Fornits

General Interest => Open Free for All => Topic started by: Anonymous on February 04, 2006, 04:10:00 PM

Title: Libertarian extreme
Post by: Anonymous on February 04, 2006, 04:10:00 PM
I just heard a nationally know Libertarian
who, I think, is too extreme.

I sure would make people happy who dislike
the police.

He states that law enforcement should be reduced to private security.

If you want to be protected hire a security company to look after you.

If not, don't!
Title: Libertarian extreme
Post by: AtomicAnt on February 04, 2006, 07:13:00 PM
Does he mean private security of the sort that big industrialists paid to break up those trying to form unions? We've been there and done that.

This libertarain also seems to be limiting security those who can afford to pay for it.

Private armies are not a good idea.
Title: Libertarian extreme
Post by: Anonymous on February 04, 2006, 07:19:00 PM
meet the second largest army in iraq.

(http://http://dox.media2.org/barista/archives/iraq-security-team.gif)

Quote
There are 50,000 to 100,000 contractors in Iraq, over 20,000 of them providing private security. The legal status of these contractors is vague under both US and international law, acording to Foreign Policy.


from: http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0613/dailyUpdate.html (http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0613/dailyUpdate.html)

 ::armed::
Title: Libertarian extreme
Post by: Antigen on February 04, 2006, 07:25:00 PM
Nope, they're not. And I can verify that some ppl who call themselves (L|l)ibertarians seem to have not thought it all the way through. Read The Improbability Broach by L. Niel Smith to get a load of that.

Most of us view the idea as a reductio absurdum and pretty much relegate it to the realm of sci-fi. FWIW, I'm pretty sure Wells would have been a whole lot more careful w/ his recomendations if he had had any idea people would forget that he was a fiction writer and start making laws and book on his musings.

If you believe that people cannot be trusted to govern themselves,
then can they be trusted to govern others?
 
--Thomas Jefferson