Archive for the ‘Libertarian’ Category

Castro Regime Arrests Cuban Libertarian Party Members – Being Libertarian


Being Libertarian
Castro Regime Arrests Cuban Libertarian Party Members
Being Libertarian
Cuba's newly-formed Libertarian Party has already experienced the brute force and tyranny of the Castro regime, simply for having liberty-minded ideas. All of the present activists at Cuba's Libertarian Party HQ were arrested late Wednesday evening for ...

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Castro Regime Arrests Cuban Libertarian Party Members - Being Libertarian

Fear and Ego are Bad Reasons to Make Choices – Being Libertarian

Fear and Ego are Bad Reasons to Make Choices
Being Libertarian
All the while, there was a Libertarian candidate on every ballot in the USA, who was passed over out of fear and weakness. People who actually voted were more afraid that the other major party would win, so they supported someone they didn't like.

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Fear and Ego are Bad Reasons to Make Choices - Being Libertarian

How Has Liberalism Impacted Libertarianism? – Being Libertarian

How Has Liberalism Impacted Libertarianism?
Being Libertarian
Throughout modern politics, liberalism and conservatism have dominated and overshadowed other philosophies. However, the dynamic of libertarianism and liberalism is rarely discussed. Despite common misconceptions, these two ideologies are not similar ...

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How Has Liberalism Impacted Libertarianism? - Being Libertarian

Libertarians plot a ground game in Florida – Orlando Sentinel – Orlando Sentinel

Can a third party in Florida ever elbow aside Republicans and Democrats? When the Florida Libertarian Party held its annual convention last month in Cocoa Beach, it vowed to try, and it has its work cut out: Objectively speaking, 2016 was the Libertarian Party's best year ever. It was also a savage disappointment. That was the verdict of Reason Magazine on the partys presidential candidate Gary Johnson, who won only 2.2 percent of the vote in Florida. As Libertarians look to the future, whats the state of the national party and in Florida? For a Libertarians answer, the Orlando Sentinel Editorial Board sought out Marcos Miralles, 23, newly elected state party chair.

Q: What are the lessons for the Libertarian Party from the loss of its presidential candidate Gary Johnson in 2016?

A: We need better organization from the first to the last step. Johnson never had a chance in the Sunshine State because our grass-roots game remained weak. Ultimately, the Libertarian National Committee is likely to focus more on smaller states, like Montana and South Dakota, so we need to realize that we will be on our own in 2020. Well need to set up field offices throughout the state, well need a much stronger outreach to the Hispanic community, well need to start an actual absentee ballot plan, and well need to put our volunteers to work. Thousands of individuals signed up in Florida to volunteer in 2016, and the great majority of them were never to be seen. It all comes down to organization.

Q: Libertarian members have been described as split between pragmatist converts vs. stalwart radicals. How would you describe the partys core philosophy?

A: If you look deeply into our philosophy, youll see that Libertarians have a rational and unwavering distrust of all government actions, and we will always look for free-market solutions to each problem in society. But our message resonates with both liberals and conservatives to some extent, and given our considerable support from independent voters last year, we have the potential of being the real middle-of-the-aisle party that dissatisfied voters can come to.

Q: What would Libertarians have concentrated on in the first 100 days of the Trump presidency, if they had representation in Congress?

A: If we had Libertarians in Congress, we would have focused on tax reform. Its clear that President Trump is en route to clash with Libertarians every week of his presidency, but in some occasions, we could work together. Nobody from the Republican establishment dared to touch tax reform in the first 100 days, and this is where we would have come in.

Q: Does the party have a national database of members, or those who contribute financially?

A: Yes, and yes. That database grew exponentially thanks to the 2016 presidential campaign.

Q: How does party membership in Florida and nationally stack up against figures before the 2016 vote?

A: Our membership numbers are just a fraction of what we could have if all 2016 Libertarian voters registered with our party. Although we barely cover 0.1 percent of statewide registered voters, we could be a major party by 2020 if all those who voted for our nominees registered with the Libertarian Party. And that needs to be our first and foremost focus by the end of the 2018 mid-term season.

Q: Libertarians seem to focus on the national level. What is the party doing to recruit candidates on the state and local level?

A: Weve actually just launched Operation: First Step, which focuses on recruiting candidates in each county of Florida to run for community development districts, soil and water boards, and other similar special districts. Weve focused for a long time on large elections, but if we want to be realists and be successful, we need to start from the bottom and involve ourselves in the smallest level of government. Only then can we create leaders within our society who with time, rapport and a good understanding of their community will one day step up to win those seats at the national level.

Q: What are the partys top policy goals for Florida?

A: Ideally, we would love to see an end to the war on drugs, work toward the demilitarization of police, a complete end to civil asset forfeiture, and budget trimming and severe tax cuts. However, there is only so much that Libertarians can accomplish without any presence in Tallahassee. So well need to first focus on policies that can help the party become an established presence. We want to see a change in the states determination of what constitutes a major party. Now, that doesnt mean were giving up on other potential reforms. Just this year, our team introduced, thanks to the collaboration of state senator and currently a candidate for Congress, Jose Javier Rodriguez (D-Coral Gables), SB 1750, a bill to reform special taxing districts and to give residents the power to abolish them.

Q: Without any Libertarians in the Legislature or in statewide offices in Florida, how does the party stay relevant?

A: Its a humbling realization to see how much work we can accomplish regardless of having no elected officials in the Legislature. Ultimately, all politics is local. Nebraska, Nevada and New Hampshire all have state legislators. Our turn will come. Meanwhile, were confident we can show Floridians what Libertarians can do with our multitude of local elected officials that we currently have and will add on by November 2018.

Q: Who is jockeying to be the partys presidential nominee in 2020?

A: Ill let the potential candidates to their own bidding for now. But what I can guarantee you is that whoever the Libertarian delegates pick in 2020, that candidate will have a better result than Gary Johnson had in 2016 and will have a real chance at unseating the current president.

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Libertarians plot a ground game in Florida - Orlando Sentinel - Orlando Sentinel

A Libertarian solution to healthcare – Redding Record Searchlight

Dennis Heiman Published 10:11 a.m. PT June 2, 2017 | Updated 5 hours ago

Speak your piece(Photo: Record Searchlight)

Feeling great pressure to do something, the House Republicans have finally made good on their promise to repeal and replace Obamacare. Their plan, which now goes to the Senate, appears to be generally unacceptable to both sides of the aisle.

There will be lengthy debate and if something does pass out of the Senate, it is likely to be equally unacceptable. One possible upside of this debacle is that the time may have come to take a look around the world and perhaps come up with a better way to provide and fund healthcare.

I make no claim of expertise on the subject but it seems that logic would steer us in the direction of a single-payer, universal system.

For the Libertarians among us, this would not have to be a federal government run operation. Why not a private, nonprofit board of directors, occupied primarily by medical practitioners, business persons and entrepreneurs (i.e. Warren Buffett and Bill Gates types) with a couple of politicians thrown in?

The government would play the role of bill collector and paymaster, just as it does for other provided services wanted and needed by all (think fire, police, and military protection, education, highways, etc.), and as with those other provided services, there would also be an individual mandate to contribute payment.

Let's put an end to this idiotic notion that healthcare coverage should be a "pick and choose"menu as if people somehow have a pretty good idea what kind and how much healthcare they will need 30 years into the future, or the thought that men shouldn't have to pay for pregnancy care or women pay for prostate cancer treatment.

Decisions on the overall content and operation of the healthcare program would be made entirely by the board and its team of advisers. The private, for-profit insurance companies could pack it in and find another line of work (like selling real-estate or automobiles). Once the board has come up with a program to provide affordable health coverage for all, it could turn ots attention to the reasons (and solutions) to why healthcare in the U.S. is many times more costly than in other parts of the developed world.

Dennis Heiman lives in Palo Cedro.

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A Libertarian solution to healthcare - Redding Record Searchlight