I was pointed at an interesting critique of a section of libertarian thought (those at http://bleedingheartlibertarians.com/) by a group of bloggers at Crooked Timber: Let It Bleed: Libertarianism and the Workplace (there are some rude words when it gets to the parts on sexual harassment).
The main topic is the question of whether the cause of freedom that libertarians claim to argue for extends beyond 'freedom from the state', and into 'freedom from others' - primarily it the sphere of work.
While it may be a little remote from the question of quite how evil Obama/Romney is, and hopefully isn't a platform for personal emnity, and while it may be a critique from the left of some left-leaning libertarians, I thought it might be interesting to look at the argument as it's also applicable to more mainstream politics.
Is freedom really freedom if it means not letting the state deal with coercion - which is itself an attack on individual liberty?
The main topic is the question of whether the cause of freedom that libertarians claim to argue for extends beyond 'freedom from the state', and into 'freedom from others' - primarily it the sphere of work.
While it may be a little remote from the question of quite how evil Obama/Romney is, and hopefully isn't a platform for personal emnity, and while it may be a critique from the left of some left-leaning libertarians, I thought it might be interesting to look at the argument as it's also applicable to more mainstream politics.
Is freedom really freedom if it means not letting the state deal with coercion - which is itself an attack on individual liberty?