How I Became a Libertarian
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- I own my life. I am responsible for my actions and accountable for my results. PERIOD!
- I believe in "acceptance" (giving in to reality). I DO NOT believe in "resignation" (giving up on possibility).
- I believe that personal growth is our primary, life-long mission.
- I believe in self-management and course correction. Wisdom is not an automatic by-product of experience. Here's the formula: Wisdom = experience x reflection x relentless honesty x accountability (accepting consequences with no blame, no finger-pointing, no excuses, no whining, no justifications or rationalizations) x behavioral change.
- Our natural tendency – one that we must reject – is to surround ourselves with people who affirm who we already are, rather than those who inspire us to reach higher and do better. In order to grow, we must surround ourselves with the kind of people that we want to be, not those who mirror our own character defects.
- Real friends put truth telling above peace keeping. They place the welfare of their friends above the survival of comfortable friendships.
- I believe that without discipline, aspiration is hallucination.
- The formula that most people employ to rationalize (to themselves) their own dysfunctional behavior: Doing the wrong thing and a good excuse = doing the right thing. I believe that when we suffer discomfort from dissonance, we must use it to instigate action and growth rather than inertia or excuses. Personal responsibility must always trump convenience. There are more but you get the idea. My objective is to have a belief system, and then to conduct regular "self-audits" to ask myself, "How am I doing?"
- Government will grow in a metastatic way by the force of its own momentum.
- Federal, state and local legislatures and government agencies often address the same issues in an overlapping, expensive and bureaucratic way (somebody explain to me why we need departments of education at every level!!).
- Local answers to issues and problems are almost always more effective than nationwide answers. (I feel the same way about the solutions to issues and problems in corporations).
- Competition among states and jurisdictions WITHIN states is a good thing.
- In order to accomplish SOMETHING when they cannot accomplish RELEVANT things, legislatures (at every level) will often pass legislation whose costs far outweigh their benefits.
- Cause and effect are never linear, time-bound, and absolute. As a result, solutions to problems often create other problems. Even when solutions are effective, they rarely comport with election cycles. So the election (and more importantly, re-election) of government officials can almost never be tied to their results, except over a very long period of time. In the minds of voters, promises become more important than results. Ditto "speeches" and actions.
- Most government agencies reward their employees for "inputs" ("tenure" being a notable example) rather than "outputs" (results). The natural consequence of that is an inward focus. That is not a good thing.
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