Peace as a Prerequisite for Civilization
While men like Murray Rothbard and Ludwig von Mises believed in “just” war, nonetheless, they did
The Draft Is Antithetical to Liberty, Even if It Is Never Used
Brandan P. Buck Fall may finally have arrived in DC, but one discussion that never seems out
Why the Money Supply Is Growing Again
In August, the money supply grew at the fastest rate in 23 months.
Why People Pay Higher Prices for Some Goods Relative to Others
One of the important points made by Carl Menger in his 1871 Principles is that people
The Birth of “Irrational Exuberance”
Long before there was Alan Greenspan to turn the Federal Reserve into Casino Central, there was
Clarifying the Possibility of a Contingent Election under the Twelfth Amendment
Andy Craig As we get closer to the election, a number of articles have been published offering legal explainers for
Yes, Car Seat Laws Reduce the Birth Rate
Thanks to increasingly broad car-seat laws, a third child often requires the purchase of a larger,
What is Old School Economics?
When people speak of “old school economics,” they generally mean the application of economic thinking that
Ctrl+Alt+Regulate: The DMA’s Misguided Reboot of Competition
Regulators with the European Union want people to believe that the “dead hand” of government regulation
Hayek on the Welfare State
While F.A. Hayek contributed much to the Austrian School of Economics, he also supported the establishment