- Sister Y's The Right to Marry
- A Really, Really, Really Long Post About Gay Marriage That Does Not, In The End, Support One Side Or The Other also recommended by CharlieSheen
At some point, this thing which does not seem like coercion, becomes a clear case of coercion. When the power used to gently nudge is absolute, no matter how slight the suggestion, its victim remains intimidated by the knowledge of the unlimited power behind it. Thus, because government necessarily sits in a position of almost unlimited power over the individual, any lifestyle suggestions they make are not compatible with libertarian ideals.
Variations of this idea have been running through my head for the last few months as I've been trying to re-evaluate my views of how concepts like "oppression" and "coercion" ought to be defined, and how immensely such categories could (when taken seriously enough) complicate the search for an ethical and practicable socio-economic structure. [1] Seeing it spelled out explicitly here gives me a high prior on the authors' understanding of the ethics of choice.
Looking at the reviews of Nudge in mainstream liberal publications, I see praise for the specific examples of "nudges" proposed in the areas of finance, healthcare, etc, and I can't help but agree. However, civil unions are a much more important and sensitive matter, and the authors seem to lean heavily on the side of caution/liberalism here. What they have suggested - separation of religion/tradition and law; eliminating restrictions on who can participate; a set of unambiguious default rules that would favour the vulnerable party; the requirement to plan ahead for situations where emotions would run high, etc - is all well and good.
However, I can't see them saying anything about what Vladimir seems to be arguing against! It does not appear that the authors even hint at changing the boundaries of what is legally enforceable for a civil union contract, and what the methods of enforcement could be. That they don't even mention the possibility of "wild radical implications" such as "flogging for adultery", and that they propose denying all legal status to private "marriage", certainly puts me at ease as to the direction of their "libertarianism" - but how is it even distinctly libertarian at this point? Why not call it the updated and streamlined version of modern liberal progressivism?
Tl;dr: we ought to take note that this is not libertarianism or conservatism, the authors are just using libertarian concepts to make good old progressivism more coherent and effective. I'm totally fine with it :)
1] One of the effects is that I'm now considerably more pro-markets, yet still opposed to the actually existing capitalist or feudal modes of production. See e.g. here
Tl;dr: we ought to take note that this is not libertarianism or conservatism, the authors are just using libertarian concepts to make good old progressivism more coherent and effective. I'm totally fine with it :)
It is a libertarian approach to doing progressivism. Those have been tried in the past, most notably much of the progressivism in the first half of the 19th century was libertarian in approach, but I would argue they have been systematically underused at least in the 20th century.
Not that I'm a dirty prog mind you. (~_^)