The Libertarian behind the World’s First Freedom of the Press Act
Johan Norberg UNESCO has just designated the Swedish Freedom of the Press Act of 1766 a “Memory
Argentina Sleepwalks into Hyperinflation (Yet Again)
A century ago, Argentina was one of the world's wealthiest nations and the Argentine peso rivaled
I try to assign a number to Krugman’s estimate of the value of not commuting and come up short
Krugman (Working From Home and Realizing What Matters): First things first: The reduction in commuting time is
Taking Notes out of Rothbard’s Taiwan Playbook
Writing pseudonymously in a series of articles for Faith and Freedom in the 1950s, Murray Rothbard took on
Washington Has No Moral Authority to Ban Guns
Another mass shooting, another call for gun control. However, when it comes to mass killings, Washington
California Tries Charging for Electricity Based on Income
Marc Joffe In California, private sector innovation is giving way to public sector experimentation. From the state
Committing Domestic Violence against Men . . . Just for a Giggle
Decades ago, Hollywood brought the neglected problem of domestic violence (DV) against women into the spotlight
Collateral Damage of IRS Audits
Chris Edwards The Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 boosted the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) budget over the
Shedding Light on the Law of Unintended Consequences
It is the right of the consumer, not the regime, to determine what lighting sources work