English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Put a Liberal in office?
If a Libertarian would not be able to get into ffice who who you want;
1. Conservative
2. Democrat?

2007-09-28 02:44:22 · 11 answers · asked by Moody Red 6 in Politics & Government Politics

Yes, Robert J. I agree

2007-09-28 06:10:44 · update #1

11 answers

I believe in the Constitution and the Bill of rights.
I'll vote for whoever will keep the oath of office and enforce them.
I believe in the principles set forth by our Founding Fathers.
Crooked politicians and lawyers as well as tyrannical power hungry business leaders and union leaders have always been the bane of America. They distort the system to their personal enrichment or empowerment.
I will support anyone, regardless of party, that will stick to the principles listed above!
Is there anyone out there?
If not, I will go with whoever is Conservative and comes CLOSE to those principles.

2007-09-28 05:19:19 · answer #1 · answered by Philip H 7 · 1 0

What if Ron Paul does not run? vote casting for a Libertarian basically because of the fact they're working because of the fact the Libertarian candidate (i.e. Bob Barr), is basically as undesirable as vote casting for a Republican basically because of the fact they're working as a Republican. you're able to desire to confess that Bob Barr grow to be a terrible Libertarian candidate. Authored the protection of marriage act. Supported the conflict on drugs, Patriot Act, Iraq conflict, & a ban on Wicca in the army. He could have replaced his concepts on those now, yet strikes (votes) talk louder than words. If he grow to be somewhat a Libertarian, exceedingly one that grow to be nominated for President, he could have been against those all alongside, not in basic terms while he mandatory to enhance his political profession. I vote in accordance to which candidate maximum suitable represents my perspectives regardless of partisanship. thankfully I stay in TX-14, so i'm going to get to vote for him despite if or not he runs for President. :)

2016-10-20 05:22:11 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The point is that neither party is any different really .
The same things must happen or society breaks down .
You can not increase the homeless population anymore then it is already and government is picking the tab up regardless of who gets elected .
The problem is the constitution which is under attack by those in government that want more power to move quickly to achieve the actions they want without regard for the law of the land .

Since we no longer teach Civics , children today are never told about this nations long history of struggle to uphold the constitution .

Its only come under heavy attack during the last 40 years and this was about the same time the military industrial complex gained its permanent foothold in our government .

2007-09-28 02:53:48 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

I am a Republican and took the internet test. Guess what? It said I was a Libertarian. So, I have to believe that most Libertarians are closer in beliefs to Republicans than those big goverment, heavy taxing, socialist Democrats. Anyone agree?

2007-09-28 05:35:09 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

You miss the libertarian concept that both political government and voting are THE PROBLEM.

2007-09-28 12:57:29 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No. I do not vote by partyline. I want someone who solve the problems. This means who can get the job done. From my life experience no particular belief have all the right answers.

2007-09-28 05:04:56 · answer #6 · answered by David_the_Great 7 · 3 0

Well considering the majority of Libertarian beliefs are conservative other than laxer restrictions on drugs such as marijuana, I believe that I would want a Conservative in office and will vote accordingly.

2007-09-28 02:51:44 · answer #7 · answered by Richard Cranium 3 · 4 2

I choose neither of the grubby b@stards. They are exactly the same coin, just different sides. They owe so many for their election, big business, lobbyists, special interest groups, that they forget about those they are supposed to be serving. They are self serving, manipulating, scumbags that do not deserve the right to be in office.

2007-09-28 02:50:17 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

I think it is funny the libertarians can't come up with a good candidate.

Proof:

-Lyndon LaRuche?
-Ralph Nader?
-Ross Perot?

The bad thing is 3rd party candidates mess up election results.

2007-09-28 02:52:57 · answer #9 · answered by infobrokernate 6 · 3 3

Conservative.
I am a Republican with strong libertarian leanings.

2007-09-28 02:55:18 · answer #10 · answered by inzaratha 6 · 3 1

fedest.com, questions and answers