civil libertarians believe most specifically that goverment should regulate as few aspects of our lives as are absolutely necessary.
what should governments do?
Basically, they believe that the government should have as little to do with our lives as possible.......especially the day to day aspects of it. They believe that allowing the government to rule how we live is wrong and a blatant disregard to us a FREE United States Citizens.
Not all Libertarians are isolationists, but many do advocate for a non-interventionist foreign policy that emphasizes individual liberty and limited government. They generally believe that military intervention often infringes on personal freedoms and can lead to unintended consequences. However, views on foreign engagement can vary significantly within the Libertarian movement, with some members supporting a more active international role to promote liberty abroad. Overall, while non-interventionism is a common stance, it is not universally held among all Libertarians.
'Most' people do not believe that. A small, very small, proportion may. Bigots, the ignorant and foolish.
Most historians and scholars believe the turning point of the American Civil War was the Battle of Gettysburg fought in July 1863.
I assume this is the American Civil War. If not, ask the question again more specifically. Mostly (but not entirely) east of the Mississippi River to the coast, and South of Gettysburg and North of Florida.
Collusion is the boundary between keeping out and getting into people's personal lives for libertarians. Most libertarians believe that if something harms others then it should remain illegal or regulated.
Though Libertarians share a basic political philosophy, they are not a collective of identical individuals with identical opinions on this issue or any other. That being said, by and large Libertarians are for Civil Rights, but most take issue ONLY with Title II & VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as these sections may interfere with private property rights (at least from the perspective of the leading Libertarian thinkers of that time).
Libertarians believe in SELF-government, and in personal freedom. Governments in general are a necessary evil, to be tolerated and strictly limited. Personal freedom should to be maximized. In general, a Libertarian will generally disagree with the statement "There ought to be a law...." Most laws are BAD laws, even the necessary ones. Libertarians believe in personal responsibility for their own actions.
Basically, they believe that the government should have as little to do with our lives as possible.......especially the day to day aspects of it. They believe that allowing the government to rule how we live is wrong and a blatant disregard to us a FREE United States Citizens.
Laissez faire because abortion is a sensitive issue, which by the way most libertarians are pro choice.
It depends on your definition of both terms.
A lot of libertarians do support it because they support liberty & free will. Most politicians who openly support marijuana legalization are either libertarian or liberal.
I don't think it's specifically Catholic. In my experience most people believe that Wednesday exists.
There's no official top three things libertarians want to do. But generally speaking most libertarians at the moment seem to be focused on 1) auditing/ending the federal reserve, 2) lowering/abolishing the income tax and 3) withdrawing troops from overseas bases where they aren't needed. Legalizing marijuana is also high on most libertarian's priorities.
I do not believe you kinow the answer
Railroads, I believe.
Not all Libertarians are isolationists, but many do advocate for a non-interventionist foreign policy that emphasizes individual liberty and limited government. They generally believe that military intervention often infringes on personal freedoms and can lead to unintended consequences. However, views on foreign engagement can vary significantly within the Libertarian movement, with some members supporting a more active international role to promote liberty abroad. Overall, while non-interventionism is a common stance, it is not universally held among all Libertarians.