I don't think that's true of American libertarians. I think libertarians in this country are too aligned with the Right and often end up defending corporations as if an attack on them is an attack on markets. I often have discussions with libertarians who will vehemently attack all forms of government but are quick to stand up to defend wage labor in a market dominated by monopolies or oligopolies, refusing to see any inefficiencies or externalities that exist in any market outside of government intervention.
Just look at Ayn Rand Center's website. You've got one article on the top of the page comparing GM to Apple praising the efforts of Apple as a producer (you know, the company that ends up buying its products from a company in China that takes advantage of currency manipulation and lack of human rights to produce widgets from labor who is killing itself because their death is more valuable than their life) and a video further down the page whose topic is using global Capitalism to cure world oppression and poverty. There is major cognitive dissonance, in my opinion, when you claim that Capitalism will solve all the world's problems and simultaneously defend a large MNC that exploits labor that has no freedom or civil rights.
Oh, there's an audio piece on the front page entitled "America's Persecuted Minority: Big Business." It is anti-government groups like this that give me pause with regards to the modern American libertarian. They don't want freedom, they just want to choose a different king.
This is a very good point. There was an ideological period in the US that was extremely ideological for business, roughly in the 1880's and 1890's, in which one of the phases of dealing with labor issues was to address the terrible situation by introducing the idea of 'contracts'.
Howard Zinn explained this well, but the gist of it is that the idea of 'voluntary contracts' was used to justify the terrible treatment of workers, because 'they agreed to it'. It completely ignored the inequity between the employer who could easily toss aside workers and replace with them with others from the 'masses' when the 'negotiation' was the company one one side and one worker on the other (labor organization being illegal) - a man has to eat, the corporation had the upper hand.
The nice neat idea of 'contract' was used to make the exploitation palatable. Eventually it was seen for the sham it was and labor rights were increased.
Libertarians are masters of confliating words like 'liberty' with corporatist power to exploit, creating fantasy 'rights' they'll talk about as if they're for 'the public', but which in fast are only really useful for the corporations to exploit and the actual denying of power and rights to 'the people'.
This is why FDR eventually advocated a 'second, economic bill of rights' and the phrase is often heard of how economic rights are the practical implementation for political rights.
The guy who is a serf working alongside his children in an unsafe factory 16 hours a day 6 days a week without healthcare for barely enough to eat has little use for the 'fancy' rights in the constitution that are mostly theoretical - just as communism was easy to sell to the starving masses who were just trying to eat and had little concern for 'political rights'. Even today in China, the government has made an implicit bargain with its people who would otherwise pose a risk to the regime, to trade getting prosperity for rebellion.
Democracy is the right, theoretically, for the people to have political power and challenge the concentrated power of the wealthy with a government who represents them and has the power to reign in private abuses of the public. Theoretically, because if those interests can win elections, by using their money to pay for elections, and to pay for propaganda for the public to back their interests instead of the public interest, then democracy isn't working - but it's still better to have than the Libertarian approach that guts democracy.
Democracy was all about 'more power for the people against the few', and that battle is always ongoing for the few to find ways to get that power back.
Libertarianism with its propaganda misusing the word 'freedom' to trick people is one of those efforts, however little those who fall for it recognize that.
There are real issues with the risks of excess government power and other problems with government - but Libertarians uses them to argue for a radical agenda, not fixing them.
There is a proud history of the people using democracy to improve society - reducing elder poverty, increasing healthcare for just a couple of examples - while Libertarians oppose nearly all such efforts of the people to get to do what they want, to the point of Rand Paul opposing even the parts of the civil rights bill that put the rights of the individual citizen to equal access to public services ahead of the private right of the owner to discriminate based on race, i.e., to keep segregation legal.
It's a good example of the Libertarian use of 'freedom' - not the freedom of the black person to eat at the local restaurant, but the freedom of the owner to say 'no'.
Not the freedom of the people to create a government-involved healthcare service, but the freedom of the private companies to say "you, the public, cannot do that."
Save234