This article deals with libertarianism as often used in the United States and Canada. For a discussion of the term
libertarian as often used in Europe, see libertarian
socialism.
"Libertarian" and "libertarianism" also often refer to support for civil liberties; such supporters may be known as "civil libertarians," regardless of their positions on other issues.
For the use of the term "libertarianism" in the philosophy of free will see
libertarianism (philosophy).
Libertarianism is a political philosophy that
holds that individuals should be allowed complete freedom of action as long as they do not infringe on the freedom of others.
This is usually taken by libertarians to entail that no one can rightfully initiate coercion against against the person or external property of another. "Coercion," to libertarians, refers to
physical force, the threat of force and the use of fraud. Libertarians also believe that
governments should be held to the same moral standards as the individuals of which they are composed. As a result, they oppose
governments imposing norms (aside from forbidding coercion) through force, even if acting based on a majority vote. Thus, they
oppose all restrictions and penalties for what they consider to be victimless crimes.
In matters of economics, libertarians believe that capitalism is the only
system that is consistent with the overarching principle of libertarianism. Libertarians believe that the nearly everything
should be privately or corporately owned and operated, and that economic and financial decisions should be a private matter
rather than preempted by a centralized governmental authority. To the extent that libertarians advocate any government at all,
its functions tend to be limited to the police, which they believe will protect
citizens from force by one another by way of enforcing property rights, the military, which protects citizens from percieved initiations of force originating from outside their society, and
the courts, which check the police and arbitrate civil disputes. Thus, they oppose any
taxation beyond that which they believe necessary to protect liberty, which may
mean opposing all taxes.
Terminology
The term "libertarianism" in the above sense has been in widespread use only since the 1950s. Taken in another sense, it refers to a variant of anarchist
socialism that became popular after the French Government suppressed the Paris Commune in 1871 and banned anarchism. At that point, some French anarchists adopted libertaire as an
alternative term for the same ideas that avoided the negative connotations of anarchy.
This usage spread to English, where critics of hierarchies are sometimes referred to as "libertarian." These groups are
discussed in their own articles. For the most part, they choose to call themselves anarchists, individualist
anarchists, or anarcho-syndicalists, and may
subscribe to certain forms of socialism called libertarian
socialism. Often, when distinguishing between the different uses of the term, the word "libertarian" is applied to these
groups with a qualifier as in "left-libertarian" or "libertarian communist." The form of libertarianism discussed here is
sometimes called "libertarian capitalism" or "right-wing libertarianism" to distinguish it from these other ideas.
A typographical convention
When Libertarian is capitalized rather then spelled a lowercase "l" it refers specifically to a member of a party that
titles itself a "Libertarian Party," rather than to the
philosophy of libertarianism. This distinction is important because some libertarians do not align themselves with a
"Libertarian Party," due to philosophical disagreements. Also, libertarians may be members of other parties, such as U.S.
Congressman Ron Paul who is a Republican.
Libertarianism and classical liberalism
Libertarians see their origins in the tradition of classical liberalism, and often use the terms interchangeably. The founders of the U.S. were called "liberals"
at the time, as they opposed the European restrictions on individual liberty. Thomas Jefferson is credited as saying that "the government that governs best, governs least," which
shares a common flavor with libertarianism. Friedrich Hayek and
others would prefer to call "libertarianism" "liberalism" instead to emphasize their connections to the founders, but note that
their views share little with liberalism as currently defined in the
United States where modern liberals support regulation of the economy and government redistribution of wealth. Hayek's views on the subject are clearly
explained in "Why I Am Not a Conservative" [2] (http://hem.passagen.se/nicb/cons.htm)(Hayek is referring there to European Conservatism,
which was suspicious of capitalism). Internationally, however, some libertarian political parties adhere to the use of the term
"liberal" such as ACT of New Zealand which refers itself as "the
liberal party."[3] (http://www.act.org.nz/)
Some argue that the term classical liberalism should be reserved for early liberal thinkers for the sake of clarity and
accuracy. They may also argue that there are important differences between many libertarian and classical liberal thinkers. For
example, many modern libertarians view the very wealthy as having earned their place, while the classical liberals were often
skeptical of the rich, business, and corporations, which they saw as aristocratic. Thomas Jefferson in particular was critical of the growth of corporations, which would form an important
part of a libertarian society.
Regardless of the term's accuracy, it is widely used by libertarians to describe themselves. Advocacy of free markets, free trade, limited
government, a non-interventionist foreign policy and a libertarian conception of individual liberty unite the two philosophies.
Some conservatives (many of whom share these same traits) see themselves as the true inheritors of classical liberalism instead;
Jonah Goldberg of National Review argues "most conservatives are closer to classical liberals than a lot of Reason [magazine]-libertarians" because conservatives want to
preserve some institutions that they see as needed for liberty.[4] (http://www.nationalreview.com/goldberg/goldberg121801.shtml) Further confusing the
classification of libertarianism are attempts by other groups to claim its values as their own. A good example is this quotation
from Ronald Reagan:
- "[T]he very heart and soul of conservatism is libertarianism. I think conservatism is really a misnomer just as liberalism is
a misnomer for the liberals -- if we were back in the days of the Revolution, so-called conservatives today would be the Liberals
and the liberals would be the Tories. The basis of conservatism is a desire for less government interference or less centralized
authority or more individual freedom and this is a pretty general description also of what libertarianism is."
Libertarianism in the modern political spectrum
Modern conservatives, liberals, and socialists often claim to promote liberty in
different ways: libertarians argue that the conservatives tend to emphasize economic liberty, whereas the socialists or modern
liberals emphasize civil liberties. Contrary to these views, libertarians suggest that economic liberty and other liberties are
inseparable, and that civil rights are ultimately impossible without the
right to property and free exchange.
Many libertarians do not identify themselves as either "right-wing" or "left-wing," and reject the ideology of both. In the US
some conservatives such as Andrew Sullivan regard themselves as both conservative and libertarian, but other libertarians argue that
the two conflict and that libertarianism is really a form of liberalism (see
Hayek's Why I am Not a Conservative, above).
Instead of a "left-right" spectrum, some libertarians use a two-dimensional space with "personal freedom" on one axis and
"economic freedom" on the other called the Nolan Chart. David Nolan, the founder of the United States Libertarian Party, designed the
chart.[5] (http://www.self-gov.org/quiz.html) Libertarians believe that their combination of economic
and personal rights requires the fewest possible coercive limitations on free action, and maximizes individual liberty and autonomy.
The usefulness of the Nolan Chart is disputed by many. Some argue that the libertarian definition of "freedom" is flawed because, in their view, "freedom of action" can be inhibited by powerlessness, not just
coercion. Others argue that the chart is biased towards libertarianism and that criteria other than personal and economic liberty
may be more important.[6] (http://world.std.com/~mhuben/faq.html#nolan)
Strains of libertarianism are evident in other political philosophies. For example, some modern conservatives might well prefer unfettered markets or free trade, while simultaneously prosecuting drug use or prostitution. Some socialists are strong advocates of civil
liberties, such as freedom of speech or the right of homosexuals to marry,
whereas, unlike libertarians, they believe that society has a right to expropriate property (e.g., wages or income) from
individuals in order to provide for the welfare of the needy or in order to provide
for certain public goods.
For more information, see main article: Nolan chart
Individualism, rights, property, and the role of government
Many libertarians hold that certain personal liberties (such as privacy and
freedom of speech) and economic liberties (such as the freedom to
trade, profit, labor, or invest) are both justifiable on the same philosophical or ethical foundations. On the other hand, many
have no complex philosophical groundings for their espousal of libertarianism but simply like idea of having the kinds of
freedoms that the ideology advocates. Libertarians contrast themselves with modern liberals, who believe that restrictions on
economic liberty (usually regulations or taxes) are necessary for personal freedom or the proper functioning of society and
social well-being, with conservatives that advocate restrictions on personal issues like sexuality, drug use, and speech, and with centrists who share some characteristics of both.
Libertarians often justify individual property on the basis of self-ownership or the right to life. The difference
between the two arguments is little more than terminology, as some libertarians argue that the right to life includes
self-ownership, and the rest argue that the right to self-ownership includes the right to life. The "right to life" version of
the argument, from Ayn Rand’s essay ’Man’s Rights,’’ is outlined below. It should be noted that
while influential in libertarian thought, Rand was not herself a libertarian (see "controversies," below).
- "The right to life is the source of all rights—and the right to property is their only means of implementation…
Since man has to sustain his life by his own effort, the man who has no right to the product of his effort has no means to
sustain his life. The man who produces while others dispose of his product, is a slave."
For libertarians, property rights protect one against others' attempts to obtain, damage or manipulate the legitimately
obtained property of another, or the person himself or herself. Libertarians believe that capitalism is the only system that allows for these freedoms and protects property. Libertarians, like other
capitalists, support the ability of each individual to acquire or produce as
much property as they wish, even if this is more than what is necessary for survival or comfort and even as others live in
poverty. In their view, all that matters is how the property was obtained--whether through production, trade, interest, or
inheritance (in which case it is legitimate) or by theft (in which case it is not).
Critics, such as Noam Chomsky, contend that private property is itself a
means of restricting the liberties of others, that property ownership is another form of authority, and that the state and
corporations inevitably create alliances in order to oppress and control
workers and stifle civil liberties. Libertarians counter that the kind of authority that inheres in property ownership is diffuse
and fleeting, and ultimately subject to the constraints of the marketplace. Libertarians see this decentralized authority as less
dangerous than any centralized, monopoly authority that uses force. Libertarians contend that government power will inevitably
act against the interests of most of society, notwithstanding the original good intentions.
Libertarians argue that rights rest originally in individuals and never in groups such as nations, races, religions,
classes, or cultures, and distinguish between
a wrong done to individual members of a group and the group itself. This position also undercuts rhetorical expressions such as,
"The government has the right to ...", since under this formulation "the government" has no original rights but only those duties
with which it has been lawfully entrusted under the citizens' rights. When democratic concerns and the libertarian view of
individual liberty conflict, libertarians generally side with their view of rights. Libertarianism frequently dovetails neatly
therefore with strict constructionism and the constitution in exile.
Libertarians call themselves "individualists," and oppose anything that they see as paternalistic. This is a source of criticism from some conservatives, who believe certain limits on freedom
may be necessary for social reasons. Additionally, many non-libertarians accuse them of being dogmatic themselves. Lastly, at
least one critic has called the Libertarian Party the "Party of Oxymoron" and jokingly suggested the slogan "Individualists
unite!"
Defining "rights"
Most rights-focused libertarians would argue that the only "rights" that should be established are variants of "the right to
be left alone." According to Capitalism Magazine's online
tour
- "Rights are not guarantees to things, but only guarantees to freedom of action (right to liberty) -- and a guarantee to the
results of those actions (right to property).
- "The only obligation one's rights impose on others is for them to leave you alone, i.e. free to act within your sphere of
rights."[7] (http://capitalism.org/tour/preamble5b.htm)
These libertarians and Objectivists argue that other "rights" such as "the right to a good education" or "the right to have
free access to water" are not rights and do not deserve the same protections. Likewise, libertarians often cite the example of a
right to "the pursuit of happiness" as asserted in the Declaration of Independence, saying that it does not posit a right to be provided with
happiness but a right to pursue it, and that the wording as such illustrates the libertarian sensibilities of the author,
Thomas Jefferson.
One way of describing the distinction is that a "right" to be left alone by other people is a negative right whereas a "right" to be provided with something through the action of another is a
positive right. According to libertarians, a right requiring an
individual to provide something to another is not logically compatible with a right of all individuals to be left alone --in
other words, if the right to keep to oneself exists, then no positive rights can exist. Some believe that this distinction is
poorly defined, or completely invalid. This is primarily a point of disagreement with liberal critics.
One example of such a dispute was over the so-called public accommodation laws such as the Civil Rights Act of 1964 which held that privately owned businesses were forbidden to
exclude customers (based on racial discrimination, for
example). Libertarians argued that the unserved customers had no right to services that businesses did not want to provide and
that government had no right to coerce businesses into serving them, either. In a similar case, after the Boy Scouts were forced by the New
Jersey Supreme Court to include gay members, Lew Rockwell wrote: "There is no right to crash a
private dinner party... The owners of the house have the right to invite or not invite on any grounds. Similarly, there is no
right to invade a private organization."[8] (http://www.mises.org/story/282) The
authors of the Boy Scouts decision disagree: "The sad truth is that excluded groups and individuals have been prevented from full
participation in the social, economic, and political life of our country. The human price of this bigotry has been enormous....
[A]dherence to the principles of equality demands that our legal system protect the victim of invidious discrimination."
Libertarians may argue that economic incentives to gain customers make such laws unecessary, though their opponents counter that
racism and homophobia may make
inclusion impossible without government intervention.
Opposition to statism
Libertarians believe that there is an extended domain of individual freedom defined by every individual's person and private
property, and that no one, whether private citizen or government, may may violate this boundary unless if necessary to repel an
initiation of force or coercion. Indeed, libertarians consider that no organization, including government, can have any right
except those that are voluntarily delegated to it by its members -- which implies that these members must have had these rights
to delegate them to begin with. Libertarians apply this philosophy to civil as well as economic matters.
According to libertarians, decisions regarding how individuals should spend or invest their money should not be affected by a
centralized governmental authority, hence their support of capitalism and opposition to statism. Thus, according to libertarians, taxation and regulation are at best necessary evils (as they involve coercion), and where
unnecessary are simply evil. They believe government spending and regulations should be reduced whenever possible, in favor of
allowing individuals autonomy in regard to how they spend their money. To many libertarians, governments should not establish
schools, run hospitals, regulate
industry, commerce or agriculture, or run social
welfare programs. However, as almost all libertarians assert that children should have some special protections and not be
treated as adults, it is not uncommon for some to make an exception for things such as public schools on grounds of efficiency,
fairness, or both, though most would prefer a school voucher sytem to
the status quo. For libertarians, government's main imperative should be Laissez-faire -- "let (people) do (as they choose)"[9] (http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=Laissez-faire) -- a
doctrine that opposes governmental interference in individual freedom of action, including opposing interference in economic
affairs beyond the minimum necessary for the maintenance of peace and property rights.
Minarchist libertarians believe that minimizing the amount of money citizens pay to government, results in minimizing the
possibility of citizens being a position to require financial assistance from government.
To the extent that libertarians advocate any system of law, it tends to be common law, which they see as less arbitrary, more consistent, and more adaptable over time. Friedrich Hayek had some of the most developed ideas on what libertarian
common law would be like, while Richard Epstein, Robert Nozick, and Randy
Barnett are three of the most influential modern thinkers in this area.
When discussing statism, libertarians like Fulton Huxtable often
refer to or emulate Pierre-Joseph Proudhon's famous
quote about government:
- "To be GOVERNED is to be watched, inspected, spied upon, directed, law-driven, numbered, regulated, enrolled, indoctrinated,
preached at, controlled, checked, estimated, valued, censured, commanded, by creatures who have neither the right nor the wisdom
nor the virtue to do so. To be GOVERNED is to be at every operation, at every transaction noted, registered, counted, taxed,
stamped, measured, numbered, assessed, licensed, authorized, admonished, prevented, forbidden, reformed, corrected, punished. It
is, under pretext of public utility, and in the name of the general interest, to be place[d] under contribution, drilled,
fleeced, exploited, monopolized, extorted from, squeezed, hoaxed, robbed; then, at the slightest resistance, the first word of
complaint, to be repressed, fined, vilified, harassed, hunted down, abused, clubbed, disarmed, bound, choked, imprisoned, judged,
condemned, shot, deported, sacrificed, sold, betrayed; and to crown all, mocked, ridiculed, derided, outraged, dishonored. That
is government; that is its justice; that is its morality." (General Idea of the Revolution in the Nineteenth Century)
It should be noted, however, that despite the overlap in terms of opposition to the state, Proudhon, like most anarchists,
would strongly oppose libertarianism on the grounds that it leaves hierarchies intact or even strengthens them through private
property. Proudhon himself coined the phrase "property is
theft"
Libertarian economics
The Austrian School of economics and the Chicago School of economics are important
foundations of modern libertarian economics. Like most mainstream economists,
they accept the subjective theory of value,
which says that only a buyer and seller, while using information shared and available in the marketplace, can determine how
valuable goods or services are to them and thereby set a mutually agreeable price. Libertarians contend that supply and demand, as ordered by the incidence of independent, subjective valuations in a free
market, are the only sensible means of establishing prices. Moreover, many economists believe that only prices rendered in a
free market can synthesize and communicate the preferences and relevant, time-sensitive data to millions of consumers and producers, alike, and that
any attempt to objectify these transactions by a centralized authority will fail. According to these economists, any government
intervention such as regulation, trade barriers, or taxes, interfere with this judgement being reflected
accurately in the price (though economists often argue that nonstate market failures can interfere with pricing in certain situations as well). Most economists agree that
accurate pricing is an important part of efficient markets, and thus important for maximizing economic utility.
Libertarians tend to minimize the number and magnitude of market failures they accept as legitimate, or even ignore them as
irrelevant to the question of maximizing rights, and this is one source of criticism from opponents of laissez-faire capitalism. Some libertarians would support this form of
capitalism even if one could demonstrate that other economic systems are more efficient from an economic perspective, arguing
that the right to property, including ownership of oneself and, by extension, in one's labor, supercedes efficiency. Other
libertarians would argue that the empirical evidence demonstrates that property enforcement is necessary to the functioning of
society, that various redistributionist schemes and, in particular, state ownership of the factors of production are all bound to
fail, and that capitalism ultimately provides a more optimal and equitable distribution of goods to members of society. If the
empirical evidence were different, these libertarians claim, their views would change.
Because they oppose taxes, libertarians also oppose most programs funded by taxes, such as social welfare, arguing that government charity preempts private charity, that redistribution of
wealth is theft, and that it keeps the poor from working, where they could help themselves. To the extent that some kind of
welfare will exist, libertarians tend to prefer Milton Friedman's
negative income tax as an alternative (but not a supplement)
to the existing system, arguing that it is simpler and has fewer of the perverse incentives of "government handouts."
Libertarians, especially the Cato Institute have long supported
Social Security privatization as a first
step to dismantling Social Security[10] (http://www.tnr.com/doc.mhtml?pt=Oibv363p69/K9x2o/MgaxR==).
Libertarianism's growth
In the 1980's, libertarianism grew substantially more popular and gained considerable
influence in Republican administrations, though at the national level, the Libertarian party still fared poorly. However, in the
2000's, libertarian ideas have some influence on other parties; for example, as of late,
some Republicans are seriously proposing eliminating the IRS and income tax. Also, George W. Bush's "personal accounts" for Social
Security are modeled in part upon "privatization" proposals long supported by some libertarian groups like the Cato Institute as a means of dismantling the social safety net.[11] (http://www.cato.org/new/02-05/02-24-05r-2.html) Other achievements hailed by libertarians in
the last few decades include:
Disputes among libertarians
Anarcho-capitalists and minarchists
All libertarians agree that government should be limited to what is strictly necessary, no more, no less. But there is no
consensus among them about how much government is necessary. Hence, libertarians are further divided between the minarchists and the anarcho-capitalists, which are discussed at length in specific articles. Within the libertarian
movement, anarcho-capitalists are often referred to as "anarchists" in order to distinguish them from minarchists. The use of
this term follows from the anarcho-capitalist belief that the term "anarchism" can be used to refer to those who only reject one
form of government. However, there is an anarchist tradition which pre-dates anarcho-capitalism and uses a more common
definition, in which anarchism denotes rejection of all forms of authority. Under this formulation anarcho-capitalists are not
considered anarchists because they support capitalism, which entails the
support of hierarchies that traditional anarchists believe are coercive in nature and thus a form of authority that must be
rejected.
The minarchists believe that a "minimal" or a "night-watchman" state
is necessary to guarantee property rights, economic and civil liberties, and that the proper function of government is limited to
that purpose. For them, the legitimate functions of government might include the maintenance of the courts, the police, the military, and perhaps a few other vital functions (e.g., roads).
The anarcho-capitalists, believe that even in matters of
justice and protection and particularly in such matters, action by competing private responsible individuals (freely
organized in businesses, cooperatives, or organizations of their choice) is preferable to government serving in these functions.
While they consider themselves to be anarchists, they insist in rejecting the
connotations attached to this term regarding support of socialism. Anarchist critics of anarcho-capitalism
also argue that capitalism must be upheld by the state, and that in the absence of state or state-like enforcement private
property beyond possession would not be viable.
Minarchists consider anarcho-capitalists to be unrealistic to believe that governments can be wholly done without.
Anarcho-capitalists consider that they are realists, and that minarchists are mistaken to believe that a state monopoly on coercion can be contained within any reasonable limits. Liberal and conservative critics of both these
positions generally point to the historical record of democratic governments as evidence that democracy and popular rule have succeeded not only in containing government abuse of freedom, but have in fact
transformed the state from a violent master of the people into their loyal and peaceful servant, at least in certain areas.
The minarchist/anarcho-capitalist division is friendly, and not generally a source of deep enmity, despite the sometimes
involved theoretical arguments. Most libertarians feel more strongly about their common support for their conception of
individual liberty, responsibility and property, than about their possible minarchist vs. anarcho-capitalist differences. Since
both minarchists and anarcho-capitalists believe that existing governments are far too intrusive, the two factions seek
change in almost exactly the same directions, at least in the short term.
Some libertarians don't take a position with regard to this division, and don't care about it. Indeed, many libertarians
consider that governments exist and will exist in the foreseeable future, up to the end of their lives, so that their efforts are
better spent fighting, containing and avoiding the action of governments than trying to figure out what life could or couldn't be
like without them. In recent years libertarianism has attracted many "fellow travelers" who care little
about such theoretical issues and merely wish to reduce the size, corruption, and intrusiveness of government.
Some libertarian philosophers argue that, properly understood, minarchism and anarcho-capitalism are not in contradiction. See
Revisiting Anarchism and Government (http://www.liberalia.com/htm/tm_minarchists_anarchists.htm) by Tibor R. Machan.
Pragmatic consequentialism versus natural law
Libertarians can be broadly classified into two major categories: those who emphasize individual rights and those who
emphasize economic efficiency. For those in the former group, such as Robert
Nozick, Murray Rothbard, and Hans-Hermann Hoppe, protecting rights is an end in itself. Though she rejects the label
"libertarian," Ayn Rand advocated a similar but distinct form of rights-based
natural law. These libertarians and Objectivists maintain that a person has the right to acquire property, use it, and exchange
it freely, as long as he or she does so without violating moral principles, and, further, that people have a right to pursue
their own ends, and they ought not to be forced to provide for the welfare of others. They believe that various end-state
conceptions of what constitutes fair shares ought not to override an individual's entitlement to the property that he acquires in
accordance with the principles of justice or morality. These arguments are primarily based on axiomatic reasoning,
natural law, and rights.
Representatives of the latter group, such as Milton Friedman,
contend that the unfettered, free marketplace is the most effective means of distributing the most social goods to the
greatest number of people. This is a more pragmatic, consequentialist line of reasoning. Consequentialist libertarians favor
protection of rights not because they consider rights to be sacred, but instead because, in their view, protecting rights
produces a society which has good results, such as an increase in wealth, safety, happiness, and fairness. An exposition of
consequentialist libertarianism appears in David Friedman's book
The Machinery of Freedom, which includes a
chapter describing an allegedly highly-libertarian culture that existed in Iceland
around 800 AD.
Some (like Frederic Bastiat), claim a natural harmony between
these two points of view (that both are different views of the same truth), and consider it irrelevant to try to establish one as
truer.
Some libertarians do not attempt to justify their beliefs in any external sense; they support libertarianism because they
desire the maximum degree of liberty possible within their own lives, and see libertarianism as the most effective political
philosophy towards this end.
The role of Objectivism
Libertarianism and Objectivism have a complex relationship. According to
Reason editor Nick Gillespie in the magazine's March 2005 issue focusing on Objectivism's influence, Ayn Rand is "one of the most important figures in the libertarian
movement... A century after her birth and more than a decade after her death, Rand remains one of the best-selling and most
widely influential figures in American thought and culture" in general and in libertarianism in particular. He notes that "Rand
provided 'liberal capitalism with a moral foundation.' That's no small feat in a world that, even after the fall of Nazism,
communism, and other collectivist ideologies, still looks with suspicion on economic self-interest." Still, he confesses that he
is embarassed by his magazine's association with her ideas."[13] (http://www.reason.com/0503/fe.cy.ayn.shtml) In the same issue, Cathy Young says that "Libertarianism, the movement most closely connected to Rand’s ideas, is less
an offspring than a rebel stepchild," rebelling against what Gillespie calls "cult-like" orthodoxy.
The hostility between libertarians and Objectivists, whose political agendas overlap considerably according to both camps, is
mutual; Rand said of libertarians that "They are not defenders of capitalism. They’re a group of publicity seekers...
Further, their leadership consists of men of every of persuasion, from religious conservatives to anarchists. Moreover, most of
them are my enemies... I’ve read nothing by a Libertarian (when I read them, in the early years) that wasn’t my ideas
badly mishandled—i.e., had the teeth pulled out of them—with no credit given."[14] (http://www.aynrand.org/site/PageServer?pagename=education_campus_libertarians)
The source of the dispute, according to Rand, is that libertarians would "like to have an amoral political program." Rand
believed that the only consistent defense of capitalism could come from her philosophy, which built its political and ethical
foundation on her view of metaphysics and epistemology. Rand conceded that the two groups (excepting the anarcho-capitalists) hold essentially the same
political goals, but saw libertarianism as too shallow to be effective, and believed that libertarians "can do the most harm to
capitalism, by making it disreputable" by robbing it of its moral foundation. Libertarians may counter that Objectivism's
foundations are themselves questionable, given that they "admitted no contradictions or paradoxes in reality [although] reality
is full of apparently irreconcilable truths." Many see Objectivists as misguided and dogmatic idealists at what Young calls "a
way station on a journey to some wider outlook" that is less totalistic.[15] (http://www.reason.com/0503/fe.cy.ayn.shtml)
Despite her hostilty towards what she calls Objectivism's "odder features" such as denigration of family ties, Young concedes
that "Rand was the most successful and widely read popularizer of the ideas of individual liberty and the free market of her day.
In the 21st century... Rand’s message of reason and liberty... could be a rallying point" for a less dogmatic political
movement with similar goals like libertarianism.
Ownership of natural resources
Main article: Libertarian perspectives on natural resources
Most libertarians agree that property held in common, so-called public
property, is likely to be mismanaged, even wasted (see, for example, the Tragedy of the Commons); this is not an original argument, for Aristotle made similar observations over 2,000 years ago. Some libertarians (such as Free Market Environmentalists) want to avoid this
problem through private ownership of all natural resources, while others (such as geolibertarians) believe that natural resources (especially land) cannot be considered property. Solutions
such as homesteading have been studied by John Locke and Murray Rothbard, among others. This
is a particularly important issue since many criticisms of private property rest on the notion that no person can claim rightful
ownership over natural resources, and argue that therefore no person can claim rightful ownership over human-produced objects
either. Most libertarians argue that taking an unowned object cannot possibly be wrong because there is no victim (finders keepers), but instead argue over whether that use of natural
resources should be exclusive. Locke's proviso that there had to be "enough" natural resources for everyone has inspired
considerable debate over the aquisition of property.
Other controversies among libertarians
Libertarians do not agree on every topic. Although they share a common tradition of thinkers from centuries past to
contemporary times, no thinker is considered a common authority whose opinions are to be blindly accepted. Rather, they are
generally considered a reference to compare one's opinions and arguments with.
These controversies are addressed in separate articles:
- Libertarian perspectives on intellectual property: Some libertarians
approach this from a natural law perspective and try to define objective property rights for ideas, while consequentialist
libertarians try to use intellectual property rights for
other goals such as maximizing innovation. Within each group, there are differences of opinion about the best solution.
- Libertarian
perspectives on immigration: Libertarians in general claim to support people's freedom of movement, but oppose trespassing,
so natural law libertarians must decide which takes precedence on the immigration issue. Consequentialist libertarians may decide
the issue in terms of what is best for the economy, rather than on a "right" to immigrate or a "right" to keep others out.
- Libertarian perspectives on
abortion: Libertarians uphold right to life as well as ownership of one's own body, so the abortion debate centers around
whether the fetus is a person (and thus has its own rights) or a part of the mother's body (in which case it is subject to her
wishes). A secondary controversy is the role of the state in regulating abortion,
if it is in fact immoral.
- Libertarian perspectives on the death penalty: Some libertarians support the
death penalty on self-defense or retributive justice
grounds. Others see it as an excessive abuse of state power.
- Libertarian perspectives on foreign intervention: Most libertarians are
suspicous of government intervention in the affairs of other countries. Others (such as those influenced by Objectivism) argue
that intervention is justified whenever a foreign government is abusing the rights of its citizens, though critics argue that
this standard would always justify the use of international force.
Criticism of libertarianism
Conservative criticism
Conservatives often argue that the state is needed to maintain social order and morality. They may argue that excessive
personal freedoms encourage dangerous and irresponsible behaviour. Some of the most commonly debated issues here are sexual norms, the drug war, and
public education. Libertarians feel that the state has no business
being involved in what they see as victimless crimes, but these
conservatives view some of these same issues as threats to society. Some, such as the conservative Jonah Goldberg of National Review consider
libertarianism "a form of arrogant nihilism" that is both overly tolerant of nontraditional lifestyles (like drug addiction) and
intolerant towards other political views. In the same article, he writes that "You don't turn children into responsible adults by
giving them absolute freedom. You foster good character by limiting freedom, and by channeling energies into the most productive
avenues. That's what all good schools, good families, and good societies do. The Boy Scouts don't throw a pocketknife to a kid and say, 'Knock yourself out, kid. I'll be back in a couple
hours.' The cultural libertarians want to do precisely that... pluralism [should not be]... a suicide pact."[16] (http://www.nationalreview.com/goldberg/goldberg121201.shtml)
Liberal criticism
Many criticisms of libertarianism question the definition of "freedom" upheld by libertarians. For example, liberals and
socialists sometimes argue that the economic practices defended by libertarians result in privileges for a wealthy elite, and
that the poor are not truly free, even if no "negative rights" are infringed because they lack the power to act as they
choose.
Some, such as John Rawls argue that implied social contracts justify government actions that harm some individuals so long as they are beneficial
overall. Rawls argued that if rational people were unaware of their own prospects (operating under a hypothetical "veil of ignorance" or in the original position) they would choose to limit the risks of adversity, and that they would want society to
provide a safety net for the least
advantaged because of the possibility that they would need it themselves. Libertarians like Robert Nozick argue this cannot override an individual’s moral right to his or her life and its
products (property).
Other critics argue that a democracy can legitimately override the rights of its own constituents. Hayek and Friedman both
maintain that buyers making choices in the marketplace is democratic, and that
the mechanism of the marketplace is noncoercive, so libertarian society would respect the economic will of the people.
Libertarians see this decentralized authority as less dangerous than any centralized, monopoly authority that uses force.
Libertarians contend that government power will inevitably act against the interests of most of society, notwithstanding the
original good intentions.
Radical criticism
Some critiques center on the notion of property (on which much of libertarian theory rests) and argue that property in general
is illegitimate. The argument that property itself is theft,
promoted by many anarchists, would undermine almost all of libertarian theory if successfully argued. Noam Chomsky, for one,
argues that property rights are authoritarian restrictions on others' actions. Others argue that current property owners obtained
their property unfairly, justifying its redistribution. This is especially true in the United States where, they argue, land was
initially stolen from the Native Americans that held it previously.
Even some libertarians concede that few existing property rights are "pure" if history is taken into account, but respond that it
would be impossible to repair the damage without infringing on the rights of the property's current owners, who stole nothing.
Critics are generally either unsatisfied by this response, or feel that it highlights a fundamental problem in property
enforcement.
Classical Marxists and many modern socialists subscribe to the Lockean notion
that production implies ownership, but argue that modern production makes it impossible to divide ownership of most goods amongst
the individual laborers involved, for too many people participate in the complex process of extracting raw materials and in the manufacture of the end product (see labor theory of value). As such, they believe that property must
be held in common for all, in trust, as it were, by the state. Moreover, they contend that the capitalist himself adds nothing to
the equation in the way of labor, that which creates ownership, and that the profit or
surplus value is therefore essentially unearned. Libertarians counter
that this analysis ignores the complex labor of arranging for and managing production, and, most importantly, the various
investment risks and lost opportunity costs that are involved in capitalizing the factors of production.
Libertarians contend that an agreement between laborers and employers to perform work is simply a contractual agreement of
exchanging the use of one form of property (one's labor) for another (wages), and there
is no particular need to tie production to ownership. Critics sometimes respond that neglecting to tie production to ownership
often results in situations in which the producers (workers) do not recieve the full benefit of their own labor.
Economic criticism
Critics of the economic system favored by libertarians, laissez-faire capitalism, argue that market failures justify
government intervention in the economy, that nonintervention leads to monopolies
and stifle innovation, or that unregulated markets are economically unstable. They argue that advances in economics since Adam Smith show that
people's actions are not always rational, that markets do not always produce the most efficient ou |