Happy 94th Birthday to a Libertarian pioneer!

Do you know who the first woman was to receive a U.S. Electoral College vote?

It was Tonie Nathan (February 2, 1923 - March 20, 2014), the Libertarian 
Party's 1972 candidate for vice president.

Leftists of course would name Geraldine Ferraro, the Democratic Party's 1984 
pick for VP.  But Democrats have never been exactly a trailblazing group -- 
Tonie won the first Electoral College vote for a woman twelve years before 
Geraldine-come-lately Ferraro.

Unlike the Democrats, Libertarians -- and Ms. Nathan -- don't wait for being 
different to become "fashionable".  And unlike the Democrats, who dip their 
toes into the pool of common sense with sheer terror, the Libertarians "jumped 
right in" with Nathan -- who was also the first Jewish vice presidential 
candidate.

Tonie was always warm and welcoming to the Libertarians she met.  She would 
call you by name and give the warmest hug.

Happy birthday, and rest in peace, to a star of the Libertarian movement.  
Thank you for all of your years in service to the Libertarian Party, and in 
service to liberty.

May many more powerful women walk in those big footsteps of yours.

More:

http://www.smithlundmills.com/obituary/Theodora-Tonie-Nathan/Eugene-OR/1363734

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonie_Nathan

http://www.lpedia.org/Tonie_Nathan

http://www.cato.org/blog/first-woman

Comment from one of our own, Virginia Libertarian Roy Scherer: "The pair of 
them got ONE electoral vote . . . from Virginia.  That was when I became aware 
of, and joined, the LP.  Thanks to Steve Tyler (wherever he may be now), and 
the two sweet ladies who were living with him."

-----------------------------------

Tonie's Obituary:

Tonie Nathan was the first vice-presidential candidate of the Libertarian 
Party. Tonie came to Libertarianism as a life-long Democrat. Soon after 
graduating as a journalism major from the University of Oregon, she attended 
the first Libertarian convention as both an interested observer and as a 
free-lance writer intending to write an article about this fledgling new 
political party. Much to her astonishment, after speaking to many of the 
leaders of the Party, Tonie was asked to run with John Hospers for the highest 
office in the nation. Hospers was Chairman of the Philosophy Department at USC.

Tonie Nathan, much to everyone's surprise, became the first woman in American 
history to have received an electoral vote in a presidential election, in 1972. 
During the 1970s through the 1990s, Tonie ran for offices including the United 
States Senate and the House of Representatives. In the 1980 Oregon Senate 
election, Tonie participated in three statewide television debates with 
then-U.S. Senator Bob Packwood and then-State Senator Ted Kulongoski. In 1990 
she ran as a Libertarian candidate for the U.S. House of Representatives for 
Oregon's 4th congressional district. She was the lone challenger to incumbent 
Congressman Peter DeFazio.

Tonie Nathan was a visionary. She was also considered a radical and extremist. 
She was an extremist for freedom and a radical because she believed in free 
markets. She lived through the turmoil of the 60's and 70's and witnessed 
campuses being burned down, riots in the streets, and assassinations of beloved 
leaders. Through all of this she consistently fought for freedom and justice. 
Tonie was against the draft and for an all-volunteer army. That was radical 
back then, but became the law of the land not too many years later.

She said the war on drugs was a waste of time and money and promoted the 
de-criminalization of drugs, even though she her herself never smoked a 
cigarette let alone took drugs. She in fact was a life-long naturopath. Those 
advocating the legalization of marijuana were considered extremists in the 
70's, but today such views are becoming commonplace, and the law in some 
states. 

She was a strong proponent of education, and wanted the federal government out 
of it and left to individual's and states only. She was one of the first to 
promote school vouchers.

Tonie was a feminist that championed women's rights, but never at the expense 
of individual rights. She chose to live the life of an emancipated woman, and 
to not tell others how to live theirs. She believed in a woman's right to an 
abortion while never dreaming of having one herself, and she defended gays, if 
and when they were harassed or discriminated against. 

But Tonie wasn't a wide-eyed Liberal. She championed free market capitalism in 
a time when capitalism was a dirty word and condemned as evil. She believed in 
absolute property rights and individual rights in a time where such ideas were 
considered "passé". Few defended the right of the rich, but Tonie Nathan did. 
At the same time she defended the rights of prostitutes calling it a victimless 
crime, even though she herself considered the profession immoral.

In a time when income tax rates were at 90%, Tonie Nathan fought for a flat tax 
where everyone would pay the same percent of their income. She was against 
favored treatment and wanted to do away with all corporate welfare, subsidies, 
and tax loopholes.

She also wrote article after article about the alternative ways of financing 
social needs, without the intrusion of government. She proposed user taxes, the 
end to eminent domain, a balanced budget, and the compliance with the 
constitution. She was a fiscal conservative, a hard money advocate, and a 
social liberal seeking social justice -- all at the same time.

Individuality was the greatest virtue according to Tonie Nathan. The freedom to 
think, to act without government controls and regulations as long as you did so 
without using force to impose your ideas or policies on others. It was the 
initiation of force that Tonie wanted barred from politics and human behavior. 
Legislating one's morality on someone else was not allowed by her strict "live 
and let live" philosophy. That philosophy, which she was exposed to by Ayn 
Rand, led to her political views of freedom, free markets, and individuality. 
Libertarianism was the political expression of that philosophy and she fought 
for it vigorously until she could fight no more. - See more at: 
http://www.smithlundmills.com/obituary/Theodora-Tonie-Nathan/Eugene-OR/1363734

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