“I’m That Libertarian”: Presidential Candidate Marc Allan Feldman’s Rap at the L.P. Convention

If only this guy could have been the nominee, rather than people who think civil liberties need to be sacrificed for the sake of political correctness. Like the current LP ticket.

Compare him to VP nominee William Weld. Weld ran to the left of his 1990 Democratic rival for Massachusetts governor on Social Justice Warrior issues, and his appointees to the state judiciary included people who had supported draconian campus speech codes. Two of Weld’s three nominees to the state supreme court were lefties, while the third was a moderate former Reagan administration official who endorsed Obama in 2008. His lower court picks were almost invariably leftists.

Weld’s appointees to the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination demanded that people be fired by private employers for offensive racial jokes.(Perhaps reminiscent of how Gary Johnson thinks small religious businesses should have to provide services for gay weddings, and thinks that Jewish businesses should have to serve Nazis.)

Weld supported new red tape, like the Big Green initiative that his 1990 Democratic opponent, John Silber, found too extreme, and which was rejected as too extreme by Massachusetts voters. Weld is also an outspoken supporter of race-based, government-mandated affirmative action, and was to the left of both Silber and democratic state senate president Bulger on that issue.

“I’m That Libertarian”: Presidential Candidate Marc Allan Feldman’s Rap at the L.P. Convention

If only this guy could have been the nominee, rather than people who think civil liberties need to be sacrificed for the sake of political correctness. Like the current LP ticket.

Compare him to VP nominee William Weld. Weld ran to the left of his 1990 Democratic rival for Massachusetts governor on Social Justice Warrior issues, and his appointees to the state judiciary included people who had supported draconian campus speech codes. Two of Weld’s three nominees to the state supreme court were lefties, while the third was a moderate former Reagan administration official who endorsed Obama in 2008. His lower court picks were almost invariably leftists.

Weld’s appointees to the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination demanded that people be fired by private employers for offensive racial jokes.(Perhaps reminiscent of how Gary Johnson thinks small religious businesses should have to provide services for gay weddings, and thinks that Jewish businesses should have to serve Nazis.)

Weld supported new red tape, like the Big Green initiative that his 1990 Democratic opponent, John Silber, found too extreme, and which was rejected as too extreme by Massachusetts voters. Weld is also an outspoken supporter of race-based, government-mandated affirmative action, and was to the left of both Silber and democratic state senate president Bulger on that issue.