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So do I but he does not provide solutions. His debates with Carl Benjamin demonstrate to me an impasse in his ideological position. The latter is actively trying to make up something that would uphold Liberalism's best (in his conception). But Lindsay is stuck, and his only move seems to be lashing out in a frankly completely futile manner against people who have learned not to be kowtowed by such methods. People who are close to him even.
Sectarianism is political suicide.
This is a very good point. The naive optimism of 90s libertarians prevented them from formulating a true social project because they believed that connecting people and liberating information would suffice to create utopia. Yet another poisoned fruit of Rousseau, I might add.
Yet, there is space to create something like this now. Technocapitalist interests would be willing to adopt something like this, and the tools to introduce private property in cyberspace are now real. Balaji's project may very well be called a new Liberalism. But whether that will pan out remains to be seen, and the philosophical work to justify such a vision remains lacking, or libertarian rather than liberal.
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