Part Of The Problem - Jeremy Kauffman
Episode Date: September 19, 2024Dave Smith brings you the latest in politics! On this episode of Part Of The Problem, Dave is joined by Jeremy Kauffman to discuss Jeremy's viral video on X of agents showing up at his home, ...how to bridge the gap between left and right wing libertarians, and so much more.Part Of The Problem is available for early pre-release at https://partoftheproblem.com as well as an exclusive episode on Thursday!Support Our SponsorsSheath - https://sheathunderwear.com use promo code PROBLEM20My Patriot Supply - https://www.preparewithsmith.com/Qualia Senolytics -https://www.qualialife.com/problemGet your tickets to Porch Tour Herehttps://porchtour.comFind Run Your Mouth here:YouTube - http://youtube.com/@RunYourMouthiTunes - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/run-your-mouth-podcast/id1211469807Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/4ka50RAKTxFTxbtyPP8AHmFollow the show on social media:X:http://x.com/ComicDaveSmithhttp://x.com/RobbieTheFireInstagram:http://instagram.com/theproblemdavesmithhttp://instagram.com/robbiethefire#libertarianSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Okay.
Welcoming back to the show.
It's been a little while, but of course we have Jeremy Kaufman who is a
free stater member of the Libertarian Party former Senate candidate and new
Internet sensation the the Libertarian hactua perhaps
Something like that. So this oh my god, dude this
You know this video of you having an encounter with two So this, oh my God, dude, this, uh, you know,
this video of you having an encounter with two people claiming to be federal
agents has blown up. I just checked it as before we started the show,
and it is at 34 million views. And of course,
that's just on your tweet. That's not counting. Like a lot,
you know how those things on the online are a lot of people share them and then you don't really get the total numbers. So before I
want to play the video and then I want to kind of discuss it. But first I would just say,
what's it been like over this last day for you? It's been, it's been interesting. It's been,
well, you know, I have a great support network here. That's something that makes that possible,
doing that from New Hampshire.
But it's brought a lot of positive attention.
I mean, it's basically torn through the right-wing media.
And I feel good about bringing this lesson to them
as a libertarian.
So I view it mostly positively.
There are a lot of unhinged weirdos online,
but I don't take them very seriously. Yes, well, there certainly are a lot of unhinged weirdos online, but I don't take them very seriously. Yes, well, that is, there certainly are a lot of unhinged
weirdos online, that's for sure.
And I do kind of want to get into that in a bit,
but so just to, and the thing is,
I want this episode to be able to go out everywhere,
so I'm almost like just choosing this carefully,
but so this was a response to a tweet from the...
Well, they never said, they did not make any statement about why they were there. So this was a response to a tweet from the
they never said they did not make any statement about why they were there.
They said they were there for all post, but they did not say why, you know? And so, yeah.
So one could speculate if we had to guess it was probably
at least in my assumption, I guess you're right.
We're about to watch. We can watch the video in its entirety.
I guess that I guess I we all have as much information as you have about why they were actually there, right?
Cuz that was the entire we can speculate why but we were just so but just to be clear
Because really it is
Pretty black and white that the tweet in question
Was basically that at least the one that came to my mind, and I'm sure
comes to your mind too, was basically the Libertarian Party of New Hampshire saying,
let's just say, if what's been attempted with Donald Trump was successful with Kamala Harris,
that person would be a hero. Something along those lines? You know that that party is somewhat infamous for celebrating, you know, when when politicians
have passed.
So that's you know, that's not really new to come out of come out of that group of rascals
over there.
Yes.
Well, look, I would just say that however you feel about that sentiment, which we could
get into because it's kind of an interesting topic in a way.
But it is certainly legal. There's no argument that it's legal under the US Constitution,
under the Supreme Court's interpretation of the Constitution,
and is certainly, by any libertarian standard of what we believe ought to be legal,
is protected speech.
It's an opinion.
You know what I'm saying? Like there's there's nothing that should that should warrant federal agents approaching you for it.
Right. Right. Yes. And right. And what the government should be doing if speech is legal,
as it clearly was, is they should be saying that they should be educating the public and
saying you know, they should be educating the public and saying, they should
be putting out a statement saying, hey, you can stop tagging us. This is something you're
allowed to say, rather than going around intimidating people. And entirely one-sided way, of course,
as well. They're not going to go knock on the various actors and celebrities. Some may come
to mind because I've seen some of the clips, but I'm very bad with remembering celebrities names.
These people have said very
similar statements, you know, about celebrating, wishing Trump had been hit or you're celebrating
whatever. Sure. And I think that and perhaps, you know, there's a little bit of almost a debate
amongst like libertarians versus some former libertarians who have kind of gone in a more hard right wing
direction. And one of the things is that, so I'm,
I'm thinking of one guy particularly who is a, well,
I'll just say it is that, that streamer destiny. He got in a bunch of trouble,
had a viral clip where Pierce Morgan really kind of like, you know,
was very hard on him about essentially celebrating after the first Trump
assassination attempt saying he didn't feel bad for the firefighter who was
killed. All this stuff. This guy does.
Me, uh, is not a fan of mine.
It was, you know,
made up a weird amount of videos about me and like insulting me and stuff.
But at least I would, if federal agents showed up to his house over tweeting that,
which, of course, I think to your point is they didn't and they never would.
But if they did, I would be like, that's an outrage.
And I don't even want to have a conversation anymore about how you felt about what he was saying.
It's kind of like a baseline thing, like either you believe we are
free creatures or we are slaves. And if you believe we ought to be free, then like there is, it is,
it is an outrage that federal officers in the capacity as thugs would approach someone,
essentially. And look again, if it was any private individual did this we would recognize them for the thugs that they are
Attempting to intimidate an American citizen for exercising their freedom of speech
It's I guess we're used to these outrages in our country these days, but it really is just appalling
I
And I mean but I think I think though the month like even though it's a pog in the abstract and I agree. Yeah. I mean, I think though, even though it's a part in the abstract, and I agree, I would
absolutely have been offended if it happened to Destiny.
I think the biggest thing here is that they did it this way and in this direction because
it really does highlight how one-sided this entire system has the sort of blue power structure, whatever you
want to call it.
Like, it's intra-agency.
I'm not trying to get too conspiratorial here, but it's intra-agency.
It goes into all these other arms of everything.
Like the journalists won't cover this.
This story is getting massive attention.
Not a single legacy, whatever you want to call them is going
to touch this story.
Despite the story here is FBI agents knocked on someone's house, refused to identify themselves,
refused to say why they were there, you know, and it's blowing up, you know, on social media
and they're not going to touch it.
They'll cover the tweet that LPNH put out, right, but they will not cover that the FBI
gave.
Yeah.
And, and yeah, well, you you know what? Let's just,
let's go to the video just in case anybody hasn't seen it.
Let's watch it in its entirety and then we can,
we can break it down a little bit more.
How can I help you?
Yeah. How are you? Here we are. I'm Agent O'Donnell with the FBI. Can you give your full name please? I'm Agent O'Donnell with the FBI.
Is that sufficient to identify as there's only one O'Donnell affiliated with the FBI?
I'm sure yes.
Could you please state your full name, sir?
Could you please stop recording?
No.
It's first amendment right.
Okay.
What's your name, sir?
Same.
Could you stop recording, please?
I'm not recording.
I'm not recording.
Okay.
I'm not recording.
I'm not recording.
I'm not recording.
I'm not recording.
I'm not recording.
I'm not recording. I'm not recording. I'm not recording. I'm not recording. Could you please say your full name sir? No it's first amendment right. What's your
name sir? Absolutely not. You can show me your name and identification or I'm gonna
go back inside my house. This is going out right after you guys walk away. So you
can show me your name ID you can walk can walk away. Which one? I'm not going to talk to people who claim to be federal agents unless they can show
me identification.
You see our badges.
I need to see, is your full name on that badge?
No.
I'd like to see something with your full name or I'm not going to talk to you.
This will be going online as soon as you walk away. All I want to do
is talk to you about a post that was made. I want to talk to you about you guys coming
here. Say you make a salary of I don't know what low 100k you guys making six figures
factor in 50% expenses overhead maybe 100 expenses. Talking about burning a couple hundred dollars an hour
just here, let alone all the time you guys are spending
to investigate something that you know
is not against the law, right?
Like you're familiar with it.
So then why would you come?
Because we wanted to make sure that there weren't any.
No, you're coming because you're part of a regime
that does this kind of thing
when you know laws aren't being broken.
And that's an embarrassment, man. Didn't you guys read the Constitution? Do you not believe in
America? Like, how do you do your jobs and go home? We appreciate it. You're walking away. Because
nothing we did is against the law. And you guys are fuckheads that try to act like bullies. And
I hope you go home and are embarrassed. You can't even say your name on camera because
you know that what you're doing is embarrassing. You know Americans that believe in the Constitution
think you're laughable. You go home and you think about what you did today. Go home and
think about it. You cowards. Drive away. Drive away. You're not welcome. You should be embarrassed. Embarrassing. You guys are embarrassing. All right, dude.
I mean, fucking Bravo, dude.
It was just like, just handled so flawlessly.
I mean, I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie. I'm not going to lie. I'm not going to lie. I'm not going to lie. I'm not going to lie. All right, dude, I mean fucking Bravo dude, just handled so flawlessly.
Like I feel like if we had scripted it, it couldn't have been any better than that.
There were so I mean, look, dude, it's like I'm laughing through it, even though it's
something that's really not funny.
It's like very serious.
But it was very intense.
It was very intense for it. Yeah, it was. I'm not sure I say it's something that's really not funny, it's like very serious. It was very intense for me.
Yeah, it was.
I'm not sure I say, it's not easy.
You get your adrenaline going and so on.
Yeah, for sure.
It's not a joke.
I can joke about it now, but yeah.
Yeah, but I mean, there's men with guns
approaching your home where your family lives.
It's like a very serious thing,
but it's just impossible to not laugh
because it's a mix of number one at the beginning. It's like,
it's like you're talking to a drunk woman, like no offense,
if there's drunk women listening, but you know,
if you've ever been in an argument with a drunk woman before, like,
and you're just like, what, you know, it's like, you're like,
can I have your full name, please? I have a badge right here. It's like,
do you have your full name on your badge? No, whatever. You're like, what? Like,
what are you like? Are we human? And the most amazing thing,
which I think you noted in your post about it was like,
as you stand up to them, it's like these guys are here to bully you.
But as you stand up to them, you just see the shame on their face.
And there's something just beautiful about that.
Yeah. I mean, I, uh, I think on some level,
they've got to know what they're doing. I did put out a post today, like,
you know, if there are good people, like maybe there could be like whistleblowing
acts or things like, you know, or, or things like that.
Cause I imagine if there are, well,
why don't we know at least one federal agent is now listening to this program? And, but you know, look, if there's a
good guy, there are, I am not someone who believes all cops are bad people, or all federal agents are
bad people, or all government officials or regulators are bad people. I think a lot of them are.
But I think there are some decent ones within that structure.
And the ones who are good can attempt to document and provide evidence about what's going on.
Because I think there has been this capture of these organizations.
And I don't even mean it in this intentional top-down way.
It's almost like a mimetic capture.
It's almost like there's this set of self self-reinforcing things that exists within
it rather than, you know, like, like I said, there's this like blue power structure, but
it's not a man.
That's why Joe Biden could be replaced by Kamala Harris so easily and why the fact and
like they're of course not happy.
The blue power structure isn't even happy with Kamala was kind of locked into her, but
like it doesn't
matter because the structure you know sort of persists and this starts to sound like crazy talk
I know it's not you know uh but uh it's the set of incentives that's created that keeps out um
your sort of people with our set of values and beliefs yeah I, I think that's right.
And I think it can be oftentimes like a mix of both.
Like there can be a conspiratorial aspect to it.
There can be people at the top who are like,
hey, look, we want to crack down on this type of speech.
But I think that what explains the vast majority of it
is exactly what you said.
It's a mimetic energy and an incentive driven energy.
It's, it's the incentives and imitation kind of create a culture.
And then after a while it's,
you just have a culture where almost anybody who like,
even if they just, if they, when they hear the story, they go, yeah,
well you had to go see about that tweet. I mean, yeah,
it could potentially be dangerous rather than viewing things through the lens of
like, Hey, no, if this is legal,
then you don't get to send armed men to go harass somebody over it.
One of the things to me that is,
as I said to you before we started recording,
it's kind of like the real white pill of all of this is that it does seem like
the video is essentially you,
the video is essentially a guy, you standing up for his rights,
not buckling and humiliating a couple of feds.
And this was so appealing to so many people that tens of millions of people
have watched this video and shared it and loved it. And that to me at least goes like, well,
there's something pretty positive there. What are your thoughts?
Well, I agree completely. My,
but I think that the percent of people who see it as positively is bordering on a
permanent minority in America at large. Right. And so of course,
my strategy, you know, and I'll repeat it again,
not for anyone here who hasn't heard it,
but it's what I talk about all the time,
is people with my set of beliefs or our set of beliefs,
not to collectivize us, but you know,
should be finding a citadel,
be building our own power structures
in our own institutions.
It is not, there is not a clear way
that you can recapture Harvard
or recapture the New York Times, you know?
And these are all part of this, you know,
reinforcing set of beliefs, which is why the New York Times
is never going to cover the stories that are harmful,
you know, and then you can't cite, and then you can't,
it's not, it can't be true on Wikipedia
because the New York Times won't report it, you know?
Or the university won't study it, you know?
And so there have become, you know,
things that are unknowable within, and they can't engage with this aspect of reality, right? Even inside
our own movement, in our own movement, these would be some of the things that cause ire and resistance
to getting into. But anyway, my answer is, if you're of this set of beliefs, you've got to find a
network, you've got to find a community, whether it's in New Hampshire or not, that
is the bare bones of any kind of resistance.
Yeah. Well, I certainly think that you're, I think you're 100% right that we're, I don't
know if I'd even say we're moving into permanent minority status. I think we've been permanent
minority status forever. And perhaps even our minority is growing, but it's still
never going to be a majority. Look, there's also neoconservatives were a
very powerful minority. The transgender movement was a very powerful minority.
So it's not that minorities can shape things, but I do agree with you that
there's no hope of capturing these institutions because again
we are we are asking them to all go against their incentives and
The people on the other side are saying no go with your incentives and in that fight
You're just always gonna lose you're not gonna you're not gonna like start pushing the waves the opposite way and making them crash
You know out into the ocean rather than toward the shore.
Yeah, absolutely.
And then the other thing that's actually important here in terms of people who have these sort
of radical beliefs, and this is another thing we see within the libertarian movement where
people don't understand this and they expect like, they think like they're just going to
go around and like persuade people individually, like one by one and people just like agree.
But in reality, if you look at how unpopular beliefs eventually became popular, and you
can look at the abolition of slavery, gay rights, interracial marriage, you know, whatever,
it's always met with a lot of vitriol in that early stage.
And what you're really trying to do is, that's fine, as long as your core of support is growing.
Because what eventually convinces the normies,
they're just being enough other people.
Good friend of mine, Travis Corcoran in New Hampshire,
who's one of my favorite people to follow,
has this post the other day about how,
you're basically just a lot of people can't even
entertain an idea until at least 10% of people believe it.
They can't even engage with the mirror because they only perceive things through a social
perception of reality.
It's fascinating to see people with this psychology, but it's actually a lot of people.
That's ultimately how they're going to be persuaded.
There's no way persuading them other than increasing the density of people. And so that's ultimately how they're going to be persuaded. And there's no way persuading them other than, you know, increasing the density of people who aren't
that way, you know, who have a sort of strong core about themselves. The density of those
people is what ultimately brings everyone else along.
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All right, let's get back into the show.
Yeah, you know, I, uh, I, I think about this with myself a lot because I remember like I, I first, um, you know, like I found Ron Paul in 2007 and then I started reading a lot of like Murray Rothbard
in the next few years. And I was, I was like convinced by the anarchist argument for at least a couple
years before I would call myself an anarchist. And I remember it was literally
just, it sounded too crazy to me. And I was like,
but like I don't even mean it sounded too crazy to me.
That's not the right way to put it.
I meant I felt like it would sound too crazy to other people. And so I was like,
you know,
I was like even though I've read the anarchist versus the minarchist arguments and I find
these anarchist arguments way more compelling, I was like,
I don't want to be seen as that guy. Cause if I tell you I'm that,
you're going to just be like, no, you're fucking nuts. This is insane. And it's,
I try to think about that a lot. It's amazing how powerful of a tool that is.
I think it's actually a much more powerful regulator than the
law. Cause I was, I broke laws many times. You know what I mean?
Like, I mean,
maybe not a more powerful regulator than if I actually thought I was going to do
like serious prison time, but it was, it's pretty up there. Like the,
the feeling of, of that we get as so social psychological creatures of
being like,
I am traveling too far out of the pack right now is a very deep instinctual
feeling where you're like, there is danger here.
This is where I get eaten by an animal.
I better move back to where there's more people.
And so I do think that's a huge part in ever building like a mass movement is
having enough of a pack there that people don't feel too afraid.
Like, they're like, okay, I'm with some people here.
So I think there's a very good point.
Yeah, 100%.
And for libertarians who have never experienced it, I didn't experience that much.
I was like, I'm kind of what you described for a long time.
I mean, I was a libertarian in my head for a long time.
I didn't really live it as part of my life. I would make libertarian arguments in progressive circles without... These were smart progressive
circles, like tech people, not like hardcore progress. And I would make the arguments and
you would have, you could tell they're probably maybe a couple of other... But you're not
wearing it on your sleeve when you're that much of a minority. And when I came to New
Hampshire and it became much more of my peer group, which was more
than 10 years ago, or around 10 years ago at this point, then I became way more comfortable,
you know, wearing it on my sleeve and being out there.
And then eventually my strategy became that we actually need to be as out there as possible.
Like at least some of us, not every not every free state has to be.
But part of why we do what we do is because
we want to be, you know, there's also a sort of like mere exposure effect.
Like this is going to be uncomfortable with people and you've got to get through that
phase of people hearing about ideas as radical as abolition.
And so we're being that unapologetic voice.
Other people can go around and be the like polite gays in suits, you know,
shaking hands and saying, no, we really do just want to get married and adopt two children,
you know, or whatever. But then there's like the gays who are like in the parade, you know, being
like, you know, swinging their, you know, dicks around. And so we're like, you know, it takes,
I think both types are necessary, actually, as you're trying to bring the public to your side.
Yeah. I think that's probably right. And I think probably most successful movements have had all of those different
sides to them. Certainly the abolitionist movement,
certainly the civil rights movement both had kind of like a moderate face
and then a more radical like, you know, uh, a face to it. No,
one of the things I've been thinking of and I'm trying to almost like formulate
this in my mind. So let me try to put this the right way. But so look,
for people who, who know, um,
it's not as if I've been critical at times of the libertarian party of New
Hampshire's messaging.
Me and you have had some passionate arguments about some of this stuff before,
and some good conversations about it.
One of the things that really I was kind of blown away by
was the people who would identify as Libertarians,
who as this video was going super viral,
were condemning the tweet or talking about the end.
And for me,
as somebody who has been a fairly sharp critic of some of the tweets out of New
Hampshire, it was,
I was kind of taken aback where you're like, okay guys,
but that clearly isn't the story here anymore. Like,
I don't know what the analogy to it would be, but it's like, if, if like
some, some woman was like running late to meet some, a guy, and then because she was
late, the guy punched her in the face. And I was like, Oh my God, call the cops. That's
a crime.
And then someone was like, Hey, let's talk about how she was running late. You're like,
no, we're not having a conversation about that anymore. That is obviously not the story
here. I don't care how you felt about the tweet.
There are federal goons showing up to harass
an American citizen over a legally protected free speech.
Are you a libertarian or aren't you?
And it kind of, look, this is something
that I've been thinking about a lot.
I'm sure you have too.
It really started with COVID for me,
where there were these libertarians who
really failed the COVID test,
who were not like vocally opposed to lockdowns and mandates and these things.
And then there were a whole bunch of right-wingers who were vocally opposed to
them. And I was like,
explain to me why I'm not just on their team rather than your team.
Like when, when, when a moment like this happens, it almost goes like, yeah,
I don't care what you tell me you believe in when it actually goes down,
you are a pussy who's not willing to even like verbally
stand up for Liberty. And I don't know, I'm, I'm still formulating this thought kind of,
but I wonder if you have any thoughts on that, or if you've seen some of that stuff.
Uh, I think it's actually mostly because left-right is a real distinction and that phenomenon,
whatever, it's difficult to get at what the root of it is and we can even get into that
more, but that phenomenon explains a lot of it.
And you see, you're all the libertarians who had a problem with it would basically be called
left-egalitarians.
They're more, sorry, left-libertarians.
I think they should be.
They're more egalitarian in nature.
They're more, they're the ones, they're all the ones that also want open borders.
And right, because these are all, there's some sort of, these are correlated concepts
in some way.
They're all, you know, and I think it has potentially has to do with their like, like
orientation of moral concern.
Like, I'm very focused on like, you know, sort of me and mine, not just my family, you know, my friends, my peers,
my community, but I'm not, I'm like,
ignore why are we thinking at all about, you know, these,
unless they're like actually a threat to us in some way,
why are we thinking about any foreign country?
I don't want to have to think about like Florida
or California.
Like I don't, you know, I believe in,
I think like America is the greatest country in the world,
but you know, I don't want to have to,
I think I want even more separation
even inside these things.
And so, but other people just have much different morals.
And so in COVID, their sympathies were much more,
their orientation is all towards,
the people might get hurt.
We need to do this to make sure
that people might not get hurt. We need to do this to make sure that people might not get hurt.
And they feel that the worth of some random person in Haiti
is like equal to the worth of their neighbor.
So like, who are you?
And so their value system is actually different
than the value system that right wing people have.
Yeah. I mean, I, it's, you're,
you're undeniably right that it is this left right divide.
And it's something I've been thinking a lot more about over the last few
months, particularly since the LP convention in, in DC.
I guess I kind of felt like,
you know, I, I felt like, um, obviously I,
I felt I had a certain obligation. Um, and, and I also like,
I got into like the kind of vision that heist had about Michael Rektonwald being
the nominee. I was trying to see that through. Obviously people know he,
ultimately lost and Chase got the nomination.
And it was almost like I had this, I had come into this new period.
There was like the time where I was trying to like be a part of this,
like this movement to take over the Libertarian Party.
There was a time when I was flirting with running and then planning on running,
ultimately deciding not to, then trying to get this other guy across who ultimately didn't. And then it was almost like, okay,
I'm taking a step back now and let me think about this.
And one of the revelations that I had, which is really stupid.
If you think about it,
I don't know why I just started thinking about this after the convention in DC,
but I started to think to myself,
it's like I've been so focused for so many years on this idea of like recreating the Ron Paul revolution.
And it always was just almost like a given in my mind.
That's like, well, that's what you'd want to do.
I mean, that was when people had the most interest in libertarianism.
So let's try to do that again.
And it just kind of like, it all kind of clicked to me where I was like, you know,
2024 is not 2008 and they are about as different as those many years apart from
each other could be in any society. I mean,
maybe short of like a full fledged revolution,
but you could almost even debate whether we've had a full fledged revolution in
this country.
And I just started realizing that like maybe that old coalition is impossible to
bring together today. and like, you know
This is probably something that you've thought about like in the Libertarian Party over the last few years
like you do look at some of these people and you're like
I don't really the idea that there's gonna be a coalition between the left Libertarians and the right Libertarians or between
Mises and Cato is just
Obviously impossible and just the immigration divide alone.
I mean, that's like the biggest issue in America today.
And you're not going to have open borders and closed borders people in a coalition together.
And there was something just seeing some of the libertarians who were taking this as an opportunity
to criticize your aggressive tweeting style really just reinforced that in my mind where I
was like, look, there is an important divide between,
are you a libertarian or are you a statist?
I'm always going to be on the libertarian side of that divide,
but I do just think the left right divide is much more important these days.
I don't know what your thoughts on any of that are.
I think so. I wish what I wish is that the other side could acknowledge it
because then if you're
going to have any hope for like if we could be like, okay, well, like we share the set of values,
but we differ in this important attribute and this, this is an explanatory reason for why we
see these issues differently than like, maybe there'd be some hope, but like they insist that,
but I just don't see this at all. The left constantly insist that they're the center,
right? And so this is why
they have to disavow the right and say like, they're not real libertarians, etc, etc. And so the
thing is, when you do that, then you make it an existential battle, right? Because if you're saying
that we can't exist at all, as even the word that we think we are, then you turn it into this
existential battle. And now what you see in this sort of existential battle, everything becomes
about the battle. And this is also why you in this sort of existential battle, everything becomes about the battle.
And this is also why you see all this stuff
of the way the people inside the movement behave.
While all these conservatives are amplifying this post
and loving it, the libertarians, who are very concerned
that the internal battle for status inside of the party
are interacting with it through this lens.
And a whole bunch of behavior of people
inside the Libertarian Party can simply be seen
as like jockeying for the next LNC election
because what else is there to really accomplish
other than to grab the car,
and then get blamed for not being able to do
what you promised because what you promised
is typically impossible.
I do have two potential helpful conclusions from all of this. One is I would beg the left wing, this isn't a conclusion,
but I would beg the left-wing returns if you know any.
If you know any, well, listen, you're like,
clip this and send it to them and say,
guys, can we please just like acknowledge this about each other?
I'm willing to say that I'm right-wing.
Like, I don't have a problem with it.
But you guys can't say you're left-wing.
It's not, it's not, like, it's like, oh, but what policies are left-wing? It's not about policy. It's not about policy.
It's about your reaction to the way it influences policy a little bit on the margins, like borders,
right? But it's mostly about, this is different in our moral orientations. Okay. But in terms
of useful things, for the right-wing libertarians, I don't think we should give up on the word libertarian.
I know some people like that idea, but I don't.
Like libertarian is a political and legal theory
on how to resolve disputes between humans.
It's an amazing theory.
It's a beautiful theory.
The more that we can scale it up,
the more it would actually solve problems.
And that is the word to describe what I believe,
more so than any other word.
I wish Mises Caucus would embrace
that they are right-wing libertarians,
and just own this.
Both sides need to own it.
We're the left-wing libertarians,
we're the right-wing libertarians.
That's what you are.
And then also, you don't need to do anything else and say, like, just acknowledge
what you care about. You believe you're libertarians, and you want to control the name libertarian
party because that is how a lot of people can see the word. That's literally why I care
about the Libertarian Party of New Hampshire. That's why I got involved. That's why I get
to help define it. You know, this is why I use it in a certain way. I built a team of people that
use it in a certain way. Just get down to the brass tacks. You don't need to promise anything.
We're just going to make sure that the libertarian party isn't like, that's the ultimate reason
people are in Reeses Caucus. We just don't want the libertarian party to be controlled by those
losers. Just get down to the bottom of it. Why are we pretending we're here for any other reason? You know, and that's,
and once you put, here's what you can actually do once you put it together.
You can do what Angela did, which was very smart, which is look, we're a block that you can pander
to. We're a coherent group of human beings with a set of beliefs that if you offer us something,
we will support you because that's the best you can do.
That's the best you can do when your beliefs are ultimately, I mean, how many people can
even understand the legal and political theory of property rights to this libertarianism?
Okay, people, so if this is your coalition, become a coalition, you can use the libertarian
party as your coalition mechanism, especially since they're called the libertarian party
and you don't want to lose it, but just use it for that purpose.
And you're ultimately putting together a block to be like, all right, who's going to pitch
us on more stuff this year?
You know, and if you can occasionally win some local elections or whatever, build up
profiles, but like focus on a block.
And that's the best thing I've seen come out of libertarian party in a long time.
So let me ask you, no, no, it's very interesting. Let me,
let me ask you. So like in terms of like,
what do you think actually is the defining feature between like say left and
right libertarians? Cause I agree with your point. It's not like,
sometimes it won't, it has nothing to do with, um, even your policy.
Um, yeah. So one example, by the way, that do with, um, the, even your policy. Um,
so one example, by the way that I've, uh,
that I've used a few times before, I don't even mean to pick on this guy. It's just,
it was such a perfect example that I just can't not talk about it.
But so I was at the Libertarian Party National Convention, um,
along with you and some other great people there. And, um,
so there's this one guy who I think is kind of like a staple of the libertarian
party world, but he wears these crazy outfits. Like he's in a thong.
It's like a grown man in a thong and like a cat uniform type thing.
And he comes up to me at one point at the convention and he goes, Hey, Dave,
I'd like to, uh, I'd like to have a discussion with you about immigration.
I think you're wrong on your stance. And I was like, uh,
I was like, oh, uh, you know, I just,
I actually just recorded a podcast with Bob Murphy where I went through like my
whole views on immigration. If you want to check it out,
like you can check it out. He goes, and he goes, no, no, no, I'm interested in a dialogue here. And I was like, yeah, I'm sorry.
I can't right now. I gotta like run. And he goes,
and he just launched into it and started going like, you know,
open borders is just the free movement of people. But, and I was like, yeah,
yeah, I'm, I'm familiar with the argument. I disagree. But I,
and there was just this moment where I was like,
I didn't say this out loud or nothing, but I'm just like, dude,
you are a grown man in a thong.
If you think I'm into a serious conversation with you right now, like, and,
and the thing that sticks in my, it sticks in my mind is like, listen, I,
and I don't know the guy, but I know this is true. Obviously we disagree on
immigration. I guarantee you if you were like, Hey,
where do you stand on war, money, taxes, guns,
regulation? I mean, I bet you could go down the list of really,
really important issues that we would totally agree on,
but we don't agree on the idea that a grown man and a thong is going to
come up and have a serious conversation with someone.
And that is, that is so much more important than that other list of things.
Like if you don't get that, then there's, there's nowhere we can go from here.
And that's almost like the best way I could think to like describe the
distinction.
Yeah, it's just, I mean, you have this sort of cloud and I know it's fun to figure this out because I've been trying to figure this out. Like, what's the root of all this? And I haven't,
I don't have like a firm theory, but you get these sort of like, you're grasping the elephant
or whatever when you're blind and trying to figure it out. So it's like, it's similar to,
because it is that adjacent left thing. There'll see this aspect of non-judgment.
We shouldn't judge.
As long as it's voluntary, then it shouldn't be judged.
And it's like, what?
I don't agree with that.
I don't agree with that at all.
This is a legal thing about property rights.
Where did you say I don't have to judge anyone?
I can judge people.
I just don't wanna produce goods in a coercive manner.
This is a thing about economics.
I don't agree with it.
But this is the left libertarian kind of perspective.
You'll see, again, the orientation of moral concern.
They want to set the whole world free, a world set free
in our lifetime.
They're interested in liberation.
Liberate everybody.
So yeah, these are all sort of things
you see that are in this cloud.
Yes, it's one of the, by the way,
I gave in my speech at the Libertarian Party Convention
that I basically went through like all the things
I think Libertarians are doing great
and all the things I think they're doing wrong.
And specifically in the section of what they're doing wrong,
I used that phrase and said, we got to stop using, uh, stupid phrases.
And that was one of them was a good ideas. Don't require force. I hate that. Uh,
and the other one was that was a world set free in our lifetime. I was like,
we sound like I, I, I compared it to, uh,
in George W. Bush's second inaugural address,
he said his goal for his second term was to rid the world of tyranny.
And I was like, sounded, uh, you know, sounded a bit lofty to me,
you know, like, and, and I,
I would like a world set free in our lifetime,
but like if we could set one city free in our lifetime,
that would be an enormous accomplishment. Somewhat, something like we're like,
we would be like, wow, we really did it. You know what I mean?
And so the idea of setting a city free or setting a state free setting the
United States of America free.
But your goal right now is that sub Saharan Africa must embrace
individual liberty before I'm dead. I'm already 41. You know what I mean?
Like I don't have that much time to go. We got to get moving on this, Jeremy. embrace individual liberty before I'm dead. I'm already 41. You know what I mean?
Like I don't have that much time to go.
We gotta get moving on this, Jaramie.
Well, that's what, we reduced the scope
to a population of 1.4 million in New Hampshire.
I do think there are reasons that it has to be a state.
You know, you can look outwards
maybe once you've accomplished that,
but we don't need to worry about anything else.
And you know what I've been reading about, Dave It's like early, um, like early history of Israel, actually.
Yep.
Uh, is, you know, the population of the land now known as Israel was like 5%,
6% Jewish in 1890, you know, and w and what is it today?
You know, and like we are, we are colonizing the lenses are going to clip
this, but I don't care.
Like we're, we're colonizing settlers.
We're here, you got to match this ideology. You need to get out. That's my opinion. And I'm sorry,
but I just don't have another way to create it. I want to be clear. I'm not trying to be violent.
I would like to buy all of their property through market transactions. But we have identified this
place. We're going to keep coming. You can work with us and join us. We think we can create
something that's great for everybody. And my version is not heroin in the streets
and this kind of thing. I do believe in order in a community, 100%. I believe we can produce
that order in different ways, in better ways, et cetera. But I'm not of that, there's a
form of libertarianism. But this is what we're doing.
And put out the beacon.
And I've been learning about it.
What are these movements?
And they were radical.
Some of the stuff they did was really radical.
And I'm not trying to say I'm trying to do some of the things that they did necessarily,
but it's been uh, Jeremy for the record is not planning on winning a war and occupying, uh,
Massachusetts or anything like that.
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All right, let's get back into the show.
But well, look, I get your point and And there's and look, I've always said, I think there's there's a very strong
argument for the free state project and that goal.
And I certainly get the argument there on the left right distinction.
The other thing that I just kind of can't help but notice is that and I'm not even sure.
I guess this I'm not sure exactly how this plays with like
pure left wing ism versus right wing ism, but there does seem to be one of the big characteristics
that differentiates the two to me seems to be a kind of like this internalized agreement
this internalized agreement with the regime that is quite frankly hostile to
Western civilization, to bourgeois norms,
to straight white men, to traditional family lifestyles, like like this instinct to always side against whoever is seen as like,
instinct to always side against whoever is seen as like,
you know,
higher up in the hierarchy of oppression or something like that. The idea that,
like immediately I remember if you remember the Garrett Foster story out in,
in Austin, where the guy did, I believe, end up getting convicted. And I still to this day think that's just wrong.
Like I do not think, oh, that's right.
That's right.
I'm sorry.
I forgot he got pardoned that.
But and good for Abbott for pardoning him.
Yeah.
But I mean, that is, you know, it's just like, I'm sorry.
I'm not immediately like my instinct.
And maybe this is what as we're kind of like thinking out loud about this
Maybe this is what makes me a right libertarian
But my instinct when I hear for anybody who doesn't know the story this was during the Black Lives Matter
Protests this guy Garrett Foster who tragically that you know got killed that night. He's there
He's in the street in the protest. There was like an uber who was an ex military guy who's coming up.
He tries to kind of like go, you know, through the protest.
I forget exactly what happened, whether he went through the light or whatever,
but the group mobs him. They run up to his car.
Garrett Foster runs over with a rifle, has it in down ready position.
The guy in the car has a pistol, shoots and kills him.
Now my instinct in that situation is,
first of all, I think it's tragic.
It's tragic when somebody gets killed.
It's tragic that the guy had to go through this,
but I just kind of err on the side of like,
I'm kind of on the side of the guy
who's being a normal person.
I'm kind of on the side of the guy
who was driving a car on the street
where cars belong and who was probably just trying to work and just trying to go home.
And the guy who ran up to him with a rifle in down ready position while there's a mob
of people around that guy and he's now got to take, he's got to decide, do I put my life
in your hands or do I put my keep my defense in my hands? I just tend to side with that guy and immediately a lot of libertarians knee
jerk recited sided with Garrett Foster and that to me always seemed like kind
of one of the distinctions like it's like why you're it's almost like a
feeling that like the Black Lives Matter protester gets the benefit of the doubt
rather than just the guy who's just driving home? Well, they do. That's part of being on the left.
They almost sort of reflexively side with the lesser.
Not that collectively blacks are lesser,
but that idea of they're siding.
It's a protest.
They're oriented towards equality, equity,
this kind of thing.
And I remember that issue. I mean, we don't need to talk about it. oriented towards equality, equity, this kind of thing.
And I remember that issue, I mean,
we don't need to read it again.
I remember that one being like really complex
and I didn't like go through it enough
to have a strong opinion on it.
But certainly, I mean, I think almost all the BLM protesters
were crappy people.
And I'm of the kind of opinion like,
I want, I have this meme that I've been showing
that's like the bottom right and the top right kissing
all the way out, even farther to the right.
Because it's like, I want very few rules.
I don't want that many.
I want, I would get rid of a ton of them.
But like, if a rule is to exist,
then it ought to be enforced.
Like this is the way I govern my household.
I have way fewer rules than most families and parents have,
probably in America generally
for my kids.
You know what my kids do?
They follow the rules that I set for them because I enforce them with like basically
100% authority because it's a rule.
I'm not saying rules can be changed, rules can evolve.
I'm not trying to say I'm like this closed-minded person, like, you know, we enforce standards. You know, but I think the psychology of these people really is different.
I had an interesting post in my history, one of my more popular viral ones before recently
on this concept of white hierarchical individualistic men.
They actually cluster meaningfully different in a varieties of sociological profiles.
They're like around one sixth of the population of America.
And you can cluster like their beliefs in a whole bunch of things like global warming
and a whole bunch of other factors.
And they're like out here on one side and like, and I get my hands on them, you can
imagine they're like very far apart from each other. On global warming, on gun rights,
on private gun ownership, regulation of private businesses.
It's like borderline libertarian,
but also you'll see on,
it doesn't have the sort of other elements
of the type of libertarian that you're talking about.
My view is that this is the type of man
who built modern society and were dominated everywhere.
But other people might view it differently and might think we're racist, bigot, sexist,
whatever.
Well, yeah, I mean, it is like, they don't have to be white, by the way.
I'm not trying to make about race.
There are people with these characteristics that aren't white.
No, I mean, look, this is as I know you saw some of it.
But like over the last few years, this was one of the fights that I would always pick with other libertarians, which I just I couldn't even believe I was getting the level of pushback. I was from some of them.
But it was just like, I would be like, you know, like my as you alluded to not being one of the libertarians who believes the streets ought to be the home for junkies or something like that. Or my, I actually couldn't, because by the way, the story, a lot of the, uh,
the, the left libertarians who aren't fans of me and you, they,
they would retell this story in a bunch of ways that wasn't actually what
happened. They would say, I called the cops on a homeless guy in a playground,
which is not true. I did not call the cops on a homeless guy,
but I was back in a playground, which is not true. I did not call the cops, uh, on a homeless guy, but I was back in, uh,
in the upper West side where I used to live with my daughter. And this was,
this was like three years ago. So she was, she's, was three,
um, or almost three. And we went to this playground and there's just like this
homeless junkie passed out at the side of a public playground. And I was like,
yo, he should be removed. Like, yeah,
I thought that would be the one that nobody could possibly argue with because
it's like, like this is clearly a place.
A lot of people have sympathy for the bug. They have sympathy for that.
That's the crazy thing to me. It's like, they align with the bug.
Like in that situation, they are taking the respect of the bug. They're not,
take right. They're not taking, right.
They're not.
And that to me is almost like the closest to the core of what we're really
talking about in this divide that I could get to. It's like, by the way,
I'm also not, I'm not like the furthest right wing.
And I don't have zero sympathy for the bum. I do like, Hey, I'm,
I'm the type of guy who like, if we were like, someone was like, you know, there's no homeless people in my town,
but like if there was someone and one of my neighbors was like, Hey,
we're raising money. We're going to put this guy up here.
We've got him in a program where he can get back into this or blah, blah, blah.
I contribute to that. I don't, I think it's better for the whole community.
And I also would, I'm not against helping someone who's really down,
but in this situation,
it's not a close call for me
that the kids and the families and the,
and by the way, this was the Upper West Side
of New York City.
There were Asian families and black families.
There's also, it wasn't like white people there,
but I'm on team normal.
I'm on team family.
I'm on team dad bringing his daughter to the slide,
not on team homeless junkie
Trump's they're
You know what? I mean their concerns. I it's the best I could say it. Well, I'm with you 100% and
I don't know if you want to be like autistic libertarian legal here for just like briefly, but I think
To me you've got all this stuff that was built up that would not be the proper way
that it should exist if we had started from the atoms of everyone's private property.
What we will do with those atoms is we'll assemble them into larger ones.
I'm in a, you know, the houses are close to me.
It's not going to be total anarchy.
Property rights are bundles of rights. We have pipes.
We have roads. There is going to be, God don't strike me down for saying this, but there will
be zones. I don't know. We don't have to abandon the word zoning. There's going to be things that
will exist. People are going to pay for the right? The police work differently, but not everyone is going to protect themselves.
People are going to pay for a protection service, right?
So instead of throwing everything away and saying, you know, it's all terrible because
it's all produced coercively and every person who participates in the system.
I think the right way to do it is how far away is that behavior from the counterfactual
of what would be produced privately, how things ought to be getting produced if we actually had
a sell. We can judge things from the distance of that. If that product was properly paid for by
the people living around it, how we should judge the behavior of what's allowed in that park, but mostly what those people would want if that's the closest way
that it would have been produced.
They don't want this.
It may have even been Rothbard, who I almost universally love, who had this, but this idea
of we should view government property as unhomesteaded land, I actually don't agree that that's the
right counterfactual.
I think it's something like this land is, the right counterfactual should be something like everyone should be a stockholder
or a shareholder in their local court. The municipality is the corporation and one home
is one share, or you can imagine other systems, but things directionally that way. You can even
find municipalities that were formed actually relatively aligned with
libertarian theory.
And then as you know, yeah, yeah.
So I completely agree with you.
And look, Rothbard is the genius of all geniuses.
I think he's one of the greatest minds of the 20th century.
And, you know, but there were a few areas where he was wrong.
And I do think he's wrong about that. It, it, to me, it just doesn't, if I,
if I enslave you for six months out of the year or four months out of the year,
depending on what level you know, you're at of, of income,
if I enslave you for four or five, six months out of the year,
and I take those resources to build and maintain a piece of property,
it does not follow to me that justice would be me saying that property is now
unowned. Like justice would be that you should get it.
Like you were the ones and okay,
it's a lot more complicated when it's not just one person,
it's millions of people.
But the theory still like to me holds that you wouldn't
just declare it unowned. That just seems ridiculous to me. It doesn't share any of the characteristics
of it's not the wild frontier where anyone can go homestead it and it doesn't affect
anybody else. It's just, it seems all wrong to me.
Yeah. Well, maybe, maybe I, um, I miss remembering that even. So let's not, but if you bring
it all the way up to the borders level, it's like, well, what's the proper counterfactual? And it probably is true that we wouldn't be producing border
security anyway like the way that we're doing it now. If you took it, if you reconstructed America
from these smaller atoms and built things up. I think towns would still probably look pretty
a lot like towns do today. There
would be differences, but they'd actually wouldn't change a ton. Whereas I think when
you get at the state level and the country level, you would see larger and larger changes.
And then you have a problem where, well, you know, there isn't really a way, like I don't
want to really pay as a libertarian in New Hampshire to police the
border in Texas. But at the same time, I don't want certain types of people who might come
across the border in Texas to ultimately come to New Hampshire. And what are the mechanisms
for me stopping them from coming here where I am, which is the way I basically do everything.
It's an important thing to think about if you're,
if geographical concentration is your strategy, then yeah, that would be like,
undeniably, you'd kind of have to think about that. I gotta ask by the way, cause I'm just cause we're having this conversation and I've,
I've really vowed to not talk about him much on the show and I haven't,
but I had to ask you kind of about the chase Oliver campaign and what your,
your thoughts on this were.
One of the things that I thought was kind of interesting is that you,
you and chase both ran for the Senate at the same time and you could not have
run more polar opposite
libertarian campaigns. You know, like if we're talking about
this left, right divide, there, there's not a better poster
boy for each. You know what I mean? Then you too. Um, and you
both ended up getting like 2%, you know what I mean? It's
like, it's, it's kind of almost this interesting thing where
you're like, ah, no, like no matter what the libertarian kind
of gets it. Now it might be a little bit different in New
Hampshire, but you know, I, I'm kind of, I'm watching this.
I did see like a few of the Chase supporters in my,
I haven't really been commenting that much
on libertarian party things since the convention.
I shared your video and so I kind of got some of these
feedback from the Chase people who were very upset
about the post.
I guess Chase himself came out and condemned the tweet.
I don't know. I'm, I'm kind of, I gotta say,
I'm amazed at the lack of noise that the chase campaign is making.
Even in my world, it just doesn't register as anything. I, I,
I don't know. Like I say, when I look at the Joe Jorgensen campaign,
I look at that Like I say, when I look at the Joe Jorgensen campaign,
I look at that and I go,
the one tangible thing that I think that came out of it is that spike Cohen kind
of got launched as like a figure in the Liberty movement.
I didn't know who spike was before the campaign. A lot of libertarians didn't,
almost all libertarians know who spike Cohen is now.
And he has an effective messenger. I mean, I love him.
And I think he's a great guy whether you love him or not
He certainly is one of our most effective messengers. So you're like, okay, that's something it's not nothing
We got like we launched his profile
He went from being a guy with like a few thousand followers to a guy with like a couple hundred thousand followers from that campaign. I
Don't see anything like that coming out of this campaign
But both of them are them seem to be generating no enthusiasm.
And the other thing that I find kind of interesting,
I'm curious if you have any thoughts on this,
is that it's kind of interesting to me that while all of the left libertarians
kind of lectured us over the years about how unpopular our rhetoric would be,
none of them seem very excited about Chase, and he has totally moderated his rhetoric. how unpopular our rhetoric would be.
None of them seem very excited about chase and he has totally moderated his rhetoric.
Like he's not running on any of the kind of left wing things that would have
been the things that we were,
we were arguing with left libertarians about. I don't know. What,
what are your thoughts on it?
I agree with basically everything you said. I mean, the campaigns are very different.
I mean, I wasn't really running a real campaign.
I'm just doing the New Hampshire maximalist strategy thing.
And it's just another, you know, that's what the campaign was.
Sorry if you didn't figure that out yet, everybody.
But yeah, look, I got on the stage of the National Convention and called Chase a gay
race communist.
But that's just a way of saying he's a leftist
that's provocative.
Yeah.
They can't see that they're leftists.
They wanna fight you for the party,
so they have to be kind of fought.
They don't get any attention because they're trying to exist
within a system that's not going to give them any.
And so the only way you can get it is to demand it,
which I feel like we in New Hampshire
continue to even show them
and show people and these people just get mad at us. So they can't even engage with when the market
is working. Obviously, my account just blew up. But even before that, if you look at the growth
of the LPNH account versus the growth of both of their accounts, throughout the campaign season,
LPNH is growing faster even as they're running
for president.
Now that said, in terms of pure vote percentage, and this is also the fundamental thing that
in terms of the Libertarian Party and the movement getting wrong, you are not optimizing
for pure vote percentage the next election.
If you get a bunch of people who are just like, oh, I, yeah, like a third party,
like, yeah, those are my party, suck, I vote for the alternative guy.
Like, that's not a movement.
That guy can't bring you anyone else.
That guy is a terminal voter that you could have picked up at any time.
He is an end node.
He does not do anything for you, aside from make the number go up a little bit in that
election.
What you're trying to do, and again, I do this with all of our stuff.
We're trying to create.
We're trying to attract a real, a real set of values, a real set of things
that you can have and then spread outwards.
And so, you know,
if you were going to try to keep the libertarian party alive, you'd get it down
to like 300 people who get it,
kick everyone else out, and come up with a much better mechanism for who you're
letting get to this thing. Okay, so you can actually keep some, you know, strong definition
to it. It's a race to like, right now, half the people in the libertarian party have like no idea
of what libertarianism as a philosophy is.
Chase is bringing in more people
who also will have absolutely no clue.
You know, it's just guns and legal weed or whatever.
And also the fact that they're doing this,
they know it, which is also why, you know,
neither of them would be interested in talking to me
because I would say it to their faces,
which would be unabidable because
the left is strategy right the right is on the side of reality the left is on the side of fiction
the side of fiction can confront the side of reality right there and so they're only the only
strategy is to you know avoid confrontation when we had a beef you confronted me right and I may
not have handled that perfectly for my end I'll'll say that on the show, I've said that to you probably.
I may not have either, yeah.
So, but we had a confrontation,
we confronted each other, right?
Because that is, I think, a more right wing
way of handling things.
And this is why, I went on to Faker Terrients with like six people there. It's one of the funniest podcast
episodes I've ever done actually. And now they just call me a racist but
wouldn't even talk to me because they can't even talk to you. You
have facts on your side. I have the facts on my side most of the
time when I'm saying crazy stuff. So there's no engagement. They'll
shame you but they won't have any back and forth.
You all they can do is taboo you because there's no truth on their, on their,
on the issues of where most of the areas of disagreement,
there's very little truth on their side.
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Yeah, I mean, look here, you're preaching to the choir on that
one. I mean, I debated so many of those guys, you know,
during the kind of run of, of leading the takeover of the Mises caucus and stuff.
And it's like, yeah, I mean that, that really does sound right. I do just, I,
I guess one of the things that's fascinating to me and it's fascinating about
your video with the feds.
And it also holds true with this is what you just said that it's like, they know it.
And this is what's so bizarre to me where you're like, look like
why isn't chase talking about the trans, the kids stuff now?
Why isn't he talking about all, you know what I mean?
Like there's so many of these things that it's like,
he's trying to walk away from that because you know,
you know that you can't actually win an argument on this.
You know, this isn't actually popular. He's not like, again,
like to your point about New Hampshire's Twitter growing faster than theirs
during a present, that is really an incredible, you know,
thing to note that it's like, and, and look, maybe from their perspective,
they're like, Oh, we don't want to grow it the way New Hampshire is growing it.
Like, okay, so then what's your way? What's the, what's the other way
to do it? Because it seems like, by the way, I don't, and I don't begrudge chase
this at all. I invited him both personally and publicly to come on the
show. And I was as anybody who knows me, I did it in good faith. I wouldn't be
like trying to criticize the guy felt almost a little obligated, like, Hey, let me give you this platform if you want. Obviously I'm going
to push back on some of the stuff I disagree with you on, but they don't want to come on
the show. And I don't begrudge them that if I were his campaign advisor, I'd probably
advise him not to come on this show. You know, it's not going to go well for you. You can't
really defend your ideas.
I mean, I would fight anyone though. That's why it's like that. I'm like, what's wrong with you? You're supposed to be the leader, but you should be able to talk to anyone. You should be able to handle any situation. That's what it means. You're just showing that you're scared. And I just don't understand how you can expect people to follow you when you implicitly show people that you're a scared person. Well, I guess my thing is almost like, look, I could accept if it was like, Hey, look,
New Hampshire's pursuing their strategy on how to grow their audience.
Dave is pursuing his strategy on how to grow his audience.
We are pursuing a separate strategy on how to grow that audience,
but it's almost like just nothing. Like if they were like, Hey, look,
our time is valuable and we don't think that coming on this show is the best use of our time. Fine. But it's like, what shows are you going on?
It seems to be doing nothing. Like,
I mean, they said no to the Tim Pool show where also I would have been, you know,
I would have asked some hard questions,
but I wasn't going to go in there and like just make fun of it and attach it.
You know, that's not what I was going to do. So, uh,
but I think they don't want to answer those questions. Well, let me ask you this and then we could wrap after this. But so
I hear what you're saying that you think that the libertarian party should be, the Mises caucus's
goal should be to keep the thing like exclusively right-wing libertarians and kind of controlled
like the messaging and work on coming up with as many mechanisms as we can to
like make sure we're getting really quality people in who are,
who are members. Do you think, cause I, I,
it does seem to me like this chase campaign is going to fall flat on its face
and accomplish absolutely nothing.
Do you think there's a good opportunity to do that after this?
And is that worth pursuing in your opinion?
I mean, that's like I think the value of what you're capturing is worth what it effectively costs in human capital to do it.
And although I'm sure Michael Heist and his team like put in a tremendous amount of work and I maybe I am underestimating it.
But I think the total cost of producing that, you know, for sort of the prices where people would potentially
be willing to do the work for are, it is producible.
And so effectively, you're for the right wing libertarian,
is it worth the 50 to $100 a year on average per person
to have the libertarian party in control of people like you?
It's worth that much money to me per year.
And so if all I have to do is be a member of national,
be a member of my state party and show up. And so if all I have to do is be a member of national, be a member of
my state party and show up. And one of the things to say also, the more we embrace that this is like
the real politic nature of it, the more we can throw away with all the other crap that doesn't
matter. Like strip your state convention down to like two hours, okay, we're in charge, we're done,
go home. Like, you know, I just get down to the brass tacks of what reality is here.
You're saying with national convention, like, I know, look, honestly, the media cost didn't
do a good job.
They did not.
Like, this is supposed to be the power politics.
I thought they did a much better job before.
You need to make sure if you control them, if you control the entire thing, or we're
close, like they didn't do a good job getting their shit done.
They didn't do a good job, like at convention, just getting through stuff. They should be a mechanism for continuing to help fight for the state parties
and organizing them along this right wing access. Then as soon as they have firm, clear,
the entire majority control the next year, they have the entire firm, clear, entirely controlled
the LNC, they should rewrite the entire thing and they should make it what
it you know, and stop and get rid of all this pretending, you know, and I don't know what
they should rewrite it to. But that's what I wrote the entire thing. Okay. And this is
it and we're keeping it this way. You know, you know, or you know, I mean, maybe there's
some room again, if the lefties can come to the table, you know, maybe we can like divvy
out states, you know, and like, divvy out states. If LP Louisiana or
whatever wants to be super gay and recruit the trans furry libertarian crowd and the
people who want to wear naked suits, again, it's a theory of property rights. Maybe those
people should be concentrating in Louisiana. I know, I'm not I'm not against those people living the way that they want to live.
I'm just against them living that way.
You know, near me and in my.
You know, and how I invite them to New Hampshire again, if they can recognize,
you know, their role, take over the Democratic Party, like we have those types here.
We're not devoid of those types.
I'm always trying to push that like, go take over the Democratic Party. Like imagine if your choice on the ballot, right, was you or the guy in this
in the spandex. Like, as you said, you agree on almost everything. Like those are two choices
to have on the ballot. Those would be like the best possible two, you know, two choices to have.
You know, if you have to pick, you know, get that well, you can imagine someone in the continuum that
would be better than that second person, but they've got to be on take
over the Democrats.
They've got to, you know, have some leftist essence, you know,
to them and that's what they should be, you know, doing.
Take over the Democratic party.
They should be putting a big power base in there.
I could not agree with you more on that.
I've said it many times over the years that these left Libertarians
are like want to go to war with us.
It's like just go be the best leftists. Yeah.
Exactly. Like why not? Um, all right. Well, listen, Jeremy,
it's always a pleasure talking to your brother. Congratulations on the, uh,
the viral success. Be careful out there and let's do this again sometime soon.
Thanks. It was great. Oh, and, uh, just anything you want to promote.
Follow me on X Jeremy Kaufman. Every libertarian has to come to Mecca at least once. So make
sure you've planned your trip to New Hampshire. Porkfest is a great time. And is there like
sort of consensus best time of the year? If you just got to come one time, you'll come
to pork best, but you can come anytime in here. Come to New Hampshire. If you made it
this far in the show.
Hell yeah. All right. Thank you. Thank you, Jeremy. And thanks everybody for listening.
Catch you next time. Peace.