Originally Posted by
Pup
But that's the catch. Agreed on by whom? How? Binding on whom?
Agreed by libertarians.
It was sort of a rhetorical question, the obvious answer being agreed on by the people who decided to reside within the monarchy.
If libertarians believe that people can enter into any kind of contract they see fit (which is what I thought they believed, and which is the part I agree with), then I see no problem whatsoever with a group of people agreeing they should live under a monarchy, as long as they don't bind other unborn people irrevocably.
It seems trivially obvious, especially as illustrated by your example, which is where I think libertarianism fails.
People don't live as individuals unconnected to others and never have, so sometimes group consensus needs reached about what the
group should do. Honestly, I think a democratic republic is as close to ideal as one can get, though far from actually being ideal, but what libertarianism seems to fail to do, is even recognize that the problem of group decisions exist, let alone propose a solution for it.
They just complain about the government as if it was an amorphous monster, and not an emergent property of groups, created by and under the power of the residents as a group. One can see it in this thread, so I don't think it's necessary to cite examples to prove it.
From another post:
Cavemonster said:
Government with laws and taxes == Apartment building with fees and rules
Libertarians often claim one is violence and one is freedom, I think the distinction is false
I agree, as long as the tenants are only binding themselves to the contract, or own it as a co-op.