My Weird Prompts
Most people treat libertarian as a synonym for "Republican who doesn't care what you smoke." But the real intellectual history is stranger and more fractured. This episode traces the word from a French anarcho-communist in 1857 through Dean Russell's 1955 rebranding pamphlet, then into the defining schism between Hayek's minarchism and Rothbard's anarcho-capitalism. We explore how the Cato Institute and Mises Institute became institutional rivals, how Ron Paul brought these ideas to a mass audience, and who the most articulate advocates are today — from Michael Huemer's philosophical anarchism to Jason Brennan's "bleeding-heart" case for markets. Underneath it all is a single tension: how does libertarianism actually distinguish itself from centrist liberalism?
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