With the Founding Fathers, a new scale was developed--a more scientific scale, which puts "complete rule by the people" (true Anarchism, or "radical capitalism") on one end (the far right end), and total government rule (the police state, fascism, centralized socialism, Marxism) on the other end (the far left). The scale is determined by the amount of government control--and, coincidently, economic freedom--a society has.
I wasn't sure I knew where I stood economically, until had a very extreme economically liberal teacher at my post-graduate studies ("Democracy and Transition in South-East Europe") who kept talking about "economic freedom". I am very grateful than he made decide I was a social democrat. I kept thinking "I'm sorry,
whose freedom?" I was so annoyed with reading his articles that were full of talk about things like national income and growth, but kept ignoring real life consequences on individual people. If 'freedom' is about the freedom of the individual, I saw none of it in his theories. Isn't the obsession with a country's economic growth in abstract terms a very collectivist concept, with the idea that this economic growth and national income that is going to happen as a result of 'economic freedom' is somehow magically going to benefit every member of the society, in itself... Even though real life tells us that this is blatantly not true? (In fact, he gave 'positive' examples of countries such as South Korea, which, at the time, severely curtailed workers' rights, made workers work 16 hours a day on small salaries, put union leaders in prison etc. before they managed to have the economic growth the country needed. That was meant as an example to be followed, an example that transition is tough but that sacrifices have to made on its altar [yes, this is my wording] ... He never mentioned anything about people losing jobs, families having no income, desperate people committing suicide after losing their jobs... It's all about the Big Picture, I guess. That's very authoritarian, isn't it? A lot like the old communist mantra of working and making sacrifices for the 'better tomorrow', when everything is going to be rosy...)
What 'freedom' are we talking about, if it in reality exists only for rich businessmen and big corporations? For people with almost no money struggling to survive, for unemployed people, for people in badly paid jobs, people who are at the mercy of their employers and working all day and all year because their boss makes all the decisions and they are desperate not to lose the job (and these are all things that are happening right now in my country, in the name of transition to the market economy... We're now at the stage comparable to the darkest days of 19th century capitalism... There's no child labor, but a lot of other things are there...), "economic freedom" means squat. In real life, abstract freedom means nothing if people's economic position is such that they have little choice. They are not free. To be free, they have to be guaranteed the basic necessities to make a decent living - enough welfare benefits to be able to have food, housing, clothes and other basic necessities (and I mean decent living, not awful homeless shelters), free health service, education, and real help in trying to find a job. Many people might take these things for granted, but they still don't exist in quite a few countries, or exist in a very rudimentary and inadequate form (e.g. in my 'transition' country, there is no such thing as the dole. You're unemployed and without income, who cares. And unemployment is very high.) And these are the things that government, IMO,
must provide. It's what it's there for, IMO. But strictly speaking, this is "interference in economy". You must collect taxes in order to secure welfare. To claim that the state should not interfere in economy at all because it would allegedly curtail "freedom" is akin to claiming that there should be no police and no penal system because it curtail "freedom"... When in fact, this would only mean freedom for the strongest to oppress the weak. The state must interfere to
protect freedom and keep in check the powerful individuals and groups who would endanger the freedom of others. And just like the authorities have the duty to stop bullies and gangsters from endangering physical freedom and life of others, so it has the duty of preventing powerful businessmen from gaining and abusing too much power and endangering economic freedom of others. Any talk about
freedom in today's world would be incomplete and delusional if it didn't include the consideration of the fact that the unchecked power in many countries comes not from the government, but from the richest individuals and groups, who have a huge influence and control over the economy and politics, and often the
de facto rulers behind the scenes.
Didn't mean to offend.
I'd actually agree with many of the stances you listed above.
I'm also in favor of drug decriminalisation. It's obvious that we're not winning the War on Drugs, and never have been. All it does, at least here in the U.S., is needlessly bloat the size of the government and infringe on personal liberties. All I was saying is that I don't agree with stance presented in
Symbiosis - which seems to be "just deal with it yourselves because it's not our problem."
Concerning religion, I'm of much the same mind as you, but from the other side. I'm a practicing Catholic, but if someone wants to be an atheist, I'm fine with that - it's their choice, not mine. What bothers me is when one side insists that the other is either stupid, unthinking, or somehow backward. Theists shouldn't force religion on atheists and atheists shouldn't force atheism on theists. And that's exactly what I think Trek was doing in
Who Watches the Watchers - it was forcing an atheistic perspective on theist viewers by ridiculing religion.
(Coincidentally, one of the reasons I'm glad I converted to Catholicism is that no matter how often I polish the bishop, I can always have the Bishop offer me God's forgiveness. Ah, the wonders of confession.

)
As for abortion, I used to be think just as you do. As Bill Clinton said - "Pro-life personally, pro-choice politically." Here lately, however, I'm having a hard time seeing a fetus as anything but a living being. So, I guess I'm moving more and more to the right on that issue.
Just FYI - I took that Political Compass test and my scores were....
Economic Left/Right: 3.88
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -4.21
My results in the Political Compass:
Economic Left/Right: -5.00
Social Libertarian/Authoritarian: -6.00
Incidentally, all my friends who took the test are in the green square (Left Libertarian), and I know a person who is at the far end, the 'leftest' most 'libertarian' stance possible. But I find that there are issues where people of those leanings have very diverse views. One such issue is prostitution. Many 'libertarians' are in favor of decriminalization of prostitution, while others (particularly some of the feminists I know) are very much against, considering it a form of sexual slavery. I am in the second camp - claiming that it is "consensual" and "voluntary" ignores the economic realities (yes, I am sure that there are people who are in that business because they like it, but I am also sure that the vast majority is in it because they really need money), I am very much for having the prostitution illegal but I support the Swedish approach: instead of prosecuting and punishing the prostitutes, go to the root and cause of the problem - prosecute and punish the johns. Help prostitutes reintegrate into society without being considered pariahs.
As for decriminalization of drugs, it depends on which drugs we're talking about and what its harmful effects are. I definitely think that marihuana should be legal, it's harmless compared to some legal substances like alcohol or tobacco, and the fact that in so many countries alcohol is legal but marihuana is not, is a cultural thing more than anything. Generally, I'd say, decriminalize those that are less potentially harmful than alcohol. With psychedelic drugs, for instance, I'm a bit vague (and I admit I don't know enough on the issue, as I don't know anyone who's taken them on any regular basis); I suppose, from what I know, I wouldn't make them completely illegal but use should be limited and careful. But hard drugs like heroin and cocaine are a whole different matter. Anyone who thinks heroin should be legal is not in their right mind. I had friends who were addicted to heroin and I know how harmful it is, one of my friends died of overdose. I cannot imagine why anyone who had a real understanding of what it is would want to try it. There is no way to keep the use of heroin moderate and relatively harmless, there are no positive effects to outweigh the bad, it definitely leads into an awful addiction and screws up people's lives and psyche, and yes, it kills.