The great science fiction writer Robert A. Heinlein was one of my first favorite writers, back when I started reading his juvenile fiction when I was about 12 or 13. I had no idea that he had already arrived at some of the conclusions it would take me decades to find.
There’s a widely held belief that Heinlein was a libertarian, but that’s much more complicated than most people think. He was pretty much an outright socialist in the early decades of his life, then a hardcore cold warrior after that. Still, libertarian themes emerged, most famously in “The Moon is a Harsh Mistress.”
Whatever he was in the early parts of his life, he gave us some of the best literary efforts on ideas related to freedom. I was reminded of that earlier this week when I saw this quoted, which comes from “The Notebooks of Lazarus Long“:

No matter where I might ever live, the South will always be my home
Conflict pushes inner buttons to make me feel like child in trouble
How do you suppose invention of ‘truth machine’ would affect you?
Anarchist vs. minarchist debate misses the shift to post-statist world
Would you have been on a ship? Or back home complaining?
Christmas tree ‘promotion fee’ is just another hidden tax on consumers
Need for love drives behaviors; for me, old needs make me eat
Dishonesty runs rampant when partisanship matters more than truth