Part 6 - Prof. Anderson on Liberalism vs. Libertarianism
CSUS Phil Club 2012From:Philosophy Club CSUSViews:0 0ratingsTime:16:33More inEducation
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Part 6 - Prof. Anderson on Liberalism vs. Libertarianism - Video
Part 6 - Prof. Anderson on Liberalism vs. Libertarianism
CSUS Phil Club 2012From:Philosophy Club CSUSViews:0 0ratingsTime:16:33More inEducation
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Part 6 - Prof. Anderson on Liberalism vs. Libertarianism - Video
Part 4 - Prof. Anderson on Liberalism vs. Libertarianism
CSUS Phil Club 2012From:Philosophy Club CSUSViews:0 0ratingsTime:16:32More inEducation
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Part 4 - Prof. Anderson on Liberalism vs. Libertarianism - Video
Peter Schiff, Austrian, Libertarianism, Right Wing, FOX Logic.
The insanity of Peter Schiff and his mindless SciffBots is unbelievable. Where is the $ Collapse, Bond implosion, Hyper Inflation, DOW 1000, Gold $10000, GM will fail, US will decouple from the rest of the World, Buy BRICs and sell US Stocks, Oil Exploding higher, Gold Miners will explode higher, China will sell the Dollar, FED is out of Bullets, Fiscal Cliff??? Where Petey? All just a bunch of fear mongering Bullshit!From:Minethis1Views:5 0ratingsTime:02:08More inComedy
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Peter Schiff, Austrian, Libertarianism, Right Wing, FOX Logic. - Video
If there is a legacy Connie Mack IV will be remembered for in the U.S. House of Representatives, it is his unabashed conservatism, with a splash of libertarianism, and his outspoken disdain for Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
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Do You Have a Duty to Vote?
Preliminary reports from the 2012 presidential election show that 57.5% of eligible voters in the United States turned out to vote, but what about the 42.5% that stayed home? Should they have voted? Is there a moral obligation to vote? Jason Brennan is Assistant Professor of Ethics, Economics, and Public Policy at Georgetown University. He is the author of Libertarianism: What Everyone Needs to Know (2012), The Ethics of Voting (2011), and A Brief History of Liberty (2010). Brennan also blogs at Bleeding Heart Libertarians (bleedingheartlibertarians.com). Produced by Evan Banks and Aaron Powell.From:LibertarianismDotOrgViews:377 17ratingsTime:02:34More inNews Politics
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Free Speach The Non Aggression Principle Voluntaryism Adam Kokesh
As seen on Adamvstheman. This took place on October 18th at the University of Alabama. The UA Young Americans for Liberty invited Adam to speak on campus. Good description of the non aggression principle and Voluntaryism. I am not associated with any of these people but they helped and are still helping me with forming my own opinions on voluntaryism and libertarianism. I hope you will take the time to look into this topic and formulate your own opinions. Lysander Spooner Stefan Molyneux Adam Kokesh Judge Andrew Napolitano Ron Paul http://www.voluntaryist.com http://www.adamvstheman.com Live and let Live.From:UsmcVetInKCViews:11 2ratingsTime:16:01More inNonprofits Activism
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Free Speach The Non Aggression Principle Voluntaryism Adam Kokesh - Video
After the Republican Party was denied its bid for the White House and lost two Senate seats to Democrats, Yahoo! asked voters what they'd like the GOP to focus on in the next two to four years. Here are one voter's thoughts.
COMMENTARY | Republicans used to be the party that freed the slaves. Now they sometimes wear the label of rich, out-of-touch, racist and sexist white guys. I believe the reason for this is because of where many of them stand on social issues. If they ever want to take back the White House or Senate, their top concern should be social transformation. Their secondary concern should be sticking to their economic values, while strategically proving why their economic stance is the best for America.
Republicans should be the party known for freedom and equality for everyone. Their stance on economic issues backs freedom. Because of their stance on social issues, however, Democrats have been able to connect those great economic values with homophobia, sexism, and even racism. If the Republican Party wants to get anywhere, it needs to become socially libertarian.
Second, Republicans need to prove their economic values are the ones that work best for America. They should not back down on their belief that low taxes for everyone, with fewer loopholes for the rich, is the best course to take. They may have to compromise, however.
Compromise may mean giving up on tax cuts for the rich. If Republicans must give in on some economic issues, they should at least make a point of saying that the compromise will not do anything to help our dire economic situation. If Americans want to climb out of their economic hole in two years, they will have the Republicans to which they can turn. Americans will only vote for Republicans, however, if they share the socially libertarian values of true freedom and equality for everyone.
-- Kristen Dyrr, 37, San Diego
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Republicans Must Focus on Social Libertarianism to Win Back Voters
Kokesh 1of4
Kokesh is externalizing at Tarpley here in these clips. Notice the duplicity that Tarpley uses to bring libertarianism into the NWO agenda and the reactions by kokesh. These people are disclosing the very agenda they argue against.These people which Ed has pointed out are descenters using polarized propaganda. See the truth exposed seriesFrom:nodemediocrecyViews:0 0ratingsTime:08:56More inNews Politics
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Robert Poole and Samuel Konkin: What is a Libertarian?
Robert Poole is one of the founders of the Reason Foundation (which publishes Reason magazine), and served as its president and CEO from 1978 to 2000. He is currently director of transportation policy at the Reason Foundation and frequently writes about issues related to privatization. Samuel Konkin authored and published several periodicals during his lifetime, including the New Libertarian Weekly (1975-1978) and the New Libertarian (1978-1990). He was a proponent of left-libertarianism and a political philosophy he developed called agorism. He passed away in 2004. In this video, Poole and Konkin engage in a spirited debate over what constitutes libertarian beliefs, how broadly libertarianism should be defined, and how best to apply the principles of libertarianism to make the world a freer, more prosperous place. Download the .mp3 version of this lecture here: bit.lyFrom:LibertarianismDotOrgViews:7 3ratingsTime:01:28:35More inNews Politics
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Robert Poole and Samuel Konkin: What is a Libertarian? - Video
Pro-Market Intervention vs. Free Market Volatility (Libertarian Dilemma)
In this video propose two choices, which I feel isn #39;t too far from many of the real choices we have in promoting Libertarianism. Choice 1) Be pure to principles and advocate pure free markets as soon as possible, but run the risk that market correction create a demand for more intervention than you started with. Choice 2) sacrifice a little liberty today to create enough stability to keep a pro-market sentiment in existence and avoid the totalitarian resentment that may arise from volatility from switch to a pure free market super fast. Support Alex Merced donate.alexmerced.com AlexMerced.com - LearnEconomicsNow.com - Libertarian101.comFrom:Alex MercedViews:1 0ratingsTime:08:48More inEducation
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Pro-Market Intervention vs. Free Market Volatility (Libertarian Dilemma) - Video
Puerto Rico Will Be The 51st State
While it may be inevitable, the path to get to statehood is being manipulated to force the citizens of Puerto Rico. It #39;s called Paternal Libertarianism AKA Nudging,From:agentj3000Views:0 0ratingsTime:08:27More inGaming
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Ron Paul, Rothbard and Race 1 of 2
The "Ron Paul Newsletters" controversy has revealed a little known conservative synthesis, "paleo-libertarianism." Paul Gottfried joins Richard to discuss the history of this coalition of writers and activists, which was quite willing to take seriously not only libertarian economics but race, immigration, and the National Question. 5:41 has a good discussion on Cato #39;s connexion to the NeoConservative movement. From Alternative Right Radio, 01 January 2012: http://www.alternativeright.comFrom:Khadija UmayyadViews:39 0ratingsTime:14:58More inNews Politics
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Ron Paul, Rothbard and Race 2 of 2
The "Ron Paul Newsletters" controversy has revealed a little known conservative synthesis, "paleo-libertarianism." Paul Gottfried joins Richard to discuss the history of this coalition of writers and activists, which was quite willing to take seriously not only libertarian economics but race, immigration, and the National Question. From Alternative Right Radio, 01 January 2012: http://www.alternativeright.comFrom:Khadija UmayyadViews:8 0ratingsTime:13:36More inNews Politics
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Libertarianism in Ancient China | by Murray N. Rothbard
Audio version of the Mises Daily article for December 23, 2009. Written by Murray N. Rothbard and read by Jeff Riggenbach. mises.org Link to the text version of this audio presentation mises.org Read Murray N. Rothbard #39;s complete book, "Economic Thought Before Adam Smith: An Austrian Perspective on the History of Economic Thought, Volume I" online: mises.org Audio book version: http://www.youtube.com DISCLAIMER: The Ludwig von Mises Institute has given permission under the Creative Commons license that this audio presentation can be publicly reposted as long as credit is given to the Mises Institute and other guidelines are followed. More info at: creativecommons.org This YouTube channel is in no way endorsed by or affiliated with the Ludwig von Mises Institute, any of its lecturers or staff members. * * * * * Murray N. Rothbard (1926-1995) was America #39;s greatest radical libertarian author -- writing authoritatively about ethics, philosophy, economics, American history, and the history of ideas. He presented the most fundamental challenge to the legitimacy of government, and he refined thinking about the self-ownership and non-coercion principles. Links to more online books and essays by Murray Rothbard: The Ethics of Liberty mises.org Audio book version: http://www.youtube.com For a New Liberty: The Libertarian Manifesto mises.org Audio book version: http://www.youtube.com Man, Economy, and State mises.org Audio book playlist: http://www.youtube.com The Case Against the Fed mises.org Audio book ...From:LibertyInOurTimeViews:109 0ratingsTime:17:05More inEducation
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Libertarianism in Ancient China | by Murray N. Rothbard - Video
Gary Johnson at the LAST third party debate on RT
http://www.garyjohnson2012.com Libertarianism = LIBERTY. Government out of your bedroom, healthcare, finances, and everyday life.From:issacharshowViews:4 1ratingsTime:08:17More inNews Politics
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During a week centered around the battle between Democrats and Republicans, students from all over the Southeast convened on UNCs campus Saturday to attend a conference on libertarianism.
The conference was one of 15 Students For Liberty Conferences held this fall around the nation.
It was the third conference held in North Carolina but the first at UNC.
More than 100 students came from Georgia, Tennessee, South Carolina and Virginia, as well as from around the state.
David Deerson, co-president of UNCs Young Americans for Liberty chapter, said those involved had two main goals.
The first one, he said, was to run a conference that is educational for students so that they have a greater understanding of liberty.
The second goal was to let students meet each other and network, Deerson said.
The conference consisted of a series of lectures on liberty and the role of government, and included speakers such as David Boaz, executive vice president of the Cato Institute, and Fred Smith, president and founder of the Competitive Enterprise Institute.
Mobin Koohestani, a freshman at Wake Forest University who works as a Students For Liberty campus coordinator, helped facilitate the event.
As campus coordinator, Koohestani is responsible for connecting various political groups on Wake Forests campus with Students For Liberty, a national organization.
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A certain line of thinking is all too prevalent among liberty-minded Americans. It runs as follows: "Candidate X may not be perfect, but he is better on domestic economic policy than candidate Y, and that is obviously what matters most for liberty." This way of thinking underlies "libertarian" endorsements of candidates such as Mitt Romney, and it implicitly throws the entire antiwar aspect of libertarianism under the bus.
This is in stark contrast to Ron Paul's way of thinking. Ron Paul may be in the Republican Party. But this by no means indicates that Paul himself would consider your average Republican to be better than your average Democrat in office. In fact, it is probably more likely that the prospect of the warmongering, imperialist neocons returning to full power is more frightening to Dr. Paul than the prospect of a Democratic domestic policy double-down.
Ron Paul, unlike some of his fans, never gave foreign policy a back seat to domestic economic policy: far from it. In his presidential campaign, he talked even more about ending the US empire than ending the Fed.
Moreover, Ron Paul wisely included foreign policy as an essential plank within his domestic economic policy, pointing out incessantly that the US empire is not only responsible for destruction abroad and insecurity at home, but it is also bankrupting and impoverishing us.
Foreign policy is an economic matter in another way as well. Foreign interventionists are essentially security-production socialists. For far too many conservatives, the same federal government that is too inept and corrupt to run a television station is somehow miraculously competent and virtuous enough to make the whole world a safer place through centrally planned invasions, occupations, sanctions, regime changes, and CIA ops.
Some may concede this point but argue that the danger of a new "New Deal" is more acute than that of a neocon renascence. But that is far from obvious, and is in fact rather dubious. What can be more acutely dangerous than an even more belligerent foreign policy that is more likely to lead to nuclear blowback?
When Murray Rothbard explained why he had rooted for (which is fundamentally different from endorsing) Lyndon Johnson over the allegedly "pro-liberty" candidate Barry Goldwater, he pointed out that Goldwater's advisers were crazy and wanted to "nuke Russia." Rothbard rightly said that problems like price controls "fade away" in significance in the face of prospects of nuclear conflict. There isn't much to price in a nuclear wasteland.
Rothbard, like Ron Paul, placed foreign policy center stage. Just as Ludwig von Mises was the Last Knight of Liberalism, Murray N. Rothbard was the Last Knight of the Old Right. As Mises was a laissez-faire Leonidas surrounded by socialists and money cranks, Rothbard was an antiwar Roland, fighting bravely and almost alone in the rear guard of the Old Right against the Cold Warriors of the New.
Rothbard spent much of the 50s writing an epochal economics treatise that made plain the case for the free market. However, by 1959, he was more concerned with matters of war and peace than with domestic economic policy. In that year, he wrote, "I am getting more and more convinced that the war-peace question is the key to the whole libertarian business," and that, in the face of an American arms budget exceeding $40 billion, "the fact that we might spend a few billion less on public housing or on farm support no longer thrills me."
Neither should the prospect of a "pro-business" candidate tinkering around the edges of the American welfare state (and probably actually expanding it) thrill, or even appease, libertarians in the face of American military spending which, in 2011, exceeded $700 billion.
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THE CORRECT VIEWS HIT SHARE! I AM SPEAKING AT CONESTOGA NOV 19
Greetings Unsettled Souls, I am going to be speaking at The Conestoga Room on Nov 19th 2012 from 2pm to 3pm on "Libertarianism" during the money mob. PLEASE come and support The Conestoga, Revolution Radio, and some good ideas that need to be heard. TELL EVERYONE TO COME SamFrom:TheCorrectViewsViews:6 3ratingsTime:01:15More inNews Politics
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THE CORRECT VIEWS HIT SHARE! I AM SPEAKING AT CONESTOGA NOV 19 - Video
American History with George H. Smith, Part One
Libertarianism.org is proud to present George H. Smith #39;s lecture series on American history, given at Dartmouth College in 1983 at one of the first Cato Summer Seminars. Smith provides an intellectual history of the founding and development of the United States from the Declaration of Independence to the Progressive Era. In the first part of this series, Smith revisits the American Revolution, from the Declaration of Independence and Lexington and Concord to the Battle of Yorktown. George H. Smith was formerly Senior Research Fellow for the Institute for Humane Studies and Executive Editor of Knowledge Products. Smith #39;s fourth book, The System of Liberty, is forthcoming from Cambridge University Press. Download the .mp3 version of this lecture here: bit.lyFrom:LibertarianismDotOrgViews:2 6ratingsTime:01:28:17More inNews Politics
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American History with George H. Smith, Part Three
Libertarianism.org is proud to present George H. Smith #39;s lecture series on American history, given at Dartmouth College in 1983 at one of the first Cato Summer Seminars. Smith provides an intellectual history of the founding and development of the United States from the Declaration of Independence to the Progressive Era. In the third and final part of this series, Smith lectures on the period of American history from the beginning of the Civil War to the beginning of what #39;s commonly known as the #39;Progressive Era #39; in the early 1900s. George H. Smith was formerly Senior Research Fellow for the Institute for Humane Studies and Executive Editor of Knowledge Products. Smith #39;s fourth book, The System of Liberty, is forthcoming from Cambridge University Press. Download the .mp3 version of this lecture here: bit.lyFrom:LibertarianismDotOrgViews:1 1ratingsTime:01:31:16More inNews Politics
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