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Education - the goal of the libertarian?

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Patrick Posted: Sat, Mar 13 2010 11:27 AM

I have had a thought the last several days.  It has concerned where myself as a libertarian should direct my energy as related to the outside world, particularly non-libertarians.  

I think now that the best thing I can do is try to spread the truth about the Austrian way of thinking.  I suppose what I am saying is that I am coming into agreement with the idea that the goal of the libertarian party or "purpose" is to educate.  

The thing that has been interesting is the reason why I think that way.  I believe that if we could somehow miraculously remove the government today another (or several) would move in and replace it.  I believe that this will be the case until the population (at least a substantial percentage) understands that they do not need a government.  And I think that once a critical mass of people (purposely being vague about how much is required for a "critical mass") understand the basic tenants of the libertarian philosophy and believes them, the days of the government will be numbered. 

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bloomj31 replied on Sat, Mar 13 2010 11:31 AM

Impossible task imo.

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Patrick replied on Sat, Mar 13 2010 11:33 AM

I would at least agree to "nearly impossible."  :)  But if education is not the goal, what is?

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bloomj31 replied on Sat, Mar 13 2010 11:34 AM

I dunno, it's all about public policy for me.

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Wolf:
I think now that the best thing I can do is try to spread the truth about the Austrian way of thinking.  I suppose what I am saying is that I am coming into agreement with the idea that the goal of the libertarian party or "purpose" is to educate.  

Totally agree. Even Adolph Hitler, who loved force and violence as we all know, once wrote that his ultimate power comes from public opinion.

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Giant_Joe replied on Sat, Mar 13 2010 4:55 PM

Wolf:

I believe that if we could somehow miraculously remove the government today another (or several) would move in and replace it.  I believe that this will be the case until the population (at least a substantial percentage) understands that they do not need a government.  And I think that once a critical mass of people (purposely being vague about how much is required for a "critical mass") understand the basic tenants of the libertarian philosophy and believes them, the days of the government will be numbered.

In general, I agree with this. What I try to do is educate people around me any way I can. I've been thinking of giving the Free State Project a shoot and moving down there for at least a few months to see if I would enjoy living there. It would be tough as I don't know people out there, but I'm pretty good with adapting to new situations. I think NH is the place which is closest to reaching this "critical mass" if there is such a thing.

I'm not huge on history, but from what little I know about the development of political science through the centuries, it seems to me that society is slowly moving towards more freedom and liberty in the long run. I'm pretty excited about the spread of information on the Internet and what it can do for us as a civilization. I think it will help people to cast into doubt some of the things they believe or stand by, which will lead them to critical examination. If they have any respect or command of simple logic, they'll come over to the libertarian side. ;)

I'm just going to keep trying in the meantime.

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Conza88 replied on Sat, Mar 13 2010 8:05 PM

bloomj31:

I dunno, it's all about public policy for me.

Impossible.

Freedom is NOT "public policy" - Lew Rockwell

Ron Paul is for self-government when compared to the Constitution. He's an anarcho-capitalist. Proof.
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bloomj31 replied on Sat, Mar 13 2010 8:07 PM

Conza88:

Impossible.

Freedom is NOT "public policy" - Lew Rockwell

I guess I've achieved the impossible then.

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Stranger replied on Sat, Mar 13 2010 8:22 PM

Smiling Dave:

Wolf:
I think now that the best thing I can do is try to spread the truth about the Austrian way of thinking.  I suppose what I am saying is that I am coming into agreement with the idea that the goal of the libertarian party or "purpose" is to educate.  

Totally agree. Even Adolph Hitler, who loved force and violence as we all know, once wrote that his ultimate power comes from public opinion.

I guess the question then becomes, what consists the public?

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Conza88 replied on Sat, Mar 13 2010 8:33 PM

bloomj31:

Conza88:

Impossible.

Freedom is NOT "public policy" - Lew Rockwell

I guess I've achieved the impossible then.

Ron Paul is for self-government when compared to the Constitution. He's an anarcho-capitalist. Proof.
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bloomj31 replied on Sat, Mar 13 2010 8:35 PM

lmao

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Conza88 replied on Sat, Mar 13 2010 8:58 PM

Just what I thought.

Ron Paul is for self-government when compared to the Constitution. He's an anarcho-capitalist. Proof.
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Patrick replied on Sun, Mar 14 2010 2:22 PM

This thread kind of went a different direction than I hoped.  It's because I put those last lines in the opening post about how if people did "understand" than the government would basically disappear.  I feel that piece of conjecture is just that, conjecture.  What I'm really interested in is people's response to this part:

"I believe that if we could somehow miraculously remove the government today another (or several) would move in and replace it.  I believe that this will be the case until the population (at least a substantial percentage) understands that they do not need a government."

 

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Wolf:

This thread kind of went a different direction than I hoped.  It's because I put those last lines in the opening post about how if people did "understand" than the government would basically disappear.  I feel that piece of conjecture is just that, conjecture.  What I'm really interested in is people's response to this part:

"I believe that if we could somehow miraculously remove the government today another (or several) would move in and replace it.  I believe that this will be the case until the population (at least a substantial percentage) understands that they do not need a government."

I totally agree. After all, if the causes for govt have not gone away, those causes will recreate it again. What are the causes? That people think it's needed.

 

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Nielsio replied on Sun, Mar 14 2010 2:35 PM

Wolf:

This thread kind of went a different direction than I hoped.  It's because I put those last lines in the opening post about how if people did "understand" than the government would basically disappear.  I feel that piece of conjecture is just that, conjecture.  What I'm really interested in is people's response to this part:

"I believe that if we could somehow miraculously remove the government today another (or several) would move in and replace it.  I believe that this will be the case until the population (at least a substantial percentage) understands that they do not need a government."

Exploitation depends on ideology. Overthrow the ideology, and then exploitation goes along with it. The reality is that a government -- and the people doing the dirty work required for the exploitation: the police and the military -- are totally and completely outnumbered by the rest of society. So when people stop believing in aggression as a solution to social problems then it's the end of government.

Hans Hoppe talks about this if you're interested. Don't know which one exactly; you'd have to search the Media section.

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