Many societies in history have been libertarian, and haven't descended into anarchy -- like, the United States of America pre-Lincoln.
<skeptical look> How so? Libertarian? I think not.
The gap between the filthy rich and the rest of us has exploded because of corporate socialism. It's almost always been government that concentrates wealth, not liberty.
I agree with the first sentence, I don't deny that at all. I disagree with the second.
Yes, corporatism has caused great harm to our middle and poor classes. You would have it do even more-so. I've seen posts where you advocated less government, allowing corporations to take the reigns over regulation and infrastructure. That's where I believe they would seize the opportunity to exponentially expand their influence and wealth, while simultaneously eliminating the costs associated with poverty. . . effectively casting them out to fend for themselves. If you think we middle class folks have it rough now, wait until your Utopian Libertarian society turns you into a slave to your corporate masters.
It's corporatism that concentrates wealth, not government, as you assert.
That's your imagination talking. And that's only prejudice.
If it results in slavery, it isn't libertarian.
Okay, so the appliance store is free to discriminate, yet the pharmacy isn't. There's a regulation. Wait a minute, there's only one appliance store in the county. . . so the customer is forced to drive three counties away to find a new refrigerator because the old one gave out and everything is spoiling. Okay, wait, in that case it's a vital business and the can't discriminate. There's a new regulation. Okay, so I'm passing through your town, I need food for my (for the sake of argument) diabetic condition. There are only two restaurants in town. . . I find one, but they don't serve gay families. I collapse into a diabetic coma on the way to the other. Well, now we need to make rules for special cases, right? More complexity, more government. Oh, and then there are the enforcement officials to make sure the rights of the discriminators are being upheld! After all, we can't have any unruly ethnic folks or fags stirring up trouble in our fine, upstanding establishments! More complexity, more government.
Oh, and then we need the lawyers to argue all these cases and help establish all the rules and regulations. . .
Discrimination is NOT a right. Equal treatment IS.