Guardians Against Slippery Slopes: The members of America's Libertarian Party don’t seem to understand this, uh… liberty thing
Of all parties, you'd expect the Libertarians to stand against the big
government insanity of private sector nondiscrimination laws
observes
Benny Huang as
InstaPundit notes that
Libertarian Party membership applications double after Trump becomes GOP nominee.
They don't.
If you’re like me you’re probably searching for a third party
candidate in the wake of Donald Trump’s clinching of the GOP nomination.
For those of you considering the Libertarian Party (LP), I hope you’ll
reconsider.
The party’s current frontrunner, former New Mexico Governor Gary
Johnson, doesn’t seem to understand this liberty thing. He thinks it
means drugs and abortion but should you decide that you don’t want to
engage in a business transaction he wants the government to coerce you.
The party’s other candidates aren’t quite as extreme
in their statism though none of them will make an unqualified stand for
your Thirteenth Amendment right not to be held in involuntary
servitude—which is exactly what private sector nondiscrimination laws
are.
Johnson is so enamored with the concept of private sector
nondiscrimination laws that he wants to force Jewish bakers to make a
Nazi wedding cakes. Yes, really.
Contrary to the battle cry of his party, “Minimum government, maximum
freedom,” Johnson thinks the government should mandate that party A do
business with party B. I don’t.
My philosophy is that both ends of any economic transaction should be
voluntary. That is not, by the way, a return to Jim Crow. Jim Crow was
also a statist monstrosity which prohibited businesses from serving whom they wished. Big difference.
Johnson makes the familiar slippery slope argument that permitting
businesses to refuse service to one group for one reason will quickly
get out of control and then all sorts of businesses will be
discriminating for all sorts of reasons. For the life of me, I can’t
explain why a libertarian would be upset about this. It certainly puts
the lie to the rest of his supposed libertarian beliefs.
… The moderator, John Stossel, then asked whether Jews should have to
bake a Nazi wedding cake and Johnson replied, “That’s my contention,
yes.” He then went on to cite the silliest slippery slope argument I
have ever heard—and I’ve heard some silly ones. He actually said that a
private utility company might decide to shut off someone’s electricity
for religious reasons.
Is this really a problem? No really; has this ever happened in the history of the universe? Where do they get these ridiculous scenarios?
I don’t mean to imply that slippery slope arguments are inherently
suspect. To the contrary, we’re racing down a slippery slope at
breathtaking speed but in the other direction. The idea that
business owners can’t discriminate is being taken to absurd lengths and
it will only get more bizarre in coming years. It isn’t just
nondiscrimination laws either. Once we’ve accepted that private
businesses aren’t really private there’s essentially nothing the
government can’t mandate or prohibit. If you’re okay with that then
please don’t call yourself a libertarian, a conservative, or even an
American. Call yourself something else. Please.
… Strange things start happening when that right disappears. What seems
like an absurd application of the law today may seem quite normal in
twenty years. The sky’s really the limit. Just imagine if you could go
back in time and tell Ralph Abernathy, one of Martin Luther King’s
closest advisers and an ordained minister, that the precedent he was
setting would one day be invoked to make Christians such as himself bake
wedding cakes for homosexual weddings. He would have thought you were
mad.
Nondiscrimination laws are now being used to force private businesses
to allow men to use the ladies’ room. That’s what Houston’s HERO was
about, as well as Charlotte’s recent law which was preempted by the
state of North Carolina, which may in turn be preempted by Obama’s
dictatorial powers. The Obama Administration’s wacky position isn’t even
that we should integrate bathrooms, only that each of us should have
the freedom to self-select which group we belong to.
…
The hottest new fad in nondiscrimination law is protection for
convicted felons. Most of us don’t think that being a murderer or rapist
is a status deserving of protection but then against most of us don’t
work for the Obama Administration. Last month, the US Department of Housing issued a decree
saying that refusing to rent to a prospective tenant on account of a
criminal record may violate the Fair Housing Act. Actuality, it doesn’t.
The act prohibits discrimination based on race but not on felony
conviction. The Department maintains that discrimination against felons
is de facto discrimination against racial minorities. So there you have
it folks—Democrats think minorities are a bunch of criminals. And we’re the racist ones?