No, I'm not really saying that at all. But pick up what you want out of it, I guess.
If my naivety lies anywhere, it is perhaps in hoping that a relatively libertarian candidate will follow more in the reasonable and pragmatic footsteps of those few liberterians who realize reality is messy rather than the idealists who think just because they want something to be true, it will.
People here, and in other places, convinced my Ron Paul was of the second type, which is why I've recently completely withdrawn my support for him. Gary Johnson seems to be of the first - I could still be wrong, sure.
As to my comment, I was arguing that unrestrained capitalism minus cronyism would b superior. Is it likely? No. But Johnson seems more intent on destroying the cronyism and the things that support it (like the drug war, corporate handouts) rather than jumping straight to "unrestrained capitalism" (if that is, indeed, what he seeks at all. He doesn't really seek to be advocating that, though - I've not found anywhere where he's arguing against regulations, for example. Maybe he is! But I haven't seen it.)
If that is his goal, I am honestly okay with us aiming towards that for a while if if he manages to succeed at reducing that sort of shit. Maybe he won't. But it seems to me the problem with aiming towards unrestrained capitalism (which, I will repeat, is not actually a worthy goal in my mind, though stepping towards it seems like an improvement over government supported oligarchy) is in the details of the implementation. Where would his focus be, if you will?
And Johnson's focus seems very much on the aspects of our current system that I find the most in need of change.
Leaf,
I was merely responding to the accusation that a Libertarian must value unrestrained capitalism higher than unrestrained freedom, when there are members of the party who support things that state the exact opposite. It wasn't in a response to Johnson in particular who, and again, I might need to repeat this, is NOT MY IDEAL CANDIDATE. Not even close! But unlike the major candidates, he has maybe 4 or 5 positions I can support instead of 1 or 2.