Matt Clark and The Young Americans for Liberty: Mistakes from the past will be anger in the future

It is no longer the Tea Party which is the issue, or school levies aligned with cheating politicians.  It has been determined that much of the modern sicknesses surrounding our American culture is self-inflicted by philosophical suicide and there is no changing that in the short run.  Many of today’s Tea Party patriots supporting Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh, and many other traditional conservatives will see Social Security collapse, Medicare costs sky-rocket into bankruptcy, and the years of socialism they said yes to bring the greatest economy and country on earth to the brink—and we’ll be lucky to survive.  The process is already starting, but their years of spineless conviction will come raining upon their lives when Obamacare takes full hold in their families and the next decade will be shoveling ourselves out of the mess.  I’ve spent roughly 2 million words warning people how to avoid this fate, but it’s now too late, so my direction is no longer focused on those of today—but those of tomorrow—the next generation who has to deal with all these mistakes.  Those young people are now aware of the failed society that has been given to them, and they aren’t happy about it.  This is the cause of the sudden rise of the libertarian movement on college campuses which appears to be as robust as the socialist movements that took place in the same colleges during the 1960s.  These modern libertarians are the antithesis to those collectivists of yester-year, who currently sit as approval editors for all television, magazines, and newspapers.  These libertarians are socially liberal but fiscally conservative, and they don’t like much of anything that is political—leaving machine politics in serious, serious trouble.  This was the topic of Matt Clark ‘s recent radio broadcast as he sat down with the president of the Young Americans for Liberty at the University of Michigan and talked about the libertarian movement, freedom, and his student group’s activism.

I am a social and fiscal conservative—so much so that I make Rush Limbaugh look like a bleeding heart liberal.  I have no tolerance for drugs or sexual promiscuity in the party scene.  Nothing good comes from those activities—but a lot of bad does.  So I do not like much about how this new generation of young people spend their time.  But as they learn in their colleges that much of what they are paying a lot of money to learn, and realize that the debt placed around their heads just in student loans is intentionally self-destructive, their fiscal conservatism is blooming.  At that point I find I have a lot in common with those libertarian millennials.  It is at this common bond that I intended to refocus my energy—toward them.

I will be there to explain to them that the health care industry used to be the best in the world, that the sustainable wages for liberal teaching at colleges was intentionally self-defeating.  I will remind them that light bulbs used to come on bright, and that global warming mysticisms taught to them in public and college institutions was created by second-handers to gain political power, and nothing more.  I will tell them about people like John Hutchinson who could give young people the kind of world they are playing in their video games, as opposed to the village hut mentality of the current political belt way of Washington who wants to shut down Hutchinson as a freak living on the fringe of society.

I will remind them of who lied to them, who cheated them, and how it came about—throwing many logs on the fire in the coming years till the world created by second-handers which we see today is up in flames—and their influence with it.  I don’t want those second-handers in my life, and the millennials don’t either—which is why they are turning toward libertarianism for relief, and a crack at a decent life away from the mistakes of their parents and grandparents who spent twenty years voting for stupid liberal school levies only to get programmed robots as children wanting nothing to do with Republicans or Democrats now that they are of voting age.

Out of the thousands of articles I have written the two that are still the most popular are Successful People Who Did Not Go to College, and Giants in Ohio.  Those can both be seen on my sidebar to the right.  They are consistently among my top viewed articles day in and day out as they are circulated around Facebook to young people contemplating paying for another semester of socialist programming from their college, or the science that those institutions have deliberately lied to them about, which has been exposed on popular History Channel episodes like Ancient Aliens.  Behind those articles is the one I did about Malden Island and the giant statues of Easter Island.  Each article acts like a log on a fire that these young libertarians come to learning that they suspected something wasn’t quite right, and my words confirm it for them—causing them to take action.

One thing that is sure is that the world of Karl Rove, Mitt Romney and even Hillary Clinton won’t cut it.  We are not living in the 60s anymore and the Beatles are no longer popular.  The entertainment of these millennials is angry—rightfully so, and their indignant nature is a rising tide of a movement that traditional politics will not be able to hold back.  Republicans could go a long way to capturing some of that momentum if they put their effort behind Rand Paul during the next election, but they won’t do that, because most of them are second-handers, and the betting money is to put another out-of-touch New Englander like Chris Christie up for nomination, or even the very safe bet of Jeb Bush.  In so doing, Republicans will only solidify the commitment from young people to get behind a third-party candidate—as those types of people do not represent their concerns.

Democrats are trying to appeal to these millennials by giving them free stuff, but the illusion is not lost on the young libertarians.  They know that Obamacare needs their money and support to care for the elderly and sick with a massive wealth-redistribution scam rooted in socialism—and even if they did want to play the game out of empathy, they can’t because premiums are way too high because of the government created oligopoly.  By the time millennials pay their Social Security that they’ll never collect, their other taxes for 1960s War on Poverty programs which haven’t worked, and pay their student loan payments for their useless college degrees giving them no job making  over 35K per year unless they work for government somewhere—there isn’t any money for Obamacare after they pay for their cell phone bills, their cable, their online game subscriptions, and their tendency to eat out all the time because the entire generation has forgotten how to cook.

The second-handers in government have purposely avoided this topic because they don’t have an answer for it.  But I will be sure to recite the memory of all these faux pas for these young libertarians looking for a direction to vent their anger.  I fully intend to be there to point the way directing their angry mobs, and loose lips with nothing to lose from their actions.  And when those mobs arrive at the door of the current second-handers, they have good reason to be afraid.  The day of reckoning is coming down upon them and there is no way to stop it now.  They didn’t listen in the past, and will now have to pay a heavy price—and it won’t be my fault or the rising tide of libertarians pissed off at politics as usual.  They will be the first generation to get openly screwed over by all these stupid policies done in America against the Constitution, and their compliance is just not in the cards.  They have nothing to lose, and that makes them dangerous—and I intend to put my skills to work on their behalf.

Rich Hoffman

 www.OVERMANWARRIOR.com

 

6 thoughts on “Matt Clark and The Young Americans for Liberty: Mistakes from the past will be anger in the future

  1. I disagree completely. Talk about too late!

    Who you going to pass it down to?? The mind-bending 30% of adults who still live at home? It’s broken top down and bottom up. More than I care to know with friends and family have this happening in their own homes. Many of these young adults are able to move out. They don’t because a cheap apartment is beneath them. Add to that the spineless parents that continue the coddling well into their adulthood and you have a house of cards. My father would have tossed my bags and ass out at 18 if I hadn’t already been gone. Kids or no kids. Period. I spread my legs, I’d have to live that out with little help. Personal responsibilty. And moving home after college? Please. He would have enrolled me in the Army, by proxy.
    No Rich. These young Americans with Matt are a sliver but not even close to reality. The damage my generation did is irreversable. There is no life skills, urge for raw independence or self worth. It’s not their fault but we’ll have a whole couple of generations that have no idea what it is to pay a babysitter, the light bill, cook day in and day and the responsibility of maintenence on a property. They don’t even carry the burden of extra while they’re under that roof!!! Lazy.

    I won’t cry a river for this youth and to be sure..my disgust is with my age group. So weak and afraid of their own shadow and their children. I see it first hand all the time. It’s gross, sad and weird.

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    1. There’s no fight in anybody. Just talk. I’m tired of people who speak softly and won’t even carry a stick, let alone………..a big one. Passive fools being led over a cliff and all they’ll do is whimper like a dog tossed into a car for the first time traveling away from a home they were born in.

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      1. Bingo. Problem is, they aren’t traveling.
        It’s lack of accountability…and respect. I have it on both sides of my family and with my neighbors. I see it all the time. How can we expect anyone to hold their government to the fire if they’re in their own abyss privately? I wish I had more hope but I call ’em like I see ’em.
        I’ll bet you 17 trillion that after this snow storm…the parents are out doing the shoveling. Wouldn’t want the little darlings to have to earn their keep. Golly, that’s slave labor!

        There are people doing things Rich. It’s a different fight. The fight for survival. They have resigned themselves that it’s irrevocably broken. I share that sentiment especially after being so active and seeing that the only fruits from that are low-hanging. It’s not a “if you don’t succeed, try try again” thing. I live that. But you know perfectly well that our demise is by design and way beyond the Whorehouse.(I mean Whitehouse)
        The HCFA comes to mind which scratches the surface and trust me…this woman is scorned and those that betrayed the people will pay. If I can go door to door for a school levy, I will relish that demeaning task (no one should have to wake sheep up, but I digress) to push to take out one traitor of a gov.
        I won’t be alone.

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  2. The Libertarians will either infiltrate and take over the GOP, the same way the socialists took over the democrat party, or they’ll destroy the GOP by focusing attention on a third party. The establishment republicans had a hard time suppressing the Ron Paul movement in 2012. These tactics will not work against his son, as Rand has built himself as a more mainstream candidate. The only new Republicans being elected are the likes of Ted Cruz and other Tea Party/Libertarians. As for the social issues; most Libertarians are actually socially conservative in nature. They just don’t want the government enforcing its view point on others. From a literal stand point; Libertarians are indeed Conservative!

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    1. I’m late to the party here, so pardon me 😉 From my personal standpoint, I struggle with completely tossing in the towel for my generation. Perhaps it’s the great respect for this country’s great accomplishments over the past two centuries that sways me to believe that freedom is embedded in our DNA. Unfortunately, most millennials don’t understand that freedom comes with personal responsibility. There’s no responsibility with a 26 year old living in his parents’ basement.

      As for this comment, “As for the social issues; most Libertarians are actually socially conservative,” I believe there is a lot of credibility to that statement. I am personally a “conservative libertarian” (lowercase “l”) that strongly believes in many socially conservative issues. Even the Young Americans for Liberty president (first video, above) told me that he’s personally against gay marriage, abortions, etc. and many in his group are the same way. Whether we’re just a “sliver” (as the first person commented), anomaly, etc., I really don’t know. BUT, I’m going down swinging!

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      1. LOL, yes that party has already come and gone, all that’s left is left over beer cans, panties that nobody has claimed, and garbage cans filled with puke.

        Good to hear from you. You guys are the future so its good to see your ready to swing.

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