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Any donation is greatly appreciated! 47e6GvjL4in5Zy5vVHMb9PQtGXQAcFvWSCQn2fuwDYZoZRk3oFjefr51WBNDGG9EjF1YDavg7pwGDFSAVWC5K42CBcLLv5U OR DONATE HERE: https://www.monerotalk.live/donate TODAY'S SHOW: Douglas Tuman interviews Mike ter Maat, the vice presidential candidate of the Libertarian Party. They discuss topics related to the Libertarian Party's platform, including free markets, deregulation, opposition to the Federal Reserve, and support for privacy coins like Monero. Mike advocates for reducing the power of government and argues that the Libertarian Party better aligns with traditional American values of individual liberty. They also cover the challenges of third parties in America, Julian Assange, Ross Ulbricht, nuclear energy and much more. community. TIMESTAMPS: (00:01:08) Introduction and Background (00:03:16) Libertarian Party Platform (00:43:57) Privacy and Cryptocurrency (00:57:04) Surveillance State and Government Overreach (01:04:00) Gaining Traction for Libertarian Ideas LINKS: https://x.com/terMaatMike Purchase Cafe & tip the farmers w/ XMR! https://gratuitas.org/ Purchase a plug & play Monero node at https://moneronodo.com SPONSORS: Cakewallet.com, the first open-source Monero wallet for iOS. You can even exchange between XMR, BTC, LTC & more in the app! Monero.com by Cake Wallet - ONLY Monero wallet (https://monero.com/) StealthEX, an instant exchange. Go to (https://stealthex.io) to instantly exchange between Monero and 450 plus assets, w/o having to create an account or register & with no limits. WEBSITE: https://www.monerotopia.com CONTACT: monerotalk@protonmail.com ODYSEE: https://odysee.com/@MoneroTalk:8 TWITTER: https://twitter.com/monerotalk FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/MoneroTalk HOST: https://twitter.com/douglastuman INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/monerotalk TELEGRAM: https://t.me/monerotopia MATRIX: https://matrix.to/#/%23monerotopia%3Amonero.social MASTODON: @Monerotalk@mastodon.social MONERO.TOWN: https://monero.town/u/monerotalk
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast: Episode 390. In the second half of a discussion on Disenthrall (for Part I, see KOL389 | Disenthrall: With Patrick Smith and Larken Rose the Morality of Copyright “Piracy”), host Patrick Smith and I discussed recent changes to the Libertarian Party Platform related to aggression and property rights; see Aggression and Property Rights Plank in the Libertarian Party Platform. We also touched on other issues like abandonment of property. Youtube of show: https://youtu.be/5c4-nO40IGo Odysee version of entire show: Related: Property Title Records and Insurance in a Free Society, Mises Blog (Dec. 4, 2010) Homesteading, Abandonment, and Unowned Land in the Civil Law (Mises Blog, 2009) Further Thoughts on Abandonment and Alienability in Contract Theory: Discussions with Jay Lakner Left-Libertarians on Rothbardian Abandonment A Critique of Mutualist Occupancy How To Think About Property (2019) Libertarian Answer Man: Abandoning Property on your curb for the trash man: who owns what? Some of my further thoughts that I sent Patrick via DM after the show (lightly edited): More thoughts re abandonment. I think if you pick up a stick in the forest and use it for an hour then discard it, it's now unowned again. The reason is you didn't take the steps necessary to establish a publicly visible (objective, observable; intersubjectively ascertainable) link. As far as others are concerned, it's unowned--maybe they don't know it was ever owned. Hell, when you pick it up and use it, you don't know if someone had used it previously and then abandoned it. So in your own use of an unowned thing, you yourself make assumptions about its current unowned status. Can you complain if others make assumptions about the resource if you skedaddle? Imagine someone who sells you a car and then later tries to get the car back, by saying "well I was just joking or pretending when I said you could have it". We would not let him do that, because we would look at what his words and behavior actually reasonably and objectively communicated, right? Likewise, suppose some guy owns a little lot and never develops it, and he leaves town, leaving behind a sign saying "I hereby abandon this; finders' keepers" and he puts a notice to that effect in the paper. Someone else then homesteads it and builds a home on it. A year later the guy comes back and says he wants his land back, that he was "only joking." Another example: if A owns some land and has no heirs, and he dies, then it's now unowned and up for grabs. But how do we know he died? What if he goes off to fight a war and it's uncertain, and we hear reliable reports he was killed. So eventually he's declared dead and someone homesteads the land. But then 20 years later he shows up and claims it. Why did he wait so long? One more example: A owns it and has no heirs, and he fakes his own death (for his own reasons--maybe to torment an ex-wife or a parent or to escape his enemies). So everyone assumes he's dead, and someone else, B, homesteads the land. 15 years later A shows up and wants his land back. He says he never died, he only faked it. Now as between A and B, who has the better claim? Did A abandon it, or not, by his act of faking his death, by his allowing people to believe this and act in reliance on it? Let me know how you think about these cases. If you tend to agree with me, then I think you'll see where I'm going and how it's relevant for acquisitive prescription. If you neglect your property for too long, and others are uncertain or misled, and start to use it, and you never show up to correct their misimpression, or to object to their use, you can see that over time, people would start to disregard your claim to reclaim your original title. One more thing: you mentioned title insurance. I've written about that briefly here --Property Title Records and Insurance in a Free Society.
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast: Episode 390. In the second half of a discussion on Disenthrall (for Part I, see KOL389 | Disenthrall: With Patrick Smith and Larken Rose the Morality of Copyright “Piracy”), host Patrick Smith and I discussed recent changes to the Libertarian Party Platform related to aggression and property rights; see Aggression and Property Rights Plank in the Libertarian Party Platform. We also touched on other issues like abandonment of property. Youtube of show: https://youtu.be/5c4-nO40IGo Odysee version of entire show: Related: Property Title Records and Insurance in a Free Society, Mises Blog (Dec. 4, 2010) Homesteading, Abandonment, and Unowned Land in the Civil Law (Mises Blog, 2009) Further Thoughts on Abandonment and Alienability in Contract Theory: Discussions with Jay Lakner Left-Libertarians on Rothbardian Abandonment A Critique of Mutualist Occupancy How To Think About Property (2019) Libertarian Answer Man: Abandoning Property on your curb for the trash man: who owns what? Some of my further thoughts that I sent Patrick via DM after the show (lightly edited): More thoughts re abandonment. I think if you pick up a stick in the forest and use it for an hour then discard it, it's now unowned again. The reason is you didn't take the steps necessary to establish a publicly visible (objective, observable; intersubjectively ascertainable) link. As far as others are concerned, it's unowned--maybe they don't know it was ever owned. Hell, when you pick it up and use it, you don't know if someone had used it previously and then abandoned it. So in your own use of an unowned thing, you yourself make assumptions about its current unowned status. Can you complain if others make assumptions about the resource if you skedaddle? Imagine someone who sells you a car and then later tries to get the car back, by saying "well I was just joking or pretending when I said you could have it". We would not let him do that, because we would look at what his words and behavior actually reasonably and objectively communicated, right? Likewise, suppose some guy owns a little lot and never develops it, and he leaves town, leaving behind a sign saying "I hereby abandon this; finders' keepers" and he puts a notice to that effect in the paper. Someone else then homesteads it and builds a home on it. A year later the guy comes back and says he wants his land back, that he was "only joking." Another example: if A owns some land and has no heirs, and he dies, then it's now unowned and up for grabs. But how do we know he died? What if he goes off to fight a war and it's uncertain, and we hear reliable reports he was killed. So eventually he's declared dead and someone homesteads the land. But then 20 years later he shows up and claims it. Why did he wait so long? One more example: A owns it and has no heirs, and he fakes his own death (for his own reasons--maybe to torment an ex-wife or a parent or to escape his enemies). So everyone assumes he's dead, and someone else, B, homesteads the land. 15 years later A shows up and wants his land back. He says he never died, he only faked it. Now as between A and B, who has the better claim? Did A abandon it, or not, by his act of faking his death, by his allowing people to believe this and act in reliance on it? Let me know how you think about these cases. If you tend to agree with me, then I think you'll see where I'm going and how it's relevant for acquisitive prescription. If you neglect your property for too long, and others are uncertain or misled, and start to use it, and you never show up to correct their misimpression, or to object to their use, you can see that over time, people would start to disregard your claim to reclaim your original title. One more thing: you mentioned title insurance. I've written about that briefly here --Property Title Records and Insurance in a Free Society.
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 382. I was an impromptu guest at the FreeTalkLive tent at PorcFest 2022 today (June 23, 2022), with host Mark Edge (and Aria) discussing corporations and limited liability, and also the recent "Reno Reset" at the Libertarian Party's 2022 Convention in Reno. Related: Corporate Personhood, Limited Liability, and Double Taxation Aggression and Property Rights Plank in the Libertarian Party Platform
Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 382. I was an impromptu guest at the FreeTalkLive tent at PorcFest 2022 today (June 23, 2022), with host Mark Edge (and Aria) discussing corporations and limited liability, and also the recent "Reno Reset" at the Libertarian Party's 2022 Convention in Reno. Related: Corporate Personhood, Limited Liability, and Double Taxation Aggression and Property Rights Plank in the Libertarian Party Platform
Hour 1 - John's guests include Kristen Tate from the Independent Women's Voice and the 2020 Libertarian Vice Presidential candidate Spike Cohen.
The Libertarian Party Platform is a manifesto of FREEDOM. The LP leadership has largely been Statist Tools who are either outright working to undermine the stated goals in the platform or are clueless assclowns who have no idea how to inspire a revolution. One of the few, yet OUTSTANDING exceptions is the LP Secretary Caryn Ann Harlos. Her dedication to the Radical Ideas of Self Ownership has been proven many times. If the LP has any hope of success in the future it will be because of the efforts of people like Caryn Ann. She is an Anarch and I could not be happier that she is a REAL leader on the LNC. AA Links- https://aquariananarchy.com/ Patreon- https://www.patreon.com/AquarianAnarchy Anchor- https://anchor.fm/aquarian-anarchy Twitter- https://twitter.com/AnarchyAquarian Store- https://teespring.com/stores/aquarian... Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/Aquarian-Ana... Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/aquarianana... Mewe- https://mewe.com/i/marcuspulis Chad Twitter- https://twitter.com/chadlismyname Nicco Twitter- https://twitter.com/Nic_Ave23 Guest Links: Twitter: @carynannharlos YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/pinkflameofliberty --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/aquarian-anarchy/support
Back from a crazy week, we get into face masks, the weird world of sports, and schools reopening. Also, we do a breakdown on one topic of the Libertarian Party Platform, drug incarceration.
Is Libertarianism, the hard to define, some people who [...]
Today I give a brief overview of the Libertarian Party Platform, from LP.org --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/eyeon2020/support
We continue from Eps 5 and 6 talking about the evolution of the platform of the Libertarian Party, including its high and low points. Particular attention is given to the platform changes made at the 2018 convention. 2018 Libertarian Party Platform: https://www.lp.org/platform/ 2018 Platform Committee Report: https://lpedia.org/w/images/4/45/Report-2018-Platcomm.pdf 2018 Supplement to Platform Committee Report: https://lpedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Upload&wpDestFile=File:Report-2018-Platcomm_Supplemental.pdf Caryn Ann on the Tom Woods Show: https://www.lp.org/lnc-regional-rep-caryn-ann-harlos-on-the-tom-woods-podcast/ More Info about Caryn Ann: http://lpedia.org/Caryn_Ann_Harlos Please support this podcast by visiting: http://biglpodcast.com/#Support iTunes review also help! Please leave one today for a shout-out (unless it is a bad review, LOL, then you may get a different kind of shout-out). You can also support Caryn Ann also by beginning all Amazon purchases through her affiliate link. For instance, check out this book at https://amzn.to/2OwnKsJ (a great intro book to the Party), and then just continue your searches and purchases from there. Amazon gives credit to any purchases done during the session not just the featured book. Please shop OFTEN AND HARD. You can contact Caryn Ann at pinkflameofliberty@gmail.com Follow Caryn Ann on social media and other sharing sites: Steemit: https://steemit.com/@pinkflame Facebook Public Figure: https://www.facebook.com/pinkflameofliberty/ Facebook Personal: https://www.facebook.com/carynannharlos Facebook Big L Podcast Page: https://www.facebook.com/biglpodcast MeWe: mewe.com/i/caryn_annharlos Minds: https://www.minds.com/CarynAnnHarlos YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/pinkflameofliberty All Big L Patrons are automatically given patron status for the Pink Flame of Liberty show. Disclaimer: All opinions are those of Caryn Ann Harlos only and not to be attributed as the official position of the Libertarian Party.
We continue from Ep 5 talking about the evolution of the platform of the Libertarian Party, including its high and low points. Particular attention is given to the 2002 and 2004 platform and as it relates to the "Portland Massacre" of 2006 engineered by the Reform Caucus leading to the birth of the Radical Caucus. Other topics include: What is the "Big Tent"? What is the difference between critiquing people versus ideas 2018 Platform changes and Caryn Ann's involvement as Chairwoman The LP Program The silly battles between the radicals, the moderates, and the pragmatists The role of the Platform Committee and its members Abortion and the Libertarian Party Is the Libertarian Party "centrist"? 2002 Libertarian Party Platform: https://lpedia.org/2002_National_Platform 2004 Libertarian Party Platform: http://www.lpedia.org/2004_National_Platform Platform of the Libertarian Party Radical Caucus: http://www.lpradicalcaucus.org/platform Reason article on the Portland Massacre: https://reason.com/archives/2006/07/07/the-portland-plank-massacre-of L.K. Samuels on the Portland Massacre: https://www.lewrockwell.com/2006/07/lk-samuels/evicting-libertarian-party-principles-theportlandpurge/ Lew Rockwell on the Portland Massacre: https://www.lewrockwell.com/2006/09/lew-rockwell/the-lps-turkish-delight/ Brian Holtz on "De-Kookification": http://marketliberal.org/FixLP.html Caryn Ann's widely shared article on abortion: http://independentpoliticalreport.com/2015/08/caryn-ann-harlos-abortion-and-the-libertarian-conscience/ Caryn Ann on the Big Tent and the lines in the sand: https://steemit.com/nonagression/@pinkflame/a-libertarian-party-partisan-draws-her-linefqafa Info about Caryn Ann: http://lpedia.org/Caryn_Ann_Harlos BIG ANNOUNCEMENT on new find that is a lynchpin in the argument for the assertion that the Libertarian Party absolutely holds that taxation is theft discussed in Ep 4. Please support this podcast by visiting: http://biglpodcast.com/#Support iTunes review also help! Please leave one today for a shout-out (unless it is a bad review, LOL, then you may get a different kind of shout-out). You can also support Caryn Ann also by beginning all Amazon purchases through her affiliate link. For instance, check out this book at https://amzn.to/2OwnKsJ (a great intro book to the Party), and then just continue your searches and purchases from there. Amazon gives credit to any purchases done during the session not just the featured book. Please shop OFTEN AND HARD. You can contact Caryn Ann at pinkflameofliberty@gmail.com Follow Caryn Ann on social media and other sharing sites: Steemit: https://steemit.com/@pinkflame Facebook Public Figure: https://www.facebook.com/pinkflameofliberty/ Facebook Personal: https://www.facebook.com/carynannharlos MeWe: mewe.com/i/caryn_annharlos Minds: https://www.minds.com/CarynAnnHarlos YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/pinkflameofliberty All Big L Patrons are automatically given patron status for the Pink Flame of Liberty show. Disclaimer: All opinions are those of Caryn Ann Harlos only and not to be attributed as the official position of the Libertarian Party.
Why is the Libertarian Party Statement of Principles so important? Caryn Ann begins a three-part series on the LP and the Enduring Importance of the Statement of Principles. If you want the background on the history and meaning of this very important document, you don't want to miss this trilogy of episodes. Make sure to start with this one and listen to all three to get the most benefit from this. Here are links to various reference materials as a supplement to the material discussed on this episode: https://www.lp.org/platform/ - The 2018 Libertarian Party Platform including the Statement of Principles https://www.lp.org/platform/ - Reference article on the history of the Statement of Principles http://lpedia.org/Document:1974_National_Platform - 1974 Libertarian Party Platform http://libertarianism.wikia.com/wiki/Libertarian_Party_Constitution_and_Bylaws_1972 - 1972 Libertarian Party Constitution and Bylaws http://lpedia.org/Document:National_Bylaws_and_Convention_Rules_2016 - 2016 Libertarian Party Bylaws and Convention Rules https://www.lp.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/2018_LP_Bylaws_and_Convention_Rules_w_2016_JC_Rules.pdf - 2018 Libertarian Party Bylaws and Convention Rules Full videos of the 2018 Libertarian Party Convention (the 7/8 Statement of Principles vote took place on the first day) *https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9G2iZl4gEFg&t=18163s *https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MgLaLP3yV10&t=11s *https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5BOEDjFZ5E https://lpedia.org/Document:Memoir_2017_D_Frank_Robinson_on_the_Statement_of_Principles - Memoir of D. Frank Robinson