Brief Commentary from National Vanguard magazine, Issue No. 103, January-February 1985:
The Libertarian movement, nurtured in part by widespread disgust or  disillusionment with the two major parties and in part by its adherents'  yen to be associated with an imagined political and intellectual elite,  has expanded in recent years. Most new recruits seem to be gathered  from that somewhat nebulous group known as Yuppies: television-weaned,  city-centered folk under 40 whose major pursuits in life are a full  enjoyment of the standard items on man's pleasure menu, as well as rapid  job advancement in some high-tech or otherwise glamorous industry,  interrupted occasionally by est encounters, visits to the racquetball  courts, and libertarian meetings.
Libertarianism fits the spiritual vistas of many Yuppies like their  Calvin Kleins fit their bods. It combines comfortable elements from  their radical youth with the nervous economic conservatism of their  maturity, and all of it is dressed in the flattering garb of profound  philosophy.
The high priestess of libertarianism is the late Ayn Rand, a one-time  Hollywood screenwriter and the author of long novels dramatizing her  philosophy, known as "objectivism." The salient thesis of Randian  thought is that the individual human mind is the prime mover of all  progress, and anything that would fetter or restrict it is part of a  "collectivist" drag back to primitivism.
Government exists -- or should -- solely to enforce contracts between  free individuals, and perhaps to provide for the common defense,  although no one is obligated to pay for the defense or to serve in the  armed forces. Libertarians in practice strongly oppose drug control,  immigration laws, gun-control laws, social-welfare programs, and  taxation. They favor unlimited and uncontrolled capitalism in all its  forms.
The type of society favored by libertarians seems to be a sort of  loosely-contained anarchy: each intelligent, self-seeking, rational mind  goes quietly and peacefully about its business, pursuing its own  objectives, not disturbing or interfering with the objectives of other  free and rational entities. Government, such as it is, will be called  upon only to arbitrate contractual disputes.
While any citizen so inclined can ship himself off to boot camp in order  to keep the armed forces going, the ultimate defense against  "collectivist" oppressors is . . . an elitist strike. Those possessors  of the freest, most rational, and most inventive brains simply will  refuse to continue to exercise their competence and ingenuity in the  service of "collectivists." After their strike causes the lights of  civilization to go out, lo, the objectivist heroes will get into harness  once more, having demonstrated to the unappreciative herd the errors of  its past ways. 
Rand manages to impart a certain appeal to these concepts in the pages  of her emotional romances. But the entire movement, from its seminal  ideas to its political expression, is a trap for deracinated fools.  "Objectivism" is a soul-state for urban Americans dominated by a highly  personal and economic Weltanschauung. It is not political  thinking at all, merely a thinking about politics. It is, at bottom, a  poltroonish mirage for those who will not face the grim facts about a  world teeming with hostile non-Whites (who would slaughter with glee all  elitists "on strike") and an America rapidly sinking into a multiracial  quicksand. The libertarian is oblivious to the fact that present racial  trends, if permitted to continue, will at the very least put an end to  his treasured concepts of unlimited frontiers, endless space, and wild  freedoms, those nostalgic mind-sets that abet the growth of puerile  nonsense such as libertarianism.
Rand and most of the early objectivists were Jews; thus the preference  for an anarchic bourgeois condition and the primacy of economic  thinking. The Jewish communist and the Jewish libertarian may seem to be  in violent opposition, but with the emphasis on the material and on  what is considered to be the "rational," the two are alike, though one  may seek the end of "justice" and other that of "freedom." Both are  hostile to movements built on national, racial, or cultural instincts.
To a libertarian the "mind" that creates civilization is spread about  indiscriminately among all races and peoples. Racial idealism, cultural  dynamism -- these are invalid concepts that in the "free marketplace of  ideas" will find new buyers, say the libertarians. And so it is that Ayn  Rand once wrote: "Racism is the lowest, most crudely primitive form of  collectivism." 1
Those who are attuned to facts, to reality, and whose  living, race-based impulses are Western, Faustian, will smile --  horselaugh, perhaps -- at Rand's transparent stupidity and at the  pathetic childishness of her followers. Were it not for a tax-supported  police force, and for the tax monies that go into the monthly welfare  checks, the impoverished urban non-Whites would rise in the night to  murder all objectivist Yuppies faster than one could say, "Who is John  Galt?"
Let the libertarians continue to weave their fantastic, gossamer webs.  Let them add their bit to the chaotic factionalism of America, this  bizarre whirlpool with a hollow death at the nadir. The static  rationalist concepts of prissy "objectivists" will drown in the steaming  vortex; schemes about going "on strike" against mindlessness will bring  one day only a sad, head-shaking smile to those who once held them  dear. 
Libertarians quack loudly and long about "rational thinking," but in reality their program discourages fact-based thinking  on the part of intelligent Whites, a few of whom might otherwise be  capable of thinking their way through to a realization of their dire  straits. Instead, the libertarian movement offers them only a sugared,  gingerbread ideology, which will crumble instantly at the first  full-blown, feral blast of the dragon's breath. 
__________________________________
1 Ayn Rand, The Virtue of Selfishness (New American Library), p. 172.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment