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Erik Victor Reed's avatar

Another excellent article. Thank you. Wow. Exactly.

I particularly like your insightful integration about the "elite" being an epistemological concept these days. One who has epistemological standards.

I also really like the identification of a myopic bias among Objectivists against Liberals and government institutions en masse. Myopic. They can't see the bigger picture, the bigger threat, because they're in a rut of only hating anything having to do with the left--including any fight against tyranny.

Plus, of course, an Objectivist bias favoring the image of a "successful businessmen" (though Trump is not that in reality). But even successful businessmen are often moral cowards. A point that Rand made clear but which many Objectivists ignore. Such businessmen often became successful by ONLY paying attention to how their business is doing, not by distracting things like individual rights, free trade, or the threat of cronyism.

Pro-Trump Objectivists have been involved in some of my most disheartening arguments. They should know better, but they don't. Allegedly, we start with the same premises, but end up on polar opposite sides of the issue of dictatorship. Trump, in fact, has proven to be an excellent litmus test for a person's basic character. Unfortunately, a much better test than the term "Objectivist".

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Gary Wiggins's avatar

It is natural and proper for libertarians/classical liberals to be “anti-establishment” in one sense. We believe that liberty, justice, and the pursuit of happiness are best served by a government that respects people's rights and is no more avaricious, powerful, or controlling that it needs to be. That makes us skeptical of and puts us in opposition to a lot of things the present government does. It should not make us dogmatic or blind to context. We need a liberal, constitutional order and the laws, institutions, and customs that preserve it. We need effective armed forces and intelligence agencies. We need alliances, trade, and as much of a civilized order among civilized nations as we can get. The goal of libertarian political action should be maximizing liberty within the present context while working to change the context to allow for more liberty, not some Rothbardian utopia incompatible with the world as it is. Many libertarians demand utopia and often see everything short of it as equally unacceptable. That is pretty much nutty and can leave them suckers for those wanting to tear the whole thing down.

I am more optimistic than you are. I don’t think the structure and institutions will be lying in a heap because of Trump – stressed some yes, ruined no, particularly if enough people do the right thing and stand up for them.

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