Just for you to know how much we like liberty, seven of the MPC’ers (Isa, Marce, Mabe, Alejo, Franz, Pablito, and I) went to a workshop this Saturday (Revolution holiday) to a workshop about student group organizing with Alexander McCobin. He told us many useful tips about organizing and spreading the libertarian ideas. Also, we made a brief workshop in which the MPC’ers decided to work as a team to create a club or organization to reach this goal in Guatemala. We concluded we would start a kind-of-club (We don’t know the name yet) and make the Liberty Café. Our goal is to, “Engage others to achieve their own understanding of liberty.” This we would achieve by three major means, Le Sticky Method, a webpage and a fan page, and the Liberty Café. Le Sticky Method consists of creating stickers, buttons, and pins with questions about relevant daily topics such like,The Social Healthcare would fail, want to know how and why?The objective of this is to encourage people to ask you this question and start an important conversation anywhere you are, whether a cafeteria or the street. After this conversation, you can invite them to the Liberty Café and offer them to visit our webpage, in which they may find all resources needed to be prepared for the dialogue tables. These resources would include videos, essays, books, and other important ones. Finally, the Liberty Café consists of round table dialogues about important topics. We found this project very interesting and easy to replicate in other places starting in universities, and we even got contacts from Alexander for funding this project!
This afternoon, we had AlexanderMcCobin as a guest at the MPC. Alexander is the president of the huge,
pro-liberty, student movement, Students for Liberty. He studied a major in the
University of Pennsylvania and now is getting a Ph.D. in philosophy from
Georgetown. Our dialogue was about the best ways to advance liberty, and for
that we read Leonard Read’s article, How
to Advance Liberty, a Learning, not a Selling Problem. By the way, it’s a
great article, which I highly recommend. Our dialogue was very interesting,
dynamic, and thoughtful. As Bert told us later, “I
was very proud to hear so many strong voices in the dialogue yesterday. Very
thoughtful and courageous. We have come a long way from our first dialogue.” I
have to agree with Bert, we have improved dramatically since our first
dialogues and I hope we keep improving.
The argument, which
Leonard Read proposes, is that in order to advance liberty, we must use the
power of attraction and it consists of attracting people to the libertarian
ideas through our passion and expertise towards these ideas. He opposes to mass
media communication because he believes it’s not a selling problem but a
learning problem, which we must engage personally. Although many of the MPC’ers
thought like this, Alexander didn’t. He thinks marketing is very useful to
accomplish the expansion of libertarian ideas. I agree with both perspectives
in the sense that marketing is a useful tool to engage people to learn the
libertarian ideas, and we must also encourage them through our experience and
expertise for them to understand these ideas by themselves. What we all agreed
on, was that there is a long road in the success of advancing liberty,
nevertheless we must start now and do our best to expand them.