Talk:Anarcho-liberalism

This article must be a joke right?

Quite the contrary. In fact anarcho-liberalism is actually a better term for anarcho-capitalism as popularly understood than anarcho-captialism. If captialism is understood as a system whereby the majority of individuals are employed by firms which they do not own, then anracho-capatalism as understood by the likes of Rothbard and Nozick would not necessarily advance such an economic system, as an inherent feature of its political philosophy. Instead the capitalism in anarcho-capitalism is simply the result of worker and consumer preferences which are contingent, not inherent to the ideology. The term anarcho-liberalism if best to encapsulate the likes of Rothbard and Hoppe as well as `Lefties` such as Long and Carlson. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2A00:23C6:291C:A401:BCC4:886C:7AAE:2E26 (talk) 18:52, 1 March 2022 (UTC)

Make disambiguation rather than redirect?
The Mexican Liberal Party was an anarcho-communist or Magonist party, but due to its origins it may be worth pointing to it from this page. 16:12, 6 January 2024 (UTC) GlobeGores (talk page | user page) 16:12, 6 January 2024 (UTC)


 * After doing some more searching, I think it is inaccurate for this page to be simply a redirect to anarcho-capitalism. There seem to be some (small, but nonzero) number of thinkers who could be described as "anarcho-liberal", but do not align with modern-day anarcho-capitalism - for example some egoist anarchists or people like Benjamin Tucker. GlobeGores (talk page | user page) 16:25, 6 January 2024 (UTC)