Don't be so sure. It depends on the issue. In the beginning, libertarians were mostly free-market capitalists and Constitutionalists. Once the anarcho-capitalists gained prominence, taking down the state became the only issue. The Constitution became suspect and the rule of law became up for grabs. All political discussion morphed from the pragmatic to the academic. I was in the Libertarian Party in 1976, but by the mid 90s I had to leave because of the tawdry corruption I saw in the state party. It went from the Party of Principle to the Party of Poseurs.
Bee earns a kek. Reminds me of "Libertarians are hippies of the Right." I've heard that put-down before.
Most libertarians would not side with the far left on an issue.
Don't be so sure. It depends on the issue. In the beginning, libertarians were mostly free-market capitalists and Constitutionalists. Once the anarcho-capitalists gained prominence, taking down the state became the only issue. The Constitution became suspect and the rule of law became up for grabs. All political discussion morphed from the pragmatic to the academic. I was in the Libertarian Party in 1976, but by the mid 90s I had to leave because of the tawdry corruption I saw in the state party. It went from the Party of Principle to the Party of Poseurs.