1. First off, I can't pass up an opportunity to tweak the Libbies... Libertarianism is a silly little philosophy that should've died off long ago. It's nothing more than a collection of gun nut militia types finding common ground with conservative "intellectuals," conspiracy theorists, Social Darwinists, gold-standard endorsing economics professors, college freshman who want drugs legalized and their upperclass counterparts who want the Fed investigated and ended. Throw in a few aging hippies who still don't trust "the man" or the "power structure" and you've got quite the souffle of crazy.
Weird thing is, I have yet to meet a libertarian who isn't fairly certain that they're smarter and better informed than the average bear. Of course, they're also fairly certain that American history ended in 1789 and that everything since has been a bastardization of American values, so there's apparently no correlation between their certainty and reality.
2. Point 1 is all (admittedly over-the-top) political opinion, and while I couldn't physically resist inserting that commentary, it really doesn't have anything to do with the original question: would SPs be more inclined to be libertarians? On this, I'm still saying no.
First, libertarianism is a philosophy that applies itself dogmatically to every situation: economy's going swell?
Great, keep the government out! Market crashes, 25% unemployment?
Well, the last thing you want is for the government to get involved! It's the same answer to every question. Not very adaptable, and hardly tactical.
Second, the Libbies are absolutely wedded to the original language of the Constitution - something being unconstitutional is The End Of The Argument. If any temperament would personify the whole "living, breathing document" thing, it would be the SPs, who can generally not even be bothered to read the rule-book, let alone follow it to the letter.
Disclaimer to point #1: I stereotype - horribly. So, before anyone writes that they're a libertarian who doesn't fit into any of my little categories, I concede. It's quite the over-simplification. But... it's mostly true.
