-
Pay them for chores and charge them for meals and school supplies. If they go bankrupt kick them out and tell them to go freeload somewhere else.
-
What if you have a heinous, non murder crime, and the criminal is unwilling or unable to pay restitution to the victim? It seems like prison, some sort of indentured slavery prison is the only option, but then, how do you pay for it? Who's willing to finance this? I don't see how it can turn a profit. Do the victims voluntarily pay for it? Is
-
Perhaps, by murdering her child, the parent forfeits their right to be an heir and the right of justice goes to the nearest living relative. The other parent or the childest closest familial relative. I'm not so sure about your criminal austricization / prison / hotel / workcamp theory, Wheylous - such a thing might happen in a close knit libertarian
-
Rothbard maintains that only the victim of a crime is justified in seeking justice for that crime (see http://mises.org/document/1724/King-on-Punishment-A-Comment ). In the case of murder, that perogative falls on the heirs of that individual. In Hoppe's introduction to Ethics of Liberty, he asserts that it would be impossible for a woman who aborted
-
I guess it has to be private debt... what are your thoughts?"
-
on page 19, Mises mentiones how 'shortages of foreign exchange' or Devisennot (german?) brought upon by restrictions of exchange controls is used to justify prohibition of interest and amortization payments to foreign countries. Is he talking about private debt here, or public debt?
-
SEMANTICS
-
No, prices are not determined by labour costs, but are determined rather by supply and demand.
-
I prefer to call it 'tax resistance'.
-
cracked, incidentally, while not libertarian is usually pretty well written