balladbird said:
I wasn't sure how to feel about the whole Mozilla ordeal, but this is much more straightforward. It's the right of any individual to do business with whoever they please, or not, for whatever reason pleases them, so good for Mr. Temkin.
For my part, I agree with him. The tea party is up there with Libertarianism and Objectivism as a political movement whose appeal is completely lost on me.
I mostly agree with your first comment. People do have the right to do business with who they want, when they want (something libertarians, conservatives, and objectivists would agree with you over most liberals). But the way this was done seems a little more like "taking my ball and going home".
Here is some things to think about:
-A CEO doesn't OWN a company or set a companies social policies, they are basically a manager. How many people that may or may not share CAH's political beliefs maybe out of a job because one guy doesn't agree with the politics of another guy. If the company was privately owned and made direct contributions, I can see it, but this is irresponsible at best. Same thing with Mozilla. Would you avoid a resturant or grocery store b/c a member of management was a republican?
-Would he do business with Jesse Jackson Jr. or Jim Trafficant Anthony Weiner,or Leeland Yee who share his political beliefs but were disciplined for wire/mail fraud and campaign issues; financial corruption; being a lying piece of crap; and an arms trafficer respectfully.
(Side Note: I believe in gay marriage, but equating people that don't believe to the same level as a racist/Nazi/Klan member/child rapist/crminal.... They have a religious belief, taught for hundereds of years that isn't going to go away overnight. Most are conflicted... they want others to be happy but are afraid for those peoples souls and their own... many times, it's not done out of hate, but a misguided sense of morality. People on that side should be educated and treated like people instead of attacked like a Klan member or those politicians)
I really don't see how limited government and more social freedom don't "appeal" to you. Libertarianism is basically the best of both worlds in politics, economically conservative and socially liberal.
The basic premise is the FEDERAL government has as little control over the lives of individuals and groups as possible, basically just boiled down to national defense, diplomacy with other nations, interstate transportation, and intervening when states have disputes while local/county/state governments do more (kinda how the Federal government was set up in the first place). Some go further saying there should be no social safety net and almost no Executive Offices, but most believe these can exist, but reformed and more efficent. One way to look at them is the guys that want to get rid of the red tape.
As far as "liberal" social issues (gay marriage, abortion) these would be non legal issues in a government that wouldn't be in the business of marrying people or making medical policy. It would also protect the privacy, religious freedom and rights of people that own their own business.
They also won't make you buy products you don't want (for more expensive prices), evesdrop on your phone calls, allow you to own things to protect your family and property, won't give money to big oil, gas or waste millions on Solyndra
I'm not as familiar with Objectivism but the little I do know is based on individual rights, but I don't know enough to support or reject it.