Well I captured some of the charactertistics of an inaleinable right and my post was not to question what that was, but what libertarians take on it is. Your take appears to be to change the definition, which is consistent with most of your posts which do not tend to reflect libertarianism to me.
From context I am getting you mean that I changed the definition of 'libertarian', not that I changed the definition of 'inalienable', correct?
In particular this comment is apparently at odds with libertarianism. My understanding is that freedom (represented by the inalienable rights) comes (in Libertaria) with zero responsibility, nor does any government or individual have any business attempting to attach any responsibility to it, ever.
It would seem that you don't agree with that.
You are correct, I don't. Francesca, are you willing to consider the possibility that your interpretation of libertarianism may be too narrow? I previously offered a variety of sources for a definition of libertarian, most of them do not much resemble your version.
I don't know your political affiliation, but if you imagine me looking up things on the internet trying to find something I can hold against your party, and then insisting you are not a Republican or Democrat or whatever you say you are if you won't agree with how I've pigeon-holed your party, maybe you might understand my position better.
There are multiple schools of libertarian thought, just like the Republicans have paleocons, neocons, and so forth, there are different flavors of libertarians. According to Wikipedia I'm a libertarian progressive. What you're describing sounds more like voluntarism. Like other parties, there is a range of thought within the party. We're consistent in the broad strokes of social liberalism and fiscal conservatism (in the current sense of conservatism, in Jefferson's day it would have been socially and fiscally liberal) but often at odds on the details. Frankly, having very little political power has given many of us too much free time to spend on imagining Libertopia, in my opinion.
If you aren't able to accept this, I am comfortable with, very respectfully, agreeing to disagree on it, as I can't imagine what more I could do to persuade you. And of course maybe I'm the one who is wrong, using too inclusive a definition of libertarian when I should actually call myself an Independent or something. It's certainly more respectable in these parts.
