Given how often libertarians are mentioned here, I thought this would be interesting. And maybe there's some people with a lot more insight into what's going on.
A few months back (May 29), the national leadership of the Libertarian Party (the "Big L" political party, not the "small l" belief system) was taken over by a group called the "Mises Caucus". While their platform seems to be a mundane version of a normal platform.
In recent days, there's several state level "rebellions" which seems to indicate that the schism between the old guard and them isn't going away any time soon.
For me, they do seem to tilt at absolutist windmills rather than do stuff they want done - which is a common libertarian flaw. And the implicit emphasis on Mises economics is a huge problem for me. Their stance against vaccination and supporting Trump's allegations of election fraud seem pretty shifty.
OTOH, the previous leadership didn't seem all that interested in libertarianism. Maybe this will shake things up in a useful way?
So what are peoples' takes on this?
Reply to: Re:It's Important to Remember...
(Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday September 20 2022, @10:30PM
According to you then, the brain would work better with only one neuron.
This model is broken on multiple levels. If humans were as smart as one neuron, voting wouldn't make sense. Brains have very tight coordination - communication on really fast levels of milliseconds. Democracies just don't have that.
And it makes no sense to attribute goodness and badness to neurons. That action occurs for emergent phenomena at a higher level. Similarly, it makes no sense to blame individuals for the emergent phenomena of societies and governments that they have no control (or perhaps one two hundred millionth) over.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday September 20 2022, @10:30PM
This model is broken on multiple levels. If humans were as smart as one neuron, voting wouldn't make sense. Brains have very tight coordination - communication on really fast levels of milliseconds. Democracies just don't have that.
And it makes no sense to attribute goodness and badness to neurons. That action occurs for emergent phenomena at a higher level. Similarly, it makes no sense to blame individuals for the emergent phenomena of societies and governments that they have no control (or perhaps one two hundred millionth) over.