there really are no words for these analogies sometimes.
we are not talking about having sex with canines, robert.
we are talking about mundane reality. either we use "force" or kids starve.
you identified using force as slavery and rape (big surprise) and said not using it was the winning argument.
thus kids will starve and they will not get to the age where you like to victimize them.
i guess that's the best the free market can do.
Except you guessed wrong. The best that a free market can do is be consistent, you can't.
A free market uses a peaceful means, which is the only way that can be justified.
The Epistemological Argument
Violence is never a means to knowledge. As Isabel Paterson, explained in her book,
The God of the Machine, "No edict of law can impart to an individual a faculty denied him by nature. A government order cannot mend a broken leg, but it can command the mutilation of a sound body. It cannot bestow intelligence, but it can forbid the use of intelligence." Or, as Baldy Harper used to put it, "You cannot shoot a truth!" The advocate of any form of invasive violence is in a logically precarious situation. Coercion does not convince, nor is it any kind of argument. William Godwin pointed out that force "is contrary to the nature of the intellect, which cannot but be improved by conviction and persuasion," and "if he who employs coercion against me could mold me to his purposes by argument, no doubt, he would.. He pretends to punish me because his argument is strong; but he really punishes me because he is weak." Violence contains none of the energies that enhance a civilized human society. At best, it is only capable of expanding the material existence of a few individuals, while narrowing the opportunities of most others.