View single post by Joe Kelley
 Posted: Wed Jul 12th, 2006 04:38 pm
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Joe Kelley

 

Joined: Mon Nov 21st, 2005
Location: California USA
Posts: 6399
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Mana: 
http://www.lewrockwell.com/lora/m.lora27.html

How To Achieve Liberty:
Bypass, Educate and Secede


by Manuel Lora and Juan Fernando Carpio

It is hard to be a libertarian and stay positive.

 

Any 'label' can be used to describe a person who endeavors to achieve liberty.

It isn't so hard to stay positive. It helps to have friends.

Friends for liberty need not agree upon anything more that liberty.

In my opinion the one's who produce more power independently will be more independent and less dependent.

It may help to invest more in the stuff that creates power and less in the stuff that is merely consumable.

Please read the link. There is much wisdom in these words (from my perspective):

Two things make the Internet the libertarian's best friend. First, it is decentralized; it has no head, no main hub, no central planner. (Yes, we are aware that there are root DNS servers, major backbones and other technical aspects that are not completely decentralized, but so long as those remain relatively free, anyone can easily connect to it.) Second, the structure of the Internet is horizontal. There is no hierarchy from an information point of view. (Again, there are some technical issues with the previous comment such as priority routing and other tweaks, but this is not a major issue so far.) Clients and servers are on a pretty equal plane and traffic ("demand") goes to the better sites and services.