• Tag Archives Gary Johnson
  • Gary Johnson’s Refreshing Foreign Policy Skepticism



    One of the few appealing aspects of Donald Trump’s presidential campaign has been his criticism of Hillary Clinton’s reckless interventionism. But the bellicose billionaire combines that criticism with promises of a gratuitous military buildup, a casual attitude toward the use of American weapons, and a disturbing tendency to view trade and immigration as acts of war.

    To get a sense of what a more disciplined, consistent, and thoughtful critique of Clintonian warmongering sounds like, listen to Gary Johnson, the Libertarian nominee for president. Notwithstanding the popular portrayal of Johnson as a foreign policy ignoramus based on his embarrassing “Aleppo moments,” the former New Mexico governor offers a bracing alternative to Clinton’s supposedly sophisticated yet consistently careless embrace of violence as a tool for reshaping the world.

    Again and again as first lady, senator, and secretary of state, from Serbia to Syria, Clinton has supported military interventions that had nothing to do with national defense. Mindful of the damage done by the promiscuous use of America’s armed forces, Johnson promises a different approach: When in doubt, stay out.

    “As president,” Johnson said in a recent speech at the University of Chicago, “I would not need to be talked out of dropping bombs and sending young men and women into harm’s way. I would be the president who would have to be convinced it is absolutely necessary to protect the American people or clear U.S. interests. I will be the skeptic in the room.”

    Like Trump, Johnson bemoans the disastrous consequences, in squandered lives and resources as well as instability conducive to terrorism, of the Clinton-supported war in Iraq. The fact that Clinton voted for that war and took more than a decade to admit it was a mistake—a mistake from which she apparently learned nothing, given her subsequent support for regime change in Libya and Syria—demonstrates that foreign policy knowledge is not synonymous with wisdom.

    Johnson’s criticism of unnecessary foreign entanglements goes beyond Trump’s by highlighting the folly of the never-ending war in Afghanistan. “We were attacked, and we attacked back,” he says. “But seven months after we sent our troops to Afghanistan, Al Qaeda had scattered to the winds and the Taliban had been removed from power. Al Qaeda was gone, but we stayed.” Fourteen years later, thousands of U.S. troops remain in Afghanistan.

    While Trump thinks the U.S. should be reimbursed for the cost of defending other countries, Johnson argues that defending other countries is not the U.S. military’s job. “The U.S. military exists, first and foremost, to defend the United States and U.S. vital interests,” he says. “We should expect other countries to defend themselves and their interests.”

    Unlike Trump, Johnson does not think the U.S. government spends too little on the military. “U.S. military spending accounts for roughly one-third of total military spending of the entire world, exceeding the combined total of the next seven largest military budgets,” he notes.

    Source: Gary Johnson’s Refreshing Foreign Policy Skepticism – Reason.com


  • MY VOTE: Gary Johnson

    This November I will be casting a vote for Gary Johnson. Not because I agree with Johnson on every issue (I don’t) but because I am absolutely tired of the tea-party duopoly that has this nation in a stranglehold.

    Too long has this country been swindled with the illusion of “choice” between crony capitalist, corrupt, power hungry war-mongers. Republicans and Democrats are two heads of the same snake, paying lip service to different demographics and then continuing the same failed policies once elected to office.

    It’s time to stop policing the world and meddling in toppling foreign governments. Our foreign policy breeds hatred across the globe and incubates the rise of groups like ISIS. We have become excellent at creating our own enemies. We supply arms to the groups today that will become the threats of tomorrow. It’s time to end this disastrous foreign policy.

    Johnson is the only candidate offering that vision.

    It’s long past time to end the war on drugs, and I don’t just mean “legalizing” them. The laws unfairly harm the poorest communities, and make it impossible for youth with a record to pull themselves up. Prohibition creates black markets that breed crime and it becomes a vicious cycle.

    Gary Johnson is the only candidate offering that vision.

    It’s time to get the government out of businesses and out of our wallets. Regulations are choking the free markets and making it impossible to start new businesses in this country. Rather than pointing the finger at the wealthy and blaming “inequality” we need to realize that the reason these abuses exist is because government wields its power to hand out favors. We need to take away the incentives to make corrupt deals with politicians.

    Taxation robs us of our earning potential with little to no return on investment. Every election year we hear how terrible our infrastructure is, how our schools are failing, and how we our social safety nets are strained. Then those same people will tell you we need taxes to provide all those things. From the poorest, to the wealthiest, there is nothing wrong with wanting to keep what you earn.

    Johnson is the only candidate willing to do that.

    We are on a path that will lead to endless debt, endless war, and the degradation of our liberty.

    Source: MY VOTE: Gary Johnson



  • Johnson Supporters Rally in West End to ‘Let Gary Debate’ 

    Dozens of people gathered in West End this afternoon to rally in favor of letting Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson participate in the third presidential debate next Wednesday.

    Supporters waving signs and cutouts of Johnson’s head met outside of the Commission on Presidential Debates office at 1200 New Hampshire Ave. NW to chant “Let Gary debate!”

    Some attendees, like Dustan Bower, came in part to protest the system by which we choose our president.

    “I think that the two old parties… basically are completely detached from the reality of most voters,” Bowser said. “They try to force them into one of these positions.”

    For brothers Scott and Tyler Nielson, the rally was a way to show support for the candidate they thought would do the best job in office.

    “I legitimately believe Gary Johnson is a better choice. He’s more qualified than either of the major party candidates,” Tyler said. “Gary Johnson and Bill Weld could do a better job of governing by consensus,” added his brother, Scott.

    Reese Sadler, who lives in Lynchburg, Va., said he drove hours to attend today’s rally.

    “We need a third party among Hillary and Donald,” Sadler said while clutching a massive Johnson head. “There’s two scandalous nominees who are running, so we need a sensible candidate.”

    Source: Johnson Supporters Rally in West End to ‘Let Gary Debate’ | Borderstan