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Why is libertarianism so infallible?

Name: Anonymous 2007-06-04 7:05 ID:qJENOkNb

It is due to it being the application of political science. It does not permit failed policies to be continued fruitlessly year after year with idealistic fervour, it is next to impossible for anyone surrounded by fierce libertarian critics to continue clinging on to lies. It is a purely functional machine, lubricated with justice and fueled by free speech.

Name: Anonymous 2007-07-31 19:13 ID:KDAWj3br

>>299
Then what is it about? If you privatize and deregulate roads and mail, people in rural areas won't have any service because it will NEVER be profitable. Do you want to get rid of environmental, health, and workplace regulations, with the absurd idea that somehow it will all work out well for the individual? Do you want to get rid of the minimum wage so that businesses can pay people $2 an hour, thus creating an underclass that adds nothing to the economy and is basically forced into a life of crime?

Really, name one attribute of libertarianism that you can't just back out of later on, and that would somehow benefit society as a whole without relying on magical thinking or an absurd interpretation of economics.

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