Katrina and the Never-Ending Scandal of State Management
The Gulf Coast was hit with two disasters: Katrina and government. At every level and in every way, writes William Anderson, it made everything worse.
The Gulf Coast was hit with two disasters: Katrina and government. At every level and in every way, writes William Anderson, it made everything worse.
John Lukacs, in his own estimation, is much more than an ordinary historian. In what he considers his most important book, Historical Consciousness
It looks like we’ll have to wait a little longer for the downfall of a corrupt regime on the big screen. Warner Bros.
Thomas DiLorenzo has written a masterpiece, says Laurence M. Vance. We have not only a great reference source, but a great weapon in our arsenal against all varieties of socialism, interventionism, and anticapitalism.
Is the Mafia like a state that uses violence to enforce its agenda? Or is it more like a private business that specializes in the market provision of security? Robert Murphy reviews a book on the topic.
You know why so many men walk around with sloppy hair? We hate haircuts. You have to drive there to get one, which represents decline, because if you know about Figaro from Rossini's "Barber of Seville," the barber came to your home (but then he also pulled out your teeth and passed on furtive notes arranging encounters of various sort, etc.).
Pete Boettke, Chris Coyne and Peter T. Leeson have a new blog: The Austrian Economists.
I was just having a conversation with a visiting political philosopher from Northern Italy.
The past year has brought to light what so long was concealed under the veil of the German consensus model, writes Frank Vogelgesang.