The Civil War was really the watershed,” he wrote Meyer. “Lincoln was America’s first dictator, and almost all the Republican ...
An enduring myth is that imports from industrialized western countries have decimated production of goods in developing ...
Freight trains receive almost no subsidies, so why should passenger trains? Ending rail subsidies wouldn’t mean the end of ...
"The precious metal has soared this year as investors seek a safe haven from a weaker dollar and geopolitical and economic uncertainty." ...
During the Middle Ages, taxation was considered to be appropriate only as an extreme measure in times of emergency, and as a ...
Mises Institute Senior Fellow Per Bylund will lead a new workshop on "Exploring & Developing New Theoretical Approaches to ...
For decades, the expansion of the executive branch’s authority has empowered unelected agency “experts” and fueled the rise ...
Murray Rothbard recognized that the Bureau of Labor Statistics provides the lifeblood for government intervention. It doesn't ...
Milton Friedman and the Monetarists believed that fluctuations in the money supply caused the boom-and-bust business cycles.
Advocates for US military intervention have invoked the war against the Barbary pirates as justification. Yet, an examination ...
In this special edition of The Institutional Risk Analyst, we feature a discussion with Alex Pollock, Senior Fellow at the ...
For those who are actually concerned about the further concentration of political power, the president’s habit of sending ...