Archive for the ‘Libertarian’ Category

Libertarian Greg Tlapek provides alternative choice in District 147 House race – Southeast Missourian

Libertarian Greg Tlapek is running for the District 147 seat in the Missouri House of Representatives once again.

Tlapek has been involved with the Libertarian party going back to the 1980s and ran his first political race in 1994. Most recently, Tlapek ran for the District 147 seat in 2022, pulling 4.1% of the vote. Republican candidate John Voss won the race, receiving 64.5%, while Democratic candidate Andy Leighton received 31.4%.

Before the 2022 race, Tlapek ran for the District 147 seat in 2014 and 2016, losing both races to then-incumbent Kathy Swan. Despite falling short in multiple elections, Tlapek remains upbeat about his position.

"I've been in this a long time, and what my experience has taught me is to be happy and accept that people who don't agree with you politically, they're not bad people," Tlapek said. "Virtually everyone wants the world to be a better place. We just have different ways of getting there."

While he said he feels the election will be a foregone conclusion with incumbent Voss likely winning in a landslide, Tlapek said he is hopeful that running as a third-party candidate can open up the political process to other parties.

"I'm mostly interested in the state Legislature and improving the political process," Tlapek said about his candidacy. "I really do think that we would benefit from having a multiparty system, and Missouri is the perfect state to do it in because we have such a large house with 163 seats. It would be about making people's vote count."

Tlapek continues to run on the same platforms he has run on for quite some time -- education reform through a 1% reduction in sales tax and a scaled tuition program for public schools, health care deregulation and moving toward a free-market approach and election reform through the use of proportional representation.

"(Missouri) is the place to do what's called proportional representation, and I would love to help shepherd that discussion," Tlapek said. "Most counties just haven't done it right. They still make it so you've got to have a threshold that keeps a lot of people unrepresented. If we get that threshold down to where all you need is 6/10 of one Senate vote, you can have a representative. Then, everybody in Missouri can truly feel like their vote counts.

"Honestly, I do think that if you went back and you get the numbers from the last from the last few elections, I think you would find that if you totaled up all the votes, the Democrats got in the state House races and all the votes and Republicans got in the state House races and then you assign seats based on that, Republicans probably are over-represented by about seven seats. It's not a huge difference," Tlapek said. "I see why they don't want to give up those seven seats, but it really eliminates the whole gerrymandering problem. There are no more state legislative district maps that have to be drawn and gerrymandered to favor the political party that was in power when the maps were being drawn. It eliminates that whole problem. This is a better way for us to get the cream of the crop in there."

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Libertarian Greg Tlapek provides alternative choice in District 147 House race - Southeast Missourian

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Review: Sheriff in ‘Fargo’ Gives Libertarians a Bad Name – Reason

Season five of showrunner Noah Hawley's TV version ofFargotells a violence-filled story exploring domestic abuse, PTSD, the concept of debt (on multiple levels), and the purpose and efficacy of the institutions of marriageandpolice.

Its villain is designed to cause discomfort for libertarians: Sheriff Roy Tillman (Jon Hamm), who self-identifies as a libertarian and a constitutionalist, and does seem to adhere to a certain peculiar right-wing belief in the county sheriff as the main source of authority. The only libertarianish qualities he evinces are a contempt for the FBI and the ability to recite a few silly, pointless laws. But the writers seem to want his stated ideology to add spice to the audience's dislike of him for being an abusing, murdering, and corrupt bully laundering his own rage and sin through a twisted vision of God.

In one scene, Tillman says he'd rather see orphans fight each other for sport than help them, and another character accuses him of being like a babycrying for freedom with no responsibility. The whole thing is reminiscent of when on old college pal thinks he istotally crushinglibertarianism with a masterful Facebook post.

If Tillman becomes smart quality TV fans' go-to image of libertarians, replacing the weirdly obsessed but well-meaning Ron Swanson of Parks and Recreation, it will be a shame. But hopefully a smart viewer will know, when Tillman calls on the spirit of western resisters of federal power such as Ammon Bundy and LaVoy Finicum, that it's no part of any proven public record that either man ever did anything a hundredth as evil as Tillman does in pretty much every episode.

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Review: Sheriff in 'Fargo' Gives Libertarians a Bad Name - Reason

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Libertarian legal nonprofit takes over New York lawsuit alleging discrimination against white men – Green Market Report

A national libertarian-leaning nonprofit law firm with a track record of winning at the U.S. Supreme Court has taken command of a lawsuit in New York that alleges government discrimination against white-owned businesses during the states cannabis business licensing.

I can officially say were taking over the case, a spokesperson with the Pacific Legal Foundation told Green Market Report on Monday.

The Pacific Legal Foundation which has won 17 of the 20 cases it argued before the U.S. Supreme Court since 1987 has taken up the plaintiffs cause in Valencia Ag vs. the New York State Office of Cannabis Management et al.

Valencia Ag filed the federal lawsuit in January against New York cannabis regulators, alleging that the social equity-focused rollout of the states recreational marijuana market violates the U.S. Constitutions Equal Protection Clause by giving disfavor to white men, including the owners of Valencia Ag.

The suit targeted goals within the New York state law that include reserving 50% of all cannabis business licenses to specific demographics such as disabled service veterans and women- and minority-owned companies under an umbrella policy of social equity. It argued that provision unfairly disadvantaged businesses owned by white men, such as Valencia Ag.

The firms attorneys are preparing to file an amended complaint in the legal action, hopefully sometime this week, after the firm filed a letter with the New York state court on behalf of Valencia Ag. That letter requested that an earlier preliminary injunction motion be canceled, but that was only so Pacific Legal Foundation could prepare its own such request for an injunction, the spokesperson said.

Pacific Legal Foundation NY Valencia letter

If an injunction is granted by a federal judge, it would mark the third time since late 2022 that the licensing process has been halted in the state, after two other lawsuits that also targeted the social equity framework resulted in out-of-court settlements which allowed marijuana business permitting to resume.

There are also multiple other lawsuits still pending against New York cannabis regulators which are similarly requesting injunctions or regulatory changes to benefit plaintiffs.

Pacific Legal has taken on the case pro bono, which is standard practice for the firm.

This case might seem different for us but government overreach is always a fit for our organization. We fight for what is right, that all people should be treated equally under the law, regardless of race and gender, the spokesperson said.

The firm deferred questions about how the lawsuits legal strategy may change at this point, and said the amended complaint is days away from being filed.

But with a national law firm that has a track record of winning at the U.S. Supreme Court taking the case pro bono, its a good bet the fate of the New York social equity market structure will be in doubt for some time to come.

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Libertarian legal nonprofit takes over New York lawsuit alleging discrimination against white men - Green Market Report

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Where Does the Term Libertarian Come From Anyway? | Jeffrey A. Tucker – Foundation for Economic Education

Where Does the Term Libertarian Come From Anyway? | Jeffrey A. Tucker  Foundation for Economic Education

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Where Does the Term Libertarian Come From Anyway? | Jeffrey A. Tucker - Foundation for Economic Education

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Could the Libertarian Party nominate RKF Jr.? – NewsNation Now

Could the Libertarian Party nominate RKF Jr.?  NewsNation Now

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Could the Libertarian Party nominate RKF Jr.? - NewsNation Now

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