Anyone doubting that free markets have enemies on the right as well as on the left might check out the essay by Oren Cass in the Financial Times. Cass, a former Romney presidential campaign aide who has a group, American Compass, working on reinventing conservative economic policy, writes: "Unnecessary tax cuts fuelled deficits rather than growth. Lax regulation invited a global financial crisis that led to a great recession."
He says, "Market fundamentalism has little to say about the economic challenges of the 21st century...the old right's market-based dogmas bear a substantial portion of the blame for the destabilisation."
Cass has some of the same reactions I did to the statement about "Freedom Conservatism" but comes at it from a different place in terms of economic policy on taxes and regulation. It's easy to rail rhetorically against "market fundamentalism" and "market-based dogmas" but harder to propose alternative systems that rival markets in terms of justice, efficiency, morality, growth, and maximizing utility.