Kolpo -
"Extreme" contradictions don't make the formation of governments slim, consider the extreme contradiction of slavery and the creation of a US government supposedly devoted to freedom.
For thousands of years man lived without such autocratic governments. True, once a government obtains such power it's difficult to get it to relinquish that power, as Jefferson said, it is the tendency for government to grow and liberty to give way. But we're talking about moral systems, not the easiest systems to create or impose.
Aside from slavery and a few other things, the newly formed US government was libertarian, much moreso than any other contemporary aside from the many smaller tribal systems around the world. But that US government did place more power in the hands of a president than had been in existence during the Articles of Confederation and the years prior to the Constitution.
That's true, and that's why democracy is an immoral system like any other autocratic system. You're explaining what is rather than what should be wrt morality.
But if a majority seeks to overthrow a libertarian system, it wouldn't be anti-libertarian to stop the rebellion, it would be self-defense by the minority who are the target of the majority since the minority has done nothing to that majority. That would be like trying to kill people who leave you alone because you hate your freedom.
A large group of libertarians move to a place without a government and prior owners and create their own system or to a state where they use the existing system to elect their own. But even once that system is created or elected there are no guarantees it will last since a future majority may vote in a different system. But this thread is about democracy and it's efficacy, not how to create a libertarian system or your perceived contradictions.
But the chance for that to be created are extremely slim because there is an extreme contradiction in it:
In order to make such dramatical changes do you need A LOT of power, you then need an extreme powerfull despot or an extreme powerfull democratic elected leader who uses that power to make a libertarian state and then end his own power.
It is actually in that way(not in other ways) similar to communism: you need a TON of power to create that type of state, either a libertarian state or a communistic state can't be created without a ton of power. Just to end the democratic principle do you need more power then any US president ever had.
Now even imagine if you actually can create such a state then shall that state still exists no longer then the majority supports it. Secret police, bans on free expression or weapon possesion are all very anti-libertarian so if the majority revolts againsts your libertarian system is there nothing the system itself can do againsts that.
That type of revolt can only be stopped by very anti-libertarian means.
Give me a realistic way a libertarian state can be create and how it can survive moments where the majority is againsts that type of state without using anti-libertarian means like a big police force, bans on weapon ownership or bans on free organization.
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