Libertarian Candidate Michael Badnarik Interview 188
Lowtekium writes "On November 2nd many young adult Americans will go to the polls to vote for their next President, but very few of them know of the Libertarian Presidential Candidate, Michael Badnarik. JIVE Magazine had the chance to interview Mr. Badnarik. He gives his thoughts on various topics that affect young adults such educational aid and funding for college students, video game violence, and even music and entertainment censorship."
Did he get the memo? (Score:4, Insightful)
Neither the Republicans nor the Democrats will bring back the draft. In fact, that bill was killed weeks ago. The Republicans from the Prez on down have said there will be no draft, and even though the Democrats sponsored the draft bill in the House, they weren't really serious about it - it was just used as a scare tactic / wedge issue.
So either Badnarick is either ignorant, or just thinks young people are so stupid that you can just scare them into voting for you. MTV does the same thing with Rock the Vote. Check it out - as we've seen before, neither party is bringing back the draft but MTV still hosts this page [rockthevote.com].
Perhaps if Badnarick starts treating the "Dot Net" age group like the intelligent, informed people that we are instead of all the MTV-esque scare-mongering, maybe we might vote for him.
Re:Did he get the memo? (Score:3, Insightful)
Watch for something to happen to "justify" it! (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course they're going to say there will be no draft (how would they get elected otherwise), but as you admit yourself, it MIGHT be necessary in the future. There is CURRENTLY a sort of "backdoor" draft going on (RETIRED RESERVISTS being called into active duty), and if we continue the so-called War on Terror, there WILL be a need for more warm bodies.
I will make a bold prediction
Re:Watch for something to happen to "justify" it! (Score:2)
Baloney. Nobody is being called up out of "retirement" -- they all still have time left in their commitment, even after their first tour of duty.
Most of the people being re-called up have special skillsets, or are otherwise experienced. If we need more lower-skilled grunts, there still is about 300,000+ reservists we haven't called up yet.
So we have no need for draftees (whom are invariably totally
Re:Did he get the memo? (Score:2)
Re:Did he get the memo? (Score:3, Interesting)
HR163 was a clay pidgeon. The only reason it was sent up was so it could be shot down, and give everybody an election-year warm fuzzy. Next year (after the election) is a whole new ball game. So a condescending manipulative lie is in the eye of the beholder.
That said, nobody in the military wants the draft either. The reason that the all-volunteer armed forces are the most effective in the world is that every member joined up know
Re:Did he get the memo? (Score:5, Insightful)
Or the interview was done while the bill was still alive.
The Democrats and Republicans constantly say one thing and do another. The draft died this time. After the election the political pressures will be different.
Re:Did he get the memo? (Score:2)
*Financing reelection
*Running for reelection.
Do you think the House wants a housecleaning?
Why reestablish the draft boards then? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Why reestablish the draft boards then? (Score:2)
It seems to be a rather objective resource. It basically says, there might be one, but don't buy into any fear-mongering.
I'll tell you why (Score:2)
Re:Did he get the memo? (Score:2)
Agreed. The public wouldn't stand for it. Maybe for a war with really broad popular support, but not for a war like Iraq where the rationale is unclear and evolves constantly (WMD, terrorist ties, Saddam was a bad guy... etc. etc.) and not for a bogged-down guerilla war with no clear end in sight.
There's also the problem of who to draft. Focusing unfairly on minorities might meet more resistance t
Legal? (Score:3, Insightful)
Earlier today, Libertarians attempted to serve these same papers at the Washington, D.C. headquarters of the CPD - but were stopped from approaching the CPD office by security guards.
Though I understand that it's suppose to be civil disobeadence, I'm not sure how they can Legeally be stoped from serving papers. I guess the idea is that they were trying to do it during the debate itself for the most coverage, but what am I missing here?
Re:Legal? (Score:3, Interesting)
They were served in DC, and there was a hearing about the injunction. The judge denied it, saying that the LP didn't provide enough time, but that they could continue the suit to seek damages. The fact that the injunction was filed for the DAY AFTER the debate at
Re:Legal? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why are the presidential debates ran by a private company? How could they republicans and democrats put up with that? Because they own it jointly.
Draft? That was killed years ago (Score:2)
This bill was killed weeks ago. I think that only 1 representative voted for it. Even the sponsor (Rangel) voted against it.
There were some other interesting comments in the article about staffing up Selective Service, and the "back-door" draft of not letting people leave the military.
Re:Draft? That was killed years ago (Score:2)
Also, what politician is going to support something unpopular right before an election.
Re:Draft? That was killed years ago (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Draft? That was killed years ago (Score:2, Insightful)
I thought it was mandatory civil service for all Americans regardless of if we were at war. This doesn't necessarily mean joining the army. The official title of the bill was:
"To provide for the common defense by requiring that all young persons in the United States, including women, perform a period of military service or a period of civilian service in furtherance of the national defense and homeland security, and for other purposes."
Re:Draft? That was killed years ago (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Word up (Score:2)
See, that's where this reasoning falls down for me- I don't think they'll EQUALLY suck. I think Kerry's obvious INTELLIGENCE and flip flopping HYPOCRISY means more government gridlock and fewer stupid stuff sneaking by. Which ends up a net plus for America.
Having said that- if you're not in a swing state, if EITHER Bush or Kerry is leading your state by more than 10%, we need you
Re:Word up (Score:3, Interesting)
Badnarik it is (Nader isn't on in Ohio and Cobb is an asshat).
Re:Word up (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Word up (Score:2)
"That government which governs best, governs least" -- Thomas Jefferson.
Re:Word up (Score:2)
I had a long response and decided to drop it.
Fans and foes of President G.W. Bush alike see stark differences in forign policy as well as many domestic issues between Predident G.W. Bush and his father President Bush let alone G.W. and Kerry.
Compare how President Bush I handled war with Iraq vs. President Bush II. I'm surprised they are related!
Voting for third parties in prez race is lose/lose (Score:2)
If nothing else, Kerry believes in making decisions based on discernable reality, and Bush believes that we are an empire that can create its own reality, because we're armed to the teeth and on a mission from God. That difference alone i
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Voting for third parties in prez race is lose/l (Score:2)
No, I'm basing my opinion on my observations of their behavior.
Kerry is cutting an electable middle ground in his rhetoric -- that is what politicians do. But based on how he has voted in the past, and what he has said when he wasn't under the limelight, I honestly believe that, had he been president for the last four years:
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Voting for third parties in prez race is lose/l (Score:2)
In that respect, then, you are like him: facts don't affect your beliefs. Fair enough. I think you should read the article before you dismiss it.
It amazes me how much everyone rationalizes the rampant corruption and lack of integrity of those they support just because it is so important to beat the "other guy".
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Make... (Score:2)
Get the man a real chair. (Score:2)
Anyway, I think he presented himself better in the
And if there was ever a massive sea change in American politics that made the Libertarian Party suddenly have a viable shot at the presidency, Badnarik is the Libertarian that I would want. Not because I like or dislike Libertarian
Re:Get the man a real chair. (Score:2)
"I get to do whatever the fuck I want and you don't get to say anything about it. Oh, except if someone threatens me. Then you have to defend me to death."
On a related note, I propose that we allow anyone to own whatever weaponry they please. To compensate, they will be completely excluded from police and military protection.
Re:Get the man a real chair. (Score:2)
The world doesn't work that way, unfortunately. You can't remove youself from society. Exactly how do you remove police/military protection anyway? Even if someone never cals the police, they still deter crime against him by arresting criminals. The fact the US has a military stops anyone from invading him. The libertarian idea of independance doesn't exist, in truth it never has.
Re:Get the man a real chair. (Score:2)
If someone breaks in your house, kidnaps your kid, etc., you're on your own.
If you try to rob someone, the police will protect that person.
Re:Get the man a real chair. (Score:2)
Re:Get the man a real chair. (Score:2)
Arrr.... (Score:5, Insightful)
But that is the whole sticking point.
The conceptions of what one should be a responsible for or have the right to do is are so varied that to simply say that that is what you espouse is meaningless.
As Badnarik asks, "Why would you let the government tell you what to do?" This is not a reasonable argument against other parties: Libertarians still tell you what to do. They say you have to respect what Badnarik calls "divine rights." No one would agree with Badnarik's exact intepretation of "divine rights" and many would not agree with anything significantly close to it.
It seems anarchists outdue the libertarians with regards to personal liberty: they say the government shouldn't tell you what to do at all. Libertarians say that the government should tell you to do some things. Marxist-Leninists says that the government should tell you to do other things. Libertarians have just picked one of many positions of the government telling you what to do. And they don't offer any definitive reasons that trump any other political parties' reasons for choosing their particular ideological position. They're saying: "everyone must have these rights simply because it's natural/divine." I don't see any evidence whatsoever that their conceptions of rights and responsibilities are natural. You can say they're "nice" or "moral", but to claim their natural is to claim that the universe is bound to your ideals. Perhaps it is, but I don't see the evidence.
Does anyone more familiar with Libertarian thought have more evidence? I'm glad to dicuss this and think about it moreso.
Re:Arrr.... (Score:2)
Re:Arrr.... (Score:2)
You can be an anti-abortionist libertarian, for example--the Constitution doesn't address murder; it's left up to the states. You can be Libertarian that wants to set up a Marxist utopia in your home town. It's all about devolution of powers to the lowest possible level of government.
As far as the official party is concerned, I think they're far too con
devine? try constitutional (Score:2)
Michael Badnarik's belief in what our unalienable rights are, is derived directly from the constitution.
Re:devine? try constitutional (Score:2)
By Techno-Pagan, I mean that I hold Nature to be sacred, and believe that we, as humans, our language, and our technology are all part of a path to a more ordered universe. That, in essence, we are the ancestorsof God.
It's simple (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Arrr.... (Score:2)
I would rather say, they still tell you what not to do, but I think I understand your point.
It seems anarchists outdue the libertarians with regards to personal liberty:
I agree that it seems this way as well, but I'll try to offer a few of my ideas on this (please note that I'm new to studying Libertarians as a party, but the ideas ar
Re:Arrr.... (Score:2)
So, Libertarians agree with the anarchists: total personal liberity is an ideal. But, the Libertarians don't take the governmental acualisation of this imperative as a finality. They import some utilitarianism. My objection to this formulation of Libertarianism is that it has merely moved the problem I raised(and others as I've read in this story dicussion) of "why are these/(which) liberties (are) an imperative for the government to protect?" to "what laws will maximise well-being for
Theory... (Score:2)
Couple of points:
So, Libertarians agree with the anarchists: total personal liberity is an ideal. But, the Libertarians don't take the governmental acualisation of this imperative as a finality.
Couple of things, the first of which is annoying. There are _l_ibertarians and _L_ibertarians. The Libertarian Party does not represent everyone who calls themselves libertarians, which stands in contrast to
Re:Arrr.... (Score:2)
Importing utilitarianism is one interesting way to look at it. But yes, anarchists and libertarians tend to agree that maximizing personal liberty is an ideal. One way to look at it might be that anarchists want to maximize personal liberty as it applies to any one person. Libertarians want to maximize it as it averages out over everyone. Since someone who is dead or coerced doesn
Re:Arrr.... (Score:2)
If you're looking for a well reasoned philosophical argument for libertarianism (small "l"), you should really just google it, or perhaps start with Libertarianism: a Primer, by Boaz. Basically, it comes down to a distillation of classic liberalism (which should not to be confused with recent U.S. redefinitions of the word) - a human owns itself, the right to pro
Re:Arrr.... (Score:2)
For example, when the US constitution's second amendment was written (the right to bear arms), it was intended to allow any citizen of the US to own a gun for personal and national defense. As long as that amendment is in the constitution, a libertarian will argue that the government has no right to issue permits, the
Re:Arrr.... (Score:2)
It's as me asking, "How do I know God is real?" and you asnwering, "Because God says so in the Bible." It's not very helpful, you know? You can say "It's a matter of faith," and I'll accept that answer for what it is. But, I don't see the former answer as actually answering the question, it seems more like an appeal to an authority wh
I can't vote for this guy (Score:3, Insightful)
Without this "goverment-sponsored theft", I wouldn't be making $70K right now and contributing $20K per year to Uncle Sam... I might even be on welfare...
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2, Troll)
Well, you know what? It may not fit the definition of theft that's codified into laws, but it comes kinda close to the idea most people have. (I'll overlook the removal of the quote from the context, because I don't think it matters too much in this instance.)
I'm not sure how I feel about federally funded student aid, but I know I have seen many, many students that probably wouldn't have been able to go to c
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
Bank robbery? Try a loan. The government is 'borrowing' money to you with the expectation that you will 'pay them back' after you graduate. They give you $40000 and you give them $10000 a year for fourty years. I'd say the terms are pretty good, wouldn't you?
I do agree, though, that abuse of the system is a problem. I, therefore, propose that the aid be made in form of a loan. If the student graduates within a given time limit (exclude illness etc.), th
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
The second point was that even though good can come of a bad deed, that doesn't change the fact that it was a bad deed. You know, I even separated the points with italics from the parent post, but I'll reiterate - there were two points made.
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
Yes, I saw you had two 'points'. The problem is that neither was either correct or relevant.
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
And where do you think the government gets the money to "borrow" to them? And when do the people who were forced to make this "loan" get their money back?
I don't recollect ever getting any of the money I "loaned" out back.
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
Did you go to school? Do you drive on a road? Does the police patrol your block? Does the military defend your homeland?
The idea is that an unskilled worker will make, what, $20,000 a year, a college-educated one probably around $45,000-$75,000. All moral issues aside, the government views the increased tax revenue as a fair trade.
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
Those are services I derive a direct benefit from, and if I didn't pay government for them, I'd still have to pay somebody else to provide (most of) them.
What we're talking about here is, the government is taking my money to spend for somebody else's benefit. I derive no benefit from having spent the money for the parent poster's having received an education and holding down a $70k job.
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
But you don't have to pay anyone else now, do you?
This is basic economics. It's better for you to live in a country in
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
What difference does that make? Whether I pay a private party for them or I pay through taxes, I still pay for them.
This is basic economics. It's better for you to live in a country in which other people earn well, too.
I understand that. But I fail to see why other people earning well is contingent on my being forced to fund their education. Let me point out, I earn considerably more than our friend who had his education funded by taxpayers like me, an
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
If you look over what I said again, you'll see I just said that I know some people who didn't deserve to be there that were on student aid. I made no claim as to how prevalent this is, other than saying I was sure many others could relate.
Frankly, the student aid system is generally fair and usually avoids these circumstances. But they do happen.
You know, I think the pretty-boy frat assholes
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
I know that I am a good member of the community of Americans; I willingly support people who do not have the same advantages that I have now. I paid my own way through college (well, I'm still pay
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
If you're making $70K/year you are probably one of the Slashdot elite. Don't expect too many sympathies from the proles.
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:4, Insightful)
What you said would be like someone under Soviet Russia thanking the government for bread, because without the government providing bread, there would be no bread at all.
I guess your government (AKA public) schools didn't teach you to think for yourself.
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
Re:I can't vote for this guy (Score:2)
That's fine for you and Uncle Sam. However, as one of the people who was forced to pay taxes to provide that education that allows you to make $70k a year, I'd like to know when I'm going to get my chunk of that $20k a year back for my "investment"?
Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:3, Interesting)
What about people who work sixty hours a week at minimum wage and can't afford to feed their famililes? Lazy bastards.
It's sad that the term "Big Government" carries such negative connotations. It's mostly something that Republicans (ironically) invoke to attack Democrats.
When railing on big government, it's important to consider the fact that big government was what got us out of the Great Depression, and small government was what got us into it. Unchecked capitalism leads to monopolies, which lead to all of the wealth being concentrated in a few hands, which leads to (eventual) economic collapse. You can see it happening right now. Rich getting richer, poor getting poorer, etc.
The solution isn't a total conversion to communism or socialism (both of which have repeatedly been shown to cause economic stagnation), but rather to put a system in place that redistributes wealth at about the same rate that the wealthy can hoard it. That's where taxes and social programs come in.
Unfortunately, people will always take advantage of the system. Capitalism, even controlled capitalism, provides an incentive for people not to do this. What's important to remember is that the people who are taking advantage are the exception and not the rule. So while some of your tax money is wasted on welfare for layabouts and bottom-feeders, it's also going to a lot of people who genuinely need it and deserve the help.
One last note: If you have to vote for lower taxes, you should vote for Badnarik over Bush, as someone will eventually have to pay for Bush's out-of-control spending. Kerry in 2004!
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2, Insightful)
That is absolute codswallop. Big Government is what got us into and kept us in the Great Depression, and War is what got us out.
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
Then you might want to explain why we were still in a depression up until the war when most of Europe, who weren't beneficiaries of the New Deal, had already recovered from it.
Our "Big Government" schools (Score:2, Insightful)
unchecked capitalism (Score:2)
Re:unchecked capitalism (Score:2)
Economies of scale basicly means that as you produce more of something, the cost to produce a little bit more y
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
The solution isn't a total conversion to communism or socialism...
What is often missed with meritocracy-based economic theories is the fact that machines are replacing humans. Not just robots in factories, software and computers are deplacing thinking jobs.
The "baby-boomers" basically structured American society as it exists today. Why do big companies need 25 vice-presidents? It's mutual ego-building.
The American economic system has gravitated towards the boomers (ironically not those that fought
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
Whose fault is it that they have a family to feed, but lack the skills to generate sufficient income?
It seems to me, that you have no business procreating if you can't support your progeny. But once you do procreate, it is your responsibility to care for them, regardless of how much personal effort that requires.
Freedom is always accompanied by Responsibility. You can't have one with
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
But, nowhere in my post did I say that compassion for the less fortunate has no place. I just don't think government should take on the role of Robin Hood.
In fact, I commit to you today that, should I ever become a billionaire, I will use my fortune to improve the education of the proletariat sheople.
I think a pure, hard-assed econo-evolutionist (which I am not!) would counter that s
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
You want people to take responsibility? Start with yourself. You are a member of society. As a member of society, you have a responsibility to help your fellow man. That means giving money and time to those in need. You dont' like it? Too bad- its your responsibility as a human being.
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
What I object to most are those that someone else here described as "layabouts and bottom-feeders". I also think that most people who become dependent on welfare find it to be a comfortable local-minima, and then make no effort to remove themselves from the nipple of the public dole.
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
The answer is society made the choice. We've decided to go the correct way- to help out our fellow man. Thus we created the social programs we have. Boohoo, you have to buy a compact instead of an SUV so some kids can eat. Forgive me if I don't mourn your loss.
Re:Responsibility for other people? (Score:2)
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
What about people who work sixty hours a week at minimum wage and can't afford to feed their famililes? Lazy bastards.
Obviously, I don't think anyone working sixty hours a week is too lazy, but who told them they were entitled to not working any more when they decided to obtain more dependants? Did they neglect to count of the fact that 1) prices (recently) go up and 2) more peo
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
Your argument has a fallacy in it--the aquisition of mass wealth is required to then feed the masses, in which case, you either exterminate the motives for aquiring wealth altogether, or you curtail it by making it harder to get wealthy. Hence companies move overseas, hence the people you were trying to be a champion for are screwed.
Those greedy corporations that hire people to work 60 hours a week at minimum wage provide more jobs than any liberal flapping his jaw about the injustices of the system ever
Re:Well-meaning idealist with no sense of reality. (Score:2)
The real cause of the Depresion was the trickle down economics used by the Harding, Hoover, and Coolidge administrations. Trickle down doesn't
Quick aside: My problem with Libertarianism (Score:5, Interesting)
That's all well and good, and I can see the point behind it. But then there is the tragedy of the commons. For example, if there is a river that runs through my property, I don't have the right to dam it up and deny people downstream the use of that river, because that river is a common, shared resource.
Look at copyright: Copyright is (supposed to) expire, because there is no such thing as an idea in a vacuum. The idea came from the combined experiences and environment provided by society. Giving up exclusive control of a creation after a certain amount of time is how we pay back society.
Well, Grandma raised a good mother who raised a good daughter, who then went to college to get a better job. She is therefore contributing more to society, possibly creating more jobs, building a better economy, providing living history. Her contributions to society are immeasurable, even if they're not directly monetary.
The problem with Libertarianism is that it assumes we all exist in a vacuum. "It's my money, and society has no right to it unless I give it." If that's your philosophy, then you have no rights to the benefit of society. Note that I said society, not government.
Re:Quick aside: My problem with Libertarianism (Score:2, Insightful)
There is another candidate I have in mind who thinks that if the facts don't fit the theory, then the facts must be wrong. I don't plan on voting for him, either.
Re:Quick aside: My problem with Libertarianism (Score:2)
With the Libs in power on the federal level, I think you would see a great variation in towns cities etc. I.E. some green/socialist
Re:Quick aside: My problem with Libertarianism (Score:3, Insightful)
You're missing the distinction - if I dam a river that is partly on my property and partly on your property, I've used my property such that I've damaged your property. In other words, I've deprived you of
One thing (Score:2)
Re:One thing (Score:2)
Bush has said there will never be a draft. Oh, fantastic. So why all the orders to Selective Service offices to be ready for
I voted for Badnarik to hurt the GOP in the future (Score:2)
Vote strategically, my fellow liberals!
Education in the article (Score:2)
That's kind of a scary thing to read, but consider this. That's only part of his plan. Perhaps with the completion of his whole plan, it could work, with people helping other people who can't afford school.
Also, please consider this. Unlike the current top two politicians, he's not trying to become President in order for power a
Re:Education in the article (Score:3, Insightful)
To my surprise, I was totally unable to come up with an argument for keeping the DMV around. Its stated goal, of ensuring that only qualified people drive, is clearly total bullshit. They don't require an
Re:Education in the article (Score:2)
Re:Why do they even bother? (Score:3, Informative)
And that's just the people that have the balls to vote third party. I'm sure there are even more who live in a swing state and would rather vote against the worst candidate than vote how they really feel. Not to mention all of the people who have never even heard of the 3rd party candidates thanks to the media.
People
Re:Why do they even bother? (Score:2, Insightful)