A Book that Changes Everything
No, the authors are not really Austrian, and I'm not even sure that they can be called libertarians, but they understand the competitive process in ways that would make Hayek and Mises proud.
No, the authors are not really Austrian, and I'm not even sure that they can be called libertarians, but they understand the competitive process in ways that would make Hayek and Mises proud.
Sponsored by the Mises Institute and held at the College of Charleston in South Carolina; 7-9 April 1995.
Sponsored by the Mises Institute and held at the College of Charleston in South Carolina; 7-9 April 1995.
Sponsored by the Mises Institute and held at the College of Charleston in South Carolina; 7-9 April 1995.
Sponsored by the Mises Institute and held at the College of Charleston in South Carolina; 7-9 April 1995.
Rather than accept either administrative law or legislation, Leoni calls for a return to the ancient traditions and principles of "judge-made law" as a method of limiting the State and insuring liberty.
Courts and Congress defends a revolutionary thesis. If asked, who has the final say in our government on the meaning of the Constitution, most people would say, the Supreme Court.
Readers of The Mises Review will not be surprised to learn that Folsom considers the New Deal a failure. Nevertheless, even those already familiar with such books as John T. Flynn's The Roosevelt Myth will find Folsom's book valuable.
"Those of libertarian inclinations tend not to hold it unfair for those with superior talents to benefit from them."
Our actual Constitution, one of congressional preeminence, has been replaced by the Happy Convention, in which the president and Supreme Court have supplanted Congress. No Jeffersonian can accept this.