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What do you think about consequential libertarians?

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SilentXtarian Posted: Sun, Feb 14 2010 8:36 PM

Can we consider consequential libertarians, actual libertarians?  What makes them any different from neocons and other statists from the left and the right?  Their foreign policy seems no different from Republicans.  

 

 

Consequentialist libertarianism, on the other hand, does not adhere to or rely on strong knee-jerk reactions. It requires real thought, not the assumption that something is always right, but analyzing the context of the situation. For Hillary Clinton, Israel will always have a right to exist and Iran will always be evil. Perhaps there was a semblance of thought at some point when she developed that stance. In contrast, a deontological libertarian will always say it is wrong to interfere with Israel and Iran; A consequentialist libertarian may hold the view that it is unfair to interfere in Israel and Iran’s affairs, but more importantly, a consequentialist libertarian will examine the consequences of both action and inaction, and choose a solution which minimizes negative consequences, maximizes positive consequences, and lets people make their own decisions as much as possible.

If Iran and Israel want interference, and we are inclined to mediate, (and we are not forcing unwilling participants to fund the mediation), that can be seen as a consequentialist libertarian position. Chances are someone does object to our interference in the Middle East, so forcing that “someone” to contribute to mediation efforts through taxation, better be justified by an imminent threat that is more costly or more irreversible than taxation. Ideally, those who favor mediation should fund it, and those who don’t favor mediation should be left alone.

http://thespinfactor.com/thetruth/2009/04/28/the-need-for-consequentialist-libertarianism/

 

Their position on economics seems no different from leftists... either

 


I'm what's called a 'consequential Libertarian', if you're looking to split-hairs; I break with the 'classic' Libertarians who believe we could do without things like a national government, taxes, compulsory education, national defense, and things like that there.  

Those of us who are 'consequential' Libertarians believe that there are consequences for actions, both positive and negative - and that due to human nature being what it is, it's necessary to impose things like speed limits, ownership restrictions for firearms, and preventing twelve-year-olds from being able to go to the grocery-store and buy codeine.   

We don't, however, believe that it's necessary to tell responsible adults that they can't smoke marijuana.    We believe that the war on drugs is a joke, and has done nothing but increase the prison population (something, by the way, for which you and I pay, and pay dearly).  

We believe it's far cheaper to build an adequate education system at $12,000/student than to imprison the same person eighteen years later at $120,000/year.

We believe that it was a good idea, overall, to ban private ownership of machine-guns in the 1930's, what with organized crime using them to settle their differences.   

We believe that prohibition was the worst idea to come out of the depression-era (and that it contributed to a lot of that organized crime in the first place).

We don't see the logic in making multibillionaires out of people who turn around and thumb their noses at the rest of us - because with wealth comes responsibility for the common good; otherwise you don't have a country; you have a perverted sort of feudal-meritocracy where blind luck and cojones the size of basketballs rule over common sense and logic.

http://astranavigo.blogspot.com/2009/09/you-might-not-be-libertarian-if.html

 

I don't know if that's true of all consequential libertarians.  

 

But it seems like this is a movement by statists who don't like the hard line view that most of the libertarians here and the classical liberals here take.  In reality they're worse than liberals and conservatives because they combine both of the evils from both political parties and mesh it into one philosophy... and it's the exact opposite of what freedom is.  

 

I was wondering what you think about these so-called consequential libertarians.  Should we trust them?  

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I believe you have just conflated consequentialism, which is a methodological or a meta-ethical philosophy, with the compromising the principles in and of itself. That's a misunderstanding. A consequentialist could come to the same or similar conclusions as any other libertarian, but on different grounds - the grounds of good consequences. The idea that consequentialism inherently equates to minarchism or something more watered down than that is a misunderstanding.

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Brainpolice:

I believe you have just conflated consequentialism, which is a methodological or a meta-ethical philosophy, with the compromising the principles in and of itself. That's a misunderstanding. A consequentialist could come to the same or similar conclusions as any other libertarian, but on different grounds - the grounds of good consequences. The idea that consequentialism inherently equates to minarchism or something more watered down than that is a misunderstanding.

Could you elaborate on what you mean by that?  I have no doubt that a consequential libertarian could come to many of the same conclusions that any other libertarian could.  

But, it just seems to me that this new movement of consequential libertarians is made up people who dislike the Misean/Rothbard/minarchist philosophy.  Why do you think this is?

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Conza88 replied on Sun, Feb 14 2010 9:22 PM

SilentXtarian:
Rothbard/minarchist philosophy

?

Ron Paul is for self-government when compared to the Constitution. He's an anarcho-capitalist. Proof.
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Conza88:

SilentXtarian:
Rothbard/minarchist philosophy

?

I'm sorry if I wasn't clear with what I meant.  It just seems that consequential libertarians seem to be fairly open to using the coercive power of the state to achieve their ends, and, they reject much of Rothbard's philosophy.  That's all I meant by that.

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They're individuals who support the limiting of the state due to their individual preferences, in this case the greatest good for the greatest number, this is no different than any human being who calls themselves a libertarian.

"Lo! I am weary of my wisdom, like the bee that hath gathered too much honey; I need hands outstretched to take it." -Thus Spake Zarathustra
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SilentXtarian:

I'm sorry if I wasn't clear with what I meant.

That's probably not why he posted that question mark. Most likely he meant to object to your calling Rothbard minarchist; so far, I've only read two books by him, and it seemed clear to me that he was anarcho-capitalist.

 

The Late Andrew Ryan:
this is no different than any human being who calls themselves a libertarian.

How is that not different from deontological libertarianism?

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John Ess replied on Sun, Feb 14 2010 10:47 PM

If I meet one, I'll quit being an anarchist forever! 

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assimilateur:

 

 

The Late Andrew Ryan:
this is no different than any human being who calls themselves a libertarian.

How is that not different from deontological libertarianism?

They are both proponents of libertarianism because of their values and therefore the way they percieve ethics.

"Lo! I am weary of my wisdom, like the bee that hath gathered too much honey; I need hands outstretched to take it." -Thus Spake Zarathustra
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The Late Andrew Ryan:
They are both proponents of libertarianism because of their values and therefore the way they percieve ethics.

Right, that's the ultimate cause, but the proximate cause, in the case of consequentialist libertarians, is that they consider liberty to be conducive towards making most people happy, right? I don't think such utilitarianism is even relevant from a deontological standpoint.

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Conza88 replied on Mon, Feb 15 2010 12:02 AM

assimilateur:
That's probably not why he posted that question mark. Most likely he meant to object to your calling Rothbard minarchist; so far, I've only read two books by him, and it seemed clear to me that he was anarcho-capitalist.

Right.

And in terms of other discussions going on here... I believe it is possible to come to a natural rights perspective, from a consequences perspective - but once you do, and thus support the Non Aggression PRINCIPLE (NAP), consequences should no longer play a factor. Otherwise you don't support the NA Principle at all.

Ron Paul is for self-government when compared to the Constitution. He's an anarcho-capitalist. Proof.
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AndrewR replied on Mon, Feb 15 2010 3:08 AM

Those 'consequentialists' are not libertarians, it seems. They've adopted some aspects of the libertarian creed but discarded or rejected the others which leads me to believe that it is an attempt to discredit, or at least demonise, the more Rothbardian wing. And as for Hilary Clinton's view on the middle east, that's political opportunism pure and simple.

I don't think these consequentialists are a particular threat. Those inclined to Rothbardian views will stick to them and those consequentialists will probably drift back into their Republican/Democrat spheres.

Ludwig von Mises: "We must see conditions as they really are, not as we want them to be."

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Ansury replied on Mon, Feb 15 2010 4:00 AM

The word "libertarian" has been in the process of being hijacked/co-opted for some time.  Just as the word "liberalism" has been destroyed.  Like most similar terms "socialist/communist/capitalist/etc", it's almost useless by itself talking to many people now.

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AJ replied on Mon, Feb 15 2010 11:08 PM

A more apt word for the people described in the quotes would be collectivist, not consequentialist. They're still making the collectivist error of thinking in terms of countries, so it doesn't matter whether they are consequentialist or deontological.

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assimilateur:

The Late Andrew Ryan:
They are both proponents of libertarianism because of their values and therefore the way they percieve ethics.

Right, that's the ultimate cause, but the proximate cause, in the case of consequentialist libertarians, is that they consider liberty to be conducive towards making most people happy, right? I don't think such utilitarianism is even relevant from a deontological standpoint.

You're right, it is not. It all comes down to interpretation of ethics and suddenly don't know what I'm because you're spot on.

Back to your original question though, I have no problem with them besides the fact that I consider them rather dangerous.

I am not a deontological libertarian either (nor am I a consequentialist) so yea...

"Lo! I am weary of my wisdom, like the bee that hath gathered too much honey; I need hands outstretched to take it." -Thus Spake Zarathustra
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Prime Cut replied on Mon, Apr 25 2011 2:16 AM

A pure deontological libertarian would be against coercion no matter the effect on society.  They would be against taxation even if 1% of the population owned 99% of the wealth.  They would be against public ambulances even if payment comfirmation complications killed hundreds and hundreds each day.  In other words, no matter how miserable society became, deontological libertarianisms would never accept any form of coercion.  Sorry guys, I can't say I agree with that.  There is a certain point where coercion can be justified for me, as long as the benefits are great enough.  You may call me a statist for that, but supporting a political philosophy based on emotion seems silly to me.

“What does censorship reveal? It reveals fear.” -Julian Assange
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AJ replied on Mon, Apr 25 2011 5:49 AM

Relevant.

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Merlin replied on Mon, Apr 25 2011 9:31 AM

Can you foresee all consequences of some action? Surely not, for much of our world is build on unintended consequences (the road to hell, you know). So, a “libertarian consequentialist” is one who trusts the consequences he can foresee to guide him, while a ‘standard’ libertarian, he who holds the NAP as an absolute, knows that such consequences are but a tiny bit of the ultimate end result that actions will give. He knows no way of foreseeing all consequences, but he trust that abiding by the NAP will make things turn out for the best, given the circumstances, most of the time. If he is wrong, any society that builds on his ideas will disappear. If he is right, it’ll prosper. Take your pick and enter the fray of history, its as simple as this.

 

The Regression theorem is a memetic equivalent of the Theory of Evolution. To say that the former precludes the free emergence of fiat currencies makes no more sense that to hold that the latter precludes the natural emergence of multicellular organisms.
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I find this bizarre.  I would consider myself a 'consequentialist libertarian'.  I hold to the NAP, and think that no good can come from the state (except for a very few and in the short-term).  The consequentialist libertarians described above seem like those who have little understanding of economic theory.

EDIT: Though by Merlin's definitions, I am probably a 'standard libertarian'.  I am consequantialist in terms of the ultimate foundation of ethics.

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