The Healthy Democracy of Inconsequential Elections
What does a "healthy democracy" look like?
What does a "healthy democracy" look like?
The outcry from establishment media figures following the decision by the Washington Post and Los Angeles Times to not endorse a presidential candidate shows how out of touch they have become about how much we rely on them.
Would America’s federal government deliberately undermine recovery efforts to try to achieve its own desired political ends? Of course.
Trump’s tax reform just replaces one tax with another. And would probably result in higher taxes.
As with any other government-controlled institution, a high level of public skepticism about elections is healthy.
Almost 90 years later, Albert Jay Nock's Our Enemy the State remains a classic and definitive work on examining the state for what it is: a liberty-crushing behemoth. David Gordon takes another look at this important work.
More Republicans support ending the Fed than ever before, while the bitcoin industry has made major investments in Trump's re-election. What could this mean going forward?
Western governments are keen on pursuing “hate crimes” and criminalizing what it calls “hate symbols.” However, these governments reserve to themselves just how one defines “hate,” which is nothing more than an attack upon free speech.