| | It always sounds nice. We all agree, more or less.
One problem is getting others to agree. "French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel will propose a financial transactions tax in September." Reuters blog Aug. 14, '11 You say, "We need to cut taxes." And they reply, "No, we need a new tax." Clearly, you are preaching to the choir. They are not going to change their minds, so any new solutions must come from a shift in paradigm. "Going Galt" is such a shift. Imagine if in 1930, hundreds had attended Nazi rallies to laugh at Hitler. We empower Merkel, Sarkozy, and Obama by giving them serious attention.
There is also the problem of The Big Sort . We all preach to our choir here. And I understand. There is a Reason-TV video out with Matt Damon and other left wingers being harrassed by the Reason-TV reporter. It would really be a waste to go to something like that and say, "I understand the problem and I agree with you on that. Here are some ways to fix it..." Once you say, "Cut taxes to the bone..." they stop listening. They have their own choir. That's what a rally is. So, basically, communication is useless because listening (on either side) does not occur.
On my blog, I have two posts about "unlimited constitutional government." The first here and the second here. You say to sell off all government properties that are not military. What about the legislature? What about The Library of Congress? Does Congress not have the power to create its own archives? If Congress is to report publicly, can they not operate a television station or website as they have traditionally had a Government Printing Office? What about the GPO? If the government is to have military bases, can they have their own military colleges (West Point, Annapolis, etc.)? Who maintains all of that? Why not have government-operated skilled trades and crafts, and ultimately government-owned farms and mines, lest the military be without resources?
You might say that they should contract everything, except the military. OK, but even now, with manpower tapped, military bases are guarded by private contractors, not by soldiers. And we know about Blackwater and other contractors, all based on Letters of Marque and Reprisal, an enumerated power. So, then, why allow the government to own even military bases?
I mean, myself, I think they should, but I point out that this is not inherent or a priori. Our common libertarian assumptions allow us to think of alternatives that others would find (quoting Orsini) "inconceivable." It is easy to argue from any side when nothing is really at stake.
I ran for Congress as a Libertarian. I was elected as a Republican precinct delegate. I have been appointed to a couple of non-partisan citizen's commissions, one county (criminal justice), the other White House (libraries). I always found much more success living my own life by my own standards, making my own choices, and doing what I think is best for myself. But getting out in public is a lot of fun, too. ... as long as you don't take it too seriously...
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