Why I Call Myself a Progressive Libertarian!
I’ve gone back and forth on what to call myself politically, and I’m still not sure I even like labels. But if I’m going to explain myself honestly, the phrase that comes closest is progressive libertarian.
That probably sounds contradictory to some people. To others it sounds suspicious. To me, it just feels accurate.
I Came From the Left — and I’m Still Largely There
For most of my life, I identified as a leftist. In many ways, I still do. I believe in social progress, personal freedom, creative expression, skepticism toward corporate power, and compassion for ordinary people trying to live meaningful lives in a system that often feels stacked against them.
I didn’t suddenly wake up conservative. I didn’t abandon progressive values. What changed wasn’t what I care about — it was how the modern left started thinking, behaving, and policing itself.
When the Left Started Feeling Bitter
At some point, leftist thinking took on a tone that felt increasingly bitter, rigid, and humorless. What was once rebellious began to feel managerial. What was once about liberation began to feel like surveillance — just with better slogans.
In a strange twist, the left began to resemble the very conservatism it once mocked:
Moral purity tests replaced curiosity
Social conformity replaced individual thought
Language policing replaced persuasion
Cultural gatekeeping replaced experimentation
The only real difference was that instead of traditional norms, the rules were wrapped in political correctness.
That’s when it hit me: this wasn’t radical anymore — it was conservative behavior wearing progressive branding.
Freedom Still Matters to Me
Libertarianism, at its core, isn’t about greed or selfishness — at least not the version I’m talking about. It’s about autonomy. It’s about skepticism toward centralized authority, whether that authority comes from the state, corporations, or cultural mobs.
I believe people should be free to:
Speak imperfectly
Create weird art
Question dominant narratives
Change their minds
Live unconventional lives
Progress without freedom isn’t progress — it’s just a new set of rules enforced by different hall monitors.
How the Left Became Culturally Conservative
There was a time when the left thrived on dissent, satire, and internal disagreement. Now, too often, it punishes those things.
When jokes are treated like crimes. When art is expected to deliver the correct moral lesson. When disagreement is framed as harm.
That’s not radical politics — that’s cultural conservatism.
It’s the same old fear of chaos, just updated for the internet age.
My Influences Aren’t Academic — They’re Underground
My worldview didn’t come from think tanks or ideological flowcharts. It came from culture — especially the weird, messy, disreputable parts of it.
Underground comics that mocked everything and everyone
Alternative newspapers that mixed conspiracy, satire, politics, and nonsense
Absurdism, which understands that taking reality too seriously is often the biggest lie of all
The Beats, who valued raw expression over moral approval
These influences taught me something important: freedom isn’t clean.
It’s noisy, contradictory, offensive, hilarious, and alive.
Humor Is Political (Whether People Like It or Not)
One of the biggest red flags for me is when a political movement loses its sense of humor.
Satire has always been a tool of liberation. Absurdity exposes power. Laughter punctures false authority.
When a movement can’t laugh at itself, it starts behaving like a church.
I don’t trust politics that demand solemn obedience and scripted language. That kind of seriousness usually hides insecurity — or control.
Progressive, But Not Authoritarian
I want a society that’s more open, more compassionate, more creative, and more humane.
I don’t want one where:
Social pressure replaces law but feels just as coercive
People are reduced to labels instead of individuals
Art exists to signal virtue instead of provoke thought
That’s why I can’t fully call myself a modern leftist anymore — even though many of my values still align with the left.
Why “Progressive Libertarian” Fits
Progressive libertarianism, to me, means:
Social progress without cultural authoritarianism
Individual freedom without corporate domination
Equality without enforced sameness
Justice without ideological dogma
It’s a refusal to choose between compassion and freedom.
Final Thoughts: I Choose Weirdness Over Dogma
I don’t want politics to replace culture. I don’t want ideology to replace humanity.
I trust weirdos more than moral scolds. I trust artists more than bureaucrats. I trust people who ask questions more than people who claim certainty.
If that puts me in an uncomfortable middle space, so be it. The underground has always lived there anyway.
That’s why I call myself a progressive libertarian — not because it’s neat or fashionable, but because it leaves room to breathe.




