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March 11, 2008 at 06:37:27

Freedom, Libertarians, and Football

by Jim Arnold     Page 1 of 1 page(s)

http://www.opednews.com

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The concepts of freedom and liberty deserve better discrimination, especially in view of the recent popularization of libertarianism by Ron Paul. Americans, especially, have tended to treat the two concepts as synonymous, but freedom and liberty actually express important differences.

Liberty can be defined as individual independence of authority. Freedom has a more positive content. But rather than engage in an abstract discussion, I’ll illustrate the difference by analogy with the playing of football.

Football is a typical team sport, played by strict rules and regulations. Individuals participate, cooperate and compete within a well-defined structure of behavior that allows them to express and realize their talents and goals. And the experience is exhilarating. It’s not just “fun”, it’s self-actualizing, it’s thrilling, it’s glorious, it’s a genuine experience of freedom in action.

So how is it that the experience of freedom can be realized even within a structure of strict regulation? It’s vital that the rules of a game or a society express the aspirations of the players or the citizens. The rules have to be recognized as in everyone’s best interest, as maximizing both individual opportunity and community benefit, and rules and regulations have to be fairly enforced. There has to be a just system, a fair game, a righteous society, and then the experience of freedom isn’t the absence of rules, it’s the participation in rules, the support of rules, the realization of the intelligence and inherent goodness and necessity of fair and rational rules. Conversely, the introduction of unreasonable rules, or any lapse of enforcement of the accepted rules, or any unfair exceptions to the rules, results in a deflation of enthusiasm, a discouragement of willing involvement, a hollowing of free participation.

Freedom is a social experience of together individuals. Goals may be personal or shared, but unlike with liberty, there’s an essential idea of <i>contribution</i> involved with the participation in freedom. It’s revealing that children, up to a certain age, are incapable of realizing the sense of connectedness, mutuality and responsibility necessary for the manifestation of freedom. Just watch a herd of four year-olds playing soccer. Or think of the kind of society libertarian ideologues envision and advocate.

Liberty, to follow the football analogy, would be someone running onto the field, grabbing the ball, and playing keep-away from the players. Liberty is acting outside of regulation, the individual acting independent of others - others who are regarded as just so many competitors to be overcome. Liberty is an important and justifiable principle in specific opposition to tyranny, as a rejection of a system of unjust rules, but as an opposition to freedom it’s a tyranny all its own, a tyranny of the most obsessive, competitive selves against everyone else.

No one accepts the imposition of unjust regulations. But to reject regulation because regulation can be, or has been unjust is like rejecting music because it’s sometimes performed badly. Yet libertarians reject regulation in principle, as if it’s an impediment to freedom. Never mind our own history, when regulations were originally needed and imposed to correct the excesses of libertarian economy. Just look at China today, where, ironically, an economy liberated from regulation is thriving within a totalitarian political system, and driving their country into unbearable filth and hazard – while creating fabulous wealth for a few amid desperate poverty for the masses.

There’s a saying that no one is free unless everyone is free. The subtle truth in the saying derives from the importance of an over-arching, balanced, reciprocal relationship between individuals and society. No healthy person enjoys playing a rigged game. Even those who seem to benefit from breaking the rules or from using unjust rules to their advantage are compelled to occupy themselves with conspiracy, threats, or violence, and with delusions of self-justification. There may be liberty and privilege for the few in a rigged game or a tyrannical system, but it’s actually un-freedom even for those who are privileged – forced by their privilege to be constantly guarding against being deprived – no less than it’s un-freedom for those who suffer the privileged. Freedom is loving and being loved, being valued by others and valuing others, giving strength to others, receiving strength from others. When liberty rides unrestrained past the homeless, the excluded, the cheated, then the core feeling for society, for the <i>We</i>, for freedom, is dumbed down and numbed up.

Freedom is based on the willing participation in a just and expansive system, a system that participants recognize as their own objective expression. To the extent that a society is unjust, even if the injustice is done to some other race, or gender, or class, it muddies the cultural pool, and detracts from everyone’s free, willing and gratifying participation. In a society built on theft and lies, push-and-shove, on taking liberty, then and there honesty and dedication are reduced to a wistful creed.

Freedom is concerted self-actualization, a goal and achievement difficult to envision until it’s actually pursued and first dimly glimpsed. Compared to freedom, liberty as a guiding principle is a simple game of keep-away where the libertarian has to keep running, ultimately to discover, if only too late, that it offers nowhere worth going.

 

A member of Democratic Circles (DemocraticCircles.org), responsible for Internet publicity. A former visitant of UC Santa Cruz, union boilermaker, ex-Marine, Vietnam vet, anti-war activist, dilettante in science with an earth-shaking theory on the nature of light (which no one will consider), philosopher in the tradition of Hegel, Marx, and Fromm (no one listens to that either), author of a book on wine clubs (ahem), and cast-off programmer of ancient computer languages.




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6 comments

Freedom loving guy from Minnesota.
Jim RongstadFreedom loving guy from Minnesota.

Government is the Referee

Mr. Arnold presents a distorted view of libertarianism. To use his analogy libertarians view individual rights as the rules of the game and the government is the referee. The only job of the referee is to make sure no one violates the rules (violates individual rights).

Instead what we have with our current government is a game where the referee (government) keeps on changing the rules during the game. The referee changes the rules based on who (which special interest) is paying him off.

So instead of having a game where everyone follows the rules and tries to do the best they can, we instead have a game where everyone tries to buy off the referee to get advantage. This creates a situation where those who have more get more. It also makes the referee evermore powerful.

Instead of enforcing the rules, the referee now decides who wins or loses.

by Jim Rongstad (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 4 comments) on Tuesday, March 11, 2008 at 12:06:03 PM
 


A member of Democratic Circles (DemocraticCircles.org), responsible for Internet publicity. A former visitant of UC Santa Cruz, union boilermaker, ex-Marine, Vietnam vet, anti-war activist, dilettante in science with an earth-shaking theory on the nature of light (which no one will consider), philosopher in the tradition of Hegel, Marx, and Fromm (no one listens to that either), author of a book on wine clubs (ahem), and cast-off programmer of ancient computer languages.
Jim ArnoldA member of Democratic Circles (DemocraticCircles.org), responsible for Internet publicity. A former visitant of UC Santa Cruz, union boilermaker, ex-Marine, Vietnam vet, anti-war activist, dilettante in science with an earth-shaking theory on the nature of light (which no one will consider), philosopher in the tradition of Hegel, Marx, and Fromm (no one listens to that either), author of a book on wine clubs (ahem), and cast-off programmer of ancient computer languages.

"Government is the Referee", who makes the rules?

Jim, you miss the point. No question, our government, "the referee" has become increasingly corrupt. Corrupt referees should be fired. Corrupt government officials should be jailed.

In a free society, something ours resembles less and less, the "league rules" which the "referees" are supposed to enforce, are supposed to express the values of the society, the people. Your objection to "the referees", your focus on “individual rights” to the exclusion of “league rules”, the social regulation a free people establish for themselves, seems entirely consistent with my portrayal of libertarianism as objecting to regulation, not just corrupt regulation. In what way do you believe I’ve distorted libertarianism? 

 

 

 

by Jim Arnold (12 articles, 0 quicklinks, 2 diaries, 77 comments) on Tuesday, March 11, 2008 at 12:59:43 PM
 


Freedom loving guy from Minnesota.
Jim RongstadFreedom loving guy from Minnesota.

Civil Society

Jim Arnold I consider this a distortion:

 "Liberty, to follow the football analogy, would be someone running onto the field, grabbing the ball, and playing keep-away from the players. Liberty is acting outside of regulation, the individual acting independent of others - others who are regarded as just so many competitors to be overcome. "

Libertarians believe in and desire a civil society. What libertarians oppose is the use of force, which is what government is. Force begets force. Libertarians believe in voluntary cooperation and exchange. Libertarianism is not "every man for himself". Libertarians know that cooperation is a necessity. A farmer, businessman or artist will only succeed by supplying something that others want.  If they ignore the desires of others/society, they will fail.

China is anything but a libertarian society. The government is in bed with a favored few, allowing society in general to be trampled upon. China is closer to what we have in the US today, than it is to any concept of libertarianism.

by Jim Rongstad (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 4 comments) on Tuesday, March 11, 2008 at 10:16:17 PM
 


I'm supporting Dennis Kucinich for President. 
Ty ShlackmanI'm supporting Dennis Kucinich for President. 

China and Libertarianism

Although China has adopted capitalism they do not have a free market economy. While Libertarians do support individual freedom which is a good thing, they also want complete freedom for businesses which is a very bad thing. Another name for business freedom is Corporate Personhood. Allowing businesses and other artificial entities to have the same rights as human beings inevitably results in these artificial entitles eliminating the rights of human beings(and other species of animals).

by Ty Shlackman (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 531 comments) on Tuesday, March 11, 2008 at 8:11:03 PM
 


Freedom loving guy from Minnesota.
Jim RongstadFreedom loving guy from Minnesota.

Corporatism

Corporations are a creature of the state. Corporations only exist under regulations of the state. Libertarians oppose corporatism.  Big corporations love big government. Excessive government regulations hinder small independent businesses from competing.

One only needs to read the paper to see the ongoing favoritism the government shows to big cororations.

by Jim Rongstad (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 4 comments) on Tuesday, March 11, 2008 at 10:21:23 PM
 


A member of Democratic Circles (DemocraticCircles.org), responsible for Internet publicity. A former visitant of UC Santa Cruz, union boilermaker, ex-Marine, Vietnam vet, anti-war activist, dilettante in science with an earth-shaking theory on the nature of light (which no one will consider), philosopher in the tradition of Hegel, Marx, and Fromm (no one listens to that either), author of a book on wine clubs (ahem), and cast-off programmer of ancient computer languages.
Jim ArnoldA member of Democratic Circles (DemocraticCircles.org), responsible for Internet publicity. A former visitant of UC Santa Cruz, union boilermaker, ex-Marine, Vietnam vet, anti-war activist, dilettante in science with an earth-shaking theory on the nature of light (which no one will consider), philosopher in the tradition of Hegel, Marx, and Fromm (no one listens to that either), author of a book on wine clubs (ahem), and cast-off programmer of ancient computer languages.

Libertarians and government

“Libertarians believe in and desire a civil society.”

Of course. The question is whether a civil libertarian society is possible, or whether it would inevitably end up a game of keep-away. The purpose of business is to make a profit for the individual owners, not to serve the common good. Businesses have to cut their costs as much as possible in order to compete. And businesses hate competition. They’ll gobble up competitors whenever possible. And the bigger they get, the bigger their competitive advantage. That’s why unregulated business leads inevitably to monopolies and anti-social practices. 

“China is anything but a libertarian society.”

 

I didn’t say they’re a libertarian society, I said they have a totalitarian government but an economy liberated from regulation. Libertarians maintain that if government regulation is abolished everything will be wonderful. China today and our own history prove otherwise.

“Corporations are a creature of the state.”

This is a common libertarian belief that probably goes to the heart of the disconnect. The modern corporation was created by the government at the behest of business. Business prevailed upon government by lobbying, bribery, and infiltration to establish corporations. Your anti-government fixation ignores the larger picture, where corporations dominate our government, where our government has become a tool of the corporations. To the extent that a government is truly democratic, government is a good thing, a “creature” of we the people. 

by Jim Arnold (12 articles, 0 quicklinks, 2 diaries, 77 comments) on Wednesday, March 12, 2008 at 12:07:07 PM
 

 

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