Why the question marks??? There isn't one.What is the libertarian argument against restricting someone's right to own property, and to have tenants?
the OP was asking about whether libertarianism had been tried in the real world, and we have gone on to discuss the merits of libertarianism.
The question was an attempt to highlight that a full-blooded libertarian system would have no protection against slum landlords, and indeed the philosophy of libertarianism won't even recognise that these would be A Bad Thing
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Suppose you buy all the routes into a town, you can charge what you like to let the inhabitants get out, and to let goods in...In libertarian philosophy there is little/no concept of "abusing economic power" unless it is to harm people or coerce them by denying them free choice of their alternatives.Even if the landlord abused his greater economic power to get the tenants in the first place.
I am not aware of anything but you need to explain the highlighted partIf you are talking about a libertarian system, what is to stop a magnate buying the bridges out of a town, or otherwise buying up the access to a block of housing, and then bleeding the inhabitants dry? Or just buying some utility.
Just like a game of monopoly.
See above. Libertarianism does not consider there to be a difference between someone who can choose between a rock and a hard place, and someone who can select from abundant riches. Both of them are equally "free" and the unlucky one has no right to anything beyond being able to choose from available alternatives.Can a libertarian system protect against abuses of economic power whilst remaining a true libertarian system? I would argue that it can't.
Yes, that was my point.
I suppose it depends on whether you consider injustice to be undesirable.
I would say that libertarianism is incompatible with a belief that injustice is bad.