I wrote my last post and then went to eat my lunch. While I was eating, some new thoughts relevant to this conversation occurred to me.
Tyler recently made a post (I don't yet know how to link to a specific post on this forum, or I would) about survivorship bias, ZC, and ZIOH, that I thought was dead on. As I was eating my beef ribeye a few minutes ago, I thought that he had some ideas there that were relevant to this thread.
In the other thread Tyler described the ZIOH board as "Stalinist." Having had some experience with Stalinist organizations as well as some slight study of history, I think that Tyler's description is apt. There is no commitment on the ZIOH board to the belief that everyone's ideas are sharpened and improved when they are subject to open criticism. Instead, there is a party line that is not to be broached and there is what might be termed a Stalinist cult of personality centered around the board's owner. Some people were explicitly told by moderators to butt out of threads because they had no business contributing to the discussion.
In the internet age, I think the idea that people can be so rigidly controlled is a pipe-dream. Although I do acknowledge that anyone has the right to create their own forum in accordance with whatever rules they choose. It just strikes me as self-defeating to control tightly permissible and nonpermissible ideas (I do understand the need to establish rules of civility and decorum).
If my ideas are superior, then let me defend them against all comers. If my ideas are flawed, then let others aid me by pointing out the flaws.
I came to this forum after some Googling on A1c lab values. After doing some reading here, I was attracted to the openness I found here, in contrast to the narrowness and rigidity I found at ZIOH.
So there might be some kind of self-selection here. One could argue that this forum's rules of engagement, so to speak, are inherently libertarian, and people, like me, who come to this forum, already have a preexisting bias towards freedom of expression. Thus, it might be the case that a poll would show that many people here are on the libertarian side of the spectrum. If one were a libertarian, I wonder how long one could remain an active member of a forum run along Stalinist principles.
The thing is, I am not sure that most people are very much concerned about the consistency of all their beliefs. From the discussions I read on ZIOH, I would guess that there was more support expressed there for libertarian sociopolitical forms than not. I tolerated the Stalinism there, for a few months, because there was some good information that I wanted to and ZIOH that seemed to be the center for all things ZC. My problem was that I kept running up against the controlling powers, at which point I recognized that I could not, in good conscience, remain a member of a community the principles of which were so antithetical to my own.
As far as your poll goes, does anyone describe herself as totalitarian? I have never met a socialist who would. I never got close to any fascists, but I kind of doubt that they overtly described themselves as totalitarian either.
Your suggested poll has prompted some additional thoughts. I make a distinction between politics and economics. I highly value the free expression of conflicting ideas in the public sphere. I oppose state interventions to limit free speech, assembly, and the like. So, I suppose, by your labels, that makes me a libertarian. But, in the economic sphere, I have no problem with state intervention, with the caveat that the state be democratically controlled. I believe that this democratic control is possible only if there are strict rules in place guaranteeing individuals the freedom to speak and organize. So, am I a statist or a libertarian? I am guessing that you would suggest that I check one of the statist options. If my guess is correct, then it seems to me that you would be concerned not primarily about politics but about economics. If so, I think it would be helpful to make it explicit that the poll as asking about economic beliefs.