What about forming a coalition with libertarians?
Libertarians are as outraged as we are with the current administration. To get an idea of where they are coming from here are few of their writers on the current situation:
First, Lew Rockwell points out that:
"The most significant socio-political shift in our time has gone almost completely unremarked, and even unnoticed. It is the dramatic shift of the red-state bourgeoisie from leave-us-alone libertarianism, manifested in the Congressional elections of 1994, to almost totalitarian statist nationalism. Whereas the conservative middle class once cheered the circumscribing of the federal government, it now celebrates power and adores the central state, particularly its military wing."
See this link for much more -- an extensive critique of the current situation with historical context from the libertarian perspective:
http://www.lewrockwell.com/rockwell/red-state-fascism.html Here Roderick T. Long proposes a libertarian/left coalition in his commentary on Rockwell's article:
http://hnn.us/blogs/entries/9354.html(Excerpts)
"With regard to the controversy over Lew Rockwell's New Year's editorial . . . I strongly agree with Lew that the libertarian movement needs to rethink its sometimes kneejerk anti-leftism and to consider "extending more rhetorical tolerance leftward."
"For me the case is not primarily strategic, . . . but it certainly is at least strategic. The statist right, which now controls the Presidency, both houses of Congress, and much of the media, is, as Lew rightly observes, "the most pressing and urgent threat to freedom that we face in our time," and it's in the interest of libertarians to build bridges with the left, who have been "solid on civil liberties" (at least by comparison) and "crucial in drawing attention to the lies and abuses of the Bush administration."
"While there are, admittedly, plenty of authoritarian types on the left (as everywhere else), there are also plenty of people whose instincts are firmly anti-authoritarian but who have been lured into supporting state socialism because it's been sold to them as the only effective counterweight to state capitalism. These leftists are our potential allies, but no alliance will be forthcoming so long as we continue to confirm most leftists' impression of libertarianism as a variant of conservatism."
Here Justin Raimondo (a libertarian and "old style" conservative) brings up some important points about that current situation that are not discussed much in the media:
http://antiwar.com/justin/(Excerpts)
"The idea that today's conservatives are in any way defenders of individual liberty, the free market, and what Russell Kirk called "the permanent things," i.e., the sacred traditions that have accumulated over time to constitute the core of our Judeo-Christian culture, is no longer a defensible proposition. Instead, what used to be called the conservative movement has morphed, almost overnight, into a coterie of moral monsters, whose political program is one of unmitigated evil.
. . .
"In any case, by this time the evidence for the malevolent transformation of the American Right is all around us – in the ravings of Fox News "commentators," in the sheer existence of Ann Coulter, in the usurpation of a formerly respectable political tendency by the greasy evasions of the "neo"-conservatives. This change is most starkly dramatized in three disturbing trends:
(1) Widespread support on the Right for internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II, touting Michelle Malkin's shoddy-to-nonexistent scholarship, with the implication that we should be contemplating the same treatment for Americans of Arab descent,
(2) the justification of torture when utilized by the American military in the name of the "war on terrorism" by "conservative" legal theorists, and
(3) advocacy of a ruthlessly aggressive foreign policy of military expansionism, supposedly in order to spread "democracy" around the world.
(More). . .