was trying  to point out in his ’75 speech. 
But if Reagan was such an advocate of small government, why did the size of 
 government increase during his administration? Many people on the 
political left  use this fact to paint Reagan as a hypocrite who campaigned on 
small 
government  only to watch it grow under his watch. 
Lee Edwards, distinguished fellow in conservative thought at the Heritage  
Foundation, told The Christian Post that Reagan did in fact slow the growth 
of  government. 
“There was a 4 percent increase in government spending under his 
predecessor,  Carter. Reagan cut that in half. Government spending only 
increased by 2 
percent  under Reagan. It increased by 10 percent under Bush 41. So while 
critics are  correct in saying that government grew under Reagan, he was able 
to slow the  growth a lot.” 
The desire for small government is what connects libertarians and  
conservatives and this is the foundational principle for both thoughts. The  
tell-tale sign of the conservative – desire for low taxes – stems from  
libertarian thought. 
Christopher Cook writes in the Western Free Press: “If taxation is 
required,  then it means putting a gun to one man’s head and taking from him 
what he 
worked  for in order to make something happen for another man. If we allow 
the state to  do that, it should be for a darned good reason. We should be 
sure that it is  something the state MUST do, because we cannot do it 
ourselves. And we should be  sure it is being done at the lowest division of 
government possible/reasonable.  It should be done with as minimal intrusion 
possible to our natural rights.” 
Most people who consider themselves traditional conservatives, including  
Santorum, would agree with this argument and advertise it as a Reagan  
conservative principle. 
It is also fundamentally libertarian.

-- 
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