Six Degrees of Libertarian Separation

Submitted by LoganFerree on Tue, 2006-10-03 23:17.

Cross posted from my DailyKos diary.

1- The term "libertarian" dates to 1857, when anarcho-communist Joseph Dejacque used the term to describe his views.

2- In many non-English countries, like France, Italy, and Spain, the term libertarian is still a close synonym of anarchist.

3- But in America, libertarian is used as a synonym or replacement for "classical liberal."

4- Also in America, a school of thought called "anarcho-capitalism" was founded by Murray Rothbard as a synthesis of classical liberalism and the anarchist tradition native to America, individualist anarchism.

5- Individual anarchists at times argue that they are also heirs of classical liberalism, much like American libertarians. Many are heavily influenced by French anarchist Pierre-Joseph Proudhon, who first used the term "anarchist."

6- One of Proudhon's key opponents on the anarchist spectrum was Joseph Dejacque, who's anarcho-communism placed him in the opposing camp of social or collectivist anarchists.

Updated thoughts: I've been thinking a lot about the origins of "libertarianism" and how it plays into explaining to people what the ideology is all about. Here are some more thoughts and observations.

Joseph Dejacque originally used "libertarian" as a way to describe his political ideology without making a reference to "anarchism," which was banned at the time. His "libertarian socialism" was set out in contrast to the "state socialism" of Marx. Both were collectivist ideologies, they differed on their statism.

Anarchism in general could be defined as anti-state, as the opposite of statism. Dejacque's anarchism was collectivist and opposed by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon. His form of anarchism was more individualist and was the anti-state counterpart to classical liberalism.

What we now have is a new form of a political chart. It goes something like this:

Now where do we properly place libertarianism on this chart? Dejacque's original use implies that libertarianism is a synonym for anarchism. You also have the movement of the libertarian-left, which grew out of the anarcho-capitalism of Murray Rothbard. This would argue for placing libertarianism specifically within the individualist anarchism corner.

At the same time, I feel confident in saying that most libertarians in America are statist (they'd call themselves minarchists or supporters of limited government). If libertarianism is placed on the statist end of the spectrum, it is only logical that it is also individualist. If so, it argues that libertarianism is properly seen as the descendent of classical liberalism in the modern world. Which, after all, is the traditional view of libertarianism as provided by the Libertarian Party, the Cato Institute, and others. Even geolibertarians and Georgists would end up here.

Is the solution to use libertarianism as a synonym for individualism, and leave unanswered the question of the state? Or, the statist libertarians are ideologically wrong and libertarianism is a synonym for anarchism, with the question of collectivist or individualist unanswered? Finally, perhaps we define libertarianism as individual anarchism or individual statism? Thoughts?

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Statist semantics

#2375 On Wed, 2006 10 04 13:30 Robot.Economist said,

If I reject individualist anarchism, does that essentially make me a statist? There are many notional shades of gray between radical individualism and formal endorsement of state-centered politics. Rothbard's "anarcho-capitalism" and Proudhon's collectivist model (I always thought of it as "anarcho-anti-capitalism") are just two examples of the many alternatives to the state sovereignty model.

Although I find it difficult to characterize my politics, it might be best described as "corporate libertarianism." To me, the idea of citizenship should be returned to it original conception as a contract. I could be completely free, but since that imposes a fairly high amount of risk, I choose to participate in governments that mitigate some of that risk by proxy with my consent.

While the space within a government is static as long as I and my fellow citizens want it to be, the outside space is largely anarchical. In terms of policy in the semi-anarchy that is the international system, the government serves as a conduit for the mean opinions and desires of my fellow citizens and myself.

Most importantly, I don't see the notion of citizenship as a indelible part of my personal identity. Sure, now I'm an American because it maximizes my opportunities, but that is not permanent. After the passage of the Military Commissions Act, I will admit I started thinking about the value of American citizenship. If the U.S. starts turning into a corporatist or totalitarian state, I'm not above immigrating to another democracy (first stop: Australia).

More Libertarian Thoughts

#2380 On Wed, 2006 10 04 14:50 LoganFerree said,

Here's something I thought of last night after I posted this diary:

One does not have degrees of anarchism. Either you support the existence of the state or you do not. The modern liberarian, or minarchist, will go right up to the edge but stop short of anarchy. This in many ways mirrors the relationship between the authoritarian socialist and the totalitarian communist, the former may allow for some freedom from the state in a few areas. The question is if you can really define where libertarianism begins on the other side--when is government intervention too much?

If you oppose the existence of a state, period, I think you have to be called anarchist. And I can see the value of a term for someone who favors a very limited state, but still a state, and I can see how that is commonly called "libertarian." As I've often said, borrowing from bloggers like Brad Spangler, the extreme anarchist is the new red, the moderate libertarian the new pink.

"Thou Shalt" thoughts

#2386 On Thu, 2006 10 05 00:10 LoganFerree said,

I had another thought about the spectrum on which to place anarchism and libertarianism. We can view anarchist as the absolute zero, no state. Libertarianism is some degree of the state, primarily to protect the individual from others who wish to invade his or her rights-theft, murder, etc. etc.

As we add more and more state intervention, we get two forms of state intervention. On the one hand, you have the "Thou shalt not" commandments that prevent an individual from doing something that supposedly harms themselves, not others. Like drug use, or eating fatty foods. You also have the "Thou shalt do" commandments that force an individual to do something, like the draft.

I don't know if it's possible to really calculate the precise line of where libertarianism ends and something that we can generically call "statism" begins, but when you start shifting telling people what they have to do, or start people that they can't do things that would hurt no one but themselves, you've left libertarianism.

local governance as legitimate authority vs. the state

#3514 On Thu, 2007 03 29 10:42 BillG said,

Logan-

where would you put Nock who called himself and anarchist yet drew a distinction between the state and local governance as legitimate authority?

the state hands out privilege (law-based property) without any corresponding obligations to those being excluded to benefit class interest (landowners, bankers, capitalists, IP, etc.) which sanctify the plunder of the labor-based wealth of the excluded.

local governance as legitimate authority requires an obligation to those being excluded by privilege in order to uphold their absolute right of self-ownership.

in anarchy where all land is in private hands the landless will have a gun pointed at their head by private thugs to hand over the economic rent.

so FORCE can not be the issue!

the only issue is whether or not force is legitimate and just.

it is only legitimate and just to use force to protect the life, liberty and LABOR-based property of individuals.

requiring the sharing of economic rent in exchange for the privilege of exclusive use backed by force is just because it upholds the absolute right of self-ownership of those being excluded by the privilege.

it doesn't violate the absolute rights to self-ownership of the landowner because:

1. they don't produce the land via labor
2. they don't create the "unimproved" land value via their labor.
3. they don't pay to acquire land from the fruits of their labor because there is no purchase price to land.

where exactly is their absolute right of self-ownership being violated by being required to share the economic rent in exchange for the privilege of exclusive use of what starts out originally owned in common (land) as an INDIVIDUAL equal access opportunity right?

Local Governance

#3515 On Thu, 2007 03 29 11:08 LoganFerree said,

But it isn't true that local governance doesn't hand out privilege as well.

yes but legitimate authority?

#3519 On Thu, 2007 03 29 21:01 BillG said,

what makes local governance legitimate authority vs. the state is if the privileges that are handed out (we have to have exclusive use of land) have a corresponding OBLIGATION to those being excluded from what is rightfully their to occupy - the natural commons - in order to uphold their absolute right to the fruits of their labor and thus self-ownership itself.

bg

National Legitimacy

#3522 On Fri, 2007 03 30 00:53 LoganFerree said,

What prevents a national state from doing the same, privileges tied with obligations?

national vs. local...

#3528 On Fri, 2007 03 30 14:42 BillG said,

the obligation that is created for the privilege is administered at a local level because that is where the backing of the title by force is going to reside...the state national guard or the US military is not going to back your title.

my two cents

#2376 On Wed, 2006 10 04 14:09 b psycho said,

You got trackbacks blocked or somethin'? I had a response to this but I put it on my site cuz it ran long.

Trackback problems

#2379 On Wed, 2006 10 04 14:45 LoganFerree said,

I was getting some serious trackback spam that Drupal was unable to block, and to filter through it I have to delete each trackback individually, there's no way to "select all" to get through the hundreds of spam trackbacks I get. You have an interesting response, one I'm going to get to once I post some of my newer thoughts from today.

the view from the left...

#2382 On Wed, 2006 10 04 18:31 chooseliberty said,

The collectivist question should not be up for consideration under the tent of libertarianism. Collective action is perfectly acceptable, in a voluntary, non-coercive manner; but this is not collectivism. For the most part, Proudhon had it right. Collective ownership or collective decision-making is not the answer. As for the statist-individualist question, we need to determine whether we are discussing normative or descriptive theory. Normatively, the state is indefensible because it is (again) non-voluntary in nature. As Logan suggested, from a descriptive standpoint, one may choose to use the state because it is the appropriate decision at the time (given that the state already exists) and it is well within that person's rights to do so. Disclaimer: my points were borrowed heavily from Roderick Long since his views are very much in line with my own.

What Is Collectivism?

#2384 On Thu, 2006 10 05 00:04 LoganFerree said,

Anarcho-communism, anarcho-syndicalism, and the like, are they "collectivist" even though they are non-coercive and anarchist?

I think you're getting at that they are collectivist, even though non-coercive, but they aren't libertarian. Individualist ideologies, be they the anti-state anarchism or the statist classical liberalism, have the possibility of voluntary, non-coercive collective action, but they do not rest much of their ideology on such activities.

I'm viewing the statist-anarchist spectrum as a spectrum in which anarchist is absolute zero, while libertarianism is everything up to that absolute zero, with a fuzziness as to when it starts.

collective and in common are different...

#3529 On Fri, 2007 03 30 14:49 BillG said,

many people on the left and right mix this two up!

common ownership is an individual equal access opportunity right that does not require prior approval to access/use but only is conditional upon infringing upon any other indivdual's equal rights to the same...if the economic rent as an obligation in exchange for exclusive use is retained in common, then it has to be collected and distributed to the individual neighbors within a local community (directly and equally).

collective ownership is a group right (or joint) where one needs to get permission from all of the other joint owners (consensus) prior to access or use and when the authority is delegated to representatives (elected or otherwise) the right inevitably becomes unequal.

American Libertarianism

#2381 On Wed, 2006 10 04 14:51 LoganFerree said,

I have one more thought, specifically on the use of "libertarian" in American politics.

It seems to me that "libertarian" was selected in America to replace the term "classical liberal" because the Democratic Party was misappropriating liberalism, Hayek and the Austrians dislike the connotations held by conservatism in Europe, and "Old Whig" was just too cumbersome.

Agree or disagree?

Agree, definitely

#2383 On Wed, 2006 10 04 18:39 b psycho said,

If someone has reason to think that's wrong, I'd like to hear it. That sounds quite obvious to me.

The Obvious

#2385 On Thu, 2006 10 05 00:05 LoganFerree said,

Sometimes it helps to state the obvious so it is easier to understand why "libertarian" means what it does in today's American culture.

Need more info

#2391 On Thu, 2006 10 05 18:32 SfRaNkLiN said,

What did classical liberals feel was the best role for the military, proactive or defensive? Is there a classical liberal concensus on the question at all?

Is there a classical liberal position on antitrust law?

How about environmental law?

Without knowing better what you mean by "classical liberal," it is tough to say whether libertarianism is similar to it or not.

Defense politics

#2393 On Thu, 2006 10 05 20:04 Robot.Economist said,

Sfranklin - I think you are asking the wrong question about classical liberals and defense. The classical liberals among out founding fathers answered the military question when they gave the power to declare war explicitly to the legislature, not the executive - making the use of force a popular decision. I'm perfectly fine with the United States initiating war, as long as Congress is willing to make the call on when it starts and stops and Americans are willing to hold their legislators accountable. These two factors act as organizational bulwarts against the potential for wars of choice.

The problem is that the two factors listed above have almost completely broken down. Even though Congress effectively abdicated its role as war arbiter when it passed the War Powers Act, it still had tactic control over the use of force because it held DOD purse strings. During the Cold War, anti-communist rhetoric made it near impossible to oppose policies promulgated by the Defense Department because politicians learned how use that against one another for political gain. This constitutes a defacto hand-off of power to the executive and it is a really threat to the future of America.

Other than that, I would say a classic liberal is willing to accept limited regulation of markets and the commons, but generally only to prevent harm. I will leave it up to Logan to characterize this notion better, I'm just the foreign policy/defense guy.

Let me ask it a different way . . .

#2403 On Fri, 2006 10 06 05:23 SfRaNkLiN said,

What did / would John Locke have said about the taking of land from Native Americans in the United States?

What was the classical liberal position on what the Europeans did in Africa, militarily, in the 1800s?

I am not asking about the procedure or procedural safeguards, or the democracy aspects. Rather, I am asking whether classical liberals thought these kinds of military activities were just and otherwise cool. Maybe they simply had no opinion on that kind of thing, or no concensus. However, if there was a mainstream classical opinion on aggressive use of the military, then I am curious as to what it was.

Rohrabacher Founder of Libertarian Movement

#2401 On Thu, 2006 10 05 21:14 ericdondero said,

Dana Rohrabacher, now a Republican Congressman from California, is the official Founder of the Modern Libertarian Movement. From 1966 to 69 Rohrabacher was Chairman of the Young Americans for Freedom Libertarian Caucus. The libertarian movement and most especially the Libertarian Party, founded in 1971, evolved out of YAF.

Oddly, Dana Rohrabacher is rarely mentioned today as the official Founder.

www.mainstreamlibertarian.com

Rohrabacher is no exmplar

#2404 On Fri, 2006 10 06 08:13 Robot.Economist said,

First, I imagine Rohrabacher's erratic political behavior and flip-flopping on the Taliban in the 1990s is the reason why most libertarians keep their distance. He was incredibly naive to think that the muhjahdeen or the Taliban would continue to serve U.S. interests once they pushed the Soviets and the Afghan monarchy out.

Second, I dispute your claim that Rohrabacher is the founder of some notional "modern libertarian movement." He may have been involved in relative popularization of libertarian politics during the era of Goldwater's presidential campaign, but wasn't the birth of American libertarianism.

Where would politicians like Rohrabacher and Goldwater have been without Milton Friedman's Capitalism and Freedom? Heck, the entire Chicago school of libertarian economic thought had been churning for nearly 20 years before 1966.