Libertarian joins 2nd District race

Hoping to reverse the growth of government and protect personal freedoms, Libertarian Jeff Petermann, of Elkhart, has joined the race for Congress in the 2nd District.

A former Republican who left the party because of what he saw as a slow turn away from conservative principles, Petermann hopes to serve as an alternative to the major party candidates in the race incumbent Republican Jackie Walorski and Democrat Joe Bock.

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Libertarian joins 2nd District race

Libertarian gubernatorial candidate to make campaign stop in Marshall

Kathie Glass, Libertarian candidate for governor, will visit with constituents Thursday during a campaign trip to Marshall.

The reception, hosted by the Libertarian Party of Harrison County, will begin at 9 a.m. at Central Perks Coffee House in the Weisman Center, 211 N. Washington Ave.

The Libertarian Party of Harrison County is excited that Kathie Glass is starting her campaign tour in East Texas, and actually including a stop in Marshall to meet residents of Harrison County, said Michele Swint, chair of the local political party. We couldn't be happier to host this event for our gubernatorial candidate.

We encourage all interested constituents that love liberty, Texas and the Constitution to join us, Swint said. Kathie will share her plans to resist federal tyranny and the over-reaching government.

She said the public is invited to meet the candidate, ask questions and hear her solutions for issues challenging Texas.

This is Harrison County's opportunity to be heard and ask questions about issues important to us, said Swint.

According to her biography, Glass, a Georgia native, is a patriot, wife, mother, lawyer and business owner. She was the first person in her family to go to college and worked her way through college and law school.

The candidate moved to Texas in July 1977, and has been a proud Texan ever since.

Kathie practiced as a highly successful civil trial lawyer in Houston for over 30 years, trying many cases and never losing a jury trial, her bio reads.

During her career, she worked in various firms, including her own in which she employed as many as 20.

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Libertarian gubernatorial candidate to make campaign stop in Marshall

Libertarian Umbehr files for Kansas governor

TOPEKA Libertarian Keen Umbehr put his name on the November ballot for Kansas governor on Tuesday, declaring that residents want a government that is fair for all people all the time.

The 55-year-old Alma attorney filed the paperwork and paid a $500 fee at the secretary of state's office. Umbehr said taxes and protecting the civil liberties of all residents, not just special interests, would be themes during the race.

"Kansas is fair. People are looking at Kansas to see what we do," Umbehr said.

Umbehr says taxes and civil liberties are first on his agenda. His running mate is his son, Dr. Josh Umbehr, a Wichita physician. He said if elected he would seek to eliminate the state income and sales taxes and replace them with a 5.7 percent tax on consumption of goods and services. Umbehr said the cuts that eliminated income taxes for certain classes of businesses, including his own, in 2012 were unfair.

"They did it for 191,000, they can do it for the other 1.3 million wage earners," he said.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback and his running mate, Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer, filed last week for their bid for a second term. Democrat Paul Davis, the current House minority leader, is running for governor with Jill Docking as his running mate, but they have yet to officially file. The filing deadline is June 2. No other Democrats have entered the race.

Umbehr said the goal wasn't just to get 5 percent of the vote, which would elevate Libertarians to major party status in Kansas. He thinks a Libertarian could get 35 percent in a three-way race with Brownback and Davis.

"It does change the calculus, and that's a good thing," he said.

Bob Beatty, a Washburn University political scientist who has studied Kansas governors, said Umbehr could be a factor in November, especially in a tight race between Brownback and Davis.

"This year the Libertarian candidate is the wild card," Beatty said. "Is it a close race? It's sort of a phantom election right now because there isn't any real contentious campaigning going on."

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Libertarian Umbehr files for Kansas governor

Libertarian to file for Kansas governor

Stay up-to-date with KAKE News:

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) Libertarian Keen Umbehr has put his name on the November Kansas ballot for governor, saying residents want a government that is fair for all people all the time.

The 55-year-old Alma attorney filed the paperwork and paid a fee Tuesday to make his bid official.

Umbehr says taxes and civil liberties are first on his agenda. His running mate is his son, Dr. Josh Umbehr, a Wichita physician.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback and his running mate, Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer, filed last week for their bid for a second term.

Democrat Paul Davis, the current House minority leader, is running for governor with Jill Docking as his running mate, but they have yet to file. The filing deadline is June 2. No other Democrats have entered the race.

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Libertarian Keen Umbehr is preparing to file the paperwork and pay the fee to enter this year's race for Kansas governor.

The Kansas Libertarian Party nominated Umbehr, a lawyer from Alma, during its April convention. His campaign said Umbehr would file for governor Tuesday at the secretary of state's office in Topeka.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback and his running mate, Lt. Gov. Jeff Colyer, filed last week for their bid for a second term.

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Libertarian to file for Kansas governor

Ben Swann Radio Show w/ Florida Libertarian Candidate Adrian Wyllie and John Ramsey – Video


Ben Swann Radio Show w/ Florida Libertarian Candidate Adrian Wyllie and John Ramsey
Ben talks with Adrian Wyllie, the Libertarian candidate for Florida Governor about being arrested over the weekend for driving without a license. Second hour...

By: Ben Swann

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Ben Swann Radio Show w/ Florida Libertarian Candidate Adrian Wyllie and John Ramsey - Video

Libertarians reality problem: How an estrangement from history yields abject failure

It has long been customary to divide the Republican Party into three camps: big business or Wall Street Republicans, the religious right and neoconservatives or national security Republicans. The third group, it must be admitted, somewhat unsteadily combines neoconservatives proper (such as William Kristol) with old-fashioned defense hawks (such as Donald Rumsfeld), but perhaps this is the Republican big tent we keep hearing about.

In any case, this neat three-part logic was roiled by two events in 2008: the Great Recession and the election of Barack Obama as president. The latters decision to respond to the crisis with a fairly traditional mix of demand-side remedies some tax cuts, some increased spending ignited a fire storm on the right. CNBCs Rick Santelli is often fingered as the principal arsonist. On Feb. 19, 2009, outraged by Obamas plan to assist homeowners caught up in the collapse of the housing market,Santelliwent on air to unburden himself of the following ideas:

The spark had been struck; the Tea Party roared to life. Five years later it has remade American politics, largely through its impact on the GOP. Profoundly alienated from the modern American state, which it regards as a bureaucratic embodiment of foreign social-democratic ideals, intensely ideological, intransigent and scornful of compromise, the Tea Party has used its electoral success in the South and Midwest and its power in primaries and caucuses to impose sharp limits on the policy options available to GOP politicians. Rick Santellis wildfire consumed immigration reform and an extension of unemployment benefits; it flared into a government shutdown and crept perilously close to two debt defaults.

One consequence of the Tea Party ascendancy has been a new prominence for the term libertarian. In many ways this is unfortunate. There is reason to believe that any connections between libertarianism and the Tea Party are tenuous at best. A recentstudyfound that 60 percent of libertarians do not identify with the Tea Party, while only 26 percent of Tea Party supporters think of themselves as libertarians. (Fully twice as many affiliate with the religious right.) Still, animpressionpersists that the Republican Party is increasingly animated by the spirit of John Galt. I think there are mainly four reasons for this.

The first is that some conservative activists, quick to sense the electoral (and financial) potential of the Tea Party, moved quickly to associate its concerns with their own, often quite different, agendas. (The absurdist theater that swirled around DickArmeysdeparture from FreedomWorks is apposite here.)

A second more important source of confusion is that libertarian, as a rubric, offers Republicans certain rhetorical advantages. It suggests theyreforsomething and not just against the Democrats, and that this something is related to liberty. (And it performs this latter function while avoiding the hated epithet liberal.) It also serves an irenic purpose insofar as it gestures at common ground for Tea Partyers, the religious right generally, and Wall Streeters. If these factions can agree on anything, its that they want less government meaning lessliberalgovernment and this is easily elided into the claim that they want more liberty. As long as no one inspects the logic too closely, this Were all libertarians now line can seem helpfully plausible. Which brings us to the fourth reason, a national media always ready to exploit the helpfully plausible in its constant search for the appealingly (or is it appallingly?) simple.

So one increasingly hears certain prominent Republicans referred to as libertarians or as members of the partys libertarian wing.Ted CruzandPaul Ryanhave been identified as such at one time or another, as have (with slightly more reason) bothPauls, Ron and Rand. This, again, is a mistake. As Ive arguedelsewhere,no important Republican politician is a libertarian. Still, perceptions are important in politics, and there is certainly no doubt that real libertarians belong noisily, busily belong to the Republican coalition.

Given this, all of us have an interest in understanding the nature of libertarian thought, and in knowing whether it forms the basis of a workable politics. Michael Lind has written brilliantly about these issues (here,for example) in the context of practical politics. I want to take them up in a more theoretical light. I will focus on the central concept of libertarian thought the idea of personal freedom and argue that it cannot be coherently explained on libertarian grounds. I will also argue that a libertarian society, if fully realized, would be actively hostile to the development of free selves. Libertarianism, in other words, cannot give a persuasive account of its own core concept. Its as close to self-refuting as a political theory can be.

* * *

Some criticisms of libertarian thought are unwarranted. For example, it issometimesalleged that libertarians lack concern for others, or are motivated only by greed, or embrace a crass, materialistic ethic. Libertarians think such charges are based on a simple confusion. Their intent is to advocate for liberty, they say; what free people choose to do with their liberty is an entirely separate matter. I think this reply is conclusive if it is meant to rebut the claim that libertarians, because they value freedom, must also value the content of every free choice. (In other contexts, as I will argue below, it is much less conclusive.) That claim really is a confusion. I do not have to approve of pornography simply because I endorse the First Amendment. Similarly, I do not have to approve of choices to be selfish or shallow because I favor economic and political liberty. Liberals, who are often on the receiving end of this kind of attack from conservative critics, should think twice before directing it at libertarians.

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Libertarians reality problem: How an estrangement from history yields abject failure

‘Capitalism’, ‘Crony Capitalism’, and Advice For Market Libertarians – Video


#39;Capitalism #39;, #39;Crony Capitalism #39;, and Advice For Market Libertarians
Higher rates of psychopathy in high-level corporate executives http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20422644 Power robs the brain of empathy http://www.digital...

By: Libertarian Socialist Rants

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'Capitalism', 'Crony Capitalism', and Advice For Market Libertarians - Video

The Average Liberator #110 Robert Burke, Libertarian Candidate for Governor of WI – Video


The Average Liberator #110 Robert Burke, Libertarian Candidate for Governor of WI
Tonight #39;s guest is Robert Burke, Libertarian candidate for Governor in WI! We will be talking cannabis legalization in WI, climate change, the war on drugs, the Federal Reserve system and...

By: The Average Liberator

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The Average Liberator #110 Robert Burke, Libertarian Candidate for Governor of WI - Video

Florida Libertarians rally in Tampa, stress common beliefs

TAMPA About 80 delegates from some 50 counties, plus candidates, supporters and others, showed up for the Libertarian Partys state convention in Tampa on Saturday to hear the message that Libertarians are the states largest and fastest-growing non-establishment political party.

Dana Cummings of Valrico, state Libertarian chairman, estimated the party has grown some 25 percent since 2012, when it had about 20,000 registered voters. The region including Hillsborough, Hernando, Pinellas and Pasco counties has the states biggest concentration of Libertarians, she said.

In a news conference, half a dozen Libertarian candidates one each for governor and attorney general and two each for congressional and state House seats espoused a message of drastically smaller government and more individual liberty.

They sharply distinguished themselves from the two major parties, saying theres no meaningful difference between Republicans and Democrats.

Voters are increasingly aware of Libertarianism and no longer consider them merely a Republican who wants to smoke pot, said Adrian Wyllie of Palm Harbor, the partys candidate for governor.

Lucas Overby, possibly the Tampa Bay areas best-known Libertarian since he ran in the Pinellas County special congressional election in March, said its particularly wrong to compare Libertarians with Republicans.

Overby is running again. He said he votes more often for Democrats than Republicans, and believes he took more support away from Democrat Alex Sink in the March election than from Republican David Jolly. This time, with no Democratic candidate in the race, he said hes hoping for and getting some Democratic support.

I have never found an area where a Republican candidate actually represented any of my views, said Overby, who described himself as strongly pro-choice and pro-gay rights and in favor of social justice.

The economic concept of smaller government is a cute talking point, but when you never, ever implement it, I cant support that, he said of Republicans.

The issue stances of the candidates suggest they have beliefs in common with various parts of the political spectrum.

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Florida Libertarians rally in Tampa, stress common beliefs