Table of Contents
1.
Foundational Questions
2. Questions About Self-Ownership and Property
3. Questions Related to Borders, Nationalism, and Defense
4. Questions About Taxes and Economic Issues
5. Questions About Partisan Politics and Authoritarian Ideologies
6. Questions About Social, Domestic, and Moral Issues
2. Questions About Self-Ownership and Property
3. Questions Related to Borders, Nationalism, and Defense
4. Questions About Taxes and Economic Issues
5. Questions About Partisan Politics and Authoritarian Ideologies
6. Questions About Social, Domestic, and Moral Issues
Content
1.
Foundational Questions
Question #1. Would you describe your libertarian strain of thought as capitalist? Why or why not? Should libertarianism be associated with any particular economic system; for example, free markets, capitalism, or perhaps something else?
Question #1. Would you describe your libertarian strain of thought as capitalist? Why or why not? Should libertarianism be associated with any particular economic system; for example, free markets, capitalism, or perhaps something else?
Question #2. How would your libertarian ideology deal with the need to preserve the rights of majorities and minorities alike? Is libertarian individualism compatible with democracy, multiculturalism, and collectivism, or not?
Question #3. Is socialism compatible with a free-market libertarian society? Can socialism be voluntary, and if so, how, or under what conditions?
Question #4. Is the Non-Aggression Principle (N.A.P.) sound? Libertarians tend to be against banning most things; is it enough to ban aggression, or is it necessary to ban things like domination, hierarchy, and exploitation as well?
2. Questions About Self-Ownership and Property
Question
#5. Would it be accurate to say that “an individual human being
owns oneself”? Would it be accurate to say that “an individual
human being owns oneself as property?” Is it important
to make such a distinction, and why or why not?
Question
#6. Does the right to own property derive from the right to own
yourself? If not, then where does the right to own property come
from?
Question
#7. How would you define private property? Is “private property”
distinct from “personal possessions”, or not?
Question
#8. Can private property be claimed without the assistance of some
state or government? If so, then how?
Question #9. What is your view on “landmine homesteading”, the process by which a person claims a plot of land by planting landmines around its perimeter? Is willingness to defend a property all it takes to justify claiming it as your own?
Question #10. What actions are necessary in order to justify owning property privately? Is the Lockean Proviso sound, or do you support Occupancy and Use Norms, or some other arrangement?
Question #11. Would it be desirable for private property to exist, even if it can exist without government? (Specifically, with respect to land, and the ownership of workplaces)
Question #12. Is "privatize everything" a helpful or hurtful slogan, in your opinion? Is there any resource which you feel should not be privatized (and if so what are they)?
Question #13. Should workers expect to be compensated with 100% of the value of the effort they contributed?
Question #14. Is work voluntary? And can employment for the benefit of another person be voluntary?
Question #15. Are hierarchy and exploitation inherently wrong, or inherently coercive in a way that violates the Non-Aggression Principle?
Question #16. What is your libertarian ideology's stance on labor unions and cooperative enterprises?
Question
#17. Is rent voluntary, or
is rent theft? Do all forms of renting violate the N.A.P., or do only
economic rents violate the N.A.P. (or neither)?
Question
#18. If you own a business, should you be in any sense obligated to
serve whomever comes in? Why or why not? Would it be desirable to
require businesses to serve all potential customers, if the state
didn't exist, and why or why not?
Question
#19. Can intellectual property be protected without
government? Should it be protected? If so,
how?
3. Questions Related to Borders, Nationalism, and Defense
3. Questions Related to Borders, Nationalism, and Defense
Question
#20. Are borders desirable? If so, does the right to have borders
derive from our right to own private property, and if so, how?
Question
#21. Would borders exist without government, and should they?
Question
#22. Can nationalism exist without the state, and should it? Can
fascism exist without the state?
Question
#23. Is law enforcement good, natural, and necessary? Are the police
necessary? Can you think of any circumstances under which ordinary
civilians ought to have the right to arrest others?
Question
#24. Should jails and prisons exist? Would they exist without the
state, and if so, how would your strain of libertarianism propose to
address the risk that applying the profit incentive to the issue of
detention of criminal suspects and convicts, could result in
increased arrests in order to justify building and filling more
for-profit prisons?
Question
#25. Can militaries exist without a government, and should they exist
in a stateless society?
Question
#26. Without the state, would people voluntarily band together to
defend themselves, or would some form of “voluntary social
contract” be necessary to ensure equal contribution to defense
efforts?
Question
#27. Are there any circumstances under which you would support gun
confiscations? Mandatory military service (the draft) or draft
registration? What about mandatory public service?
Question
#28. Would private military contractors exist without the state, and
should they?
Question #29. Would war exist without the state? Is war ever necessary, and if so, when and why?
Question
#30. Can a “minimal government” exist? Is it possible to have
government, but at the same time, not have statism?
Question
#31. Would justice systems exist without government, and should they?
Could there exist such thing as a “stateless legal order”, and if
so, what would it look like, and how can it be achieved?
Question
#32. Does anarchy mean a lack of rules, a lack of rulers, or
something else? Would rules, laws, legislation, and regulations
exist without government, and should they?
Question
#33. Would contracts exist without government, and what
qualifications make a person competent enough to enter into an
enforceable contractual agreement? Can contracts be successful
without guarantees of enforcement, and if so, how?
4. Questions About Taxes and Economic Issues
4. Questions About Taxes and Economic Issues
Question
#34. Can taxation be voluntary, or is taxation always theft? Explain
your answer.
Question
#35. If civil order couldn't be sustained without some sort of
involuntary taxation, then would you choose to ignore the need for
civil order and not impose a taxation system, or would you choose
some sort of so-called “least bad” or “semi-voluntary”
taxation system? If you would, then
which
system would you choose, and why?
Question
#36. Is it enough to assume that all exchanges which take place, are voluntary? If not, then is it enough to require all exchanges to be voluntary? Should we
have higher standards in addition to voluntaryism in economic
transactions?
Question
#37. Where do corporations' privileges come from; the state, or some
other source? Can corporations exist without the assistance of the
state? If so, how? Would it be desirable that they exist, in the
absence of the state?
Question
#38. Are currency and money the same thing? Are currency and money
good, natural, and necessary? Would they exist without government,
and should they? What can and can't be used as a currency?
Question #39. Is the use of currency voluntary, or is inflation theft? Are all forms of money and currency intrinsically subjective in value, and is this a good thing or a bad thing? Are money and currency intrinsically control tools?
Question #39. Is the use of currency voluntary, or is inflation theft? Are all forms of money and currency intrinsically subjective in value, and is this a good thing or a bad thing? Are money and currency intrinsically control tools?
Question
#40. Are rent, interest, and profit good, natural, and necessary?
Would they exist without government, and should they? Why or why not?
Question
#41. Which is a more valuable mode of organization in an economy;
cooperation or competition? Why? Are there other ways to organize the
economy? Is organizing the economy desirable in the first place, and
can it be done without the government?
Question
#42. Are there any resources which are abundant? Are markets,
competition, and trade still necessary to help distribute and
allocate goods which are abundant?
Question
#43. Is overpopulation real? How might your libertarian strain of
thought propose we deal with the problems typically associated with
“overpopulation”?
5. Questions About Partisan Politics and Authoritarian Ideologies
5. Questions About Partisan Politics and Authoritarian Ideologies
Question
#44. Which of the two major political parties have done the most
damage to economic and social freedom? If you had to choose, which
party would be the easiest for your strain of libertarianism to get
along with, and why?
Question
#45. Which governmental departments, welfare programs, or functions
do you think are the most important to abolish? Which are the most
urgent to abolish?
Question
#46. What are the proper roles of federal, state, and local
governments, as you understand it? Do you believe it is possible to
reconcile anarchism with federalism – or achieve anarchism within a
federalist system like the American system - and if so, then how?
Question #47. Are there any programs or functions of government which you think it is important to delay abolishing until we are sure we can live without them (and if so, what are they?)
Question
#48. Does socialism always devolve into authoritarianism? Was the
Nazi regime the result of collapsed socialism, or were the Nazis
capitalists (or perhaps something else)?
Question
#49. How do you feel about America's decision to align with the
Soviet Union during World War II? Who did more damage to
economic and social freedom – and who killed more - Adolf Hitler or
Josef Stalin? If your strain of libertarian ideology had to align
with either the Nazis or the Bolsheviks, which would you choose, and
why?
Question
#50. Considering your answer to the previous question, what
assurances can you make to other libertarians about your strain of
libertarianism's dedication to embracing freedom and liberty, and to
opposing authoritarianism and states?
6. Questions About Social, Domestic, and Moral Issues
6. Questions About Social, Domestic, and Moral Issues
Question
#51. What is your
stance on positive and negative rights? What are your thoughts on the
relationship between freedom, responsibility, and privilege?
Question #52. Can marriage exist without government recognition? If so, how? Has the problem of undue restrictions upon the rights of same-sex couples been solved yet, or not?
Question
#53. How would you, or your
strain of libertarianism, propose to address the issue of abortion?
Question #54. How would you, or your strain of libertarianism, propose to address the issue of public health?
Question
#55. How would you, or your strain of libertarianism, propose to
address the issue of drug addiction?
Question
#56. How would you, or your strain of libertarianism, propose to
address the issue of mental illness and mass shootings?
Question
#57. How would you, or your strain of libertarianism, propose to
address environmental and ecological issues?
Question
#58. How would your strain of libertarianism propose to provide
people with resources which we typically perceive as public utilities
(such as energy, transportation, plumbing, roads, and
infrastructure)?
Question
#59. What are your thoughts about the role of religion and
spirituality in an anarchist, stateless, or voluntary society? Should
the practice of religion be allowed in an anarchist society, or
should society find a way to get rid of it as just another form of
indoctrination like government?
Question
#60. Where does morality come from: the state or government, religion
or spirituality, or some other source?
Question #61. Does non-aggression imply pacifism, and should people who subscribe to the N.A.P. have to be pacifists? What does pacifism mean to you? If we place peace too high among our values, does it put freedom and liberty at risk? Are force, aggression, violence, and coercion ever necessary, and if so, when?
Question #62. How would your libertarian ideology deal with problems like racism, ultra-nationalism, and hate groups? When, if ever, should “hate speech” be prohibited? Should Antifa be considered a domestic terrorist group?
Question
#63. In the infamous "Trolley Problem", would you pull the
lever to kill one person in order to save five others; or would you
do nothing and leave the lever where it is, resulting in the death of
five people? Explain your answer.
Written
on October 4th, 7th, and 8th, 2019
Published
on October 8th, 2019
Edited
on October 24th, 2019
Originally Published as
"Sixty-Two
Questions Every Thinking Libertarian Should Be Able to Answer
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An enlightening read! This blog brilliantly addresses the core tenets of libertarianism through a thought-provoking list of sixty-three questions. Each question delves deep into the philosophical foundations and practical implications of this ideology, making it an essential exercise for anyone who values individual freedom and limited government intervention. Is the compass of your quest aligning with assignment help? Allow calmness to pervade, for your sojourn finds fulfillment right here. Introducing unmatched Singapore Assignment Help, easily accessible within your proximity. Our squadron of assignment maestros is geared up to amplify your scholarly escapade. Questions encompassing your assignment are solicited – reach out without delay.
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