We need a new political term- neolibertarian, page
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reply posted on 6-2-2012 @ 01:21 AM by Sachyriel
Libertarian used to mean a close ally of Anarchist. People co-opted it in common usage and now you're angry that the Libertarians of today aren't the Libertarians you want them to be.



The use of the word "libertarian" to describe a set of political positions can be tracked to the French cognate, libertaire, which was coined in 1857 by French anarchist Joseph Déjacque who used the term to distinguish his libertarian communist approach from the mutualism advocated by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon.[19] Hence libertarian has been used by some as a synonym for left-wing anarchism since the 1890s.[20] Libertarian socialists, such as Noam Chomsky and Colin Ward, assert that many still consider the term libertarianism a synonym of anarchism in countries other than the US.[9]


en.wikipedia.org...

I don't want to be the guy who walks into every political thread to talk about Anarchy but really, this is ATS, deny ignorance. Instead of becoming a 'neolibertarian' why not just suck it up and describe who you are with something that's more useful as a description?

Making it a single word is just obscuring what you mean with a desire to keep it simple. No one knows what a neolibertarian is and Libertarian just used to mean a non-Proudhon anarchist.

Leave Libertarian the word out of your new ideology, it's already being taken over by right wing conservative panderers who couldn't tell you why Equality and Fraternity are the pillars of Liberty.


reply posted on 8-2-2012 @ 01:56 PM by eboyd
Originally posted by Sachyriel
Libertarian used to mean a close ally of Anarchist. People co-opted it in common usage and now you're angry that the Libertarians of today aren't the Libertarians you want them to be.



The use of the word "libertarian" to describe a set of political positions can be tracked to the French cognate, libertaire, which was coined in 1857 by French anarchist Joseph Déjacque who used the term to distinguish his libertarian communist approach from the mutualism advocated by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon.[19] Hence libertarian has been used by some as a synonym for left-wing anarchism since the 1890s.[20] Libertarian socialists, such as Noam Chomsky and Colin Ward, assert that many still consider the term libertarianism a synonym of anarchism in countries other than the US.[9]


en.wikipedia.org...

I don't want to be the guy who walks into every political thread to talk about Anarchy but really, this is ATS, deny ignorance. Instead of becoming a 'neolibertarian' why not just suck it up and describe who you are with something that's more useful as a description?

Making it a single word is just obscuring what you mean with a desire to keep it simple. No one knows what a neolibertarian is and Libertarian just used to mean a non-Proudhon anarchist.

Leave Libertarian the word out of your new ideology, it's already being taken over by right wing conservative panderers who couldn't tell you why Equality and Fraternity are the pillars of Liberty.





from one of the heroes of the "Libertarian" right himself.


reply posted on 10-2-2012 @ 12:05 PM by Sachyriel
Originally posted by petrus4
Originally posted by Sachyriel
But, if you please, explain to me how I'm not controlling your mind right now.


The phrase "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity," is inherently paradoxical, and is intended to be. A person cannot have complete freedom, within the context of association with others. That can only occur when a person is alone. Otherwise, the other people present will always be exercising some degree of influence over said individual, even if they aren't ordering the person around directly.

Equality as it is meant in the context of the above statement, does not exist either; nor, for that matter, does liberty, if the intent is to exercise such to the point of entropy. In nature, different organisms have different roles; which implies non-uniformity by definition. Natural constraints also apply as well; basic things such as hunger, thirst, fatigue etc, and we can never get free from those.

The statement is designed to make us think that we can have certain things which we can't. Liberty to the point of entropy, (that is, to the point of being literally free of biological limits) and equality to the point of total uniformity and being generic in nature.


If your argument merely rests on each term being absolute you're wrong, a balance must be struck between what we want from all three of them with each other.

We are not about absolute freedom anymore than we are about absolute equality. Our fraternity will be about finding a better balance between the two than any government.

"natural constraints" nothing, humans are better than merely giving in to nature. We can free ourselves from those.

If you think otherwise I emrely leave you in your own cage, good bye.

>That can only occur when a person is alone.

I'll leave you to be free of me, for I am free to talk about it with anyone else I'd like. Maybe they will agree with me, and we'll actually get somewhere.
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