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Where is the Libertarian explosion coming from?

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,019 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,026 ✭✭✭Lockstep


    This post has been deleted.
    http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/civil%20libertarian

    Civil libertarianism is not the same as doctrinaire libertarianism (which is what this thread is about)
    I'd say nearly everyone in the thread is a civil libertarian. But many are opposed to the form of libertarianism you advocate.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,445 ✭✭✭BluePlanet


    This post has been deleted.
    Go on donegalfella, tell us how we consumers have benefited from having different types of propietary mobile phone chargers.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,019 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    BluePlanet wrote: »
    Go on donegalfella, tell us how we consumers have benefited from having different types of propietary mobile phone chargers.

    That's not the issue. The producers benefit.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,019 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,445 ✭✭✭BluePlanet


    The EC had been asking for a consensus on the charging issue from the mobile industry to address the problem of ever-changing chargers. "If there were not to be a voluntary agreement, then this year even, we would be looking to come forward with draft legislation," said Verheugen. "But this voluntary agreement is a much better state of affairs."
    It took the threat of Big Goverment interference to force the hand of industry.
    http://arstechnica.com/telecom/news/2009/06/10-companies-agree-to-standardized-mobile-phone-charger-in-eu.ars


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,026 ✭✭✭Lockstep


    This post has been deleted.
    It doesn't conflict with doctrinaire libertarianism, but it is certainly not the same thing.

    You're post calling FIRE libertarian (and linking Lukianoff, a liberal to it) was an equivication of the highest order. This thread is about far more than civil liberties and is about libertarianism as an entire ideology. And you know this.
    This post has been deleted.

    I didn't say all posters. Just nearly all of them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,445 ✭✭✭BluePlanet


    And your still avoiding the issue i raised donegalfella.

    You claim that lots of choice is best, but i've countered with an example of industry waste: all the different types of mobile phone chargers.
    Choices of mobile phone charges didn't benefit consumers at all, nor the environment.

    So can you tell us why having so many different mobile phone chargers was best for consumers?

    If anything donegalfella, you should be arguing against Big Government interfering and forcing the hand of industry to create a standard.
    You should be telling us how wrong that is and how wonderful it is to have 10 different propietary phone charges clogging up a deskdrawer at home.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,693 ✭✭✭Laminations


    It doesn't conflict with doctrinaire libertarianism, but it is certainly not the same thing.

    You're post calling FIRE libertarian (and linking Lukianoff, a liberal to it) was an equivication of the highest order. This thread is about far more than civil liberties and is about libertarianism as an entire ideology. And you know this.


    I didn't say all posters. Just nearly all of them.

    Exactly. We can all pick out parts of libertarianism that we agree with, and you were correct in saying nearly all of us are advocates for civil liberties, even if DF has the odd idea that we want the government to regulate screensavers - is that really what you got from our argument for legislation to prevent harrassment and abuses of power in the workplace? And you still maintain your detractors are lefty idiots?
    This post has been deleted.

    I'd like to think I oppose leftist idiocy too, I also oppose libertarianist idiocy.

    Your absolutist fundamental libertarianism is what is being critiqued, that and your belief that the market solves all social problems


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 23,547 ✭✭✭✭Akrasia


    This post has been deleted.
    Thats why its called a paradox. People want more choice, but sometimes getting what they want makes them less happy.

    It's all fine and well using toothpaste as an example of choice, it's a homogenous product, all toothpaste is essentially the same (I always buy the one that's on special offer) But for things that are actually meaningful, like a car, or an education, if you are given a choice between 3 cars all the same price but with different advantages and drawbacks, whichever one you choose, you'll always have a twinge of regret for the cars you could have had and thus be less satisfied with the car. If you buy a car because it was the only one you could afford or because a family member arranged to get it for you, you'll be happier with the car because you won't know about the other products that you could have had but chose not to.
    People seem to share the blame equally. If I impulsively go to see a film that turns out to be a load of rubbish, I might tell myself that I should have read the reviews first. But I'm also unlikely ever to watch another film by that director. I'm less likely than that to long for a cinema that only screens one film, so that I don't have to make burdensome choices.
    That's rationalisation, its not how the psychology actually works. In fact, the more research you do before you see the film or buy the product, the more likely you are to be dis-satisfied with any flaws in the product because you will believe that there are better products that you could have chosen (all equally flawed in their own way, but you don't know about those flaws because you never experienced them)


    According to your theory, societies with limited consumer choice ought to be happier ones—but they haven't been. Communist societies have always had black markets, because people long for a more expansive range of products than are available in a limited planned economy.
    and it is a truism that aquiring posessions does not make people happy. They might desire something, doesn't mean it will make them happy when they have it. (especially with the power of the advertising and marketing industry to influence people into purchasing things they don't need)

    I would be extremely interested if you can find a single study that shows that people who try to find happiness in consumerism and seek to always purchase the best product available are in fact happier than people who are satisfied with the more limited choices that they have locally.
    In any case, if you don't want to exercise choice, you don't have to. You can decide that you are just going to eat Cornflakes every morning for the rest of your life, and ignore all the other choices. But don't try to take options away from others.
    Again with the false dichotomy. It's either a squalour, or utopia.
    In reality things are more complicated. people want a varied diet, the question is whether people are more happy if they have a selection of 3 different types of cornflakes, (normal, frosted, chocolate covered) or 23 different types?

    Chomsky(2017) on the Republican party

    "Has there ever been an organisation in human history that is dedicated, with such commitment, to the destruction of organised human life on Earth?"



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,019 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,445 ✭✭✭BluePlanet


    Still waiting for you to explain how the threat is wrong and why consumers are better off having lots of different propietary mobile phone chargers.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,026 ✭✭✭Lockstep


    This post has been deleted.
    They may or may not overlap but they are not the same thing. Conservatives would frequently agree with libertarians on market issues but disagree on social ones, likewise, libertarians would agree with (American) liberals on social issues but disagree on economics.
    This post has been deleted.
    Yup and that's what this thread is concerning. If we start cherry picking parts of an ideology then we end up all over the place.

    You and I have frequently found ourselves on the same side on issues such as burqas and the banning of pornography. I'd take a guess that you would never refer to me as a libertarian. Or if you did, you would appreciate that it is extremely misleading.
    This post has been deleted.
    Ah the usual. Traditional values, strong military, low government involvement in the market. Etc.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,019 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 23,283 ✭✭✭✭Scofflaw


    This post has been deleted.

    Or to protect your right to marry who you like and say what you like about Jesus Christ - it depends on what people want. Most people do seem, however, to want a government powerful enough to actually carry out the preferences of the electorate, and are prepared to pay 41% of their income to get that.

    I'd say, once more, that the "libertarian explosion" is the result of people casting about desperately for simple solutions - and libertarians have simple solutions. That they don't work doesn't currently matter to many people, because they feel the current set hasn't worked either.

    Plagues bring out the faith healers and quacks - economic hard times, the libertarians and the rest.

    cordially,
    Scofflaw


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    Scofflaw wrote: »
    ...
    Plagues bring out the faith healers and quacks - economic hard times, the libertarians and the rest.

    You really shouldn't poke fun at libertarians: they are a largely humourless bunch, and some of them like guns.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,019 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,026 ✭✭✭Lockstep


    This post has been deleted.
    There are different brands of liberals though. I'm broadly in favour of free speech and all that, but I would, for example, draw the line at newspapers printing articles when there are clear national security risks. THere would presumably be libertarians who would agree on this issue and overlap between libertarians and liberals.

    FIRE makes no claims on economic issues, that is true. But would you not agree that it is extremely misleading to refer to an organisation as "libertarian" in a debate which concerns both social and economic issues?


    This post has been deleted.
    Of course. If we don't believe in freedom of speech for those we despise, we don't believe in it at all. Etc.

    I was vilified by the hard left in Galway for refusing to blockade David Irving speaking at NUIG and for organising votes in favour of him being alloawd speak. I was accused of betraying my working class roots.:(


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,019 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


    This post has been deleted.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,745 ✭✭✭Eliot Rosewater


    BluePlanet wrote: »
    Still waiting for you to explain how the threat is wrong and why consumers are better off having lots of different propietary mobile phone chargers.

    This is obviously a negative aspect of the free market, but it pales in comparison to some of the negative aspects of "big government". In Ireland the educational standards in mathematics seem to be continually falling, something that has a lot to do with the unions' and the government's monopoly on education. I sat an economics exam today, and one of the questions related to public choice theory. To illustrate the proposition that governments tend to favor special interest groups over what is best for society as a whole, I used the example of the school vouchers donegalfella mentioned earlier, where Obama and the Democratic Congress abandoned the successful voucher programme at the behest of the unions. I do feel that poor education standards are a result of government pandering to unions, and that the alternative choices proposed here do nothing to break the union-government strangle hold.

    If you are expecting me to account for every single thing that could happen under a libertarian society, you should be ready to account for what I've said above. And I don't know about you, but education is slightly more important to me than mobile phone chargers.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,019 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 784 ✭✭✭Anonymous1987


    Surely interest groups such as unions would still exist and have the ability to exert power under libertarianism? After all Libertarians call for self interest to regulate society?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,019 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 23,283 ✭✭✭✭Scofflaw


    This post has been deleted.

    No, I'd say that's an example of bad regulation - but the existence of bad regulation doesn't prove that regulation is bad.

    cordially,
    Scofflaw


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,745 ✭✭✭Eliot Rosewater


    In a libertarian society unions would not be able to employ the coercive force of the state to get what they want. One of the main problems with public sector unions is that their employer doesn't operate under the same economic constraints that private businesses do. Because of this, unions can make totally unrealistic demands and actually get them. All the state has to do is increment tax by 1% and, as per what I was saying earlier, the government wins lots of votes but loses relatively few. Also, unions maintain the monopolies donegelfella spoke of, once again because they can use the state to impede any kind of efficient competition.


    By the way, this "libertarian explosion" didn't come out of the recession, in my experience: most of the libertarians here believed in what they do before the downturn occurred.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 10,007 ✭✭✭✭thebman


    taconnol wrote: »
    What you're doing is telling me the education system in this country is bad and that we have no alternative due to time constraints, but to dismantle the entire public education system. Two few points:

    1) There is no way that dismantling the entire public education system would result in faster results than reforming the existing system.

    2) You still haven't explained why, other than time, why a 100% private education system is the only alternative to the Irish education system in its current form.

    Well the alternative is taking on the unions to get working standards in place for appraising teachers but which political party has the will to do this?

    Or increase standards and hear from Mary who's kid can't get to college now and how its the governments fault not her kids who didn't put in the effort to get the course they wanted.

    Quite simply, I would much prefer a free, state education system but one must acknowledge the failures we have at the moment and propose ways to fix these problems. Donegalfella's solution seems drastic to me but at least he has put forward a potential solution.

    Personaly I would prefer to see teachers not be state employee's as they won't get the union protection they have at the moment and Irish political parties don't seem to have the will to take on these unions. However, I do think we should have free education too. I guess that would mean the government paying grants to private schools to take on pupils and the costs would have to be regulated however it would remove some of the power of the state to enforce grade inflation.

    One cannot say the current system is working so what is the state solution to the problem and when will we see it?
    This post has been deleted.

    That kind of makes the stats a bit uselss though IMO but given the whole problem is manipulation of stats then who's stats can we trust?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39,019 ✭✭✭✭Permabear


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 23,283 ✭✭✭✭Scofflaw


    In a libertarian society unions would not be able to employ the coercive force of the state to get what they want. One of the main problems with public sector unions is that their employer doesn't operate under the same economic constraints that private businesses do. Because of this, unions can make totally unrealistic demands and actually get them. All the state has to do is increment tax by 1% and, as per what I was saying earlier, the government wins lots of votes but loses relatively few. Also, unions maintain the monopolies donegelfella spoke of, once again because they can use the state to impede any kind of efficient competition.

    The problem, though, is that while I can agree with that point, it's a bit like saying "people can sometimes use the law in ways we don't want, so we're better off without it" or "employees sometimes use their rights in ways that we would prefer they didn't, so it would be better if they had none".

    In other words, the pink thing in the bathwater is a baby.
    By the way, this "libertarian explosion" didn't come out of the recession, in my experience: most of the libertarians here believed in what they do before the downturn occurred.

    I wasn't really suggesting your numbers had increased, though, or even that there are more actual libertarians - I'm suggesting that you currently get a better reception for your ideas than at other times, and that this has the effect of amplifying the libertarian signal.

    cordially,
    Scofflaw


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,745 ✭✭✭Eliot Rosewater


    Scofflaw wrote: »
    The problem, though, is that while I can agree with that point, it's a bit like saying "people can sometimes use the law in ways we don't want, so we're better off without it" or "employees sometimes use their rights in ways that we would prefer they didn't, so it would be better if they had none".

    Obviously. However I have tried to make the point here that the problems in government don't stem from the particular administration (Fianna Fail in Ireland's case) but rather the system itself, which strongly favours interest groups and appears to have a tendency to get larger as time goes on.

    Additionally, the way in which government provides education in this country means that we have to take whatever they give us, which restricts choice and, ultimately, quality. This monopoly is far worse than any potential Ryanair monopoly people use to criticize liberal economics. All the alternative solutions proposed here are still working within that framework that gives Teachers' Unions and other interest groups such as the Gaelgoirs too much clout, attempts a one-size-fits-all school system and is motivated by political gain.


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