“I’m a fiscal conservative, but a social liberal”. Is it an oxymoron to describe yourself
as such?
How can one be socially liberal yet support a system (such as
capitalism) that inherently devalues a working woman who needs to go on leave
for two years to raise her children?
Essentially, we want the
government out of our bedrooms and also out of our wallets.
Folks who like this description probably believe that they are
taking the best parts of the two major political parties. Social liberalism
from the Democrats/ALP, and economic conservatism from the
Republicans/Coalition. My problem with this perspective is that it is based
upon an incorrect assumption. The incorrect assumption is that economic and
social policies and ramifications are mutually exclusive. They do not interact
with each other. As far as I can tell, they do indeed interact. Socially progressive
and fiscally conservative values are not mutually exclusive.
The reason for the interaction is
simple. A growing number of the so-called social liberties are costing all
citizens more and more real dollars. In other words, there is a price to be
paid for the reckless and irresponsible choices that some people make. There
would be far less linkage between social issues and economic issues if people
were required to clean up their own social messes and not pass the bill on to
others. This is not the case. We live in the era of the government solution. We
try to solve problems by collecting money from everybody, and transferring it
to the problem, which is often cast as a victim.
The key question becomes, when
others choose to be socially liberal, are you willing to spend your money, via
the government, to help them fix situations which they caused? These situations
may often involve behaviours and choices which you might never even remotely
consider appropriate for your own life. Is this being economically conservative?
As I look out on the number of divorces, unwed mothers, declining
test scores, and the increase in violence by children, I can come to no other
conclusion than we are simply taking too many risks. I do not want to tell or
even suggest what people should do. But I also do not want to be handed the
bill when their choices require a bailout.
Being in the era of government, we react to these trends with more and more programs. In the end, I believe that this is an approach that will not work. It has not worked to the extent that we have tried. Do you really believe that these disturbing trends will be slowed and even reversed by government programs? The government should not reward and subsidise risky behaviour. And even if you believe that the government is doing good, will you at least acknowledge that the money that the government spends comes from taxes extracted from families that may very well have far better use for that money - their money. On what moral basis can we extract money in order to fund risky behaviour?
Being in the era of government, we react to these trends with more and more programs. In the end, I believe that this is an approach that will not work. It has not worked to the extent that we have tried. Do you really believe that these disturbing trends will be slowed and even reversed by government programs? The government should not reward and subsidise risky behaviour. And even if you believe that the government is doing good, will you at least acknowledge that the money that the government spends comes from taxes extracted from families that may very well have far better use for that money - their money. On what moral basis can we extract money in order to fund risky behaviour?
I do not claim that raising children can be done without money.
Far from it. I do not believe, however, that government should have a role in
the raising of children. Historically and constitutionally it does not have a
role. It is simply the wrong institution for the job of raising children. If a
family needs financial help, the far more appropriate institutions are extended
family, churches, and the large number of charity groups that exist for this
very purpose. Getting government out of this function will provide substantial
funds which can be redirected to these much better alternatives. Further, it
would eliminate the discrimination against individuals and couples who choose
not to have children.
There appears to be some tension between some “right” and “left”
libertarians. There appears to be a rift between libertarians who lean socially
liberal and the libertarians who lean socially conservative. There is no
denying that many in the libertarian camp are both fiscally conservative and
socially liberal. But that by no means insists that all libertarians are
socially liberal. (Some even claim to be libertarians who are economically
liberal – I just call them wrong). In fact, many libertarians are both
economically and socially conservative. So how do we explain the compatibility
of these socially liberal and social conservative fiscal conservatives? How can
two groups of individuals who differ widely on social issues reconcile their
differences? The answer is that both are libertarians, and being a libertarian
is not about social liberalism or conservatism. Libertarianism is about social
responsibility. The word means “a believer in liberty”. Libertarians believe in
individual conscience and individual choice.
Regardless of what they believe about proper social behaviour,
libertarians maintain that individuals and communities are responsible for
social values, not the government.
The term social liberal/fiscal conservative represents an opinion
about public policy. It represents your opinion about the proper relationship
of one to the other, your view about the proper relationship of state
expenditure to the various “social” needs of the population.
Social conservatives can still be libertarians. That is because it
is individual responsibility that holds together “left” and “right”
libertarians. Those who claim libertarians are merely “fiscally conservative
and socially liberal” should therefore be corrected. Instead we should say that
libertarians are “fiscally conservative and socially responsible”.
How do you reconcile fiscally conservative and socially
progressive values? I think they’re both saying essentially the same thing –
they just want government to spend their tax dollars wisely and get out of
their private lives. Take the state out of private decisions. Abolish both
halves of the welfare/warfare bureaucracy and liberate 90% of our wealth that’s
currently soaked up by the costs of a bloated and ineffective government, to
make us all richer and freer.
Government bureaucracies have no incentive to lift people out of
dependency and every incentive to keep them in it. After all, more poverty
means a bigger budget and more power for the bureaucrats. Instead, income tax
should be abolished and people should be allowed to keep what they earn instead
of taxing it away from them. The wealth freed up would go directly to the
private sector, creating jobs for the poor, decreasing the demand on private
charity, and increasing charitable giving. We should be promoting solutions
that empower people rather than demanding government intervention. Start your
own business and create your own wealth.
When I think of a fiscally conservative person, I think of someone
who believes in free market principles in the form of less taxation, regulation
and is a proponent of capitalism. When I think of someone who is socially
liberal, it is a person who believes in social equality in the form of,
perhaps, gay rights, feminism, and other issues.
In broad terms, being socially conservative means you value
tradition and established conventions, while being socially progressive is
about trying to change things for the better. Economically, conservatives
advocate a small government, lower taxes and harsher stances on crime, while
progressives advocate a government that provides services and regulates the
economy.
If you're fiscally conservative (small government, low taxes) and
socially liberal (generally for people having the right to do what they please
so long as it isn't hurting anyone else), you're a libertarian (who supports
free markets, low regulation and social policy). I consider myself in this
category.
If you're socially liberal regarding a greater redistribution of wealth, a stronger welfare state, or other policies that imply a significant degree of government intervention (affirmative action and abortion can be hazy here), but are otherwise economically conservative (free markets, low regulation), you might qualify as a "moderate libertarian" or just as a moderate. I do not advocate the creation of a welfare state. The welfare system is flawed because it rewards people for being poor and deprives them of incentives to work. It is the welfare system that has sucked individuals into the trap of dependency. The availability of government subsidies lures people away from the effort of work. The opportunity to get compensation for drug- and alcohol-related disabilities lowers people's resistance to these vices. Payments made to unwed mothers undermine the incentive to take precautions against unplanned pregnancies. The best escape route out of poverty is one that government cannot provide – motivation and hard work.
If you're socially liberal regarding a greater redistribution of wealth, a stronger welfare state, or other policies that imply a significant degree of government intervention (affirmative action and abortion can be hazy here), but are otherwise economically conservative (free markets, low regulation), you might qualify as a "moderate libertarian" or just as a moderate. I do not advocate the creation of a welfare state. The welfare system is flawed because it rewards people for being poor and deprives them of incentives to work. It is the welfare system that has sucked individuals into the trap of dependency. The availability of government subsidies lures people away from the effort of work. The opportunity to get compensation for drug- and alcohol-related disabilities lowers people's resistance to these vices. Payments made to unwed mothers undermine the incentive to take precautions against unplanned pregnancies. The best escape route out of poverty is one that government cannot provide – motivation and hard work.
Almost everyone agrees
that a job is better than any welfare program. Yet for years this country has
pursued tax and regulatory policies that seem perversely designed to discourage
economic growth and reduce entrepreneurial opportunities. In addition,
government regulations such as minimum wage laws and mandated benefits drive up
the cost of employing additional workers. Individual initiative and hard work
should be rewarded, not punished. I believe that the system of a progressive
tax is unfair. Why should I be required to pay more taxes because I happen to
make more money? Percentages are equal for everyone, so if I make a million
dollars and have to pay 20% for taxes then it is equally difficult for me as it
is for the person who makes ten thousand dollars. Everyone earns money
according to the amount of time, energy and education that they have expended,
as well as the experience they have garnered. Capitalism has proven to be the
most efficient way of creating and distributing wealth.
A national sales tax would be
better than income tax. The rich would pay more simply because they would buy
more products and the poor would pay less because they would buy less. By
allowing the rich to make more and more money, we encourage them to do and
invest in things that we want. In the short term, inequality is increased, but
in the long term, everyone wins. Government should be in the business of making
sure that the rules of the game are fair, not in redistributing the winnings.
The perspective that a person should pay a higher rate than another is unjust
in that it infringes on the personal freedom of an individual. Distributing a
well-off person's money to everyone just teaches others how to be lazy and get
money for not working. It discourages success. If the rich have less money to
spend, there will be fewer jobs because the rich spend money, and create jobs.
A poor person has never hired me for a job. Nobody should be forced to support
another person entirely, nobody should be paying for another person's
healthcare or whatever. Individuals
who are unable to fully support themselves and their families through the job
market must, once again, learn to rely on supportive family, church, community,
or private charity to bridge the gap. In exchange for public
assistance, the government is entitled to make demands on people. Benefits
should be linked to socially accepted behaviours such as getting a job and
refraining from having more children before a family can afford it.
My support for smaller, less intrusive government means that
government should have less of a role in both the economic and social realms.
Free trade provides economic growth and jobs, and is the best policy for
economic development.
The term libertarian is generally someone who has economically
conservative and socially liberal political
views. Thus a libertarian is
someone who is fiscally conservative and socially liberal, and against
government intervention in economic affairs, and for expansion of personal
freedoms. An individual who is
liberal is one who is favourable to progress or reform. They are also one who
is generally considered to be free from prejudice or bigotry and tolerant.
Libertarians believe that every individual is entitled to equality before the
law and fair treatment as an individual responsible for their own actions. We
oppose racism, sexism and sexual preference bigotry, whether perpetrated by
private individuals or (especially) by government. We recognise that there will
always be bigotry and hatred in the world just like there will always be fear
and stupidity. But one cannot use laws to force understanding any more than one
can use laws to force courage or intelligence. When people use bigotry as an
excuse to commit force or fraud, it is the act itself which is the crime and
deserves punishment, not the motive behind it.
It is not the role of government to negotiate maternity leave
arrangements between employers and employees. Similarly, I want the government
out of marriage. I do not support a government ban on gay marriage, a
Constitutional amendment to define marriage, or laws that discriminate against
people on the basis of sexual orientation. It is the place of individuals to
decide whether or not a marriage can occur; the government should not be
involved in the matter at all. I am also anti-drugs. So much so that I don’t
even like to take pain killers for minor afflictions such as headaches and
minor pain. So I am pro-drug war and anti-legalisation of drugs, right? Wrong!
I believe that individuals are responsible for what they put into their bodies,
not the government. That being said, I do support voluntary education and drug
support groups. But I refuse to let the government be responsible for policing
individuals’ drug use. Responsibility is for the individual, not the state. And
like with marriage, it is also not the government’s place to legislate on
abortion rights. The government should not meddle in a decision that should be
private between a woman and her physician. Having said that, pro-lifers should
not have to subsidise with their money behaviour they consider to be murder. I
would also end all government funding of art. The label “artist” confers no
special right to a living at public expense.
The problem which has been evident for many years now is the fact that the
Australian Liberal Party are called so. The
Liberal Party of Australia is a misnomer - they are against more or less
everything that liberals are for
except for gun control, which they support.
How can a
political party, a major national political party, call themselves Liberal if
their views are counter to that adjective? How can a party, who’s members
identify heavily with nationalism, conservatism and protectionism be named
Liberal?
It is a
great misnomer, one that would cause great embarrassment amongst those of us
who are politically charged and sufficiently educated.
How do
libertarians differ from conservatives? For starters, by not being
conservative. Libertarians hold no brief for the right wing’s rather over
militarist, racist, sexist, and authoritarian tendencies and reject conservative
attempts to “legislate morality” with censorship, drug laws and obnoxious
Bible-thumping.
The Liberal Party,
has at the moment, employed as their leader an icon of Australian conservatism.
Tony Abbott is not a progressive and clearly not an advocate of personal
freedoms and liberties. He supports a bottom line of policy based on religious
belief which could in turn effect legislation if his party were to ever form
government again under his leadership.
In the sane
world, Liberal is a word which describes those of us who are progressive in our
thought, opinions and actions. Those of us without bigotry or prejudice. It
describes those in our society who support freedoms and liberties. This is a
Liberal.
Tony Abbott
is quite possibly, one of the farthest from that description right now in
mainstream Australian politics.
So why does
he lead the Liberal Party? Why has this party, or perhaps, how has this party
been able to hang on to this name for so long? Even with a long line of recent
men at the helm – John Hewson, Alexander Downer, John Howard, Brendan Nelson,
Malcolm Turnbull (actually, Malcolm is one of the few MP’s in the party with
slightly progressive opinions. Two such being the republican issue and on same
sex marriage) the party has still kept its name.
Since the
party was formed after the 1943 federal election after the destruction of the
United Australia Party, the Liberal Party, who has historically held a
coalition with the National Party when in government, the Liberal Party identified
themselves as economic liberalists. Economic liberalism is not the same as
being a liberal, as Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher were also quite the
economic liberalists, however I would dare anyone to even call them remotely
progressive.
The party
has always identified socially with the conservative ideology. They have leaned
towards the old policies of the now non-existent Australian Protectionist
Party. There has always been a nationalist undertone to their ideals and their
governmental policy-making. Their number of government coalitions with the
Nationals – a slightly more right-leaning party, have produced more border
control measures and have made it significantly more difficult for legitimate
refugees to gain asylum and start a new life in Australia.
Social
conservatism is the best way to describe the Australian Liberal Party. And
despite their economic liberalism, this does not in fact, make them liberals in
the slightest way.
Libertarians
believe in open borders but given unrestricted immigration would attract a huge
influx of welfare recipients, libertarians would start by abolishing welfare
programs before opening the borders.
If a party’s
name were fairly based on that party’s agenda, then the Australian Liberal
Party would more realistically be known as the Australian Conservative Party.
I think conservatism is really a misnomer
just as liberalism is a misnomer for the liberals. The basis of conservatism is a desire for
less government interference or less centralised authority or more individual
freedom and this is a pretty general description also of what libertarianism is. True
conservatism, at its heart, is libertarian.
Thus it
pains me greatly to see some self-proclaimed conservatives these days attacking
libertarianism. Instead of true conservative
beliefs – those of small government, individual freedom, and free markets, they
preach social authoritarianism and government control. Casting aside the
ideology of the ‘founding fathers’ of what is now considered conservative
thought, they instead replace it with a statist regime little different to that
of the socialists. Rather than trying to minimise the size and scope of government,
they instead seek to use it to their own ends. Seeking to use government to
achieve your desired aims is not conservative.
Indeed,
while conservatives and libertarians certainly can disagree on some issues,
these are at the periphery. It is our shared view on the size and scope of
government that unites us.
The fact
that there are now these faux-conservatives who argue for greater government regulation, greater responsibilities for the State
and greater control
over peoples lives, is nothing more than an insult to the memories of the true
conservative heroes. It is not conservatism, but socialism in drag, and it is a
disgrace.
If you want
to be a social authoritarian statist, that’s fine. We live in a free country,
and you have the right to be wrong. But please, please, don’t you dare call
yourself a conservative.
What if I
want to crack down on wasteful pensions and union spending on behalf of the
taxpayer, but don't want to deny this country's gay citizens the equal right to
marriage? What if I want to shrink the mind-numbing bureaucracy of government
while continuing to allow women to make their own choices governing their body?
Who do I vote for?
Herein lies
the problem. If you want a fiscal conservative to represent you in Australia
you have to accept an unacceptable amount of socially backward baggage. If you
want a representative committed to human rights and personal liberty you have
to accept a bloated government too close to the nation's unions and too willing
to waste taxpayer dollars.
I am
disappointed by the lack of a reasonable individual to rise from the right to
save the Liberal Party from the religious hijacking currently besieging it. The
Liberal Party has created a social litmus test that is impossible for people
outside of evangelical Christianity to adhere to, and this is going to hurt
them in the long run. As of now, those in my generation have nowhere to turn
for a socially liberal fiscal conservative.
It is not married gays
that keep the nation's unemployment rate high; it is not gays in the military
that have mired us in Iraq and Afghanistan; it is not a woman's right to choose
that has caused foreclosure after foreclosure; and it certainly has not been a
lack of faith in Jesus Christ that saw nearly a trillion taxpayer dollars go to
the very same companies that plunged this nation close to recession. Yet these
social issues remain the priority of the Liberal Party supposedly focused on
reining in government spending and getting our economy back on track.
Because my economic views don’t align with the Liberal Party’s
social views, this leaves me politically stranded. If you feel that politics is
broken, well you’re probably right. One should not have to compromise their
opinions to fit into arbitrary pigeon holes because our country doesn’t offer
an alternative party that values socially progressive and fiscally conservative
policies. A true libertarian party.
This conundrum demonstrates the need for balance in our approach
to governing. We must have visionary leaders with courage to move our country
forward, but they must temper their exuberance with sound fiscal policies that
support new initiatives in a responsible way. In this sense, we must learn to
run government like a business and make sure our policies are both effective,
and cost effective.