Libertarians could be considered socially conservative in terms of what they think the government should regulate, but the libertarian belief system sometimes places them in bed with liberals. Generally they think that the government should stay out of personal decisions, so abortion and drug use, etc are all off limits to the government in the eyes of a hardcore libertarian. In that respect, the views of libertarians stack up more closely with the left.youngterrier wrote:From the economic standpoint, they should be most conservative but plenty aren't (Bill Maher). The misconception with the terms "conservative, liberal, and progressive" is that progressive and liberal are seen as synonymous which in fact they are not.CID1990 wrote:
You don't know much about libertarians if you are ranking them in the solid right. Libertarians are all over the map. I happen to know this.....
A progressive is someone who wants social change, a liberal wants more power in the Government , a conservative wants less government or little government. technically you could say Republicans are socially liberal in the sense that they wish to regulate people's lives by giving the government more power to do that (see sodomy laws, etc)
so I would categorize it as
Democrats--social progressives, economic liberals
Republicans--technically social liberals (but you can call it conservative), economic conservatives
Libertarians--social conservatives (by means of less government) and economic conservatives
IMO your not a libertarian if your social views line up with the Republicans or your economic views line up with the Democrats...but that's just my
Libertarians are not fiscally conservative in and of itself, rather they support a system of government that would automatically be fiscally conservative. Libertarians do not necessarily care how much money the government spends as long as the government is not telling people what they can and cannot do, how they should live their lives. Social conservatives in my mind are as bad as social liberals in that they want the government to enforce their ideas of how people should behave. Libertarians are completely opposed to this.
I have consistently voted Libertarian since I started voting, and I have generally been familiar with the candidates. You will usually find the anti-income tax folks in that group, as well. They certainly do have many characteristics of conservatives, but generally conservatives want government to dictate morality and that is where there is a big difference between the conservatives and libertarians.










