oligarchy means a few leaders. There is no such thing as an oligarch.
Political-economic libertarians have a quaint way of not squaring ideology with reality in the political arena. Any minarchist worth his or her salt relies on the artifice of externalities to maintain the veneer of responsibility and expects a piece of paper to maintain the balance of power.
Libertarians are selfish, greedy and anti social.
Any attempt to exercise fiscal prudence and government restraint advised from a libertarian point of view is bound to be off-target since the underlying assumptions of that particular school of thought are inherently flawed. The good news is that contrary to many a libertarian sentiment they don't hold the monopoly in those disciplines.
Any attempt to exercise fiscal prudence and government restraint advised from a libertarian point of view is bound to be off-target since the underlying assumptions of that particular school of thought are inherently flawed. The good news is that contrary to many a libertarian sentiment they don't hold the monopoly in those disciplines.
sole owner?
Yes sole owner, and using that argument, I can easily make a case for taxes, just not income tax. For instance, gasoline needs to be taxed since its use is violent against the environment which causes harm to all people, without their consent. Cigarettes need to be taxed for the same reason.
You have no right to force smog into my body. Using gasoline, you do this against my will, the violence is small so the fine is small, but if the tax was not there you would be more liable to use gasoline.
The case for the internet and all sorts of other inventions is quite similar.
and this justifies the uncompromised libertarian position somehow?
...I am pretty sure the one thing all libertarians would agree on is that each individual is the sole owner of their own life...
Huh?Libertarians don't take personal responsiblity for their actions? Lack of accountability is what tears down society, not deciding to smoke cigarettes.
Well, I think in the end, the result is anarchy...the impression I get is that little government interference in peoples lives is what is demanded...the strong survive...and all that crap. So, that is where I get the anarchy from. If a libertarian society were to form, I see it being complete anarchy.Libertarians are selfish, greedy and anti social.
I wouldn't call them anarchists.
Minarchism is closer to classical liberalism than anything else although people call it a form of libertarianism.Political-economic libertarians have a quaint way of not squaring ideology with reality in the political arena. Any minarchist worth his or her salt relies on the artifice of externalities to maintain the veneer of responsibility and expects a piece of paper to maintain the balance of power.
Exactly.Oh? >raises eyebrow< I think you know what I meant, but just in case, check out the dictionary. True, I probably used an incorrect article...
As for economic standings of libertarianism, I think that a lot of previous people had some real pie in the sky ideas about how much government involvement is necessary. Corporate deviancy is a fact, and an economic form of violence that the government needs to protect citizens from. The idea isn't "smallest government possible", that would be no government at all. The idea is "smallest government necessary", which amounts to saying that there are areas that the government doesn't need to be involved, like the bedroom.