≡ Menu

A good quote from me

from this Chronicles thread:

I agree that most people do not want liberty; that is why we do not have it. IMO those who think we can “win” the battle for liberty are just deluding themselves. Why libertarians, who denounce altruism etc., feel as if it’s some moral duty to go around wasting large parts of their life in some campaign for liberty is beyond me–it’s altruistic; it’s futile; it’s a waste of time, since one is at most barely increasing the odds, that we will temporarily and slightly increase liberty, the puny benefit of which falls primarily on those who do not deserve it.

I have spoken. So let it be written, so let it be done (affecting Yul Brenner Pharao pose)

Coda:

In the wake of some emails, let me add a few clarifying commments. I am not saying that it is a waste of time to try to work for liberty. To the contrary. I am saying that one would have to view it as a waste of time, if one really believed the costs of fighting the battle must be justified by the gains achieved–because one must delude oneself into making the equation balance. I just reject the equation. I help fight for liberty because it is the right thing to do. If I strutted around like some libertarians who claim that in their devotion to the struggle for liberty they are “making a difference”–certainly “more of a difference” than people like me who don’t write “influential books” or a daily op-ed column or give speeches to socialist legislators in Arabia–then if I were honest I would have to say, it’s really not worth it. If the justification for spending time and effort and money etc. to fight for liberty is whether or not we are “winning,” then the project is a failure, on those terms. As I noted above, the actions of most of us at most result in a slightly higher chance at barely, and temporarily, increasing liberty–or, more likely, slowing down the rate of increase in government growth–primarily for the benefit of the masses who at root are to blame for the problem in the first place. And honest analysis realizes this.

Freeing oneself from self-delusion is essential for self-honesty and integrity. It also frees one to take principled positions and to avoid making the dishonest and irritating mistake of judging the truth or value of a theory or view by its “strategical” significance.

I cannot count the number of times some irritating jerk libertarian says to me, in response to a theory or normative proposition, “but that is not going to persuade anyone.” They immediately assume that everything is to be judged by strategy, rhetoric, persuasiveness. I see nothing wrong with using such standards when appropriate. For example if I am proposing a method or argument to persuade people, then it is relevant whether the proposed argument or technique is persuasive. But when I assert to a fellow libertarian that we have a right to such and such, or that there is no right to xyz, for such and such reasons–it is just a non sequitur, a category mistake–and usually smarmy disingenuity, IMO–to say BUT that is not “going to persuade people.” Hey dumbass–I never said it was gonna persuade others. These type of libertarians are in my view basically moral skeptics, relativists, and/or utilitarians. They are incapable of discussing anything normative. Moral talk is simply not “useful.” What good, after all, does it to do identify moral truths, if it does not persuade others?

By this logic, there are no rights violations; there is only power. After all, even if libertarian rights could be proved by the Word of God delivered in an engraved envelope–still, an aggressor could disregard it. “Telling” him that he is violating your rights will “do no good.” Yes. So? And so? What is the point of this elementary school observation? This entire mindset is that of the self-proclaimed “pragmatist” who does not want to say there are no rights–after all, it might be “useful” if some people do believe in them–but he does not really believe in them. He, in engineer-like fashion, cares only about “practical” “results.” And I have no problem with this. But I would prefer they be honest. If I say, “there should be no murder,” don’t say “that’s not practical”; it’s not “impractical”; it’s a normative truth. To say the rule against murder is “impractical” is to fail to distinguish between ought and is.

Every 5-15 years you see some libertarians waxing about how we are winning the battle, or that we can win the battle, all we need to do is… As far back as the 1930s etc…. They have to delude themselves and engage in wishful thinking and rah-rah political rally self-delusion (“we can win! we can win the Presidency! This year we will get 100 million votes if we just get our message out there!!!”). They have to delude themselves because they have bought into the idea that the cost of the fight is a worthwhile “investment” in the struggle to “achieve” liberty. They must believe that worth it to fight for liberty, implying they think we have, or can, achieve suffiient “gains” to “outweigh” the “Costs”. This is naive and wide-eyed gullibility, wishful thinking.

Me–I say, be a libertarian activist if you want (of whatever stripe: more academic, like some of us; a blogger; a writer; join a local discussion group; run for office; donate your time or money to something; help promote economic education and literacy; whatever). I am, myself, to a degree. It’s okay to spend effort on a cause one is passionate about. I expend effort reading science fiction, and don’t seek to justify it w/ some made-up phantom tangible gains. Fight for liberty for its own sake. If you fight for it based on the gains, you will soon give up.

Share
{ 2 comments… add one }

Leave a Reply

© 2012-2024 StephanKinsella.com CC0 To the extent possible under law, Stephan Kinsella has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to material on this Site, unless indicated otherwise. In the event the CC0 license is unenforceable a  Creative Commons License Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License is hereby granted.

-- Copyright notice by Blog Copyright