Trumping
'The Body'
by Michael R. Allen
If anything, Trump and Ventura want to be popular -- which means
to do what is popular, like using the label libertarian and
attacking Buchanan. Fortunately, their popularity has not yet
produced success.
Buchanan has been assailed primarily for his outspoken
noninterventionist views, though his other views have hurt him
also. Buchanan knows that war only makes for more government
intrusion into people's lives, whereas Trump and Ventura believe
-- along with the political establishment -- in the moral
necessity of intervention. Embracing the central tenet of
meaningful libertarianism, Buchanan is much more of a libertarian
than either of his enemies.
As to his economic nationalism, Buchanan is no worse than anyone
who thinks government schools and subsidized mass transit are
worthwhile endeavors of the limited state. The conservative
pundit has never called for expanding either public schools or
transit, but the brawny governor has. As it is, the governor has
endorsed a lot of ideas that are anathema to real libertarians.
Ventura has been praised for some of his more libertarian views.
As a matter of fact, on Fox News (12/14/98), he called himself
"libertarian" and claimed to know and support the
ideology. In his infamous Playboy interview, he showed
that he adheres to what now passes for libertarian -- just not
the libertarianism of Murray Rothbard or even Milton Friedman.
Most tellingly, he showed the thoughtlessness of his ideology by
making a major faux pas.
When asked about prostitution, he sensibly said that
"prohibiting something doesn't make it go away." Then,
asked why this view was unpopular in the United States, he
proclaimed that religion was responsible.
"Organized religion is a sham and a crutch for weak-minded
people who need strength in numbers," posited Ventura.
"It tells people to go out and stick their noses in other
people's business." (He also said that, if reincarnation was
true, he would like to come back as a size Double D bra, thus
earning the the nickname Jesse "the DD" Ventura by
fellow TAP editor Chris Burlingame.)
Perhaps the governor is not aware of the number of non-religious
liberals who are cheerleaders for anti-drug and anti-prostitution
laws. Perhaps he isn't aware of the large number of Christians
who have left the public school system to find freedom. If
Ventura was a principled libertarian, he would applaud the
Christians who have found freedom without asking for tax dollars.
Instead, he chooses to demean a voluntary association without
looking at the facts.
Sure, there are a lot of authoritarians on the religious right --
but no more so than on the impious left. But it is popular to
bash religious conservatism. It's also popular to support medical
marijuana, more money for government schools and phased-in tax
cuts -- three pillars of Ventura's philosophy. On close
inspection, the governor seems to support nearly everything that
is politically popular right now, though most of that is not good
for human liberty. Whatever this is, it is not libertarianism.
It seems Ventura has one tenet of his philosophy developed: he
wants to be what Lew Rockwell calls a "modal"
libertarian, or at least a cousin to the Clintonist left. They
can have him, and Mr. Trump. Let the word libertarian
recover from the assault the Ventura camp has perpetrated.
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