Libertarian Badnarik an Election Spoiler? 351
Mr. Slippery writes "The New York Sun points out that Libertarian Party candidate Michael Badnarik could tip the balance in this year's presidental election, like Ralph Nader is accused of having done in 2000. Bush's policies may be driving some traditional conservative Republican voters into the Libertarian camp. Rasmussen polls have put him as high as 5% in New Mexico and 3% in Nevada, which could make a difference in which major party candidate takes those states."
So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:3, Insightful)
I for one don't care who runs, and how many people, I have looked at some of the other candidate, I even looked at http://www.peroutka2004.com/ [peroutka2004.com] I like his pro-life stance, but he fails to do separation of church and state, and as a devout Lutheran that scares me, so I can not vote for him, and leaves be back at the only other pro-life candidate Bush, unless any one can give me another one to look at.
* I put costs in quoats, because in a republic like we have a politician does not own another persons vote, the person gives a vote as a gift to a candidate. I will be giving mine to Bush, but Bush does not own it.
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
1) All the candidates are pro-choice
2) There are SIGNIFICANT other issues that counterbalance this.
3) Predicted results.
2 and 3 are a bit fuzzy. 3 is easier to explain: if one candidate is pro-life, but has a history of doing nothing to stop abortion, and the other candidate is pro-choice, and doesn't look likely to further the cause of abortion, it's effectively a non-issue. Many argue that Bush has not done enough aga
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
not saying John Kerry is better on any of these issues, but I don't understand how catholics can support Bush in light of this
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Also, the issues you brought up weren't non-negotiables like most of the core life issues (abortion, euthenasia, etc).
And please don't think I'm endorsing Bush. I'm not. I'm voting
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2, Insightful)
Secondly, (and I am saying this as an atheist), there is absoultely no conflict with believing in separation of church and state and voting according to your religious principles.
I am pro-life (somewhat), and an atheist (and a Libertarian). I see the fetus (though not until later stages of development) as a viable entity and as deserving of the same protections of Life, Liberty, and Property as anyone else.
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:4, Insightful)
Just because your religion says abortion is wrong doesn't mean that mine agrees with you. Hence the government should stay out of the way as it can often come down to a religious belief. I'm not saying that a politician can't or shouldn't allow thier religion to influence thier decisions or morality, but they have to keep in mind that not everyone shares thier religious beliefs. With that in mind they should do what is best for the majority, not just what is best in the eyes of thier church.
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
when life begins? (Score:2, Insightful)
And this makes that point in time completely dependent on constantly changing technology. Fifty years ago no one would have dreamed that we'd be saving babies born 20 weeks premature. What happens when we get to the point when babies can be grown in test tubes, no uterus needed? Does that change the definition of when life begins?
Conception is the only definitive time we can point to. Anything else is arbitrary. Morality and ethics should not shift with time, technology, or opinion polls.
Re:when life begins? (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:3, Insightful)
So no, that is not necessarily the crux of the issue.
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
I agree completely... how dare the government take away my right to punch you in the face! Stop trying to control what I do with my body, you damn gubmint bureaucrats!
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
I'm glad we agree.
My point was simply that the grandparent poster was incorrect: Many people believe that fetuses are alive and yet still oppose the illegalization of abortion.
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
2) No, she can't.
3) No, they aren't.
Glad I could clear up the confusion for you.
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
The majority has decided that murder infringes on anothers right to life, of course this leads right into your next point and I'm sure that's why you made it.
The moment the sperm meets ovum, it is a life, and a human life, and that life has all of the same rights as he/she will after birth nine months later. He/she has 46 chromosomes, distinct from either the mother and the father. He/she begins to
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
So what? A tapeworm can't survive outside of its host... is it alive? A fish can't survive out of water... is it alive? You can't survive outside of a breathable atmosphere... are you alive?
Also, is there conciousness at this point? Can you prove it?
Are you conscious? Can you prove it? You can't even prove you exist (to me).
The bottom line is this: we don't know when life begins... but we do know it happens sometime a
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
No it can't, and in some respects an unwanted fetus could even be likened to a parasite. It requires the mothers womb to survive and without the womb it dies. Of course part of development changes that so it can survive, and of course technology allows us to cheat nature and preserve "life" beyond a point that it might not have otherwise survived. Why should the decision be taken away from the "host" before that time?
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Since when is consciousness important in this regard? Individuals suffering various kinds of brain damage are no longer conscious, but justification for terminating their lives seem less compelling.
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
This is like the whole, prove God doesn't exist argument, it's bogus. Generally speaking, it is impossible to prove a negative, thus it generally falls for those on the positive side to provide proof. Granated, one can simply go on faith, but that is a poor way to convince people.
Nope. Err on the side of caution. Viobility does not life make. What if I was handicapped and could not survive without care from others. Would it be justifiable to kill me?
This is
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
First, I'm not voting for Bush, mostly for the reason you outline. I'm also not Voting for Kerry. There's other parties out there.
If it were to protect the LIFE of the mother with a high degree of medical certainty,
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Really? I guess you should tell that to the Atheist and Agnostic Pro-life League [godlessprolifers.org].
Though I am currently a Roman Catholic, I believed abortion was unilaterally wrong before I believed God existed, much less actually became Catholic. Abortion is an abomination that
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
I was of course referring to the various Christian denominations though it would be foolish to ignore Judaism as a prominant religion at the time. It certainly wasn't a large portion of the population but it was a portion.
And our founding fathers did not intend for us to be a Christian nation, but a Christian-influenced nation.
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
While what the founding fathers thought or did may not be relevant what they wrote in the constitution is. It's logical to take a look at American society and based on that note not everyone is Christian and changing the views of our government to reflect Christian ideals doesn't do anything to represent the peop
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
It's a matter of proving to everyone that a fertalized egg is indeed life. So far I've yet to hear a convincing argument for that. Arguments that technology can sustain
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
The real answer is yes- as long as they are tolerant of other religions. Prayer in school, if done proberly, can teach tolerance in the secular realm. Freedom of religion should not be construed to mean freedom FROM the religion of others.
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
In general I agree, but prayer in school will amount to cooersion. Try telling the one kid who is an athiest (or simply non-christian in certain areas) that he doesn't have to pray while all his peers pray, and see how many bruses he has the next day. I say this having
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
As others have said, before school, after school, and even on breaks is fine. If a student feels the need to pray, they can do so silently without taking up the time of others during educational instructional.
Also realize, not everybody prays the same way. Some are much more vocal than others, worship different gods, have different customs. Once you open the floodgates, how do you give all individua
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
Re:So what? Just one Republicans view. (Score:2)
No where would you ever get that idea? The constitution guarentees any natual born American citizenship and the constitution. This nothing but scare tactics.
my fear is that Peroutka may not understand this aka all regiogions are equaly protected, be it christians, muslumes, jews, athiasts, satinists, what ever.
And this fear is based on..
Badnarik not as big of a danger as Peroutka (Score:3, Insightful)
Depends which conservatives, ala Bob Barr (Score:4, Interesting)
Republican Bob Barr (of all people) just wrote this article [creativeloafing.com] here is the last couple of paragraphs :
"Bush's problem is that true conservatives remember their history. They recall that in recent years when the nation enjoyed the fruits of actual conservative fiscal and security policies, a Democrat occupied the White House and Congress was controlled by a Republican majority that actually fought for a substantive conservative agenda.
History's a troublesome thing for presidents. Even though most voters don't take much of a historical perspective into the voting booth with them, true conservatives do. Hmmm. Who's the Libertarian candidate again?"
If someone like bob barr endorses Badnarik, this could get REALLY interesting.
Re:Depends which conservatives, ala Bob Barr (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Depends which conservatives, ala Bob Barr (Score:2)
Re:Depends which conservatives, ala Bob Barr (Score:2)
Actually the ones leaving the party are the conservative ones.
The repubs are in no more danger that the DNC..
Re:Depends which conservatives, ala Bob Barr (Score:2)
Even though I am registered Libertarian, I think the only successful third-party will be a moderate, libertarian-minded splinter group from the GOP. You can already see it in motion: McCain, Schwarzenegger , Ron Paul. And was Ross Perot a Republican before he formed the Reform Party? These are GOP politicians are popular, but they don't toe the Bush/Cheney line. As a green-leaning libertarian, I would vote for such a party (though I am torn as to whether I would vote for the same candidates if they still ra
Let me reprhase that (Score:2)
Re:Let me reprhase that (Score:2)
What? Obviously the tooth fairy is the author of liberty, not God. I read it in a book.
Re:Badnarik not as big of a danger as Peroutka (Score:2)
Libertarians Draw from Democrats, too. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Libertarians Draw from Democrats, too. (Score:4, Interesting)
I tend to doubt this. Some erstwhile Republicans will stray to the Libertarian party on account of the unlibertarian social policies of the Republicans... but that is because there were libertarians in the Republican party to start with. There has never been a big libertarian presence in the Democratic party. Their entire philosophy of government is diametrically opposed to the libertarian vision. There are libertarians that might vote on occasion for Democrats on account of social issues but they are not part of the Democratic base being lost to the Libertarian candidate... they are swing voters that just don't swing this time.
I figure the "lost" Democratic votes are probably no more than 25% of the Libertarian vote, another full 50% is lost Republican votes, the remaining quarter would just stay home if there wasn't a Libertarian candidate.
Re:Libertarians Draw from Democrats, too. (Score:4, Interesting)
I think you've been reading too much propoganda
Most Democrats are strong believers in civil liberty-- you are free to do whatever you want, as long as you don't infringe upon the rights of others. Practically every democrat will agree with the philosophy presented at the top of lp.org [lp.org].
I think Democrats and Libertarians differ in the treatment of rights-- I belive that all people have an equal right to the basics -- food, shelter, health, happyness, love, others. A well-designed government can be used to promote equality for all people, but right now there are many problems getting in the way to achieve those goals.
Sadly, my experience with most people who call themselves "Libertarians" is that they care mostly about low taxes and want less government interference in their buisness affairs, and could care less if the government prevent homosexuals from marrying each other, or if a business business pays white workers more then black workers. I call these people "Business libertarians".
Re:Libertarians Draw from Democrats, too. (Score:5, Informative)
No... they are strong believers in SOME civil liberties almost exclusively limited to the area of sex at this point. You can do whatever you want as long as it's not smoking, owning a gun, saying something "insensitive", doing whatever you want with and on your own property, keeping your own income, associating, or NOT, with whomever you want for whatever reasons you want, taking risks with your health, educating your own children, etc. etc. etc.
A well-designed government can be used to promote equality for all people....
("business" libertarians) could care less if... a business pays white workers more then black workers
This is exactly the difference between libertarians and Democrats. That you use it as an example of something you think contradicts libertarianism shows your fundamental misunderstanding of what they believe. Libertarians place the highest value on liberty, Democrats place it on equality or perhaps "fairness". The two are NOT the same at all and are in fact VERY OFTEN in conflict. Your (sadly, not so) hypothetical is a perfect example of the difference. The arrangement between this employer and his black employees is one arrived at by the consent of both in liberty... A libertarian can think that employer a bad man, may personally shun him, may even organize a boycott of his business. A libertarian would likely think this man would eventually harm his own busines and be supplanted by another company that will properly values labor. A libertarian would point out that institutional racism ultimately REQUIRES government enforcement because of this truth. The one thing a libertarian would NOT do is advocate government action to FORCE that man to do something with his own money that he didn't want to do of his own free will.
Your example is at one extreme where even some libertarians today may see the case for government action. The problem with your argument is that Democrats see such justifiable violations of peoples liberty *everywhere*. Laws, upon laws, upon laws in almost every sphere of human activity, exercised by the most centralized government body available. Laws dictating when and where I can build a house, earn a living, employ other people, what I MUST pay for insurance against future calamity etc. etc. etc. All of them with excellent justification for why following them will make me and others happier, healthier, wiser... it's just that it's not my choice.
I belive that all people have an equal right to the basics -- food, shelter, health, happyness, love, others
The problem with these "rights" is that they are not rights I carry in myself but OBLIGATIONS that must be imposed upon someone else. I could argue that I have a RIGHT to grow, or earn my own food... but to have a RIGHT to food itself government must FORCE someone else to give it to me, same with shelter, health, love etc.
Let me point out that I am NOT a libertarian. I'm perfectly OK with and approve many of these laws and think that government has some broader responsibilities beyond what a true libertarian would agree with. I do however understand the philosophy and can see that you don't... that is why you think (wrongly) that there is a large body of libertarians within the Democratic party that may bolt to the Libertarian candidate. Unless of course you think there is a large body of Democrats that would find the logic above regarding racial hiring practices perfectly sound, I rather doubt it.
Re:Libertarians Draw from Democrats, too. (Score:3, Funny)
How are the Democrats going to implement this? Nookie Stamps? WhoreCorps? Hooker subsidies? Girlfriend quotas? More seriously, what do you think the government's should do to provide equality of love? Have social workers going around giving people hugs?
Re:Libertarians Draw from Democrats, too. (Score:3, Insightful)
Most yes, there are however a at least some pro-life libertarians [l4l.org], and the most prominent libertarian think tank is officially agnostic. The reason being that IF you accept that the unborn is a human life with rights then the laws against abortion are as legitimate as laws against any other form of homicide... this is a question that is beyond the ken of libertarian philosophy in and of itself.
Re:Libertarians Draw from Democrats, too. (Score:2)
I agree, in a different way (Score:3, Insightful)
Usually the Republicans win this judgment. They violate it in many ways (telling gays they can't marry, people they can't smoke pot even at home, protesters that they can't burn the flag, etc.), but their overall tendency has been to try
Re:Libertarians Draw from Democrats, too. (Score:2)
And I'm a slightly right leaning Libertarian. I guess together we prove the grandparent's point.
Re:Libertarians Draw from Democrats, too. (Score:2)
The real problem with the 3rd parties... (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't want to be associated with that, myself.
IMO, the only way a third party is really going to get launched is if a couple of high profile guys from the two major parties decide they've had enough and walk. I wouldn't waste a vote on Badnarik just to "send a message" (especially after being so forcefully reminded that there is a pretty big difference between the republicans and the dems), but I'd give serious consideration to a party running one of the men in Washington who I have real respect for.
Re:The real problem with the 3rd parties... (Score:2)
I think he hangs out not only at Americans For The Environment meetings, but also the ANSWER meetings, Socialist Republicans of America meetings, DEFCON, Grassroot Activists for Pat Robertson meetings, AFGNWOW (Americans for Getting Nuclear War Over With) gatherings, and Moontribe Pow-wows.
I also sat next to him at a wedding recently.
Scary.
A bit much to hope for? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:A bit much to hope for? (Score:2)
Not At All! (Re:A bit much to hope for?) (Score:3, Informative)
Who cares what the party label is on the candidate, if he actually represents your views? Ron Paul ran as the Libertarian candidate for President, but is in the US House as a Republican. His views haven't changed. He still is the most consistently sociall
Re:A bit much to hope for? (Score:2)
"If you were in prison and you had a 50% choice of lethal injection, a 45% chance of going to the electric chair and only a 5% chance of escape, are you likely to vote for lethal injection because that is your most likely outcome? If you continue to vote for the Democrats or the Republicans, you are committing political suicide!"
Fallacy (Score:2)
Maybe those people voting for a third party would like to make a point. Instead of voting for Bush or Kerry they still have the possiblity of not voting, which they'd even prefer to both.
Electoral College question (Score:2, Interesting)
How does this work with non-duopoly candidates? Do the Libertarian/Green/etc parties have their own set of electors too? What about "non-aligned" candidates like Nader, who claim no party affiliation at all? How would it work if by the grace of god one of them captures a state?
Re:Electoral College question (Score:2)
Re:Electoral College question (Score:2)
Can you hear me now? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:5, Insightful)
I tried to come up with something witty to respond to this, like saying Nader is a republican who is pro environment, but nothing is really that funny because the idea of Bush being is a democrat is just so absurd. If that were even slightly true this country wouldn't be anywhere near as polarized as it is now.
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:2)
Nonsense. You seem to think that we on the left like spending for its own sake, but that's a silly myth.
If there was a way to feed the hungry, cure the sick, and house the homeless and generally provide for a high standard of
living for all Americans for free, then we'd be first in line to flatten government spending. As of right now there isn't,
so we insist that the super-rich pay their fair share back into the system fro
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:2)
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:2)
Well, while I think progressive taxation is the way to go, it sounds like you're in favor of an income cap? Correct me if
I misunderstood you... I think that would be problematic in that it would quash any incentive for a person to be
productive once they hit the magic number.
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:2)
A near cap- I think 95% would do and they'd get to keep the additional 5%. In addtion to that, those who are truly productive past this point need help- need to hire additional people to help out with the productivity, and I'd also
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:2)
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:2)
Democrats - What ever the problem, more government is the solution.
Republicans - What ever the problem, more government is the solution, just not as much as Democrats.
Libertarians - What ever the problem, less government is the solution.
Yeah sure. (Score:2)
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:2)
In 2000, both Gore and Bush ran a fairly Centrist campaign. Bush did it slightly better. Gore's centrist movements lost him the Nader votes. Maybe if he had stayed closer to his true left, he would have lost the centrist vote, but picked up enough of the farther left vote to make up for that.
In a way, I was glad Democrats
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:2)
Re:Can you hear me now? (Score:3, Insightful)
- Libertarians are always up for a tax cut.
- Reduction of government programs is great, but Bush didn't do this. The size of the government drastically expanded under his watch.
- Microsoft suit being killed? Good. Prosecute them if they violated any contracts or entered into illegal contracts. If the suit is that they just were not nice to the competition and were giving out too much imbedded software, I
This reflects the east-west "Republican" dichotomy (Score:5, Interesting)
West of the Rockies, and in the mountain West in particular, the core political ideology of the region tends to revolve around a small-government, non-interference, live-and-let-live perspective -- real believers in rugged individualism. There are many historical reasons as to why this is that go back a century or two. While the people that live there are often conservative as individuals, they generally are not socially conservative in that they try and legislate the behaviors of society. A built-in distrust of government is stronger than their desire to control what other people do. East of the Rockies, big government social conservatism is deeply embedded in the culture.
Libertarians and similar have long held relatively strong positions in the mountain West due to the fact that Eastern conservatives often control conservative politics, primarily because of population differences. People like Bush reflect only the conservative issues that are unique to Eastern conservatives while not reflecting the issues shared by Eastern and Western conservatives. When more extreme examples of this come down the road in the Republican party, it tends to lead to defections to the Libertarian party out West. It is an old political and ideological tug-of-war.
In fact, if you look at the core philosophical components of Western conservatism, it is essentially libertarian. Which is why there are far fewer restrictions on what you can do and what you can own in the "conservative" mountain West than in "liberal" states, ironically. Nevada makes California look like a socially conservative police state by comparison if you actually compare laws, and they are next door.
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Re:MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Re:This reflects the east-west "Republican" dichot (Score:2)
Conversely, pack people looser and you're put more on your own - if you don't do it, there's nobody for more miles to help you. Self-sufficiency takes on a greater value.
The Irony (Score:4, Insightful)
So now what? Do I vote for Kerry? Well, that is no better. That leaves me with Badnarik.
What people don't realize, though, is that Badnarik will not cost Bush the election. Bush already lost my vote. My choice is only between Kerry and Badnarik. That is the irony of the whole thing. Do I vote for a liberal or a libertarian, even though I might lean conservative?
It is an odd election. That is for sure.
Re:The Irony (Score:2)
Huh? (Score:2, Insightful)
Spoilers... (Score:3, Insightful)
This just in: MICHAEL BADNARIK ARRESTED (Score:5, Informative)
Re:From libertarian to democrat. (Score:3, Informative)
I think people would be less likely to shoot at you if they thought you'd shoot back. If we got government regulation out of health care, it would cost a lot less, and with your saved tax dollars you could purchase more of it. If drug prohibition were ended, the druggies could afford their habbits and their rent just like the majority of nicotine and alchohol addicts... Why again