• @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    My old boss claimed to be a libertarian.

    He would always rant and rave about the government overstepping and forcing people to get the vaccine and wear masks (which never happened, but okay) and then in the next sentence would praise the folks in power who wanted to ban abortions.

    Like… motherfucker, at least be consistent!

    He also scoffed at me because “must be nice to get government money during the pandemic just for having a kid.” I got like 300$. That shithead gladly got a massive business bailout and just smugly read shitty articles and conspiracy theories from with Facebook Q group at work instead of doing his job.

    • @fubo
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      1 year ago

      (Don’t take this too seriously. This is a rant and I only believe about ¾ of it, but I’m not sure which ¾.)

      Libertarianism at various times became a political home for —

      • patriotic white American kids who had been taught lies about slavery, Reconstruction, and American history generally;
      • science-fiction nerds looking to derive human society from first principles, like Asimov’s Hari Seldon, and yet end up with a system that would accommodate Heinlein’s Jubal Harshaw;
      • philosophers of economics who wanted a laboratory to experiment with their free-market theories, from Nozick to the Friedmans (Milton et seq.);
      • passionate and doctrinaire anticommunists following Ayn Rand (though she hated the term “libertarian”);
      • outright neoconfederates and white-supremacists, like Lew Rockwell and Ron Paul;
      • post-hippie engineers looking for a safe space to sell lots of porn and High Weirdness on the Internet.

      Over time, history beats philosophy. The libertarian movement fragmented. Part of it leaned into white-supremacist patriotic pisscrap and joined up with the alt-right. Part of it got woke and teamed up with the feminists, BLMs, queers, and other progressives — but only so long as it’s okay to vape weed, look at porn, and argue about the legitimacy of sex work. Part of it dug into economics and techno-weirdness and morphed into the cryptocurrency bros. Other bits vanished up the asses of the atheist movement, the open-source movement, or other specific issue-driven groups.