Libertarians were virtually alone in opposing the planned expansions of government power in the wake of 9/11, and then as now, we saw the attacks for what they were: criminal attacks on human persons and property which nonetheless have not been set right or rendered impossible by more than a decade of nearly untrammeled government theft, war, regulation, and spying. An updated ‘9/11 Reader:’
- Times Change, Principles Don’t by Lew Rockwell
- A Bloody Decade of Fear and Vaunting by Anthony Gregory
- It Can Happen Anywhere by Wendy McElroy
- Ron Paul on Blowback by Lew Rockwell
- Forgotten Victims of 9-11 by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
- A Tribute to Trade by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
- A Modest Craft by Sean Corrigan
- Who is to Blame for 9-11? by William Anderson
- War Laid Bare review of Chomsky by David Gordon
- The Security Leviathan by William Anderson
- Carving Up the Homeland Security Pie by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
- Aftershocks of 9-11 by Christopher Mayer
- Is Libertarianism Defunct by Robert P. Murphy
- Airplanes and Property Protection by Jeffrey Tucker
- A History of Folly by Adam Young
- Liberty and the Common Good by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
- For the Love of War by Karen De Coster
- Assessing the Damage by Gene Callahan and Robert Murphy
- The Attack and its Aftermath by Llewelln H. Rockwell, Jr.
- Why the Show of Force Won’t Work by William Anderson
- Alternative to Unending War by Jon Basil Utley
- What Not To Do by by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
- The Military Option by Robert Blackstock
- Wartime’s Lost Liberties by Douglas Carey
- Live Free, or Be Killed review by David Gordon of Frum.
- The Source of Air-Travel Insecurity by Robert P. Murphy
- Mises on the Vengeful State by Joseph R. Stromberg
- Can Free Trade Really Prevent War? by Richard Ebeling
- Defending the Homeland by Robert Higgs
- Is Terror Good for the Economy by Ben Powell
- A Century of War by John Denson
- The Private Production of Defense by Hans-Hermann Hoppe