Liberty International (formerly International Society for Individual Liberty or ISIL) is a non-profit, libertarian educational and networking organization based in Dallas, Texas. It encourages activism in libertarian and individual rights areas through the "freely chosen strategies" of its members1. Its history dates back to 1969 as the Society for Individual Liberty, founded by Don Ernsberger, Dave Walter and Jarret Wollstein2. The previous name (ISIL) was adopted in 1989 after a merger with Libertarian International was coordinated by Vince Miller, who then became president of the new organization.
Liberty International is now chaired by Mary Ruwart with Jacek Spendel serving as president since 2019. Board Members include Ken Schoolland, James Lark, Per Bylund, Lobo Tiggre, José Luis Cordeiro and David Walter. The organization has members in over 80 countries.
Activities
Liberty International sponsors an annual conference which attracts libertarian, classical liberal and other political speakers. Among others, these have included Nobel laureate Milton Friedman in 19902 and Pnresident of Costa Rica Miguel Ángel Rodríguez in 19993. It has sponsored a variety of educational materials and member projects from its website, and has incorporated other libertarian entities such as Laissez Faire Books.
History
Society for Individual Liberty
The Society for Individual Liberty (SIL) was founded in 1969 by Don Ernsberger and Dave Walter, who became its directors, after libertarian activists were expelled or later defected from Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) during and after their 1969 convention in St. Louis, Missouri4. During the August 1969 YAF convention, traditionalists and libertarians fought for control of the student organization. The libertarian faction lost. During the struggle and aftermath, the Anarcho-Libertarian Alliance, YAF Libertarian Caucus and two anarchist chapters of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) worked together, and eventually organized into a loosely knit association that became known as SIL5. Don Ernsberger resigned from YAF, promised to continue working with SDS at Penn State and established SIL headquarters in Philadelphia. The SIL was considered officially established by October 1969 when the YAF Libertarian Caucus merged with Jarret Wollstein's Society for Rational Individualism (SRI), which had been a Randian organization based in Maryland6. It was the influence of Roy A. Childs Jr. who prompted the SRI to favor "anarcho-capitalism", which later facilitated the merger with SIL7. Although SIL encompassed a diversity of minarchists and anarchist libertarians, the organization adopted a black flag within a dollar sign to become its official symbol8.
The founding of SIL is considered the defining moment that witnessed the "birth of an autonomous libertarian movement"9. Purged or disillusioned YAF chapters and members withdrew from YAF and joined SIL which claimed to have 3,000 members10 that had grown to 103 campus chapters in the United States, "two in Canada and one each in Sweden, India, and Australia" by 19704.
Activities and influence of SIL
According to historian Jonathan Schoenwald "All student libertarian groups opposed both the Vietnam War and the draft"11, which prominently included SIL. From the start, SIL built a campaign on campus to abolish conscription, writing in one issue paper that "it is the height of folly to maintain that a war which is maintained only through the draft, inflation, and government coercion through the tax system can in any way prove to be an example for positive antitotalitarian action"12. Identifying with the merits of decentralization, SIL also developed into a clearing house for the student libertarian movement, whose leaders wanted to keep their autonomy but likewise wanted to "band together to destroy the far Left and Right as well as the state"13.
In other activities, SIL embarked on a national program to "de-control America and restore our freedom"14. They sponsored educational conferences, developed a large series of one-page issue papers, created a Libertarian Speakers Bureau, published the monthly newsletter Society for Individual Liberty News and the monthly magazine The Individualist, edited by Roy Childs, worked to charter campus chapters at major universities, and published books, including A Liberty Primer by W. Alan Burris in 1981. In 1971 SIL launched a three-pronged project, which included "The Draft—Keep It Dead," "Justice in America—Crime without Victims," and the "‘No War, No Welfare and No Damn Taxation’ Spring Offensive."15
One of the noteworthy leaders affected by SIL activities was David Nolan, the main organizer behind the founding of the Libertarian Party in the United States. Nolan was involved with SIL as a campus leader7, and first revealed the current version of his Nolan Chart in an article named "Classifying & Analyzing Politico-Economic Systems" in the January 1971 issue of SIL's The Individualist16. Ed Clark, the 1980 Libertarian Party presidential candidate, became involved in the movement through his attendance at a SIL conference in New York City7.
Merger with Libetarian International
One of main reasons for SIL's merger into the International Society for Individual Liberty (ISIL) in 1989 was Don Ernsberger's withdrawal from SIL activities to become deputy chief of staff for Congressman Dana Rohrabacher. After his stint as a congressional staffer, he spent several years writing civil war books and nearly 40 years as a high school and college teacher. Dave Walter became involved in the Libertarian Party, serving as National Chair during 1988–199117.
In 1989 SIL merged with Libertarian International, founded by Vincent Miller, who assumed the position of president, changing the name of the organization to the International Society for Individual Liberty (ISIL), which had members in over 80 nations and hosted annual educational conferences across the globe18.
ISIL Era
ISIL was organized as a non-partisan, tax-exempt outreach and educational organization, which as an umbrella organization, represented groups and individual members in some 80 nations.19 During the ISIL years, Jarret Wollstein and others wrote 38 different educational pamphlets20, where it has been estimated that over 5 million copies were distributed21. Many of the pamphlets have been translated into dozens of foreign languages.
During the 1990s, ISIL held several conferences in the former Soviet bloc, and provided scholarships for students and young leaders. Conference networking led to the formation of the Liberty English Camps, started in 1997 in Lithuania and spreading to over 30 countries. They also translated a number of books in various languages such as Ken Schoolland's The Adventures of Jonathan Gullible: A Free Market Odyssey (in over 50 languages), Ayn Rand’s Anthem (including in her native Russia), Karl Hess’s Capitalism for Kids, Frances Kendall's Super Parents Super Children, and Mary Ruwart’s Healing Our World21.
The following was ISIL's Statement of Principles, as recorded on their website, until late 2013.
The International Society for Individual Liberty is an association of individuals and organizations dedicated to building a free and peaceful world, respect for individual rights and liberties, and an open and competitive economic system based on voluntary exchange and free trade. Members and affiliated organizations pursue this goal through independent action, using their freely chosen strategies. The association exists to promote the exchange of information and ideas, to study diverse strategies and to foster fellowship.22
Renamed as Liberty International
In 2016, ISIL adopted the public name Liberty International23 to avoid association with the Islamic State (sometimes known as ISIL or ISIS) and added international board members, including Per Bylund from Sweden, Jacek Spendel from Poland as president in 2019, and José Luis Cordeiro from Venezuela in 2022.
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International Society for Individual Liberty, "Statement of Principles" (ISIL.org, ca. October 2013), accessed 1 August 2024. ↩︎
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Liberty International, "Our History" (Liberty-Intl.org), accessed 1 August 2024. ↩︎
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Ben Best, "A Trip to Costa Rica" (BenBest.com), accessed 2 August 2024. ↩︎
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Rebecca E. Klatch, A Generation Divided: The New Left, the New Right, and the 1960s (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999), 234-235. ↩︎
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Ibid., 231. ↩︎
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John L. Kelley, Bringing the Market Back In: The Political Revitalization of Market Liberalism (New York: New York University Press, 1997), 103. Klatch, A Generation Divided, 364 note 91. ↩︎
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Kelley, Bringing the Market Back In, 91. ↩︎
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Mark C. Frazier, "Anarchism: Revolutionizing the Right", The Harvard Crimson (12 March 1971), accessed 5 August 2024. ↩︎
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Klatch, A Generation Divided, 12. ↩︎
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Gregory L. Schneider, Cadres for Conservatism: Young Americans for Freedom and the Rise of the Contemporary Right (New York: New York University Press, 1999), 136, 224 note 44. ↩︎
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Jonathan Schoenwald, "No War, No Welfare, and No Damn Taxation: The Student Libertarian Movement, 1968–1972", in The Vietnam War on Campus: Other Voices, More Distant Drums, ed. Marc Jason Gilbert (Westport, Connecticut: Praeger, 2001), 32. ↩︎
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Cited in ibid., 32, 50 note 58. ↩︎
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Ibid., 37. ↩︎
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Cited in ibid., 38, 51 note 77. ↩︎
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Cited in ibid., 39, 51 note 80. ↩︎
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Kelley, Bringing the Market Back in, 116, 238 note 23. ↩︎
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"Dave Walter" (LPedia.org), accessed 7 August 2024. ↩︎
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Eric Garris, "Vince Miller, RIP" (Antiwar.com, 28 June 2008), accessed 7 August 2024. ↩︎
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Tim Starr, "Vincent H. Miller, Requiescat In Pacem, 1938-2008" (WendyMcElroy.com, 1 July 2008), accessed 7 August 2024. ↩︎
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"ISIL Pamphlet Series" (Liberty-Intl.org), accessed 8 August 2024. ↩︎
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Joseph Bast, "Vince Miller, RIP" (Heartland.org, 29 June 2008), accessed 8 August 2024. ↩︎
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"About ISIL" (ISIL.org), accessed 8 Aug 2024. ↩︎
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"Liberty International" (ISIL.org), accessed 8 Aug 2024. ↩︎
This article is derived from the English Wikipedia article "Liberty International (organization)" as of 24 Nov 2023, which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.