M
melensdad
Guest
Generally the Libertarian party would argue for economic freedom and international non-intervention. It also argues for market efficiency with regards to laws and regulations. If something like food safety was a common concern (it clearly is for most people) then the Libertarian view would be to start local and go up. So it would start at the city you live in and advocate food safety at restaurants and supermarkets. But those interact with business outside the community so then a state agency would become logical and as interstate trade occurred then a logical and efficient move would be to establish some sort of federal agency, perhaps we could call it the FDA? Hmm we already have an FDA so why would a Libertarian oppose such an agency? Well in principle I think a Libertarian would NOT oppose it, but in some specific instances it might oppose ACTIONS and POWERS that the FDA may try to impose. For example I thing the pure Libertarian would oppose the imposition of nutritional standards as being beyond the scope of what is necessary. However we Americans clearly ignore nutritional standards in a very real way, so the FDA imposing them has proved to be pointless!
Then looking at the Labor Law questions. . . no MINORS would probably not be allowed to sign contracts, to be employed in dangerous jobs, to be forced to work in sweat shops, etc. They are, after all, not of age. Libertarian thought does not, in a practical sense, mean that life is a free-for-all.
Again, take a look at folks like Lew Rockwell or Ron Paul and see what Rockwell says/write and how Dr Paul has voted to get an idea on how Libertarian thought can be practical and moral. Go back and read our US Constitution, because that is one of the guiding documents to the Libertarian movement here in the US.
Then looking at the Labor Law questions. . . no MINORS would probably not be allowed to sign contracts, to be employed in dangerous jobs, to be forced to work in sweat shops, etc. They are, after all, not of age. Libertarian thought does not, in a practical sense, mean that life is a free-for-all.
Again, take a look at folks like Lew Rockwell or Ron Paul and see what Rockwell says/write and how Dr Paul has voted to get an idea on how Libertarian thought can be practical and moral. Go back and read our US Constitution, because that is one of the guiding documents to the Libertarian movement here in the US.