A Complete Analysis of a Concept Split into Six Incompatible Doctrines
Among contemporary political terms, few have collapsed into incoherence as dramatically as “neo-libertarianism.”
Originally coined in a specific academic context, it has since been recycled, distorted, and appropriated by ideological currents that have nothing in common.
Today, “neo-libertarianism” can mean:
- an institutional statist libertarianism (Sterba + Kochtopus)
- an anti-state anarchist libertarianism (Konkin)
- an authoritarian post-libertarian doctrine (post-libertarians)
- a culturally conservative radical libertarianism (paleolibertarianism)
- an egalitarian left-wing libertarianism (left-libertarianism)
One term, six incompatible ideologies.
This article explains why the concept is analytically useless and should be abandoned.
1. The Bloc of “Institutional Statist Neo-Libertarianism”
(James P. Sterba + the Kochtopus / Atlas Network)
Although they come from entirely different worlds, James P. Sterba and the Koch-funded libertarian think-tank ecosystem end up converging toward the same structure:
👉 a form of libertarianism that affirms, preserves, or legitimizes the State as a necessary framework.
They represent the institutionalist pole of neo-libertarianism.
1.1 Sterba’s Version: A Procedural, State-Regulated Libertarianism
Sterba proposes a model where:
- negative liberty is essential,
- yet a stronger State is required to balance conflicting freedoms,
- using a Rawls-style procedure to decide legitimate restrictions,
- in order to guarantee a high minimum of liberty for everyone.
He explicitly rejects the minimal night-watchman State, arguing that liberty conflicts inherently require government arbitration.
His “neo-libertarianism” is essentially:
👉 a procedural social-liberalism, not a radical libertarianism.
1.2 The Kochtopus Version: Corporate, Pro-Institution Libertarianism
The Koch-funded network (Cato Institute, Reason Foundation, Mercatus, Atlas Network) promotes a libertarianism that is:
- pro-business,
- compatible with Washington,
- pro-globalization,
- reformist rather than revolutionary,
- favorable to a strong, stable, arbitration-oriented State,
- tied to corporate interests and policy engineering.
This is a polished variant of neoliberalism, dressed in libertarian language.
It is neither anti-state nor radical:
👉 it depends on the State as an institutional backbone.
1.3 Why Sterba and the Kochtards Belong Together
Despite no direct link between them, Sterba and the Koch ecosystem share essential traits:
- they defend the legitimacy of the State
- they distrust anti-state radicalism
- they prioritize institutional stability
- they embed liberty inside a political framework
- they reject revolutionary strategies
- they seek “respectability” within academia or government
Together, they form the statist-institutional neo-libertarian bloc.
2. Konkin’s “New Libertarianism”: Agorism and the Abolition of the State
In total opposition to the institutional bloc stands the vision of Samuel Edward Konkin III.
His “New Libertarianism” is:
- uncompromisingly anti-state
- based on the creation of the agora, a fully free counter-economy
- fueled by black and grey markets
- explicitly anti-political (no elections, no lobbying)
- strategically revolutionary
- grounded in a multi-phase plan of peaceful subversion
For Konkin, political participation is not a tool — it is a betrayal.
He represents the radical anti-state bloc.
3. Post-Libertarians: A Libertarianism Subordinated to a Strong State
Post-libertarians argue that:
- pure libertarianism is unworkable,
- order must precede liberty,
- a centralized hierarchy is necessary,
- the State should be strengthened or rationalized,
- libertarian ideals must adapt to “realism.”
Some frame this as “realist neo-libertarianism.”
This is, in substance:
👉 a state-centric authoritarian libertarianism — the exact opposite of Konkin and incompatible even with Sterba’s proceduralism.
A third meaning of the term.
4. Paleolibertarianism: Radical Anti-State Economics + Cultural Conservatism
Paleolibertarianism, articulated by Rothbard, blends:
- absolute economic anti-statism,
- strict property rights,
- populist traditionalist values,
- cultural conservatism,
- rejection of elite Beltway libertarianism,
- voluntary traditional communities.
It is incompatible with:
- left-libertarian egalitarianism,
- Koch-style corporatism,
- Sterba’s proceduralism,
- Konkin’s counter-economics (strategically),
- post-libertarian statism.
A completely distinct tradition.
5. Left-Libertarianism: Egalitarianism, Anti-Rent, Non-Absolute Ownership
Left-libertarianism includes:
- mutualists,
- Georgist libertarians,
- market socialists,
- anti-rent individualists,
- theorists of equal initial access to natural resources.
They defend:
- self-ownership,
- but not absolute private property,
- equality of opportunity grounded in resource fairness,
- decentralized or cooperative market structures,
- opposition to corporate capitalism.
Some consider their doctrine a “new egalitarian libertarianism.”
Again, a meaning wholly incompatible with the others.
6. Why We Must Abandon the Term “Neo-Libertarianism”
The verdict is clear: the word is beyond repair.
1. It has no stable theoretical meaning
It refers to six incompatible ideologies.
A concept that means everything means nothing.
2. It generates confusion instead of clarity
When someone uses the term, you cannot know whether they mean:
- a statist procedural liberal,
- a corporate neoliberal,
- an agorist anarchist,
- an authoritarian post-libertarian,
- a paleoconservative radical,
- or an egalitarian left-libertarian.
The ambiguity is built-in and unavoidable.
3. It hides real ideological divisions
The libertarian landscape is sharply divided into:
- agorists,
- institutionalists,
- corporatists,
- egalitarians,
- paleos,
- post-libertarians.
The term blurs distinctions that matter.
4. It is now a rhetorical weapon, not an analytic tool
It is used to:
- smear opponents,
- amalgamate unrelated ideas,
- disguise statist agendas as “modern libertarianism,”
- dilute radical doctrines into bland centrism.
5. Precise terms already exist
We already have clear categories:
- agorism,
- procedural libertarianism,
- corporate libertarianism,
- post-libertarianism,
- paleolibertarianism,
- left-libertarianism.
Each corresponds to a real tradition.
6. The term is too politically parasitized to save
Too many factions have redefined it.
The semantic contamination is irreversible.
Final Conclusion
“Neo-libertarianism” is not a coherent doctrine.
It is a semantic graveyard where incompatible ideologies collide:
- Sterba’s statist proceduralism,
- Koch-style corporate institutionalism,
- Konkin’s counter-economic anarchism,
- the authoritarian post-libertarian turn,
- Rothbard’s paleolibertarian conservatism,
- the egalitarian left-libertarian tradition.
A single term that tries to contain all of this is worse than useless —
it actively destroys conceptual clarity.
For the sake of intellectual precision, doctrinal coherence, and philosophical honesty, the term “neo-libertarianism” must be permanently abandoned.

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