You're still not answering the question. You said that libertarians do not think that companies should have the right. Well, who do libertarians believe should take it away?
Try reading and comprehending... Libertarians do not believe that people have the right to infringe upon others beliefs. Therefore, as long as the individual does not infringe upon the rights of others, he in turn should not have his rights infringed upon. There is no 'right' to take away... at least according to what Libertarians believe.
What happened here is a clear violation of his rights (according to Libertarian belief... not law). You had a group formulate a mob and attempt to punish the man for his donation six years ago. A donation that they have known about for some time. When appointed CEO, the mob demanded that he recant his former position. He chose not to discuss it. They then pretended that his mere presence was some great force against 'morale'. Again... if he didn't bend to the group think... they punished him.
And I think it's really weird to say that a company should not have the right to do X without advocating for the government to enforce it.
yes, we know... you are a 'government solves all our problems' kind of guy. So of course you can't see anything but government involvement.
Fair enough. Let me ask you, would you support a law like the one I described?
It does indicate that one is a fake libertarian. The argument and position is not based on libertarian principles which clearly lead to the conclusion that Mozilla had a right to fire Eich, though he resigned, and that the consumers and employees had every right to use economic pressure against Mozilla/Eich. SF's/Newt's argument and position is based on partisan tit for tat and betrays a bias against Democrats. Obama has nothing to do with this. Libertarianism is not about a knee jerk reaction to Obama or "liberals."
Besides all that, the comparison is apples to oranges. Obama opposed Proposition 8. He also has publicly changed his position to gay marriage. Eich supported Prop 8 and has not publicly changed his position.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/08/05/AR2010080502211.html
This is how you can spot a fake libertarian. He desperately continues to try and associate his opponent with Newt/Bush/etc... with the hope of distracting from what has actually been said. It is Strings way of trying to dismiss the discussion based on his vain attempt to associate me with 'evil right wingers'.
Libertarians believe in the rights of the individual to live and act as they choose provided that their actions do NOT interfere with the same rights other individuals have. Eich's actions outside of work had NO bearing on the employees of the firm. It only became a 'problem' when he went from CTO to CEO. To pretend that his promotion suddenly made it a problem is nothing short of nonsense. Therefore it violates Libertarian beliefs in the rights of the individual.
for you and String to continue to pretend Libertarians would support such nonsense is comical. They do not.
Continues? First time I mentioned Newt and I was just repeating what had already been stated. You are just a knee jerk partisan Republican.
No, it does not violate libertarian beliefs, you fucking moron. Your argument implies one has a property right in there job. You don't know the first thing about libertarianism.
You stated the following...
No, I would argue that libertarians are more supportive of free markets than conservatives. Conservatives toss out free market economics unless they support the cultural hegemony they wish to maintain or regain. Obvious examples are their position on drugs or sex trades. But they also are more likely to support trade barriers, farm subsidies, bailouts for corporations, etc., than libertarians are. Economics for them is just a means to gain cultural control and true free markets are too unwieldy and disruptive for their liking.
Now tell us String... which of the above do you think I stray away from vs. Libertarians? Do you know? Can you provide any examples? No, you cannot. You simply continue to make bullshit claims about where I stand with nothing to back them up. Nothing.
Yes. I don't believe that a company should be able to willy nilly fire someone without cause except when the companies ability to be profitable is challenged.
No moron... it does no such thing. But as a Libertarian, one does not think that it is right to fire someone for beliefs held outside of work that do not affect the work environment. You subscribe to the 'majority rules'/'mob justice'/'group think' bullshit and pretend it is Libertarian. It is not. Not even close.
Still waiting String... care to tell me where it is that I differ as you claim?
Who decides what challenges their ability to be profitable? Image is a part of their product.