I have been wondering if I am really a libertarian at all. Don't worry. I am not going to join the army of people who think they know better than you how to live your life. I have just been thinking about my thinking. A holiday gives a chap time for such intellectual spring cleaning. Let me share these doubts, so that you can (I hope) shoot them down.
If I try to imagine a clean slate "start up" libertarian society, it's difficult – especially as there are no virgin territories on Earth to which a group of like-minded people could migrate to found one. Unless such a group could leave behind the addicts of state dependence and the power-crazed thugs of statist politics all the vices that have led to the world's current depressing assortment of pork barrel democracies and totalitarian states would persist. Unless one was prepared (as one is emphatically not) to contemplate a libertarian version of Lenin's Red Terror. Let's just accept, based on history, that if an imagined better society needs a Terror, it's not really better.
Even if they did find another New World to colonise, our libertarian founding fathers and mothers would find those vices rising again in their offspring (or immigrating opportunistically across their open borders). They are, after all, part of what it is to be human.
A libertarian democracy would be at constant risk of degenerating into statism as the feckless banded together to vote themselves goodies at others' expense. If not a democracy, the temptation of power would be too much for the thugs amongst us. Indeed can any of us really know we are not thugs until that temptation has been presented and resisted?
History suggests even the founding idealist might find the temptation too much. Did Lenin spurn a state-funded Rolls-Royce? No more than Soviet Russian bears started to use public conveniences.
Every emergency in the new polity would lead to a call for "action" from the intellectually-challenged. "Action" that is by someone other than, and at no direct or immediate expense to, themselves. So I fear that my imagined small state would, one way or another, grow.
My imagining of a better society therefore involves not just a more free, but a more moral, population. There's the rub. Almost any political fantasy works with better people. The real test of a political philosophy is that it works with defective human material.
It seems to me that the only sets of historical circumstances that have ever led to a free (or at least free-er) society have involved communities with solid shared values of self-reliance evolved into unchallenged custom (or enshrined in canonical founding documents drawn up in reaction to the overthrow – or as in the case of Magna Carta, putting back within his bounds – of a tyrant). Typically those values have also been protected by some supernatural authority (real or imagined) capable of largely suppressing base human urges. That sounds more like a Conservative than a Libertarian society, doesn't it?
What a pity Britain doesn't have a Conservative Party any more. Or a God. Discuss.








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