GreNME said:
Back to the point: Libertarian philosophy does not work because it relies on a utopian acceptance of the core principles in order to work. While various degrees of Libertarian-like systems have existed (late-19th century US) or currently exist (Somalia), there has not nor is there likely to be any "pure" Libertarian system in existence, as arguably there hasn't been any "pure" political philosophical system in existence for any notable period of time throughout history. If the "impure" examples are not sufficient sources to draw conclusions from, then a better argument than suggesting the lack of a "pure" Libertarian system needs to be made to justify such criticism.
I'm not sure what your basis is for saying it's must be completely accepted. Please give an example or more explanation or reasoning.
What, precisely, would you like an example of? The
Laissez Faire doctrine not being sustainable? The fact that
Laissez Faire has given way to regulation and unionization isn't sufficient? Do you understand why things happened the way they did, why the various markets of the robber-barons were eventually met with regulation or why federalism was fought over so vehemently? The reasoning is fairly elementary-- people want their social systems to have moral basis, including fairness and charity, as opposed to an amoral system-- while explanations could go on for pages upon pages.
The key point of Libertarian philosophy, that personal property is sacrosanct regardless of community or nationality, falls short of a sustainable political philosophy from the beginning, since the only precedent for its establishment is that some guys asserted it as a philosophy. But to illustrate how and why the Libertarian philosophy is utopian, let me ask you these questions: do you feel that a Libertarian philosophy of government allows for democratically-elected governance? Why or why not?
I ask those things because clearly Democracy in its base form is completely antithetical to Libertarianism, yet advocates of Libertarianism always seem to propose a government where the people are voting in a democratic-like system. While I understand that this is ostensibly presented in order to show that there would still be a place for a representative government, however much smaller it may be, the manner in which it's described how individuals would
take or
gain office seems to be completely the opposite of the Libertarian philosophy-- after all, if there's a vote, haven't those who voted "the other guy" not been afforded an equal amount of representation in their government as individuals? Wouldn't a democratic vote simply be the imposition of the majority upon the minority, which is precisely what the Libertarian philosophy opposes about the current form of federalist government, about worker unionization and government regulations, about the system of taxation and federal subsidy, and so on?
I encourage you to explain away this small bit of what seems like a convenient cognitive dissonance as the first step in our having a reasoned conversation about why a Libertarian political system is a utopian ideal.