LPM Online

September 15, 1998

Contents

  1. Upcoming Events
  2. Paul S. Woolum, Libertarian Candidate for Wayne County Execu
  3. In Praise of Working People
  4. Wires for Yard Signs Available

  1. Upcoming Events

    September 17, 1998 - 7:00 PM
    LPSC Monthly Meeting, featuring Diane Barnes!
    Location: Risto's Bistro, 113 S. Washington Street, Owosso
    Contact: Ben Steele III Phone: (517) 288-5616 E-mail: bsteele1@tir.com

    September 20, 1998 - 3:00 PM
    Teresa Pollok will be speaking at the Constitution Day Remembrance 1998 from 3-7 p.m.
    Location: Livingston County Courthouse, Howell, MI.
    Contact: Teresa Pollok Phone: (810) 229-0737 E-mail: tpollok@livingonline.com

    September 26, 1998
    Libertarian Party of West Michigan I-196 road clean up week.
    Location: I-196 corner of College
    Contact: Erwin Haas Phone: (616) 942-7674 E-mail: haas@iserv.net

    October 3, 1998 - 12:00 AM
    Picnic, leafletting of the Grandville neighbourhood, first Sat of Oct.
    Location: Gelineau's
    Contact: haas Phone: (616) 942-7674 E-mail: haas@iserv.net

    October 10, 1998 - 7:00 PM
    The LP of Mid-West Michigan will hold it's regularly monthly meeting on October 10 at 7:00 PM at the Kountry Kitchen Restaurant in Cadillac. Guest speaker TBA. The Kountry Kitchen is located at 1920 N. Mitchell St. across from the Bob Evans.
    Location: Kountry Kitchen Restaurant, 1920 N. Mitchell St. Cadillac.
    Contact: John Willis Phone: (616) 775-0187 E-mail: lpmwm@geocities.com

    October 14, 1998 - 6:30 PM
    Meeting - Libertarians of Macomb County
    Location: Fire Station Restaurant, 31185 Utica Road, Fraser (on the southwest corner of Utica Road and Groesbeck, just north of 13 Mile Road.
    Contact: Paul Soyk Phone: (810) 977-3523 E-mail: LNUSGMB.ZZYQNH@GMEDS.COM

    October 17, 1998 - 10:00 AM
    The Libertarians of Macomb County Adopt-A-Road clean up day. We will be cleaning up our assigned stretch of Metro Parkway, all volunteers are welcome.
    Location: Southwest corner of Schoenherr and Metro Parkway in Sterling Heights (bank parking lot).
    Contact: Rosemary Racchi Phone: (810) 776-2214

    November 3, 1998
    Election Day -- Don't forget to vote!
    Location: Precinct polling places across the state!
    Contact: Your Libertarian Candidates Phone: (800) 343-1364

    November 7, 1998 - 6:30 PM
    Libertarian Party of Michigan, Liberty Awards Banquet. Keynote Speaker - Jacob Hornburger. Banquet Tickets $50 if ordered before mid-October.
    Location: Top of the Ponchatrain Hotel, Detroit Michigan
    Contact: Joann Karpinski Phone: (313) 925-6917 E-mail: Ben45@aol.com

    November 11, 1998 - 6:30 PM
    Meeting - Libertarians of Macomb County
    Location: Fire Station Restaurant, 31185 Utica Road, Fraser (on the southwest corner of Utica Road and Groesbeck, just north of 13 Mile Road.
    Contact: Paul Soyk Phone: (810) 977-3523 E-mail: LNUSGMB.ZZYQNH@GMEDS.COM

    More
    For more events, see the online calendar at:
    http://www.michiganlp.org/lpmonline/events.php

  2. Paul S. Woolum, Libertarian Candidate for Wayne County Execu

    Being a citizen of Wayne County for 18 years has inspired me first of all to VOTE, and then to become active in causes that will benefit everyone's freedom and protect our constitutional rights. The people of Wayne County, and for that matter in many other counties across America are tired of having their hard-earned money turned over to the local, state or federal government without adequate accountability. Many people are realizing that as government gets larger, it becomes more expensive to operate. Larger government also becomes a more dominate force in our lives, one that will continue to escalate our tax burden, legislate unfair laws and attempt to prevent "We the People" from having a government that is free and fair. The main short term goal as Wayne County Executive would be to access how the airports in Wayne county are being run. If the county is not doing an adequate job, I will seek actions to correct this, including getting the county out of the airport business if beyond the scope of county expertise. The second issue is to assess how all layers of government in the Wayne County area are working together, City, State, County and Federal layers of government and make sure that they all are accountable to the people of Wayne County. After we the taxpayers are held accountable for paying our taxes to all these layers of government, can we then look at our roads or other county services and truly say that there is no better way?

    Why vote Libertarian?

    Some people think of Libertarians as ones who want no laws or taxes. In reality Libertarians are very supportive of laws and we also realize that some form of tax is necessary. We do insist that laws must be in compliance with the Constitution and we insist on fair taxes. Past generations of the two party system (I call it the one party system 'Republicrats') has caused this nation to stray from the guidance of the Constitution and our Bill of Rights. If you have read the Executive Orders that Clinton has signed since he has been in office, you will learn why it is important to protect (and restore) our freedoms that we have come to take for granted. The shifting of power to the one all powerful federal government is taking place, The power and rights of the individual states, the Congress and you, are eroding. Our present form of government has become a juggernaut of bureaucracies and agencies that are continually spawning new agencies and more bureaucracy that at best are wasteful and at worst are a danger to our freedom and privacy and you foot the bill. This is not what our founders envisioned, this is hardly "for the people" "by the people". As history has shown us, power corrupts, but America was supposed to be different. Our constitution was supposed to protect us. The Constitution is not the cherished document it once was, in the hands of many of our present elected officials. Most Americans want to do the right thing and vote for candidates who will help bring America back to it's rightful freedom and fairness. However, most simply do not have the time to research what each candidate is for and against, they just plug their nose and vote for 'the lesser of the two evils'. Libertarians are neither liberal nor conservative, our political motivation is to protect the freedoms and rights of the American citizen, minimize government, minimize taxes and protect the strength and sovereignty of the United States of America.

    I am not a career politician, I am a family man and an engineer with a vision for a better way. As a Libertarian I stick fast to principals of smaller government, individual freedom and individual responsibility and will always use these principals to guide me when elected.

    
    Paul S. Woolum
    18534 Henry
    Melvindale, MI 48122
    313 928-6543
    
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  3. In Praise of Working People by Wendy McElroy

    A prominent difference between the 19th-century libertarian movement and the contemporary one lies in their attitudes toward working people. These are people who are not primarily interested in reading economic or political theory but who focus their energies instead on making a decent living or raising a healthy family. These are intelligent people who understand the impact of laws and government on their lives but who concentrate on controlling the more personal factors involved in their well-being.

    The 19th-century movement considered working people to be the best and firmest foundation on which to build a free society. The three periodicals that constitute a chronicle of earlier libertarianism --- The Word, Liberty, and Lucifer the Light Bearer -- consciously addressed the concerns of working men and women, rather than those of the elite. Indeed, both The Word and Liberty would probably never have existed if their editors had not previously been active in the New England Labor Reform Association, which aimed at improving the conditions of the working poor. Even Liberty, which espoused the lofty-sounding "philosophical anarchism," did not talk down to the laborers who were subscribers. Instead, it went out of its way to include them, e.g. by creating a parallel German-language publication entitled Libertas so that the large number of German immigrants in factory jobs could access individualist-anarchist ideas.

    By contrast, contemporary libertarianism often seems to dismiss working people, sometimes with disdain. Perhaps this attitude comes from the otherwise salutary influence of Ayn Rand and her portrayals of "the solitary hero" who rises like cream from milk above the commonplace. Her novels portray "the masses" in an incredibly unflattering light. Perhaps working people are underrated because the leadership of the movement is top-heavy with university professors and investment gurus, who tend to be divorced from many mundane concerns. Perhaps any political party that consistently receives a small slice of the popular vote would come to view "the masses" with antagonism. Whatever the reason, the pages of the contemporary periodicals are far more likely to discuss the gold standard than the problem of day care for working parents. They are more likely to address the concerns of the successful businessman or an intellectual -- that is, of the elite --- rather than those of a single mother who must work two jobs to buy groceries and who lives in fear that the IRS will discover she is declaring only one income.

    There is a tension involved in dismissing the concerns of working people. As libertarian strategy increasingly focuses on electoral politics, the success of the movement increasingly depends upon the good will and discernment of working people. The tension lies in the following question: How can an elitist movement garner the popular vote or otherwise expand beyond its white, middle-class boundaries?

    Political strategists tell us that the masses are either uninterested in or unable to understand the libertarian ideology. Thus, it must be presented to them in a simplistic and often misleading manner by dealing only with certain well-chosen issues, such as taxation, rather than with principles. Such strategists sift through libertarianism in search of popular issues and they discard the rest in the belief that people will never notice any gaps in theory. Moreover, since working people are said to respond only to matters that directly affect their material well-being, the popular issues are usually phrased in utilitarian or economic terms.

    The notion that "the masses" are not interested in ideology is bizarre. The two most powerful and revolutionary social forces in Western history are both profoundly ideological and they were both embraced by working people: Christianity and Marxism. Although Marxism may have initially had the utilitarian lure of promising to increase the status and wealth of the proletariat, Christianity's appeal has never been economic.

    Moreover, the American Revolution -- which many consider to be the defining libertarian moment in history -- was a grassroots revolution that revolved around principles. In a famous passage, John Adams wrote, "What do we mean by the revolution? The War? That was no part of the Revolution.... The Revolution was in the minds of the people...." The event was sparked by specific events, such as the introduction of the Stamp Act, only because the groundwork of principles had been laid.

    Arguably, the most successful libertarian cause of 19th-century America was also grassroots. It spoke to working people, often through a periodical entitled Working Man's Advocate. This was the land-reform movement that grew under the careful stewardship of the libertarian George Henry Evans. Evans demanded that all land titles be held by the people, not by the government, and not by large business interests that enjoyed government privilege. In 1829, when Evans organized the Agrarian League, he commanded the attention of less than a handful of newspapers. Within three decades, of the approximately 2,000 newspapers published in America, more than 600 of them supported Evans's land reform. In 1862, Congress passed the first homestead law providing that any citizen who was either 21 years old or the head of a family could acquire title to a parcel of federal public land, not to exceed 160 acres. Unfortunately, Evans had died several years earlier.

    Other impressive accomplishments of 19th-century libertarianism relate directly to their appeal to the working person. For example, the adult education movement arose from the tenements of American cities and had its roots in the working class Mechanic's Institutes and Workingman's Institutes of Scotland and England. The appeal of grassroots causes cannot be dismissed as a 19th-century phenomenon. Today, the most fruitful avenues for libertarian change may well be home-schooling and the move to decentralize government that has gripped Western states such as Montana: both have a grassroots appeal because they allow people to reassert control over their own lives.

    Indeed, much of classic libertarian theory is based on trusting working people more than members of the elite. For example, the trial by jury lauded by Lysander Spooner was meant to place community opinion as a safeguard between the individual and the state. As Spooner explained, "The trial by jury is a trial by the country -- that is, by the people -- as distinguished from a trial by the government.... The object ... is to guard against every species of oppression by the government." In short, trial by jury provided an institutional procedure through which the community passed judgment on the justice of government law.

    Years later, the issue of an "educated jury" arose in the pages of Liberty. George A. Schilling suggested that the common man should not be allowed to judge the law because "juries drawn randomly from the population are not likely to be more just or intelligent than the whole body from which they are drawn." In response, Victor Yarros explained that the so-called commonness of jurors was the strength of trial by jury, not a weakness, because the jury represented "the country" in terms of "intelligence, opinions, and state of knowledge." Thus, no state law that was vague, unpopular, or counter to common sense could be enforced. Working people formed a barrier against state oppression.

    Another reason working people are dismissed is that the elite believe they are too unsophisticated to grasp the political and moral principles of libertarianism. Instead, they must be spoon-fed the philosophy, issue by issue. I think precisely the opposite is true. The principles are easier for people to grasp than the issues. Why?

    Many issues require specialized information that working people lack because it is of little practical value to them. In a discussion about Bosnia, for example, people might require an extensive knowledge of that nation's history in order to grasp the points being made. But broad moral questions such as "Is murder ever justified?" do not require specialized information that is unavailable to most persons. A philosopher may have given more thought to the question, but his reasoning and arguments come from observing the same human nature with which everyone is familiar. In short, moral and political principles offer the extreme advantage of requiring no specialized knowledge to be understood. That is why virtually all human beings come to some conclusion about the propriety of murder, even though few may take a firm position on Bosnia.

    Rather than present libertarianism through carefully selected and derivative issues, the rule should be: the more basic the political issue or principle, the more likely it is to be understood by most people and to appeal to their interests. Working people may not understand the evils of Keynesian economics or the complexities of chaos theory. But the people I talk to in coffee shops and grocery stores realize the repercussions that legislation will have on their lives and those of their children far better than university professors. Recently, the media and political pundits have expressed astonishment at the public's reaction to the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal: namely, people refused to condemn Clinton with the knee-jerk moralism that had been predicted by the elite. Instead, regular people turned on the media and accused it of blatantly trying to manipulate them. Once more, the elite had underestimated the intelligence and common sense of "the masses." Or, perhaps, it had overestimated its own.

    Working people also understand when they are being talked down to or otherwise dismissed. This is particularly true of minorities, who are sensitive to social abuse and recognize it in a flash. Again, a tense question arises: How can a white, middle-class movement (libertarianism) expand its appeal without respectfully addressing the issues of burning concern to minorities? These people should be a natural constituency. After all, minorities are the greatest victims of the welfare state and of social programs with racist aspects, such as the war on drugs. Hispanics and blacks already view the political system with such profound suspicion that they are far less likely to call the police than whites are. Yet they are no more friendly to libertarianism. And why should they be? The movement makes no attempt to represent them.

    The principles of libertarianism -- the same principles that sparked the American Revolution -- appeal to working people. In the 18th and 19th centuries, this appeal was the movement's strength. In the 20th century, libertarianism seems to have deliberately cut itself off from its roots. No wonder it has difficulty growing.

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  4. Wires for Yard Signs Available

    Greg Stempfle has 600 wires for yard signs available to whoever can use them. For more info, call Greg at (313) 565-4407.

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