My article "How to Deal with a Non-Violent Bigot" has been published at
Learn Liberty (IHS). In it I discuss the "alt-right's" repugnant response to the excesses of "political correctness" and my view of the proper libertarian perspective on bigotry.
Warmongers are gay. Pardon my bigotry.
ReplyDeleteSorry, I'm having trouble to see a consistent argument here.
ReplyDeletePeople who use force and insults based on some idea of political correctness should be treated with respect. But people who don't use force, but only insults and imagery in response should be shunned?
By your argument, shouldn't alt-righters also inherently deserve respect too?
I don't see the criticism. I countenance no use of aggression, and I condemned impediments to free speech. I also criticized the alt-right's obnoxious tactics. No inconsistency there.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your reply. I agree with that summary, but I'm having trouble with the argument you use in your post to criticize those obnoxious tactics.
ReplyDelete(1) Maybe I'm unclear what you mean by "respectful" or everyone deserving equal "respect" in your post. Do those that don't treat you with respect deserve such courtesy in return?
(2) I don't see how the alt-right responding with insults to uses of force and insults by the "political correctness" folks is inconsistent with libertarian principles.
Libertarianism is not pacifism (I will not use force in any situation), but rather non-aggression (I will only use force in response to force/aggression). To me, it seems perfectly compatible with libertarianism to respond to insults/force with insults.
Whether one should choose such behavior is a separate question, that seems outside of libertarianism per-se, and in the realm of personal preferences and strategy (like pacifism).
Although it doesn't match my personality, I see some rationale to responding to bullies who try to silence others (by calling people racists, rapists, or facists, throwing eggs or pee, yelling over them, trying to get them fired by making false claims, using violent threats like #killallmen and bomb threats) with defiance:
"I do not care about your bullying and supposedly delicate nature/needs, I will say what is on my mind without sugarcoating, I will not try to be nice to you".
I agree with Julien.
ReplyDeleteSheldon,
Can you define bigot for me?
I also think it is pie-in-the-sky silliness to play nice with people who have no qualms about using violence.
"Efforts to make racism, anti-immigrationism, sexism, and general intolerance cool are hardly something for us to cheer on."
Why is anti-immigrationism a necessarily bad thing? Is being pro-immigration some kind of moral imperative? Who is trying to make racism and sexism cool? Are you subsuming tolerance under libertarianism? Toleration and non-aggression aren't synonyms.
It's not possible for a bigot to adhere to the NAP. The bigot will justify closed borders by claiming that the NAP supports closed borders (see see John Hasnas's myth of rule of law).
ReplyDeleteBut suppose, for the sake of argument, that the bigot adheres to the NAP 100%. But when he sees a hate crime against a black person, he might "condemn" the crime as a violation of the NAP. But the bigot might sympathize with the perpetrators of the hate crime, and he do nothing to prevent the crime in the future. He merely "condemns" it, but because he passively sympathizes with the perpetrators, he does not take action to prevent it. This will happen when people adhere to a "narrow" view of the NAP. (See the similar example of Obama's passive sympathy to the Sisi and Maliki regimes. Obama merely "condemns" the human rights violations, but does not do anything about it.)
In war, each side violates the NAP. People who adhere to this narrow view of the NAP might see both sides as equally responsible, so he will "condemn" the war, but he will remain passive not do anything about it.
So it's important to advocate a broader view of the NAP grounded by theory. Otherwise one will remain passive.