The oxymoronic identity is libertarianism. It masquerades as anarchy but doesn’t oppose capitalist oppression.
I see a pattern here - you’re operating on a twisted set of definitions - this isn’t the first time I’m seeing this when debating people online
Particularly, you have completly different definition of anarchy. You probably consider it some sort of organized social system, but I consider it lack of any framework being enforced.
If you don’t understand the difference between these definitions, you can’t have any dialogue.
With the definition I use (and many other people BTW), basically anarcho-anything is an oxymoron. When somone talks about anarcho-capitalism, it’s nothing but gibberish to me.
In light of different definition, consider this:
Libertarianism has nothing to do with anarchy - it’s a system that minimizes state intervention to the absolute minimum, leaving as much to free market forces as possible, providing only minimal legal rails for enforcement of agreements.
There’s no paradox here if you run with that thought process.
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I thought it’s a mater of public health and safety.
I can’t ignore what I see. And I see, computers, airplanes, modern agriculture, and all the wonders of modern civilization.
I was a libertarian as a teenager, but with time I understood that every extremism is pathological. I’d say I’m a liberal now.
It’s always gets personal with you people. You can’t win the debate and you get angry.
Which part of my identity is oxymoronic? You throw accusations but you never give any examples.
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I see a pattern here - you’re operating on a twisted set of definitions - this isn’t the first time I’m seeing this when debating people online
Particularly, you have completly different definition of anarchy. You probably consider it some sort of organized social system, but I consider it lack of any framework being enforced.
If you don’t understand the difference between these definitions, you can’t have any dialogue.
With the definition I use (and many other people BTW), basically anarcho-anything is an oxymoron. When somone talks about anarcho-capitalism, it’s nothing but gibberish to me.
In light of different definition, consider this:
Libertarianism has nothing to do with anarchy - it’s a system that minimizes state intervention to the absolute minimum, leaving as much to free market forces as possible, providing only minimal legal rails for enforcement of agreements.
There’s no paradox here if you run with that thought process.