PJ  Media
 
 
 
 
 
 
_The Libertarian Case for Mitt Romney_ 
(http://pjmedia.com/vodkapundit/2012/10/01/the-libertarian-case-for-mitt-romney/)
 
October 1, 2012 - 5:00 am - by _Stephen Green_ 
(http://pjmedia.com/vodkapundit/bio/) 

 
 
I have a Libertarian friend who’s likely to vote for Gary Johnson, but is  
open to supporting the GOP — if someone can convince her why Romney should 
get  her vote. With just five weeks left, I suppose it’s time for somebody to 
make  the libertarian case for Mitt Romney.  
Before we begin, a few words about the actual Libertarian Party candidate,  
Gary Johnson. Johnson is almost everything you’d want. He’s a solid 
libertarian  without being weird about it — and you know exactly what I mean. 
He 
doesn’t come  with the baggage of Ron Paul’s cult of personality. Best of 
all, Johnson has  real executive experience as the governor of New Mexico. And 
he won’t be elected  president of these United States in a 
millionty-billion years. 
In fact, he’ll be lucky to break one-half of one percent of the popular  
vote.
 
Look, I like Johnson. I find him endearingly goofy, although that’s 
probably  not a trait most Americans look for in their commander-in-chief. But 
he’s 
a good  man and a solid libertarian, so if I fail to make the case for 
Romney — then  absolutely please do vote for Johnson. Afterwords, you won’t 
have to do the Walk  of Shame back to your car, like I will. 
Since the father of RomneyCare isn’t exactly an easy sell to libertarians,  
first we have to look at the man already sitting in the Oval Office. And it’
s  safe to say that unlike 2008, in 2012 there is absolutely zero 
Libertarian case  to be made for Barack Obama. 
“_Liberaltarians_ 
(http://willwilkinson.net/flybottle/2008/05/30/liberaltarianism-back-the-future/)
 ,”  remember them? I’m not sure even if their 
charter member, Will Wilkinson, is  still using the word. If you don’t 
remember, 
the Liberaltarians were  hipper-than-thou libertarians who fell for Obama’s 
promise to protect civil  liberties and cut the deficit in half, and if 
there are any of these people left  after four years, they must be neck-deep in 
the Kool-Aid. Every policy we hated  from George W. Bush, Obama has doubled 
down on, big-time. 
See, those promises were just things Obama said to separate  himself from 
the despised Chimpy McBushHitler. Fact is, Obama is fundamentally  opposed to 
liberty, and he’s fundamentally opposed to the limitations placed on  the 
federal government, and especially to the limitations placed on the  
executive branch. 
I believe this makes Barack Obama a uniquely dangerous figure in American  
political history.
 
We have _a  younger Obama on tape_ 
(http://dailycaller.com/2012/09/24/full-audio-of-1998-redistribution-speech-obama-saw-welfare-recipients-as-majority-
coalition/) , saying that welfare recipients and “the working poor”  are a 
“majority coalition.” And don’t fool yourself into thinking that by  “
welfare recipients” he just means the huddled masses getting their “_Obama 
bucks_ (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z5tqH7UrzOw) ” and food  stamp billions 
and disability checks. Under Obama, Wall Street is a welfare  queen, too. So 
is our banking system. Half our domestic auto industry is on the  take, 
too. Obama has gutted work requirements for individual welfare recipients,  and 
gutted the profit requirement for big business and big banking and big  
finance.  
The masses won’t give up their checks, and the crony capitalists won’t 
suffer  any competition. The squeeze is on, and you’re in the middle of it. That
’s the  Permanent Progressive Majority. 
This squeeze _fundamentally transforms_ 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KrefKCaV8m4)   what America means, and what it 
means to be an American — from 
citizen to  subject. It took a century to take us this far along the 
Progressive path to a  Technocratic State of high-tech feudalism, but we’re 
almost 
at the end of the  line. Another four years is probably all that’s needed to 
get there. 
China currency manipulation, the Afghanistan surge, the civil war in Syria, 
 the Drone War over the Middle East, gay marriage, the Life of Julia, the 
War on  Women, Republicans want your father to take away your free birth 
control then  impregnate you and force you to carry the child to term even if 
it 
kills you —  these are largely distractions. The only thing that matters in 
this election is  stopping the Progressives from completing their task, and 
to give ourselves the  breathing room necessary to enact real reforms. 
So is Mitt Romney the man to save us? 
Well… no. 
But he can buy us time.
 
We’re libertarians, big-L and small, and so we know what it means to be the 
 tiniest of minorities. We lose, because we don’t deliver the goods to our  
constituents, nor do we want to. The very idea appalls us. But the 
high-speed  gravy train is beginning to derail. We’re sitting on 
$16,000,000,000,000 
of  existing debt, we’re adding another trillion every 12 months, 
entitlements are  exploding, our job-creation machine has been broken, and when 
that 
train derails  it’s going to take the nation with it.  
Some of you are nodding your heads at this, with a grim approval. I know,  
because I’ve done it, too. We have this phoenix fantasy, that after the 
Federal  Leviathan comes crashing down, it will be we, the libertarians, who 
pick up the  pieces. Our predictions of disaster will have come true, we will 
have been  vindicated, and a better America will emerge from the ashes. 
It’s a theme that dates back at least to Atlas Shrugged, but it’s  become 
a recurring theme in popular speculative fiction. Think of John Ringo’s  
_The  Last Centurion_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/The-Last-Centurion-John-Ringo/dp/1416555536)  or John 
Birmingham’s _Without  Warning_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Without-Warning-John-Birmingham/dp/0345502906/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1
348854826&sr=1-1&keywords=without+warning+john+birmingham) , and others too 
numerous to count. In each, some terrible  apocalypse befalls America 
and/or the world, and then we somehow put the pieces  back together to form a 
more perfect union, in harmony with our founding  principles. 
Only I don’t see it that way. 
Let’s look at France. Late in the 18th century, the monarchy was 
overthrown,  and a republic established. The French Republic succumbed to the 
temptation of  empire, but then the emperor was overthrown and the monarchy 
restored. France  has had two republics, just since the end of the Second World 
War. 
Take away the  kings, you still have France. Take away the emperor, and 
France is still there.  Put in a president, and the French are still French. 
In just the last hundred years, Germany has had a kaiser, a republic, a 
Nazi  dictatorship, two Germanys (one drearily Communist), and now a unified 
Federal  Republic. Through it all, the Germans remained German because they’re 
 German. 
Most nation-states are built on a common culture, language, and ethnicity.  
This gives them a simple, hardy core of commonality, from which cohesion 
emerges  naturally. Governments, entire political systems, may come and go, 
but the  people are always there. 
America has none of those things.
 
America is an idea, and an ideal. Take away that idea, crush it under the  
weight of a failure unprecedented in its scale and scope… and what’s left? 
Anything? 
What we need is breathing room, a chance to get the economy growing again, 
to  get people back to work again. It’s no coincidence that when we reformed 
 welfare, it was during an economic boom. Wealth papers over lots of 
differences,  and allows people to get things done. And there’s lots that needs 
doing. We can  start by repealing ObamaCare, repealing Dodd-Frank, and just 
generally undoing  the last four years. These are things Romney has promised 
to do. 
Will he do it? I hope so, and if he wins it will be our job to ride him and 
 ride him hard to live up to those promises. What I do know for certain is 
that  Romney isn’t Obama Lite, despite what you might think. Romney won’t 
dial back  Washington to 18% of our GDP. But he might get it down to 20%, 
which, believe it  or not, is a big — and absolutely necessary — improvement. 
We’ll see no such improvement from a second Obama administration, which 
aims  to ramp up Washington to something like 110% of our economy. 
Obama sees it as his job to add every day to the Rube Goldberg device that  
Washington has grown into, while simultaneously throwing sand into its 
gears. If  that seems like a contradictory notion, or even a sick notion — it 
is. But we’ve  watched Obama do just that for four years now. How much more 
can it, can we,  take? 
But the simplest reason is this: If Obama’s _Cloward-Piven  crash_ 
(http://www.americanthinker.com/2008/09/barack_obama_and_the_strategy.html)  
does 
come in the next four years, a turnaround artist like Romney  might just be 
the right person to have at the helm. It’s no scare tactic to  remind you what 
a dedicated Progressive _does with a crisis_ 
(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yeA_kHHLow) ,  especially an engineered one. 
I’ll leave you with one last thought from one of libertarianism’s 
accidental  founding fathers, Robert Heinlein. In Stranger in a Strange Land, 
Jubal  
Harshaw has some words of wisdom for his friend Ben Caxton. Ben, a 
columnist, is  considering writing a piece that will bring down the 
administration 
of  Secretary-General Joe Douglas. But Jubal cautions Ben to 
“Look at Douglas and ponder that, in his ignorance, stupidity, and  
self-seeking, he resembles his fellow Americans but is a notch or two above  
average. Then look at the man who will replace him if his government  topples.” 
“There’s little difference.” 
“There’s always a difference! This is between ‘bad’ and ‘worse’ —  which 
is much sharper than between ‘good’ and ‘better.’” [Emphasis  added]
We don’t get to choose this year between “good” and “better’” — have we 
ever  enjoyed that choice? But we do get a sharp distinction this year 
between “bad”  and “worse.” 
I’m going with “bad” because I’m not sure we’ll survive another term of 
the  worst.

-- 
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