Brainpolice:
To my knowledge, Mises argued against anarchism in any form. His arguments against anarchism are somewhat similar to Rand's. Mises seemed to think that a state legal system protecting private property is a necessary prerequisite for a free market and that anarchism would lack such an enforcement mechanism.
Yuck! It's always funny to see someone defend the free-market except for one industry.
Don't allow leftists to play games with definitions! Some of the
libertarian-leaning leftists at this forum will try to redefine
"left-wing" back to its original defition (Third Estate, limited
government, free-markets, laissez-faire reforms, etc.). Fine! We
non-leftists can't stop them from using their own personal definitions;
they can use whatever labels they want to describe any concept they
want.
However, they have the audacity
to then use their personal definition of "left-wing" (remember, the original
definition, which is no longer valid) to prove that modern leftists are
more libertarian than modern rightists! They will say that
libertarianism is "inherently leftist" (again, using the original, no
longer valid definition), and use that to insist that we should prefer
and side with modern leftists over modern rightists.
Question their motives.