Well, yes, but that's similar to saying no one starts even because some people are smarter and stronger and more talented too, or born in different geographic locations. It's ridiculous to expect that kind of evenness and not really neccisary for the libertarian arguement. The libertarian arguement is that it will provide the maximum value for the maxiumum amount of people, not that it will provide some impossible expectation of evenness or adhere to your personal beliefs about objective fairness.
And again, the argument is only feasible in theory but not in practice, since differences among economic status of people predetermine their chances (and thus their "freedom") to succeed in life, this seems like a minor disadvantage when you are with the group who can have control over their own life, but believe me it is huge when you are born within the lower class group, and it is not just a few people, there's an army of people doing jobs to eat something, and i dare to say many are as talented, hard-working and smart people, as many of the lucky ones who were simlpy born with better conditions. In computer simulations of game theory, and in mathematical models, it is evident that groups in which individuals who are just seeking their own benefit even when altruism is encouraged tend to group "richness" (and by your own defitnition their "freedom") in very few generations, and overcome those tendencies is virtually impossible.. i know i have to post evidence right now.. but i can't seem to find that article i've read in the spanish version of scientific american.
Of course we can say.. "well bad luck for those.. they will dissapear eventually...", and i agree that this particular point of mine of saying that that attitude is wrong, is a personal opinion.
Yes, to some degree you have to assume people are rational, or at least that they have a right to decide what they think will make them happy, or who they want making their decisions for them. If you think that you are the sole arbibtor of how people should run their lives then libertarianism is not for you.
Capitalism does not require people to gives two shakes about "group benefit" whatever the heck group benefit even means. If you want wealth, in a capitalist society, providing other people with what they value will get you wealth. If you value equal distribution of wealth, providing other people with what they value will further the equal distrubution of wealth.
I don't think i'm the sole arbitror of how people should live, but the only way to assess that in groups, (since governement and laws affect groups) is to do it trough statistics, show everybody which system works better and let them chose. It seems to me that sometimes the attitude is "who the heck cares about the group.. i care about myself"... that is simply not noticing you ARE PART OF THE GROUP
And there's also a big IF in this sentence: "If you want wealth, in a capitalist society, providing other people with what they value will get you wealth." this is assuming you are capable of producing wealth.. what if you are not?, what if you lack opportnity because applying for proper education of your talents requires wealth to get started... also not everybody can have wealth... since it is finite, and since you are defining freedom as the capability of distributing your wealth.. then it follows that not everybody is as free as others...
Precisely! can't you see the benefit in having free healthcare?They don't have to be charitable, there just needs to be some benefit in it for someone to build roads there. If there's no benefit to it then why do it. Before you start ranting about survival of the fittest, lets note again that "benefit" here is definied however you personally like, you may see helping the homeless as a "benefit".
But if the whole group see a transaction as a benefit then you could do it voluntarily within a capitalist system. What you're talking about isn't benefit for the group, but the benefit of you over other people. This is why communism always leads to totalitarianism. It's not just a freak occurrence, it's a logical necessity.
But what if the MAJORITY of the group see it as a benefit but only the wealthy don't?
There's no such thing as a society that doesn't have to worry about healthcare, education, and security. Those things are all relative and no matter how much of it you have, there is always more. We have a ridiculously awsome amount of healthcare compared to 100 years ago, by their standards none of us have anything to worry about ever. There's no such thing as a 0% chance of death. What you're talking about is sacrificing one person's healthcare for another's. I don't see how this is "freedom", and as I've explained before, it encourages healthcare quality to plummet.
Have you ever lived in Spain, France, UK...? Even the richest people are grateful for healthcare, they are not constantly worrying about the "lazy people who just live from government", and they keep demanding everything they can from their governments.
Where do you get the evidence that this encourages the healthcare to plummet? have you reviewed the ranking of best health systems in the world?, the most healthy populations? are you arguing that healthcare is like a finite thing which can be taken from one and given to the other,, if that is the case. how come free healthcare countries are consistently showing better life expectancy? also.. i've read this argument that someone wishes to spend his last months surfing somewhere instead of getting hooked with tubes in the hospital.. who says that because of free healthcare they FORCE you to use it?, you are paying the service.. just like you are paying an insurance company... and you are also free to chose which doctors to visit and which treatments (and by the way.. paying insurance companies doesn't also limit the hospitals you can visit and the doctors and treatments they pay?)
I'm not talking about "michael-moore-like" arguments, i mean looking at the raw data...