> Would you still give Uber money if they were shooting up Lyft?
In the current context, no.
If street wars between rival ride sharing companies was the norm, then sure, maybe, along with everyone else. People are remarkably flexible when it comes to necessities.
Cabbies have been known to be racist as hell to black people for a long time, that didn't stop non-black people from taking taxis.
> The voluntary support of their subscribers.
Ah yes, and if they abuse others I'm sure their subscribers will withdraw their support, of course.
Curious, what's the ancap version of something like CPS?
> Curious, what's the ancap version of something like CPS?
I think this is the best question I have been asked in this thread.
As you might imagine, ancaps are very into this topic and have done a pretty good job of thinking through all the little details. The answer to almost all these questions is something like, "It would work just like it does now, but you would voluntarily choose who to pay for the service, instead of a government having a monopoly on it, so you could fire them if you weren't satisfied".
CPS seems like a genuinely difficult problem though. For that matter, it's a tough problem in the current system.
If you ran a rights enforcement agency, what would be the fall-out for you for interceding in a child abuse situation? Or for having one reported, but choosing to not intercede? What kind of liability would interceding expose you to? If you heard that in real 2020 America, Uber had directed its drivers not to report suspected child abuse, and Lyft had the opposite policy, would that influence who you hired?
In the current context, no.
If street wars between rival ride sharing companies was the norm, then sure, maybe, along with everyone else. People are remarkably flexible when it comes to necessities.
Cabbies have been known to be racist as hell to black people for a long time, that didn't stop non-black people from taking taxis.
> The voluntary support of their subscribers.
Ah yes, and if they abuse others I'm sure their subscribers will withdraw their support, of course.
Curious, what's the ancap version of something like CPS?