March 8, 2005

A Liberal in Latin America

The War of the End of the World by Mario Vargas LlosaTom Palmer, in a post today, encourages everyone to read a recent speech by novelist Mario Vargas Llosa. Entitled “Confessions of a Liberal,” the speech covers a discussion of what it means to be a liberal, as well as the impact of liberal ideas throughout Latin America. Here is an excerpt:

Thus, the liberal I aspire to be considers freedom a core value. Thanks to this freedom, humanity has been able to journey from the primitive cave to the stars and the information revolution, to progress from forms of collectivist and despotic association to representative democracy. The foundations of liberty are private property and the rule of law; this system guarantees the fewest possible forms of injustice, produces the greatest material and cultural progress, most effectively stems violence and provides the greatest respect for human rights. According to this concept of liberalism, freedom is a single, unified concept. Political and economic liberties are as inseparable as the two sides of a medal. Because freedom has not been understood as such in Latin America, the region has had many failed attempts at democratic rule. Either because the democracies that began emerging after the dictatorships respected political freedom but rejected economic liberty, which inevitably produced more poverty, inefficiency and corruption, or because they installed authoritarian governments convinced that only a firm hand and a repressive regime could guarantee the functioning of the free market. This is a dangerous fallacy. It has never been so. This explains why all the so-called “free market” Latin American dictatorships have failed. No free economy functions without an independent, efficient justice system and no reforms are successful if they are implemented without control and the criticism that only democracy permits. Those who believed that General Pinochet was the exception to the rule because his regime enjoyed economic success have now discovered, with the revelations of murder and torture, secret accounts and millions of dollars abroad, that the Chilean dictator, like all of his Latin American counterparts, was a murderer and a thief.


There is obviously much more to the speech. Head over and give it a read it you have the time.

Posted by Peter Mork at 9:57 AM | Comments | TrackBack

December 12, 2004

Evil From Within

Tom Palmer is sickened by the positions of some libertarians on the Ukrainian elections and much more. It's an excellent post that deserves a read.

What’s that terrible smell? It’s coming from a hatred of the United States that has become so strong that it has overpowered any lingering attachment to the ideas of liberty on which the United States was founded. Lewrockwell.com and antiwar.com are where the stench is strongest.
Some may wonder why I raise this issue, which is something I do in my own name only. It would be much easier to do what most of my friends do and merely ignore those who have taken up the mantle of malicious anti-Americanism and the defense of oppressive tyrannies, all in the name of “liberty.” I don’t relish getting slimed, having my personal life made an issue (Justin Raimondo and some of the lewrockwellites find my sexual orientation much more interesting than I do), or being denounced in pornographic comments and emails.
But this issue needs to be confronted. And real libertarians, people who actually value liberty, should – at the least – turn their backs on those who defend tyranny.

Posted by Peter Mork at 11:10 PM | Comments | TrackBack