By Jon J. Ray 12/22/2013 @ Dissecting Leftism
We occasionally see some rather poorly informed claims to the effect that libertarianism and conservatism are totally different -- e.g. an article by Walter Block here. I think therefore that a little clarification is required. The truth can be very simply put:
Libertarianism is ONE ELEMENT in conservative
thinking. More precisely, Libertarians and conservatives share an
attachment to individual liberty.
Libertarians are in some ways like Leftists. Leftists tend to have very
simple formulas for what is wrong with the world. Ask them and they
will say: inequality, poverty and (more amusingly) intolerance. When
you realize that leading Leftists are usually well-off and are totally
intolerant of dissent, you can see how uninsightful and oversimplified
leftist reasoning is. And aside from being mostly poor, libertarians
are like that too. They oversimplify enormously: Get government out of
the way and a new Eden will dawn.
Conservatives, on the other hand see everything as complex. They see
that there can be other influences on human welfare than freedom. For
instance, when a country seems threatened by foreign aggression (as
Britain was in WWII) a conservative may see national security as an
important consideration that may need balancing against individual
liberty - hence conservative governments may introduce a whole range of
"wartime measures" that reduce the liberties of citizens to some
extent. Conservatives try to balance competing principles.
Another revelatory case is immigration. Since libertarians dislike
governments and their restrictions, they usually favour open borders.
If libertarians had their way, most of Mexico would end up in the USA.
But conservatives see other issues as being involved -- such as
pressure on welfare programs and other systems, and the importation of
the dumb political ideologies that have kept most of the Americas South
of the Rio Grande mired in poverty. What the immigrants have in their
heads is important, not just the fact that they are a person. And
conservatives also see it as a matter of property rights. If I have the
right to say whom I will have living with me in my own home, surely
groups of people (nations) also have the right to say who will live
among them?
Libertarians also tend to ignore genetics. When proposing remedies for
poverty, Leftists will say: "give the poor more money" while
libertarians will say "Give the poor no money". Neither system will
usually be practical so conservatives tend to say: "The poor ye always
have with you". With no ideology to explain everything, conservatives
can simply accept reality. As one of Britain's most prominent Conservatives
recently said, some people are equipped mentally to do well and some
are not. Leftists usually cry "racism" when genetics are mentioned so
the conservative response is usually implicit rather than explicit these
days. That people are born different underlies a lot of conservative
thinking even though it can be risky to say that out loud.
Similarly with homosexual "marriage". Leftists see it simply as an
equality issue, libertarians see it simply as a liberty issue while
conservatives see it as impacting on many other things -- such as
morality and the family and a general devaluation of marriage.
So conservatives try to align their thinking with the complexity of
reality while libertarians have a "one size fits all" explanation and
solution for all problems. Conservatives value liberty but don't think
it is the answer to everything. And the only liberty Leftists value is
your liberty to do what they say
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