by Free » Fri 30 Dec 2005, 17:47:29
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'C')ompetition does not need to be enforced. It is the natural state of liberty. A free society is a competitive society. The government's role is limited to protecting individual rights with complete equality.
What are individual rights? Is it an individual right to be protected from the outcome of a competition that leaves the individual starving or under other existential threats?
With this kind of competition, shouldn't unions feel free to compete for money, i.e. going into strike to get more money? I know you see this as "blackmailing"...
But what if you would define union just as a company which is selling it's workforce? Liberty for all, if any...
(And don't tell me pacta sunt servanda, because that would be a cheap shot...)
This leads to all kind of paradoxa. There is no such thing as free fair competition, competition is always biased. That's why there need to be rules, and a state that enforces these rules.
I am kind of sympathetic to the ideology of individualism, freedom and free trade, but I am not so blue eyed to ignore the real world frictions....
From a philosophical perspective, an interesting, not well known classic about the individual and its freedoms in the world is Max Stirners "Der Einzige und sein Eigentum" (don't know the english title, roughly translates as: "The only one and his property") Marx despised him...