Since you would rather strong-arm your way by with intimidating lists of links, and suggesting that I debate by reading your thousand plus page library of literature, I'll go to your page, and pick the first link that appears, and address the first issue that said link addresses.
http://mises.org/rothbard/mes/chap18a.asp
I'm not going to read the entire thing, just the Introduction and the section after. If something important comes up later in this article, I'm sure you can easily draw my attention to the important parts, since you obviously know the whole thing by heart.
The Article I read was very superficial. Instead of making arguments in favor of the free market with logic based on facts, it attempts to overwhelm the reader with obscure and purposefully hard to understand language.
It proceeds to construct a straw man who can only say "people don't actually know what they need, so we need a government to tell them what they need." This straw man is weak. This straw man is wrong. This straw man is easy to vanquish, and the article unsurprisingly vanquishes it well.
The article's straw man believes that government is a divine and benevolent force. One can argue whether or not most non-anarchist people see the government in such a light, but to actually make a compelling case, you would have to actually take a rather large survey of real people. So I will just speak for myself.
I don't see the U.S. government as a diving and benevolent force. I don't even see the U.S. government as an outsider. Any citizen of the United States can participate in their government. Anyone can petition for congress to create a law. Anyone born in the United States can run for any elected position.
The article assumes that there is no such thing as fraud. It assumes that all suppliers are selling what they claim to be selling. Let's say that you pay good money for a car. The seller tells you that the car runs great and has less than 100 miles on it. You buy the car, and you see that it has no engine, and realize that the seller replaced the odometer. Are you screwed? or do you think that there ought to be some law that prevents the seller from defrauding you?
Edit: I've been ninja'd like 14 times in the time it took me to write this.