Difference between revisions of "Slavery"
From Critiques Of Libertarianism
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− | [[Category: | + | [[Category:Capitalist Harms|100]] |
− | {{DES | des = Slavery is a free-market phenomenon. Slavery has almost always been abolished by acts of government that regulate the market, making it illegal. 19th century slaveowners defended their property rights in slaves in | + | [[Category:Private Limitations Of Liberty]] |
− | {{Links}} | + | [[Category:Inequality|100]] |
− | {{Quotes}} | + | [[Category:Property]] |
+ | [[Category:Gang rape is democracy.]] | ||
+ | {{DES | des = Slavery is a [[Free Market|free-market]], capitalist phenomenon. Slavery has almost always been abolished by acts of government that regulate the market, making it illegal. 19th century slaveowners defended their property rights in slaves in "[[Economic Freedom|economic freedom]]"-like terms that are unmistakably libertarian, differing only slightly in terms of who had natural rights. Some modern libertarians continue to make cases for slavery, such as [[Robert Nozick]], [[Walter Block]], [[Murray Rothbard]], [[Hans-Hermann Hoppe]] and [[David Friedman]]. The [[Private Prisons|private prisons]] that libertarians endorse (and traditional "hard labor") are really an opportunity to revive slavery. The only way to eliminate prison slavery is for government to regulate against it. | show=}} | ||
+ | <!-- insert wiki page text here --> | ||
+ | <!-- DPL has problems with categories that have a single quote in them. Use these explicit workarounds. --> | ||
+ | <!-- otherwise, we would use {{Links}} and {{Quotes}} --> | ||
+ | {{List|title=Slavery|links=true}} | ||
+ | {{Quotations|title=Slavery|quotes=true}} |