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fishstock25 | 1 year ago
Hm I think I see what you mean. It's a free market argument that includes that some regulation is in place which keeps A in business and keeps D out of business.
But wouldn't the free market corollary then be to remove that regulation so the market can be more free? That's hardly the suggestion coming from the left-leaning perspective, which instead proposes to add more regulation. So the end-to-end argument (including s corollary for what to do) doesn't actually sound free market to me.
johnisgood|1 year ago
And it is not exactly "left" either. Rothbard was a right-libertarian, aka. libertarian capitalist or right-wing libertarian.