Reagarding my conversation? I'm the source. Call me a liar if you will but you'd be wrong.
If you want to read about what libertarians say about unregulated markets, how about going to what the Libertarian Party says about it?
Libertarians believe that all people have the right to freely offer goods and services on the market and that free-market approaches are the most effective at improving people’s lives. Our current economy is more crony capitalist than it is free, and that is responsible for the majority of...
www.lp.org
Libertarians believe that the only proper role of government in the economic realm is to protect property rights, adjudicate disputes, and provide a legal framework in which voluntary trade is protected. Unfortunately, the vast majority of regulations on the books do not do that. These regulations are heavy burdens on businesses and people who are just trying to make a living, and often prevent new businesses from starting, prevent existing businesses from hiring new employees, and even force businesses to close. This violates the rights of people to engage in peaceful and honest trade. Additionally, it actively hurts people by stifling human energy, innovation, and well-being.
Where in their manifesto are human rights? It's all about property rights, protecting trade and providing a court to adjudicate disputes. Within that statement, the asshole who said demanding head as part of the requirement for a paycheck might be able to justify that belief.
This is so naïve, I can't believe a person can espouse such a belief and still learn to type.
The free market, when it is allowed to do so, provides tremendous opportunity for people of all backgrounds, interests, and abilities.
The context of that statement was what they called crony capitalism. "Free the Market and free yourself".
I don't think you've even read what the Mises Institute says about it all.
They reject science and mathematics because it just "confuses". They adhere to axioms otherwise put by them as praexeology. It's nothing more than religious belief dressed up in modern terms.