Oh this is terribly rich -- and funny.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — Two years ago, Augustus Sol Invictus walked from central Florida to the Mojave Desert and spent a week fasting and praying, at times thinking he wouldn't survive. In a pagan ritual to give thanks when he returned home, he killed a goat and drank its blood.
Now that he's a candidate for U.S. Senate, the story is coming back to bite him.
The chairman of the Libertarian Party of Florida has resigned to call attention to Invictus' candidacy in hopes that other party leaders will denounce him. Adrian Wyllie, who was the Libertarian candidate for governor last year, says Invictus wants to lead a civil war, is trying to recruit neo-Nazis to the party and brutally and sadistically dismembered a goat.
It's an awkward situation for the small party that's trying to gain clout.
Hahahaha.... oh that's why Adrian resigned eh? C'mon Adrian, cut the crap.
This is the well-justified comeuppance for a party that lost its view of what it really stood for quite some time ago. I ought to know -- I was part of it for a while and resigned in disgust after the state party endorsed Gary Johnson for President, a man who wasn't very Libertarian and who famously stated nobody committed any crimes when it came to the financial crisis.
Oh really, nobody committed any crimes eh? At the time I put forward a scrolling list of crimes.
Of course the so-called Libertarian Johnson did more than just that. He also refused to engage on the medical monopoly issue, despite the fact that there are even more crimes found there!
It may be true that the Republicans and Democrats have no principles that matter; they simply run whatever puppet is convenient. But the Libertarians try to claim they're different; sadly, they're not.
What Sol Invictus has done is thrown this in the party's face in such an outrageous and blatant fashion that it exceeded any thinking individual's tolerance. But the seed of this disease in the Florida Libertarian Party goes back a hell of a long time, far longer in point of fact, it appears, than the 2012 campaign.
I left the party after attempting to put a stop to this crap by insisting that the party live to its principles and failing to carry the day in that regard. Adrian himself got involved in his own little game of not really Libertarian, in my opinion, with his driver license screed in which he "refused" to renew his license over Real ID, instead of arguing that he had a right to travel and one cannot force licensing of a right. There's actually case law precedent on this point, albeit very old case law, but to my knowledge it has never been cited and then overturned.
Instead Adrian did the politician thing and argued that it is "unjust" (e.g. unconstitutional) to be forced to positively identify oneself to obtain said "license." As I pointed out to Adrian at the time this was a stupid line of attack because if one accepts that the government may license travel by the means common in the present day for non-commercial personal conveyance of one's person and effects, in other words that is not a right but a privilege that the government may grant (because it owns that right and thus may delegate it as it sees fit), then you lose instantly because there is a compelling state interest in being able to prove that only persons eligible to exercise said privilege are granted said license!
In short as I've argued many times a right cannot be subject to license or permit; the two are polar opposites. You are granted a license or permit to do a thing otherwise prohibited.
The Libertarians have utterly failed in this regard in that their statement of principles and alleged party platform are clear yet they use mealy-mouth words such as "should" instead of "must" and "shall." This in turn gives rise to the sort of twisted argument-by-expedience, and thus a refusal to demand that candidates adhere to the party principles or be disavowed.
It is a fact of law that one has only one means by which you can prevent someone from running on a given party ballot in this state, and that is to primary said person and beat them. If you cannot manage to muster enough people, enough money and enough support to do that then anyone can show up on your ballot whether you like it or not, and that's exactly what happened.
The party got what it had coming to it in the form of Sol Invictus; sometimes it takes a while for the cosmic wheel of karma to come around, but it nearly always, given enough time, does.
Goodnight Gracie.