An acclaimed creator and historian of the libertarian motion fell to his dying final week, his employer confirmed.
The physique of Brian Doherty, 57, senior editor of the libertarian journal Purpose, was discovered Thursday “after a fall” within the Battery Yates park portion of the Golden Gate Nationwide Recreation Space, the publication wrote.
The Nationwide Parks Service’s regulation enforcement company confirmed it responded to an incident at Battery Yates on Thursday “involving a male customer who reportedly fell from the cliffside into the water.”
“The person was recovered and pronounced lifeless,” stated Scott Carr, parks service spokesperson, in an electronic mail. “We would not have any additional info to share at the moment.”
The Golden Gate Bridge is seen from the Fort Baker Marina within the Golden Gate Nationwide Recreation Space in San Francisco. Doherty was discovered within the Battery Yates park portion of the recreation space.
(Los Angeles Instances)
Doherty was the creator of a number of books, with Purpose saying his most notable work was the 2007 research “Radicals for Capitalism: A Freewheeling Historical past of the Fashionable American Libertarian Motion.”
“Doherty has rescued libertarianism from its personal obscurity,” the Wall Avenue Journal wrote of the work, “eloquently capturing the enchantment of the ‘pure concept.’”
Libertarianism’s function in gun management and the courts was the topic of his works, and Doherty had no scarcity of admirers.
Loren Dean, chair of the Libertarian Occasion of California, stated it was Doherty’s work at Purpose that introduced him into the freedom motion.
“Brian Doherty was the perfect type of libertarian: one who holds true to the rules of liberty as they’re,” Dean stated in an electronic mail. “He was a tireless champion of each gun rights and police reform who wrote books on each [former U.S. Rep.] Ron Paul and Burning Man; his work didn’t sit on both the ‘left’ or ‘proper’ aspect of the authoritarian field, however delightfully exterior that drained body, the place libertarian rules really sing.”
Doherty started working at Purpose in 1994, in line with the publication’s obituary, left the corporate and returned in 2000 on the behest of Nick Gillespie, then editor in chief.
“What I preferred most about Brian was his abiding curiosity in issues taking place on the margins of American tradition, politics, and thought, and his deep appreciation for the prodigious bounty that markets ship reliably and with out moralizing,” Gillespie wrote in his farewell to Doherty, who had many opinion items printed in The Instances.
Removed from simply heady topics, Doherty coated “each libertarian and eccentric” subcultures, in line with the obituary, together with New Hampshire’s Free State Challenge and the Seasteaders, a rising group of people devoted to dwelling on the seas.
The Seasteading Institute tweeted its condolences and famous the group had “appreciated his protection of seasteading through the years.”
Doherty was a local of Queens, N.Y., majored in journalism on the College of Florida and joined the faculty’s libertarian group in 1987, in line with Purpose’s obituary.
He moved to Los Angeles within the mid-Nineties and joined a bunch often known as the Cacophony Society, a gang that “impressed or created phenomenon starting from the novel/film Struggle Membership to city exploration, billboard alteration, the Sure Males, flash mobs, and ‘Santa Rampages,’” in line with the obituary.
A type of initiatives translated into the formation of the annual Burning Man pageant, the obituary acknowledged. Doherty later chronicled the famed artsy, hippie-like pageant in his e-book “This Is Burning Man.”
“Libertarians discuss rather a lot about freedom and accountability. Brian embodied each,” Purpose Editor in Chief Katherine Mangu-Ward stated in his obituary. “His bizarre, colourful life — stuffed with comics and festivals and music and books — was a mannequin of life lived freely and overtly.”

