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Archive for the ‘Equality’ Category

While no libertarian, I do have a pretty strong indifference to other people’s lifestyles.  This is common among American conservatives.  In other words, I strongly believe in aloofness to private vice and idiosyncrasy so long as it is undertaken in a way that is respectful of the community.  This is what distinguishes the Old America’s kooks and crazies from the “counter cultural America” that emerged after the 1960s.   The old kooks wanted to be left alone; the new ones want to “raise our consciousness.”

In spite of its reputation for conformity, people had a wide range of religious, ideological, and lifestyle freedom before the Left set out to “shake up the world.”  Snake handling churches, hippy communes, and people’s private opinions didn’t concern older generations of Americans nearly so much as similar “infractions” bother liberals today.  For liberty-loving conservatives, the personal is not political and shouldn’t be. This is a core commitment of a free people, and it’s something that needs to find support not only in the laws but also in people’s private attitudes, judgements, and concerns. Ideas have consequences, as do sentiments and judgments.  It’s hard to say something is the apotheosis of evil, but also say it should be legal.  Older libertarians and conservatives knew that people’s attitudes, offensive art, and private behavior simply weren’t that evil and weren’t that harmful compared to legal intervention to stop the same.

This lack of respect for other people’s right to make odd or even offensive choices is why the civil libertarian aspects of regular liberalism have been swallowed up by the deeper liberal concern for equality, undermining traditional power structures, and avoiding hurt feelings among preferred victim groups.

So it’s kind of funny to me that the newest generation of libertarians, like cop-hater Radley Balko, spend so much sincere energy on whether things are offensive, racist, or outside the bounds of politically correctness.  Do you think someone like Radley or anyone over at Reason knows why John Randolph wrote, “I love liberty; I hate equality?”  Can you imagine Ron Paul or Murray Rothbard or any of the old guard giving a crap if some old-fashioned item might be considered “racist”? No, these folks didn’t make a point of self-congratulatory inquiry into whether some kitschy item in an airport gift shop is offensive

The natural constituency of restoring historical American liberties can be found among the productive classes, men that are aware that the past wasn’t so bad and that also have a commitment to pulling their own weight. Everyone from country mechanics to Henry Ford and Charles Koch fit under this umbrella.  But guys like this don’t give a crap about whether Aunt Jemima statues are offensive, and so long as libertarianism fights a two front war against socialism and conservatives–with especial venom for cultural conservatives–it will have an even smaller constituency and less influence than it already does.  The one glimmer of hope (other than the Goldwater campaign) was during the early 1990s when an alliance of libertarians and paleoconservatives punished George Bush for his various transgressions against conservatism and good sense.  Needless to say, we didn’t worry about the Willie Horton ad or “code language” about school bussing back then; we just wanted the government to stay out of our lives, and we didn’t mind if some people were attracted to this philosophy because they had strong feelings about the disastrous social engineering experiments they and their kids endured, like school bussing, affirmative action, Title IX, and a soft-on-crime justice system.

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One of the worst things about our era is that our universities, which are supposed to stand apart from the conformist pressures of a democratic society and pursue the truth boldly, are filled with politically correct followers, whose critical thinking skills are defective.  Most professors, pundits, and other opinion makers run away from the truth on the basis of the most sentimental myths about human beings. 

Brave New World Watch had a nice link to an old Willmore Kendall piece where he recognized this tendency 50 years ago:

We stand constantly in the presence these days of a mode of argument that runs as follows: Proposition X, or Propositions X and Y, or Propositions X, Y, and Z, if valid, would force certain conclusions that are intolerable. The propositions in question are, therefore, not valid. And the view of reality that has tended to make them seem plausible, or attractive, or unavoidable, must be a false view of reality. The task, therefore, becomes that of substituting for the false view of reality another view of reality which will yield up propositions whose validity we are entitled to take for granted because it does not lead to the conclusions declared intolerable. Nor do we require any criterion by which to evaluate this other view of reality than just that: we embrace it, and all the tacit premises and clear implications that go with it, because it assures us a means of escaping the intolerable.

This is another illustration of an important truth about beliefs:  ordinary people are more attached to their conclusions than their supposed first principles.  They will readily change the latter rather than risk the former.  But the politically correct conclusions of our age–denying the reality of IQ  or the tyrannical implications of Islam–are supported by the most transparent, results-oriented, and unconvicing apologies in the academy.  We do live in a decadent time.

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