One can be unenamored of the current state and still recognize that "market forces" are never going to lead to anything like an adequately educated general population.
Now you're making even less sense because any libertarian should have no problem whatsoever as a libertarian with people shouting and making whatever hullabaloo they want about anything they want. A right unexercised is a right a right given away. Trying to stop contracting parties or force them to do something is one thing, but exercising free speech to rant and rave in public venues and papers about their actions? As someone who just wants some peace and quiet, or as someone who doesn't see what the point of it is, or even as someone with an axe to grind against one party or the other, any of those might provide grounds for agitating but you specified you're talking about this use of speech "as a libertarian."I am not referencing legal courts here - there is unquestionably a place for them, even in my idealized libertarian utopia. I am talking about the courts of public opinion. Why what amounts to a minor contract dispute is making headline news and setting the Twitterverse alight is beyond me.
But maybe I've gotten to that stage of old man yelling at cloud.



Reply With Quote