How is a libertarian society going to contribute to a de facto requirement for gun-owner liability insurance? Insurance doesn't protect against people being negligent and/or stupid. i.e. does insurance or liability or consequences prevent drunk driving (some...but it still happens a LOT). The basic idea is that people must be responsible for their own actions and not expect others to take care of them. Many of us will help through many ways, but the sense of entitlement must go.VMI77 wrote:While I like it as an objective, I don't think a libertarian society is possible for a number of reasons, one of which is that it requires a distribution of intelligence among the populace that doesn't exist. However, in such a society, since people would be responsible for their actions, those without criminal designs would want some kind of "insurance" for protection against financial ruin when something bad or unintended happens while using a gun. In that context, insurance companies would require some kind of training before issuing a policy to a gun owner. No one would be required to get such training, but there would be an incentive to do so, since appearing in court without it would contribute to a presumption of negligence.
I do agree that a Libertarian society is not likely because we've spent at least two generations conditioning people to not take responsibility for their actions and that they are entitled to everything. That should not keep us from fighting for freedom and pushing back. If the world doesn't blow apart, we could still push the ball back down the field in sight of the goal line.