Difference between revisions of "Libertarians Misunderstand Freedom"
From Critiques Of Libertarianism
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | + | {{Internal | |
− | + | | category = What Is Wrong With Libertarianism | |
− | + | | ordinal = 300 | |
− | + | | description = Libertarians use freedom as a [[glittering generality]] of [[propaganda]]. A freedom consists of an ability to do something without a human or natural obstacle. Libertarians redefine freedom as being unobstructed by humans. Either definition of freedom prohibits obstructions by humans. If a freedom is enforced, it is a right (otherwise it is merely a claim) and the prohibition of human obstruction is an enforced involuntary duty. Every enforced freedom creates these unfreedoms. A capability is a freedom where the ability is also a right: there is an enforced involuntary duty to enable in addition to the duty not to obstruct.}} | |
− | + | mucho text after template. | |
− | + |