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I simply had to post this one. This was pure win.
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I meant the "anti-libertarian" parody of the picture in the first post.
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That was pure win, man. :)
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[quote user="Jon Irenicus"]There aren't so much differences between market anarchism and anarcho-capitalism as there are overlapping features and additional features which an-cap has (e.g. society where there is a division between capital & labour, traditional firms &c.)[/quote] Thank you. May you explain what you mean by Anarcho
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[quote user="Jon Irenicus"]Anarcho-capitalism is a subdivision of market anarchism.[/quote] Oh, I figured that. But what I'd like to know is what is it tha makes them both different. For example, I heard that "market anarchists don't reject the labor theory of value, while Anarcho Capitalists do." I could be wrong though
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[quote user="liberty student"][quote user="malgratloprekindle"]What I'd like to know is what exactly would be the same.[/quote]That's impossible to know. We'd have to know the outcomes of unfettered human creativity, all of the environmental changes coming, and the disposition and preferences of every person. I suspect
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OK, that's what I should have figured, it seems like it was just semantics. [quote user="liberty student"][quote user="John Ess"]It seems anarcho-capitalism is the idea that things will be much the same accept for with more freedom, sound money, and overall stability without the fed interfering with business.[/quote] I agree
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[quote user="Judicator"]You can get natural monopolies fairly easily with the privately optimal firm size is quite large.[/quote] Are there examples of this happening in a free market? [quote user="Judicator"]On patent rights - what do you think will be the incentive to innovate if innovations are so easily stolen?[/quote] It's