Rand Paul’s filibuster stunt has brought libertarianism back
in to spotlight. In truth, there can never be a society of just libertarians. Society
is give and take, is interaction of all members, and is equilibrium of wants and
needs; it is hawks and doves living in harmony. Libertarians would be peaceful
hawks but nonetheless, hawks, always willing to take but never willing to give
back.
Libertarians want to live in an unreal world. They want to live in a society we all worked hard to build and preserve. They say what
many of us feel; we want the freedom to do anything we want to do, as long at
it doesn’t hurt anyone else. It sounds idealistic or Utopian to be sure but it
is impossible. In fact, it is downright asinine and tantamount to a child who wants
to live out their life in a toy store. A number of philosophers have tried to
define utopia and have failed because it is the social equivalent of a perpetual
motion machine. The only reason a place called “heaven” works in the human mind
is because everyone lives the good life but no one has to work to preserve it. No one has to compete to grow
food or find a place to live. There is always abundant fresh
water to drink. Stress and conflict do not exist in that world but of course,
we do not live in that kind of place. We work to build and maintain society by competing, sharing, and struggling on earth
with seven billion other people trying to survive. It would be wonderful to be a “libertarian” and not to have to worry
about anyone else.
As a little example, I distinctly remember a TV reported asked
Rand Paul about his attitude about segregations, after the people of Kentucky first
elected him to the Senate of the United States. His answer was simple and
thought provoking. He said the owner of a lunch counter has the unquestionable right
to deny service to black people because the owner owned the property and his right
to do with it as he please; to succeed or fail in business as he chooses. What
kind of a twisted mind could think that owner would hurt no one by acting this
way? Rand Paul claims to be the icon of
libertarianism that wants us to give him the freedom he thinks he deserves, the freedom to do anything he
wants to do, as long at it doesn’t hurt anyone else.
Judging from his father’s history, I do not know but suspect
that Rand Paul grew up in a toxic home environment. Although I do not subscribe
to the nurture side of the nurture-nature argument, I do believe that people
act in varying degrees according to what they have learned. However, if they
are acting according to innate reason, then they are acting in a manner of a
sociopath, a form of mental aberration, which creates the classic father-like-son
dilemma; is libertarianism nurture or
nature
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