I also had libertarian friends who were similarly poor; I think the thing that made us libertarian wasn't moneyness, but was we tended to be harder, more masculine, we tended to place agency strongly within ourselves vs outside, were extremely independent, and self-suppressive.
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Libertarianism felt like it embodied a philosophy of strength. "No one will help us", pioneer style. One of my friends was a marine. I'd come out of a very strict religious life. We had been trained to endure and keep going; high stress, high responsibility. Push your limits.
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I still operate under a clear view of responsibility; either you're responsible for a thing or you're not. No one is ever allowed to encroach on you, or you ok them. It's the philosophy of emotional boundaries/consent, but applied to all of life and property.
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This is all *underlying* stuff; there's a lot of non-libertarian-esque things that I'm totally fine with, like communes, social support networks, welfare, etc. - assuming they are done in a way that doesn't violate the deep down underlying structure of freedom.
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But my ultimate point is that I suspect money isn't the biggest divider of whether someone is libertarian or not; I think it's the hyper-agenty, masculine, clear-boundaries personality type. I do however suspect ppl with this personality tend to end up earning more money.
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For example, when I was struggling, I never once ended up receiving direct aid from the government. That never occured to me. Knowing that my life was fully my responsibility was a philosophy that I directly contribute to achieving the level of success I have today.
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Also wanna clarify - ppl characterize libertarianism as "only look out for yourself". This isn't quite right - it would be "nobody can force you to look out for others". Myself and other libertarians I know do really enjoy helping other people out of our own free will!
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Replying to @Franco0187
I think the high medical costs in the us come from significant overregulation, and if the government was more libertarian, we'd see costs here drop dramatically *without* having to also compensate with income tax
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Private greed has given us very cheap furniture, entertainment, technology, why do you think private greed applies uniquely to healthcare and not other things?
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