CATO Unbound
 
Libertarianism as Radical Centrism
 
 
 (http://www.cato-unbound.org/contributors/clark-ruper) 

By _Clark Ruper_ (http://www.cato-unbound.org/contributors/clark-ruper)  
The Conversation 
May 29, 2013 

 
 
I have used the term “radical  centrism” in this series a few times. 
Before we wrap it up I would like to  explain where I think libertarians fall 
on 
the political spectrum if we are not  going to be “on the right.” The 
following is adapted from my entry in the  upcoming book Why Liberty. 
The left-right political spectrum is the standard introduction  to 
political thought: if you believe X, you are on the left, and if you believe  
Y, you 
are on the right.  What X and Y represent varies depending on with  whom 
you speak; its invocation encourages people to place themselves someplace  on 
that spectrum, even if their views don’t locate them on one spot on that  
spectrum.  It’s made especially absurd when we’re told that “the two  
extremes meet, making the spectrum into a circle,” with rival forms of violent  
collectivism at each end.  So when you first hear of classical liberalism  or 
libertarianism, you may ask yourself on which side of “the spectrum” the  
philosophy falls. 
It doesn’t. Inherent in the ideas of liberty is a rejection of  the 
standard left-right spectrum.  Libertarianism questions and challenges  the use 
of 
political power. Instead of a choice between government intervention  in 
this area or in that area, libertarianism sees politics as a struggle of  
liberty against power. Libertarians take very seriously the lesson of the  
historian Lord Acton: “Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts  
absolutely.”[1] Libertarianism does not fall onto one side or another of a  
spectrum with advocates of one kind of coercive power or another on each  side. 
So which is coherent and which incoherent, libertarianism or  the 
left-right spectrum, with Communism on one end and Fascism on the other,  with 
tobacco prohibition on one side and marijuana prohibition on the other, and  
with 
speech codes on one side…..and speech codes on the other?  You can  decide 
for yourself. 
In a sense, if one were to  insist on a linear spectrum, libertarians could 
be said to occupy the radical  center of political discourse. Libertarians 
are radical in our analysis – we go  to the root (Latin: radix) of the 
issues – and we believe in the principles  of liberty.  One could call us 
centrist in the sense that from the center  we project our ideas outward and 
inform 
political parties and ideologies across  the spectrum. As a result, 
libertarian ideas pervade both the center-left and  the center-right, providing 
them with their most appealing qualities.   Moreover, an increasing percentage 
of the publics in many countries should be  seen as libertarian, rather than 
as on the “left” or the “right.”[2] 
Libertarianism is a political philosophy centered on the  importance of 
individual liberty.  A libertarian can be “socially  conservative” or “
socially progressive,” urban or rural, religious or not, a  teetotaler or a 
drinker, married or single…..you get the point. What unites  libertarians is a 
consistent adherence to the presumption of liberty in human  affairs, that, in 
the words of the Cato Institute’s David Boaz, “it’s the  exercise of power, 
not the exercise of freedom, that requires justification.”[3]  Libertarians 
are consistent defenders of the principle of liberty and are able  to work 
with a wide variety of people and groups on issues in which individual  
liberty, peace, and limited government are implicated. 
The libertarian radical center has shaped much of the modern  world. As 
journalist Fareed Zakaria observed: 
Classical liberalism, we are told, has passed from the scene.  If so, its 
epitaph will read as does Sir Christopher Wren’s, engraved on his  monument 
at St. Paul’s Cathedral: “Si monumentum requiris, circumspice.” If  you are 
searching for a monument, look around. Consider the world we live in –  
secular, scientific, democratic, middle class. Whether you like it or not, it  
is a world made by liberalism. Over the last two hundred years, liberalism  
(with its powerful ally, capitalism) has destroyed an order that had 
dominated  human society for two millennia – that of authority, religion, 
custom, 
land,  and kings. From its birthplace in Europe, liberalism spread to the 
United  States and is now busily remaking most of Asia.[4]
Libertarianism (the contemporary name for principled classical  liberalism) 
has already profoundly shaped the modern world. In much of the  world, many 
battles have already been won: separation of church and state;  limitation 
of power through constitutions; freedom of speech; debunking of  
mercantilism and its replacement with free trade; abolition of slavery; 
personal  
freedom and legal toleration for minorities, whether religious, ethnic,  
linguistic, or sexual; protection of property; the defeat of fascism, Jim Crow, 
 
apartheid, and communism.  Intellectuals and activists made those victories  
possible, and they are far too many to name. They made the world better – more 
 just, more peaceful, and more free. They made the libertarian position on 
those  and many other issues the baseline for reasonable political 
discourse. But we  are not content to rest on our laurels. As always, old 
battles 
must often be  fought again.  And, for the youth of today, as was the case for 
preceding  generations, there remain many battles to fight and freedoms to 
win. 
How have libertarians managed such influence while operating  largely 
outside of the party structure? Sometimes we do form our own parties, as  
evidenced by the various (classical) liberal parties in Europe and other  
countries 
today. Sometimes we work within minor parties, as with the Libertarian  
Party in the United States, whose 2012 candidate Governor Gary Johnson educated 
 millions about the harm caused by the war on drugs and other government  
programs.  Sometimes we work within existing party structures, exemplified  
by Ron Paul’s presidential campaigns as a Republican in 2008 and 2012. He was 
 able to advance many libertarian principles by using the soap box of a 
political  campaign to reach thousands of young people, not only in the United 
States, but  around the world. While our political activism takes many forms 
depending on the  country and the context, our ideas inform the political 
spectrum. 
Consider 1960s America, regarded as the golden age of radical  student 
activism in the United States. On the right you had the conservative  Young 
Americans for Freedom (YAF). Their founding Sharon Statement, which was  
adopted 
in 1960, claimed, “That liberty is indivisible, and that political  freedom 
cannot long exist without economic freedom;  That the purpose of  
government is to protect those freedoms through the preservation of internal  
order, 
the provision of national defense, and the administration of justice;  That 
when government ventures beyond these rightful functions, it accumulates  
power, which tends to diminish order and liberty;”[5] Their hero, Senator 
Barry  Goldwater, famously stated, “I would remind you that extremism in the 
defense of  liberty is no vice. And let me remind you also that moderation in 
the pursuit of  justice is no virtue. ”[6] 
At the same time, the Students  for a Democratic Society (SDS) was emerging 
on the left as leaders of the  antiwar movement. In their Port Huron 
Statement, which was adopted in 1962, they  affirmed “We regard men as 
infinitely 
precious and possessed of unfulfilled  capacities for reason, freedom, and 
love.  The decline of utopia and hope  is in fact one of the defining 
features of social life today. The reasons are  various: the dreams of the 
older 
left were perverted by Stalinism and never  recreated … the horrors of the 
twentieth century, symbolized in the gas-ovens  and concentration camps and 
atom bombs, have blasted hopefulness. To be  idealistic is to be considered 
apocalyptic, deluded.”[7] Former SDS President  Carl Ogelsby recalled in his 
memoir Ravens in the Storm,  “Libertarianism is a stance that allows one to 
speak to the right as well as the  left, which is what I was always trying to 
do…Why go to rightists on this theme  when there were so many leftists to 
choose from? Because you made the strongest  case against the war if you could 
show that both right and left oppose it.”[8]  Moreover, “I had decided 
early on that it made sense to speak of ‘the radical  center’ and ‘militant 
moderation.’ I meant that we should be radical in our  analysis but centrist 
in reaching out to conservatives.”[9] 
While they varied in their areas of emphasis, YAF on economic  freedom and 
opposition to socialism, SDS on civil rights and peace, taken as a  whole 
they can be regarded as pioneers of libertarian activism in the modern  age. 
The leaders of those movements went on to become the teachers, journalists,  
professors, politicians, and other figures who drive the public discourse  
today.  They claimed allegiance to the left and the right, but their best  
intellectual arguments and energy came from their underlying libertarian  
impulses.  
The war on drugs is  increasingly being acknowledged as a disaster.  
Libertarian think tanks  such as the Cato Institute have documented for decades 
the deadly costs of the  drug war and the benefits of personal responsibility 
and personal liberty.  Libertarian economists, notably including Milton 
Friedman, have explained the  perverse incentives created by prohibition.[10]  
Moral philosophers have  argued that a society of free and responsible 
individuals would eliminate  prohibitions on victimless crimes, an argument 
going 
back to Lysander Spooner’s  1875 pamphlet, Vices Are Not Crimes: A 
Vindication of Moral  Liberty.[11]  Because libertarians blazed the trail by 
pointing 
out  the harmful effects of prohibition – on morality, justice, and crime 
rates, on  families and on social order – more and more political leaders are 
speaking out  about the consequences of the war on drugs without fear of 
being smeared as  “pro-drugs.”  They include presidents of Mexico, Guatemala, 
Colombia, and  Brazil, countries that have suffered from the crime, 
violence, and corruption  brought by prohibition. In the United States, these 
figures include governors,  former secretaries of state, judges, police chiefs, 
and many others.[12] 
This is how libertarians change the world. We are radical in  that while 
others may hold particular pro-liberty beliefs casually or on an ad  hoc 
basis, libertarians advocate them from principle. Libertarians are found on  
the 
leading edge of issues that are first seen as extreme but through our  
advocacy are later taken for granted. We are centrist in that we are neither  
left nor right, but instead we project our ideas outward to inform the entirety 
 of the spectrum. 
There is a great opportunity at  hand here. Ideological battles and 
elections are not won on the extremes; they  are won in the center. As Boaz and 
Kirby’s _research shows_ 
(http://store.cato.org/libertarian-vote-swing-voters-tea-parties-fiscally-conservative-socially-liberal-center-digital)
 , “10 to 
20 percent of Americans  are fiscally conservative and socially liberal—
libertarian. And over the past  decade, unlike loyal Democrats and Republicans, 
they have been swing voters.”  Most of these people are with us in preferring 
both economic and social freedom,  they just do not know that makes them a 
libertarian yet. If we libertarians  stand up and proudly occupy the center 
then we will hold incredible influence in  both the short and long term. We 
can show people that they do not have to pick a  side, that the traditional 
spectrum is a joke, that we present a desirable  alternative to the broken 
status quo. 
Libertarianism is not a philosophy of the right or of the  left.  It is the 
radical center, the home for those who wish to live and  let live, who 
cherish both their own freedom and the freedom of others, who  reject the stale 
clichés and false promises of collectivism, both “on the left”  and “on the 
right.”   Where on the left-right spectrum does  libertarianism stand?  
Above it.

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