And not the strawman image that detractors consistently put forward.Coito ergo sum wrote:Well, a philosophy is what it claims to be.Psychoserenity wrote:Well it claims to,Coito ergo sum wrote: Well, you see, the imagery breaks down when you try to do that. Libertarianism advocates the idea that force against another to take their property is, well, improper, even when it is done by the majority against the minority through the machinery of the State.
Psychoserenity wrote:
Sure it's more subtle than pointing a gun at someone, but for that it's a lot more effective on a large scale.
I've often said that socialism works pretty well (other than the whole liberty issue) until the OPM runs out. This is why Norway is held up as a paragon of democratic socialism. But it's a false or at least incomplete argument precisely because of what you say. Norway has a small population spread over a large area with abundant natural resources that Norway sells on the capitalist free-markets in order to fund its social programs.The amount of oil and other naturally resources controlled by Norway is so disproportionately high, that with little effort its 4.5 million people can be supported and there is still a surplus of stuff to sell abroad, resulting an annual surpluses in their economy. In that kind of environment, socialism can work to a degree, because nobody feels the bite very hard.
But once the OPM (other people's money) runs out, like it did in the Soviet Union and Cuba (and everywhere else it's been tried) the system necessarily collapses because socialism stifles and indeed punishes the very economic model (capitalism and free markets) that it depends on in its resource-rich heyday. So, without the OPM, there's nothing left to sell to capitalists to fund the entitlements, as Greece proves without any doubt.