Mises Daily

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Murray N. Rothbard

The catch is that in order to file an appeal, the plaintiff has to pay a fee of two dollars. Justice Mahoney, O happy day, refused to accept the appeal because Federal Reserve Notes, which of course constituted the fee, are not lawful money. Only gold and silver coin, affirmed the judge, can be made legal tender, and therefore the fee for appeal had not been paid.

Jörg Guido Hülsmann

What is, then, the best monetary policy? Mises argues that “A metallic money, the augmentation or diminution of the quantity of metal available for which is independent of deliberate human intervention, is becoming
    the modern monetary ideal.” He adds: “The significance of adherence to a metallic-money system lies in the freedom of the
    value of money from state influence that such a system guarantees.”

Joseph T. Salerno

The actual aim of the recent flood of laws rendering cash transactions less convenient or limiting or even prohibiting them is to force the public at large to make payments through the financial system in order to prop up the unstable fractional-reserve banks and, more importantly, to expand the ability of governments to spy on and keep track of their citizens’ most private financial dealings.

David Howden

As we review the Fed’s operations in 2012 we see the usual outcomes. The banking sector has benefited from its operations (unusually so, thanks to the
    continued interest on reserve policy) and the government has received a free lunch by having a ready buyer for its ever-increasing debt.

Steven Kates

Demand is constituted by supply; according to Say’s Law, supply <strong>is</strong> demand. If you want to get to the essence of Say’s Law you must never think in terms of aggregate demand and aggregate supply. If you want to defeat Keynesian economics, you need to wage war on the very notion of aggregate demand. Nothing else will do.