Salon: 11 Questions to See If Libertarians are Hyprocrites -- _#kickstarter
Posted by JustinLesniewski 11 years, 11 months ago to Culture
This article is a Salon repost from AlterNet.
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Q2= Stupid, Supply and demand dictates the “recognition and reward” Good luck trying to be recognized as the best hamburger flipper in the world; and get 100K for doing it.
Q3= Same stupid question (see air traffic controllers)
Q4= obvious contradiction.
Q5= No, Democracy is brutal as 51% wins. A republic allows for a voice of the 49%; their representatives can filibuster and many procedures require a super majority to pass.
Q6= What? No one says no government except Anarchists and that’s a different subject.
it just got worse and ,,,I just can’t.
"Most of these questions first require you to accept their premise. In every case they were pretty much setups like asking Simone if they have stopped beating their wife."
I agree. States a premise, then asks a broad question immediately after.
The main premise is that those with wealth are the libertarian torch lighters (BS). Which is an attempt to discredit the libertarian motive. And keeps insinuating that the libertarian wants the government to protect them. The libertarian wants the liberty of protecting himself. ........
Ayn Rand endorsed labor unions. As warmed-over Republicans, many self-identified libertarians are in favor of "right to work" laws. Like "extra-sensory perception (ESP)" so called "right to work" is a logical fallacy, but self-styled libertarians endorse it on the basis of what it seems to mean.
The divide between Objectivists and libertarians is centered on the morality of Objectivism. Libertarians argue that you have a political right to become a drug addict. For Objectivists, the distinction between a political right to idiocy and the morality of self-interest needs little discussion.
For myself, I see the hypocrisy in the claim that corporations have a right to recoup their tax money with "tax abatements" but that a woman with children is a moocher for getting a SNAP Card to buy groceries.
So, too, do you really not have any such thing as a "right to work." That is a misnomer.
But, yes, you do have the right to any agreement that is non-coercive. So, if the workers in a factory hire a team of industrial engineers and lawyers (called a "union") and they bargain with the IEs and lawyers of the employer to work out a contract, then, the employer might say, "John Robert, thanks, but you have to join the union so that I know that you will be safe and productive." Maybe. Maybe not. But either way, it is a contractual situation, not a matter for the government to get involved in. If GM wants all hourly employees to be UAW members, that's the way it is.
Myself, I often work as a contractor through an agency. So, for me, I am not in their bargaining unit. I get that. And I understand that they have rules for themselves that limit my actions when I am on their site. For instance, I was hired to teach robot operations and programming. But I was not hired to install the robot. They had electricians and riggers for that. They checked my tools when I came in and made sure that I would not do their work. Sort of a hassle, but the rules of the house, really, if you want to be a good guest.
What we have here between us JR is an example of why the government should stay out of it. At JR, Inc., there is no union, OK. But a MM, Inc, there is. My choice might not be smart in your view, but it is my right to make that choice, and not the government's business to tell me that I as an owner cannot require union membership of the employees.
In the case of the robot in the Ford factory, I could not touch the robot until it was installed. Once the riggers and electricians were done, it was mine. It did guarantee them work, but it also ensured the safety of the entire plant, rather than letting a few zillion dollars and the safety of a 1000 people rest on one guy's idea of good enough.