Some libertarians argue
I'm one of those extreme libertarians that your sociology teacher might have warned you about. I find it difficult to have these conversations because generally people who try to "pose the flaw with libertarianism question to libertarians" are grounded in assumptions that are only valid in a non-libertarian framework.
It's like if someone asked the question: "how do you get put chess pieces away? You can't because rooks only move in straight lines! Hahahah!"
Questions like that totally miss the point. Yes, rooks only move in straight lines. But only if you're playing a game of chess. If you're
not playing chess, it's trivial to pick up a rook and put it in a box and put the box away.
Given that the state and the government are supposed to be the tools
through which citizens express and apply their collective will, how
do you plan to forbid corporation and wealthy individual to seize the power?
Wouldn't libertarianism ultimately mean the end of democracy?
The original question is so grounded in assumptions that only make sense within a certain context that it's difficult to give a useful answer that makes sense within that context. To me, someone who doesn't perceive within that context, the entire question and premise of the OP seems both circular and flawed.
* You
don't forbid corporations and wealthy individuals from seizing power.
* Even if you wanted to,
putting them in charge in the first place to prevent them from later seizing it is not a good solution.
* Who cares if democracy ends?
Democracy is a system in which it is accepted policy that individuals have no more say in their own lives than those around them. Why is that a good thing?
All of the above aside, the
fact is that those with power have power. Creating bureaucracy does not change this. Creating laws does not change this. It simply hides the understanding of "what is power" behind an illusory wall of self-delusion. You are
not safe from the things you fear libertarianism "will bring" simply because you have these rules and laws. Rules and laws are simply a smokescreen behind which those with power can hide to simplify their use of power by deluding you into a sense of safety.
If a man with the power to harm you chooses to harm you, a law stating that he can't will not stop him. In fact, laws
don't state that you "can't" do things. There is no law that says you "can't" murder people, and even if there were it would be meaningless. There are only laws saying that
if you murder someone, other people have agreed to do something to you in return. "Law" is a way of legitimizing mob rule. It's a way of doing exactly the same thing, but feeling good about it by exteriorizing the decision process.
I assert that exteriorizing responsibility for choice and the consequences of choice is not beneficial to a conscious entity.
I assume that the OPs position and question makes sense from a certain worldview. And I'm sure my position seems ridiculous from a certain worldview. But the questions themselves can't be addressed simply by answering them. The worldviews in dispute need to be reconciled before any useful discussion can take place.
The problem is that it's all based on 18th century philosophy without a strong foundation in experiment-driven science, so nobody can say for certain if it would actually work.
And my answer is that
of course it "would work." Just like the present system also "works." And a purely libertarian society would have certain consequences just like living in our system has certain consequences. It's simply a matter of choosing which consequences you would prefer.
But looking around, I see a lot of people unhappy with the consequences of living in the existing system.