Wasn't the early days of the US industrial revolution pretty much free market systems with hardly any government interference?
In that particular case, it resulted huge class divides and unsafe working conditions for little pay. Ultimately, though, I suppose you could say it resulted in government regulation and unions.
Wasn't the net results of the industrial revolution were much, much more efficient production of goods and an explosion in the number of available jobs?
I wouldn't argue though, that a free market economy would not have periods where there are crappy products or bad working conditions...I think that the libertarian philosophy says that market forces ultimately correct these though through competition and the end result is better than we could achieve through any other system.
You're never going to find an example of a "pure" implementation of any economic philosophy. Philosophies are necessarily simplified extractions of real world situations. You can't control for every real world factor to try a perfect 'libertarian economic system'.
Well, I think you can "pure implementations" of philosophies that allow for and acknowledge human nature. For example, you can't get a pure implementation of communism because people don't go for it...but you can see pure implementation of things like dictatorship with secret police seeking to squash dissent.
(I chose that example just so it doesn't seem like I'm doing special pleading for libertarianism or something similar as a transcendant idea that can be fully implemented due to its individual greatness.)
It seems like ideas that have various allowances for potential problems can be implemented in reasonably pure forms, and it seems like libertarianism is one of them, sense it relies on overall forces to create its positive effect which ultimately overcome individual "hiccups."
These are all quite major regulations of the marketplace. Why do you support these regulations which protect the interests of capital but not regulations which would protect the interest of workers?
Well, these regulations are simply necessary for the "free free market" to exist. People have to use creation of goods and services and so on to make their money instead of simply stealing things from people or stealing innovations from other businessmen.
Let me stress that libertarianism is NOT anarchy. The government DOES have a role, but the role is ONLY to protect property rights and stop stealing, murder, fraud and so on. NOT to try to control the demand or price for any good or service or the wages of workers.