abandonconflict
Well-Known Member
You are correct on all three. I said Voluntaryism and anarchocapitalism not libertarianism, have corporations control private armies.Libertarianism would not mean that companies could have private armies and gun down strikers.
Libertarians are not Anarchists.
You really have to explain how you can have Socialism that isn't state enforced
For the second statement, this is also correct, libertarians, in the current American vernacular are not anarchists, and not even truly antistatist. They advocate for rigid hierarchies (note that you can't have hierarchy with out archy and therefore anarchocapitalism and voluntaryism are not true anarchy).
Apparently this is the sticking point that leaves most people who are completely accustomed to having a master unsure of what to do next. So workers have wrested control of thier lives, destinies or at the very least their work, from corporations and the state. What is next? How do they keep it? How do they get it? What exactly is it? I can explain this in a mildly libertarian socialist sense, for real anarchy, there is required a dissolution of state and a reclamation from hereditary owners of essential resources. This can be violent.
For a model of libertarian socialism completely consistent with the constitution, it, is simply nothing more than compensation proportional to the contributions of workers. It is a fair share of the means of production they operate. It is fiscal transparency of a smaller government.
Dude, that can be accomplished by giving them tradeable stock and better pay and benefits and being more transparent with what tax dollars are being spent on. That can best be accomplished by drastically cutting pentagon spending, and allowing an energy model that doesn't take up 20% to 30% of the average worker's debt to income ratio.
You know, a plan as to how libertarianism will improve everyone's lives instead of the insistence of a cat like Ron Paul that "THE FREE MARKET WILL FIX EVERYTHING!"