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Ridiculous Strawman Watch (Part 4 of ???)

Here's a pretty old post from the blog archives of Geekery Today; it was written about 14 years ago, in 2010, on the World Wide Web.

It’s R.S.W. time again, which puts me in a bit of a quandary. Not about who to recognize in the Watch: Bruce Bartlett’s recent column on libertarianism and Jim Crow obviously deserves a place in the R.S.W. far more than any lesser imitator. But Bartlett’s post does raise a very serious problem: the problem of how I’m supposed to decide which pull-quote from the post actually represents the most ridiculous Ridiculous Strawman that Bartlett has to offer?

Is it Ridiculous Strawman A (of the free market):

The Court’s philosophy in these cases led logically to Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896, which essentially gave constitutional protection to legal segregation enforced by state and local governments throughout the U.S.

As we know from history, the free market did not lead to a breakdown of segregation.[1]

Or is it Ridiculous Strawman B (of the libertarian philosophy and freedom):

In short, the libertarian philosophy of Rand Paul and the Supreme Court of the 1880s and 1890s [?! sic — Ed.] gave us almost 100 years of segregation, white supremacy, lynchings, chain gangs, the KKK, and discrimination of African Americans for no other reason except their skin color. … Thus we have a perfect test of the libertarian philosophy and an indisputable conclusion: it didn’t work. Freedom did not lead to a decline in racism; it only got worse.

Long-time readers may remember that Bartlett was already named as an R.S.W. laureate a little more than a year ago (in which he decided that the problem with American libertarians is that they never talk about interventionist foreign policy or the War on Drugs). But such a man of action is not content to rest on his laurels, and he has certainly outdone himself this year.

As usual, of course, I have little interest in defending a weaselly conservative statist like Rand Paul; and none at all in defending the Supreme Court of the 1880s and 1890s. But I do have some passing familiarity with the libertarian philosophy, and with the meaning of the term free market; and I think that if you consider almost a century of legal segregation enforced by state and local governments to be the right setting for a historical on free market outcomes; or looking at what happened under politically-enforced white supremacy, lynchings, chain gangs and the KKK to be a perfect test of the libertarian philosophy — apparently on the notion that libertarian anti-statism is identical with a doctrine of unlimited States Rights, and the free market is identical with the market outcomes that you get when pervasive racism and segregation are explicitly required by an extensive system of government economic regulation — well, then, you, sir, are eminently qualified for the R.S.W.

See also:

  1. [1]Of course, to be fair to Bartlett here, it is true that the free market did not lead to a breakdown of segregation in the American South. Neither did a Communist invasion of the United States, or a visitation by space aliens. Guess what all of these things have in common? —R.G.

5 replies to Ridiculous Strawman Watch (Part 4 of ???) Use a feed to Follow replies to this article · TrackBack URI

  1. Discussed at www.theanarchisttownship.freedom-blogs.com

    The Anarchist Township» Blog Roll Call for the week of 6/14/10:

    […] How ridiculous can your understanding be of a freed market place? Well apparently Charles can help y… […]

  2. Natasha Petrova

    In fairness to Bruce; it is true that minarchists do sometimes treat state’s rights as a part of the ideology.

    • Rad Geek

      My complaint against Bartlett isn’t that he treats a States’ Rights doctrine as part of one kind of libertarianism. That’s fine; obviously, some libertarians believe in that stuff. (I’m anti-States-Rights, but I am a decentralist, so hey man, I reach.) My complaint, though, is that Bartlett straightforwardly treats Sates-Rightsism as simply identical with the libertarian philosophy, just as such. This is obviously wrong — indeed, a Ridiculous Strawman. But the Ridiculous Strawman is of course necessary if you are going to argue that the Supreme Court was acting on a libertarian philosophy in Plessy v. Ferguson (!) or that we have a perfect test of the libertarian philosophy and an indisputable conclusion: it didn’t work.

· August 2010 ·

— 2013 —

  1. Discussed at radgeek.com

    Rad Geek People's Daily 2013-12-04 – Burn Corporate Liberalism:

    […] most formulaic and uncharitable possible terms; in general the article might be a candidate for the Ridiculous Strawman Watch, but mostly it is just a demonstration, as Nathan Goodman says, that the author couldn’t pass […]

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