Ron Paul: Anti-libertarian

In the United States we mis-use the word 'libertarian'. Some thoughts to share with your non-left libertarian friends about why Ron Paul is not a libertarian.

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

Liberty. Here is a word whose definition is paramount to human happiness. It seems we have come to a cultural consensus that whether you subscribe to socialism, anarchism, or the republican party, the word "liberty" is of special importance.

Defining such a word as is quite a bit harder, I like the later Wittgenstein belief that the meaning of words can be found in the way they are used. We look outside ourselves instead of in to understand a word's meaning. Ron' Paul's popularity is a case of misunderstood meaning.

Paul himself speaks with such gusto it becomes easy to forget how his actual policies, if brought to fruition, would create a society that in many ways is deeply totalitarian. After all, not all uses of the word liberty, nor users of it, are in service of and result in libertarian ends. For instance the sentence: The king has the liberty to rule over his subjects.

It is understandable that people are worried about things like SOPA and foreign wars. The encroachment of our civil rights by the government is something that takes constant vigilance to prevent. When Paul voices his objection to these things support for him makes more sense. One needs only to dig just a bit deeper to see that in many other ways, however, he is a staunch enemy of liberty. A value that Americans should and often do hold dear is a healthy distrust for government. It is, however, too simplistic for one to see the government as the only source of totalitarianism as well as seeing "government" as an island outside of influence.

The most totalitarian organization of the modern world is left absent from Paul's analysis, this Institution is the corporation. Paul wants to replace one Big Brother with his Bigger Brother who already calls the shots on the former. Let’s not forget that oppressive government measures like SOPA were encouraged by entertainment corporations. It is also understood within the Left in the United States that militarism and capitalism are tied, and it hardly needs reiterating here.

One place where totalitarianism is pervasive is the workplace. Ron Paul is against the institutions that protects the liberties and rights of workers everywhere: Unions. The absolute monarchy of employer over every aspect of employees life while at work is something Paul has no problem with.

All of this even before scratching the surface of something we have only hinted at thus far: liberty's relation to equality. Enlightenment Ideas of liberty developed from an upcoming mercantile class and their need to describe whose property was whose and who had the right to it. Since then the Idea of liberty has expanded and it was realized that a free society cannot be had if only some are free. What, in the French Revolution, was called liberty and fraternity can now be seen in Ron Paul's idea of liberty. His idea is on the basis of what he claims are individuals only, and not white People, or women, or African Americans, misses the very deeply ingrained oppressive mechanisms that go beyond capitalism, for example Cis gender privilege. This I think regardless of the new information about his ties to White Power groups makes Ron Paul anti-libertarian.

Occupy Wall st in New York was a pluralistic horizontal movement. Although you didn't see them much every once in a while you would run into a Ron Paul supporter during the days when there was a park. I only speak for myself on Occupy, in my personal point of view it was alright that they where there because Aesthetically there is an image portrayed (though, as I have laid out pretty clearly, not followed up by his real beliefs) of Paul which seems like he is against a common enemy. Within an open experiment like Occupy whose strength came from avoiding limiting narratives, different beliefs intersect and influence each other and this is a good thing.

Although Paul when you listen to him would blame government regulators and not the banks (and its true obviously the government played a role bailing banks out.) Paul misunderstood the root, but the Occupy movement didn't, simply by picking its target of Wall St. Occupy caught on because people around the world understood. Paul's target of "government regulators" would have never gained so much popular support because it is understood that Wall Street is at root, not regulators.

In John Dewey’s Freedom and Culture written in 1939. Dewey lays out the complex relationship that industrialism has helped develop between government, corporations, and Unions. He delves deep into how when considering liberty you must consider liberty in a mass society as of necessity related to collective organizations and human relations, on to considering all these complex more micro relationships. Freedom must exude in different ways culturally, politically, from within our social ties. At this point we are even farther advanced from the world painted by Dewey in 1939. Paul's analysis sets us back hundreds of years and it being draped over postmodernity leads, to deep oppressive and totalitarian overtones.

Comments

DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

Self evident to many US readers of this site. I think it will still be helpful for us.

DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

share with others!

Against Rich S…

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Against Rich S… on October 17, 2013

Perhaps I'm neurotic, but the odd grammar in this article is so distracting that I can't focus on what is actually being said in the article.

DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

fixed! sorry!

omen

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by omen on October 17, 2013

[deleted]

Entdinglichung

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Entdinglichung on October 17, 2013

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DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

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Ablokeimet

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by Ablokeimet on October 17, 2013

Dave H is correct. Ron Paul is no libertarian. And neither are any of the other so-called "libertarians" who describe themselves as "minimal statists".

These people want to confine the State's field of activity to its core armed power - police, military, courts & prisons. What they omit to mention is that their policies would result in the State hugely expanding the extent of its activity within that field. We can see this is true because the policies of the "libertarians" have already been put into practice.

On 11 September 1973, the Chilean military, under General Augusto Pinochet, staged a coup, overthrowing Latin America's longest established capitalist democracy. The President, Salvadore Allende, either was murdered or committed suicide in the course of the coup. After the coup, General Pinochet ruled with an iron fist, murdering tens of thousands and drowning the Chilean Left in blood. This much is well known.

What is not so well known, however, is Pinochet's economic policy. He invited a group of Chileans who had been studying at the University of Chicago under Milton Friedman to come back to Chile and run the economy for him. What followed was the largest and most comprehensive program of privatisation and economic deregulation the world had ever seen. The Chicago Boys created a free market paradise.

This created a situation about which the "libertarians" prefer not to talk. Not only was Pinochet's jackbooted military dictatorship compatible with the free market economic program, it was a prerequisite for them. The privatisation and deregulation could not have occurred under a capitalist democracy because the people of Chile most emphatically didn't want them. The price of a "free market" was a people in chains.

The fundamental intellectual error of the US "libertarians" is the identification of private property with individual liberty. Once you realise that private property has become a fetter on liberty, as opposed to the (already problematic) bulwark of it that it was in the days of the struggle against monarchical absolutism in the 17th Century, the spell of the US "libertarians" is broken. Fundamentally, Ron Paul wants Augusto Pinochet for US President. And that's something that should be more widely understood.

DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

Yes, I think I could have said that more explicitly, that private property is key. Thank you for posting

DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

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omen

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by omen on October 17, 2013

[deleted]

DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

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DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

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DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

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DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

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omen

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by omen on October 17, 2013

Dave, please just calm down for a moment. I mean that, no one here is attacking you.

You've informed me by private message that you have good reason to be upset by some of the comments above. My apologies for that. None of them by any of us were intended to upset you in any way.

I'm editing out the messages if that will help (but to others: they aren't in any way intended to make fun of the poster or the post, and I never considered they would be misinterpreted that way).

DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

Thank you sorry. I'm trying to figure out how to use the site properly. I don't mean to keep posting things. I'm not mad just not good at making the site work.

DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

Thank you sorry. I'm trying to figure out how to use the site properly. I don't mean to keep posting things. I'm not mad just not good at making the site work.

DaveH

11 years 2 months ago

In reply to by libcom.org

Submitted by DaveH on October 17, 2013

Thank you sorry. I'm trying to figure out how to use the site properly. I don't mean to keep posting things. I'm not mad just not good at making the site work.