About Mark Jeftovic
I live in Toronto, Canada with my wife and daughter, I'm the founder and president of easyDNS.com - the DNS hosting provider & domain name registrar, a libertarian and former Director to the Canadian Internet Registration Authority (CIRA). In my copious spare time I blog here about doing business on the internet, moderate the ChessForums.org website and play guitar in The Parkdale Hookers, an indie power-pop group who releases all of our music under a creative commons license. I can be emailed at markjr@myprivacy.ca (requires verification) CategoriesQuicksearchArchivesBlog Administration |
Wednesday, December 5. 2007He says that like it's a bad thing...Trackbacks
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"The state owes me healthcare (because I'd rather spend my money on cigarettes, twinkies and soft drinks)"
You say that like it's a bad thing. Actually, I do find your conception of libertarianism a tad childish. That everybody is responsible for themselves is a given; its childish to think that "liberals" or "progressives" don't also feel that "personal responsibility", whatever that means, is high on their list of priorities, maybe even the highest. The problem with Ayn Rand and other libertarians is (1) there's no necessity to point fingers and judge people (2) because universal healthcare, universal education, et al, can be had by the free association of individuals, without the necessity of a State which can break down your down and throw in jail with a key. In fact, this idea that people would not be charitable, or forthcoming with taxes --sufficient for agreed upon goals--absent State intervention, or some "crazy" progressive ideaology that only some people carry, is bogus. This isn't the 18th century. The vast majority, of Americans at least, have sufficient access to food, shelter and clothing. Arguably, all Americans have sufficient access, by anything but the most lofty contemporary measures. And you know what: none of it is provided by the State. What the State provides is actually in addition to the base welfare that churches, non-profits, etc, already provide. I'm not anti-taxes or anti-anything. If somebody wants to eat twinkies and soda and freeload healthcare. Fine! You know what; only the most pessimistic individual would think that all people are that way, all the time. We are all a little, and maybe that's why too many doubt that their fellow neighbor would help them in need--because they're afraid they wouldn't help their neighbor. But you know you would. And you know they would. And you don't need the threat of force by a State to make it happen. You just need transparency and shared normative values; things human nature and technology can and does provide *today*. Hi, thanks for stopping by and commenting.
I don't claim that conservatives and leftists (the two camps I seem to prattle on about) don't hold personal responsibility high on their list, but they are often guilty of having that priority trumped by their peculiar camp's ideologies: Conservatives want to tell everybody else how to live their lives while Leftists think they know how we all should live. Both taken to extremes cause much havoc and my suggestion is the Libertarian maxim that we should worry about running our own lives more than running other people's lives is less selfish than others make it out to be. I am having difficulty parsing this statement: "In fact, this idea that people would not be charitable, or forthcoming with taxes --sufficient for agreed upon goals--absent State intervention, or some "crazy" progressive ideaology that only some people carry, is bogus." Granted I'm on 2 hours sleep here, but are you saying that the idea that people won't be charitable absent state intervention is bogus? You're right, people do not need a State to make them co-operate with one another, pool resources and respect each other's differences. But is that then "a crazy progressive ideology that only some people carry?" Am I one of the crazy progressives then but you're not? (Are you saying we do need the state because without it only nutcase Libertarians would be nice to other people ?) - like I said, I'm on no sleep. I always find the US desire for universal healthcare quite interesting from the Canadian perspective, where we have it. On one hand I hear too many heartbreak stories about Americans who can't afford to pay their medical bills and are basically bankrupted by illness or injury. Then up here in Canada, yay, free health care. But what about wanting access to better healthcare and are willing to pay for it? No dice. You can't if you wanted to. Basically I'd welcome a two-tier system and I think it's inevitable but it's the objections to it I find very typical of the left. They have the strange quirk where asking that we all pool resources and work together to lift the disadvantaged means we also have to drag back anybody who manages to get ahead. You say you're not anti-taxes. Up here in Canada the highest marginal tax rate is close to 50%, and that's not when you're earning 10 million dollars a year, that kicks in under 100K / year. It's like living through a perpetual divorce, you just keep handing half your money over to an unaccountable beaurocracy that goes and blows it on idiotic affairs I had no say in, like foreign wars. Here we are agreement: "But you know you would. And you know they would. And you don't need the threat of force by a State to make it happen. You just need transparency and shared normative values; things human nature and technology can and does provide *today*." which is why I have some trouble parsing your comment, I just call myself a libertarian because I feel to a statist the state is the end in itself. Similar to the way people who are not very financially literate become obsessed with money, which is really just a medium of exchange (it isn't even a store of value anymore), the government apparatus should just be the mechanism by which we all pitch-in and play nice together. But that isn't how it works these days, now is it? |
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