Traitorfish
The Tighnahulish Kid
If the distribution of property is not voluntary, then it must be enforced. For it to be enforced, coercion must be employed. Coercion on a social scale invariably involves the use of violence. If violence is being used towards a coherent end, then it implies some central agent, and what is this agent, if it is not the state?OK, now you are confusing me.
My understanding of anarchism is fairly limited, and my understanding of Rothbard is limited to a few online articles (Which is enough to know he was not a left-winger in any sense) but I don't get what you're getting at here. To me, whether the government protects your property claim or some private protection agency does, to me the implications are the same, I own X, you trying to take X from me that's an aggression against my property and I can thus use force to stop you from taking it from me, because that's part of the non-aggression principle, I can use force to stop you from using force against me. To my knowledge, left-libertarians would agree with this, but would disagree that I actually own anything, and so would claim that theft should not be a crime. To me, this doesn't really make any more sense than saying murder should no longer be a crime, I think what socialists object to is more how property is distributed, rather than the fact that I can stop you from taking things from me. But I'm definitely clueless here, some enlightenment would be appreciated.
Why does property need to be "Voluntary"? If I own something, the majority shouldn't be able to make me give it up. That just sounds like government again, not libertarianism.
You can certainly argue that people have no right to take things off you arbitrarily, but that's a different sort of ethical claim: it's about what people should volunteer to, not whether they should be permitted to organise voluntarily in the first place.