Originally posted by Agathon
They're the Ayn Rand types who see a libertarian manifesto as a way for the strong to triumph in a Darwinian fashion over the weak.
You can usually sort them out by asking this question: would you prefer a libertarian society where everyone happened to end up having approximately the same amount of wealth and influence, or would you prefer a libertarian society where there were vast disparities in wealth and influence?
The authoritarians will tend to opt for the latter, while the anti-authoritarians either won't care or will opt for the former. The anti-authoritarians are the "every man's home is his castle" type, while the others are the the "my castle is bigger than yours" type.
They're the Ayn Rand types who see a libertarian manifesto as a way for the strong to triumph in a Darwinian fashion over the weak.
You can usually sort them out by asking this question: would you prefer a libertarian society where everyone happened to end up having approximately the same amount of wealth and influence, or would you prefer a libertarian society where there were vast disparities in wealth and influence?
The authoritarians will tend to opt for the latter, while the anti-authoritarians either won't care or will opt for the former. The anti-authoritarians are the "every man's home is his castle" type, while the others are the the "my castle is bigger than yours" type.
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