It's not a free market if includes closed and controlled markets. Thus, it's not possible to have a global market and a free market. A free market must be necessarily domestic and isolationist, or operating tariffs to protect itself from the global market. This is something a lot of libertarian economists do not want to come to terms with.
Also, the average person in a first world country will not have a robot maid until borders are mostly closed for that nation.
Kind of like how machined farming only really took off after slavery was ended. It's the same story for cheap foreign labor and automation.
What makes free trade not free, exactly?
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