and the fatal flaw of it's cousin, objectivism, is the assumption that humans generally behave rationally.
You seem to have missed a few pages...
Rigid ideologies bother me, because they are maintained not by evidence or rational discourse, but by confirmation bias and cognitive dissonance. It should be easy to observe various types of societies and discern which has the best results for measures like general well being.
That's one reason you'll never hear me argue that an Objectivist society would be a utopia. It wouldn't. That said, it's the only society I know of that treats adults like adults--ie, that respects their rights to make their own decisions with their own property, and not to be interfeared with unless they violate the rights of others. I'm not exactly clear as to how that's a bad thing, except that people who make stupid choices will suffer the consequences.
Where's the evidence that either libertarianism or objectivism result in better societies?
There's a great deal of evidence that collectivism doesn't.
Tony said:
You can't have freedom without a measure of security. It isn't about one being more important than the other, it is about finding a balance between the two.
No. It's a question of identifying what freedoms are proper for people to have, and what they need security from. I do not believe that people need to be protected from the consequences of their bad choices, for example, and I DO think they need protected from theft.
Everyone benefits from planned cities and building codes.
Except those who want to do things that the planners disagree with, like start a home business out of their garage. Or those who can't build on property because it was re-zoned. Or those who can't paint their window frames without submitting reams of paperwork.
It's simple: Once you start paying a portion of my mortgage, you get to have a say in what goes on on that land. Until then, you have no say,
just as I have no say ini what goes on on your property. Remember, I apply these standards universally. And before you say it, yes, I would live downwind from a paper mill. In fact, I used to.
If the community does not set aside wilderness and wetlands all of our standards of living can be degraded.
I see no reason why it has to be the community. I know a number of individuals who have done this (without any subsidies, I should add--they just said "Hey, see that woods? It's mine. No one's allowed to hunt there", and then carried it out).
If not, we all suffer and I consider that you causing me to suffer if your idea is your rights include anything you want on property you own.
This is where objective laws come in. An argument like "But I don't like it" or "But I can't sell it for what I wanted to sell it for" (what the property value boils down to--the value of a property is what you can sell it for) aren't valid objections--you have no say in what goes on in someone else's land, and investments can in fact lose money, even real estate investments. That said, an objection like "He's put methel-ethal-chloride into the drinking water" is a serious and objective complaint--it's the equivalent of manslaughter, really, with that particular chemical. Rights ARE relative, but they're relative to the RIGHTS of others, not to their wishes.