The Ethics Of Liberty - Children And Rights
I have to admit up front, this chapter contains my biggest disagreement with Rothbard so far. In "Children And Rights", he starts with discussing the rights of parents to abort and neglect their children before partially redeeming himself by focusing his searchlight back onto government's aggression against children and parents. He starts the chapter describing his philosophy on abortion. I disagree out of the gate. Uncharacteristically he provides no logical or natural law basis for his foundation. Instead, he throws out an assertion and starts applying his normal deduction atop this faulty starting point. "[with] birth as the beginning of a live human being possessing natural rights... While birth is indeed the proper line of demarcation, the usual formation makes ...