1972 PLATFORM
of the
LIBERTARIAN PARTY
THE PARTY OF PRINCIPLE
Adopted in Convention
Denver, Colorado
June 17-18, 1972
STATEMENT OF PRINCIPLES
Adopted unanimously by the delegates to the 1st national
convention of the Libertarian Party, on June 17, 1972.
We, the members of the Libertarian Party, challenge the cult of
the omnipotent state, and defend the rights of the individual.
We hold that each individual has the right to exercise sole dominion
over his own life, and has the right to live his life in whatever
manner he chooses, so long as he does not forcibly interfere
with the equal right of others to live their lives in whatever
manner they choose.
Governments throughout history have regularly operated on
the opposite principle, that the State has the right to dispose of
the lives of individuals and the fruits of their labor. Even within
the United States, all political parties other than our own grant
to government the right to regulate the life of the individual and
seize the fruits of his labor without his consent.
We, on the contrary, deny the right of any government to do
these things, and hold that the sole function of government is the
protection of the rights of each individual: namely (1) the right to
life -- and accordingly we support laws prohibiting the initiation
of physical force against others; (2) the right to liberty of speech
and action -- and accordingly we oppose all attempts by government
to abridge the freedom of speech and press, as well as
government censorship in any form; and (3) the right to property
-- and accordingly we oppose all government interference with
private property, such as confiscation, nationalization, and eminent
domain, and support laws which prohibit robbery, trespass,
fraud and misrepresentation.
Since government has only one legitimate function, the protection
of individual rights, we oppose all interference by government
in the areas of voluntary and contractual relations among individuals.
Men should not be forced to sacrifice their lives and
property for the benefit of others. They should be left free by
government to deal with one another as free traders on a free
market; and the resultant economic system, the only one compatible
with the protection of man's rights, is laissez-faire capitalism.
INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS AND CIVIL ORDER
The protection of individual rights is the only proper purpose
of government. No conflict exists between civil order and individual
rights. Both concepts are based on the same fundamental
principle: that no individual, group, or government may initiate
force against any other individual, group, or government. Government
is instituted to protect individual rights. Government is
constitutionally limited so as to prevent the infringement of
individual rights by the government itself.
Crime
We hold that no action which does not infringe the
rights of others can properly be termed a crime. We favor the
repeal of all laws creating "crimes without victims" now incorporated
in Federal, state and local laws -- such as laws on voluntary
sexual relations, drug use, gambling, and attempted suicide.
We support impartial and consistent enforcement of laws designed
to protect individual rights -- regardless of the motivation for
which these laws may be violated.
Due Process for Criminally Accused
Until such time as a
person is proved guilty of a crime, that person should be accorded
all possible respect for his individual rights. We are thus opposed
to reduction of present safeguards for the rights of the criminally
accused. Specifically, we are opposed to preventive detention,
so-called "no-knock laws" and all other similar measures which
threaten existing rights. We further pledge to do all possible to
give life to the Sixth Amendment's guarantee of a speedy trial,
and shall work for appropriate legislation to this end. We support
full restitution for all loss suffered by persons arrested, indicted,
imprisoned, tried, or otherwise injured in the course of criminal
proceedings against them which do not result in their conviction.
We look ultimately to the voluntary funding of this restitution.
Freedom of Speech and The Press
We pledge to oppose all
forms of censorship, whatever the medium involved. Recent
events have demonstrated that the already precarious First Amendment
rights of the broadcasting industry are becoming still more
precarious. Regulation of broadcasting can no longer be tolerated.
We shall support legislation to repeal the Federal Communications
Act, and to provide for private ownership of broadcasting rights,
thus giving broadcasting First Amendment parity with other
communications media. We support repeal of pornography laws.
Protection of Privacy
Electronic and other covert government
surveillance of citizens should be restricted to activity which
can be shown beforehand, under high, clearly defined standards
of probable cause, to be criminal and to present immediate and
grave danger to other citizens. The National Census and other
government compilations of data on citizens should be conducted
on a strictly voluntary basis.
The Right to Keep and Bear Arms
In recognition of the fact
that the individual is his own last source of self-defense, the
authors of the Constitution guaranteed, in the Second Amendment,
the right of the people to keep and bear arms. This reasoning
remains valid today. We pledge to uphold that guarantee. We
oppose compulsory arms registration.
Volunteer Army
We oppose the draft (Selective Service),
believing that the use of force to require individuals to serve in
the armed forces or anywhere else is a violation of their rights,
and that a well-paid volunteer army is a more effective means of
national defense than the involuntary servitude exemplified by
the draft. We recommend a complete review and possible reform
of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, to guarantee effective
and equal protection of rights under the law to all members of
the U.S. armed forces, and to promote thereby the morale,
dignity, and sense of justice within the military which are
indispensable
to its efficient and effective operation. We further pledge
to work for a declaration of unconditional amnesty for all who
have been convicted of, or who now stand accused of, draft evasion
and for all military deserters who were draftees.
Property Rights
We hold that property rights are individual
rights and, as such, are entitled to the same respect and protection
as all other individual rights. We further hold that the owner of
property has the full right to control, use, dispose of, or in any
manner enjoy his property without interference, until and unless
the exercise of his control infringes the valid rights of others. We
shall thus oppose restrictions upon the use of property which do
not have as their sole end the protection of valid rights.
Unions and Collective Bargaining
We support the right of
free men to voluntarily associate in, or to establish, labor unions.
We support the concept that an employer may recognize a union
as the collective bargaining agent of some or all of his employees.
We oppose governmental interference in bargaining, such as compulsory
arbitration or the obligation to bargain. We demand that
the National Labor Relations Act be repealed. We recognize
voluntary contracts between employers and labor unions as being
legally and morally binding on the parties to such contracts.
TRADE AND THE ECONOMY
Because each person has the right to offer his goods and
services to others on the free market, and because government
interference can only harm such free activity, we oppose all
intervention by government into the area of economics. The only
proper role of government in the economic realm is to protect
property rights, adjudicate disputes and protect contracts, and
provide a legal framework in which voluntary trade is protected.
All efforts by government to redistribute wealth, or to control or
manage trade, are improper in a free society.
Money
We favor the establishment of a sound money system.
We thus support the private ownership of gold, and demand
repeal of all legal tender laws.
The Economy
Government intervention in the economy
imperils both the material prosperity and personal freedom of
every American. We therefore support the following specific
immediate reforms:
(a) reduction of both taxes and government spending;
(b) an end to deficit budgets;
(c) a halt to inflationary monetary policies, and elimination,
with all deliberate speed, of the Federal Reserve System;
(d) the removal of all governmental impediments to free
trade -- including the repeal of the National Labor Relations
Act, the Interstate Commerce Act, all antitrust
laws, and the abolition of the Department of Agriculture,
as the most pressing and critical impediments;
(e) and the repeal of all controls on wages, prices, rents,
profits, production, and interest rates.
Subsidies
In order to achieve a free economy in which government
victimizes no one for the benefit of anyone else, we oppose
all government subsidies to business, labor, education, agriculture,
science, the arts, or any other special interests. Those who have
entered into these activities with promises of government subsidy
will be forewarned by being given a cutoff date beyond which all
government aid to their enterprise will be terminated. Relief or
exemption from involuntary taxation shall not be considered a
subsidy.
Tariffs and Quotas
Like subsidies, tariffs and quotas serve
only to give special treatment to favored interests and to diminish
the welfare of other citizens. We therefore support abolition
of all tariffs and quotas as well as the Tariff Commission and the
Customs Court.
Interim Reforms
In order to effect our long-range goals, we
recommend, among others, the following interim measures: the
adoption of the Liberty Amendment, and provision for greater
use of the referendum for reducing or repealing taxes.
Long-Range Goals
Since we believe that every man is entitled
to keep the fruits of his labor, we are opposed to all government
activity which consists of the forcible collection money or goods
from citizens in violation of their individual rights. Specifically,
we support the eventual repeal of all taxation. We support a
system of voluntary fees for services rendered as a method for
financing government in a free society.
DOMESTIC ILLS
Government intervention in current problems, such as crime,
pollution, defraud of consumers, health problems, overpopulation,
decaying cities, and poverty, is properly limited to protection of
individual rights. In those areas where individual rights or voluntary
relations are not involved, we support an immediate reduction of
government's present role, and ultimately, a total withdrawal of
government intervention, together with the establishment of a
legal framework in which private, voluntary solutions to these
problems can be developed and implemented.
Pollution
We support the development of an objective system
defining individual property rights to air and water. We hold that
ambiguities in the area of these rights (e.g. concepts such as
"public property") are a primary cause of our deteriorating
environment. Whereas we maintain that no one has the right to
violate the legitimate property rights of others by pollution, we
shall strenuously oppose all attempts to transform the defense of
such rights into any restriction of the efforts of individuals to
advance technology, to expand production, or to use their
property peacefully.
Consumer Protection
We shall support strong and effective
laws against fraud and misrepresentation. We shall oppose, however,
that present and prospective so-called "consumer-protection"
legislation which infringes upon voluntary trade.
Overpopulation
We support an end to all subsidies for childbearing
built into our present laws, including all welfare plans and
the provision of tax-supported services for children. We further
support the repeal of all laws restricting voluntary birth control
or voluntary termination of pregnancies during their first hundred
days. We shall oppose all coercive measures to control population
growth.
Education
We support the repeal of all compulsory education
laws, and an end to government operation, regulation, and subsidy
of schools. We call for an immediate end of compulsory busing.
Poverty and Unemployment
We support repeal of all laws
which impede the ability of any person to find employment --
including, but not limited to, minimum wage laws, so-called
"protective" labor legislation for women and children, governmental
restrictions on the establishment of private day-care
centers, the National Labor Relations Act, and licensing requirements.
We oppose all government welfare and relief projects and
"aid to the poor" programs, inasmuch as they are not within the
proper role of government, and do contribute to unemployment.
All aid to the poor should come from private sources.
FOREIGN POLICY
The principles which guide a legitimate government in its
relationships with other governments are the same as those which
guide relationships among individuals and relationships between
individuals and governments. It must protect itself and its citizens
against the initiation of force from other nations. While we recognize
the existence of totalitarian governments, we do not recognize
them as legitimate governments. We will grant them no moral
sanction. We will not deal with them as if they were proper
governments.
To do so is to ignore the rights of their victims and rob those
victims of the knowledge that we know they have been wronged.
Foreign Aid
We support an end to the Federal foreign aid program.
Ownership in Unclaimed Property
We pledge to oppose recognition
of claims by fiat, by nations or international bodies, of
presently unclaimed property, such as the ocean floor and planetary
bodies. We urge the development of objective standards for
recognizing claims of ownership in such property.
Currency Exchange Rates
We pledge to oppose all governmental
attempts to peg or regulate currency exchange rates.
International trade can truly be free only when currency exchange
rates reflect the free-market value of respective currencies.
Military Alliances
The United States should abandon its
attempts to act as policeman for the world, and should enter into
alliances only with countries whose continued free existence is
vital to the protection of the freedom of all American citizens.
Under such an alliance, the United States may offer the protection
of its nuclear umbrella, but our allies would provide their own
conventional
defense capabilities. We should in particular disengage
from any present alliances which include despotic governments.
Military Capability
We shall support the maintenance of a
sufficient military establishment to defend the United States
against aggression. We should have a sufficient nuclear capacity to
convince any potential aggressor that it cannot hope to survive a
first strike against the United States. But, as our foreign commitments
are reduced, and as our allies assume their share of the
burden of providing a conventional war capability, we should be
able to reduce the size of our conventional defense, and thus
reduce the overall cost and size of our total defense establishment.
Diplomatic Recognition
The United States should establish
a scheme of recognition consistent with the principles of a free
society, the primary principle being that, while individuals everywhere
in the world have unalienable rights, governments which
enslave individuals have no legitimacy whatsoever.
Secession
We shall support recognition of the right to secede.
Political units or areas which do secede should be recognized by
the United States as independent political entities where: (1)
secession is supported by a majority within the political unit,
(2) the majority does not attempt suppression of the dissenting
minority, and (3) the government of the new entity is at least as
compatible with human freedom as that from which it seceded.
The United Nations
We support withdrawal of the United
States from the United Nations. We further support a Constitutional
Amendment designed to prohibit the United States from
entering into any treaty under which it relinquishes any portion
of its sovereignty.