If you want to be the spelling police on these boards be my guest. Seriously, I would love to see you get up in arms this much over every single mispelling. It would be comical watching you go insane.
Keep lying to all of us if you need to, but your use of the non-word "bafoon" for "buffoon" was not a typo or a simple misspelling.
It's common Engrish.
You were let down by your schools, your parents, and even your peers. Now you are letting yourself down. That last part is just sad.
Back to the topic, I think the OP may be on to something here:
Maybe libertarianism is at the magic stage between Marx and Lenin-but of course, communism in practice turned out wholely different from what Lenin envisioned.
Personally, I believe the ideology of libertarianism suffers from the same overly idealistic shortcomings as the ideology of democracy and the ideology of communism:
The ideology of democracy assumes the "rational, informed voter" and also leans heavily on the assumption that people will put the general interest ahead of their special, personal interest -- as if.
The ideology of communism depends on the assumption of people putting the general, collective interest ahead of their personal interest, and the dangerous and obviously failed belief that the process of the dialectic -- thesis, antithesis, synthesis -- could roll through the "antithesis" stage of giving over ALL power to the state on the way to the synthesis of the state withering away in support of their thesis of the lalalala collective good triumphing . . . again, as if!
Libertarianism, imho, is similarly naive in it''s assumptions.