Saturday, September 3, 2011

"My message is one of freedom and individual rights."

"My message is one of freedom and individual rights.  I believe individuals have a right to life and liberty and that physical aggression should be used only defensively.  We should respect each other as rational beings by trying to achieve our goals through reason and persuasion rather than threats and coercion.  That, and not a desire for "economic efficiency," is the primary moral reason for opposing government intrusions into our lives: government is force, not reason. 

People seem to think I am speaking of principles foreign to the Republic tradition. But listen to the words of Robert A. Taft, who in the old days of the Republican Party was once its standard-bearer:

"When I say liberty I do not simply mean what is referred to as "free enterprise." I mean liberty of the individual to think his own thoughts and live his own life as he desires to think and to live; the liberty of the family to decide how they wish to live, what they want to eat for breakfast and for dinner, and how they wish to spend their time; liberty of a man to develop his ideas and get other people to teach those ideas, if he can convince them that they have some value to the world; liberty of every local community to decide how its children shall be educated, how its local services shall be run, and who its local leaders shall be; liberty of a man to choose his own occupation; and liberty of a man to run his own business as he thinks it ought to be run, as long as he does not interfere with the right of other people to do the same thing."

As we'll see in a later chapter, Taft was also an opponent of needless wars and of unconstitutional presidential war-making. THIS is the Republican tradition to which I belong."  -Page 5 and 6 of The Revolution, A Manifesto

No comments:

Post a Comment