My name is Brad Cooper. I have red hair and drive an El Camino. I am about 5 feet 7 inches. I am the chair of the Libertarian Party of Bucks County. If you would like to learn about what is wrong with our country and how librarianism can solve it, go and watch some YouTube videos I made for you.
That's an old video. I was a kid. Watch the politics ones. Don't you care about freedoms?
Grayson Green
The library ones are better
Evan Rivera
>Bucks County oof
Alexander Jones
Hi, so as a libertarian, I presume you own freehold property and do not rent out to others. That this property is completely independent and sustainable, off-grid. For any other times you may need something you cannot provide for yourself, you deal directly with individuals, and no corporations. That you do not deal in any commerce that would require infrastructure of any kind (including administrative, ex: corporations) unless you can provide it yourself, and in doing so, does not impose on any other person, in any way, that does not want to be bothered by you, or your dealings. I.e. you have the ability to provide for yourself, never imposing on any other individual(s), upstream or down stream, who do not engage with you. That in your dealings, there is no imposition by proxy that results from who you choose to deal with...
You do not use public utilities, everything you have is photo-voltaic, wind, micro-hydro, geothermal, biofuel... And that you obtained this ability dealing with independent contractors. That these contractors, in doing work for you, did not pass on in any way, to any other individuals any cost, waste, use of public infrastructure... in the process of doing that work. That you absorbed all waste material, have stored it, or processed it with zero risk and/or transfer to the general environment...
I am being a little bit factitious, but just a little.
Henry Robinson
How's the party going to feel when I screenshot the filth in this thread and hand it in at the next meeting? Be ready fuck face, you make the party look bad.
Jaxon Bell
I explain all of this in my videos.
Samuel Ross
*facetious
Andrew Sanchez
Books aren't filth!
Alexander Sullivan
I didn't post the sexy library girls! That was other people!
Ian Gutierrez
...
Kevin Scott
>librarianism
Leo Hill
That isn't even a library! It's just a bookshelf in a bedroom!
Hudson Perez
>tfw everyone falls for this obvious personal army request >tfw some faggot libertarian kid is going to have his shitty hobby YouTube channel shat on for no reason >tfw you have no face
Jaxon Flores
Yeah, factitious would mean you were telling the truth.
Kayden Brooks
You didn't read the thread before replying, did you?
Nolan Mitchell
Get all members to take over Sup Forums, kick the shit out of those stormfags nat.SOCIALISTS (who are political leftists that have somehow co-opted the "alt.right" logo), and seize control of Sup Forums for its true heirs, the TRUE right!
Nathan Cooper
No I have no time to read threads between fucking my girl and dabbing on the haters
Xavier Cruz
Were you at bloomcon?
Aiden Rogers
No
Owen Martinez
Anywhere there are books, it's library > and lesbianism
It's not global warming, it never really was, that is a laypersons misnomer, it is climate change. At this time people can make any arguments about whether or not human activity has an affect on this, it does not matter, since regardless of what the cause is, the effects of it must be mitigated in relation to human endeavor.
That means when the government zones, and the zones exclude people from building large houses, or housing projects in flood zones, or too close to the ocean... it is a defensible stance. Since it is the taxes we all pay that will be diverted to the initial evacuation, then rescue, and ultimately recovery operations that will be required more and more over time. No area is totally without risk, but many areas are high risk, and this can be measured.
The regulating of discharge to the environment has nothing to do with climate change or things like environmentalism/"saving the planet. It has to do with public health and safety, the security of private and public property, natural resource management, and quality of life. Things are a little better now than they used to be because of such requirements imposed on many industries. For anyone that is old enough to recall, many metropolitan and/or industrial areas in the seventies and into the eighties, suffered from extremely low air quality. This has both an acute and chronic impact on health and quality of life. For a long time many public and private lands and natural resources were adversely affected by the operations of upstream activities, that is why the regulations became so harsh, because regardless of what someone may want to believe, humans by nature tend to be more corrupt than not. I have seen this first hand with the transfer of some properties to particular demographic groups and under the brownfields umbrella.