All Kinds of Jargon
From: A Cox Crow: http://www.coxesroost.net/journal/2008/06/15/all-kinds-of-jargon
After reading The Austrian Economists site for a while now, I notice it shares some features with some papers Niall Ferguson posted on his website. Namely, name-dropping.
I’ve been out [...]
The people at the Economics Roundtable – the blog roll I visit every day – have seen fit to legitimize the article below from the Financial Times, by Tim Harford (“Deer Crossing”).
In the article Tim furthers the misconception that [...]
Soros is someone who exasperates me politically and impresses me entrepreneurially. He mixes leftist, Keynsian, and Austrian views. He correctly understands the problem that Hayek proposes. But he does not understand the cause, which Rothbard proposes. Or, at least, I [...]
There is another article over on Economist’s View on the supposedly widening gap in incomes. The link to the original article is actually dead, but the postings are still of interest.
I ranted a bit, and copied [...]
This is one of my better rants of late:
…I mean, there are Ponzi schemes and Ponzi Schemes, but this one is the mother of all Ponzis, and when the Hayekian Knowledge Bill Collector shows up, the auditors are going [...]
This is yet an other essay on environmental catastrophe. It says that something is bad but it does not say why.
The most common reason why people think this kind of thing is fear that comes from the Garden of [...]
About
Curt Doolittle
Seattle, WA, United States
"De Philosophia Aristocratia"
I am an independent theorist of Political Economy in the Austrian Libertarian tradition. As a methodological Propertarian, I support the Property and Freedom Society, The Mises Institute, and the Neo-Classical LIberalism Movement.Purpose
Anglo Conservatism is the remnant of the European Aristocratic Manorial system and the Classical Liberal philosophy of the Enlightenment, combined with our ancient tribal instincts for group persistence and land-holding. It currently consists as a set of sentiments rather than as an articulated rational philosophy. And without that rational articulation, conservatives lack the ability to create and promote a plan that is a positive and rhetorically defensible alternative to the hazards of accidental bureaucracy and purposeful socialism.
This lack of an articulated philosophy leaves conservatives vulnerable in the public debate with Schumpeterian public intellectuals whose advantage in both volume of production, and simplicity of argument poses a nearly insurmountable challenge.
Libertarianism by contrast, is a rational philosophy of an articulate but permanent minority. It is based upon a solid, rational and critical methodology, even if it is flawed in its initial assumption: the principle of non-violence.
Unfortunately the Rothbardian Anarchist movement has appropriated the term "Libertarian", and left Classical Liberals and Conservatives alienated from the only system of thought with which they need to articulate their political sentiments in rational and empirical rather than moralistic and sentimental form.
By repairing the flaws in Libertarian philosophy we can use its methodology to provide a rhetorical solution for conservatives - a language which in turn may become an articulated philosophical body of argument and advocacy for the frustrated conservative majority.
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Putting The American Failure To Support Britain Over Argentina In Strategic Context