Since my brief against
"liberaltarianism" was based around the negative
liberty/positive liberty distinction, I thought I ought to comment
on
Jonah Goldberg's argument that some libertarians have started
to emphasize positive liberty, albeit not of the state-enforced
variety. I think Jonah's more or less got Nick Gillespie's number.
Here's
Gene Healy summarizing a debate on the viability of
libertarian-conservative marriage that the America's Future
Foundation hosted last year:
Nor was there much agreement about what it means to be
a libertarian among the libertarian panelists. Jeremy Lott saw no
inconsistency between libertarianism and moderate social
conservatism, so long as it's not enforced by the state. Nick
Gillespie, on the other hand, argued that a monomaniacal focus on
the state left out some important aspects of liberalism. He
rejected the notion that libertarianism could be limited to the
realm of political philosophy. At one point, he noted that we were
dramatically freer than we had been decades ago, because, among
other things, in 1970 it was difficult for an unmarried couple to
check into a hotel together. Afterwards, I wondered what the hell
that had to do with libertarianism, and a friend cracked that I
must have skipped the part about hot-pillow joints in Locke's
Second Treatise.
None of this means that a lib-lib alliance of the type that Brink
Lindsey envisions is viable. It does mean that certain types of
libertarians are uncomfortable with the libertarian-conservative
alliance, but (as I mentioned in my
podcast with Dave
Weigel last week) that's always been true for various reasons.
topics:
Conservatism, Libertarianism