The European Union Is Anti-European
The modern drive to centralize European government and make a European superstate threatens to destroy what made Europe great in the first place.
The modern drive to centralize European government and make a European superstate threatens to destroy what made Europe great in the first place.
The Murray N. Rothbard Memorial Lecture sponsored by Helio Beltrão.
Guido Hülsmann and Jeff Deist discuss the ongoing migrant crisis in Europe.
As with East Germany, a liberalized Cuba would still require decades to catch up to its affluent neighbors, economically. North Korea is an even more extreme case. All these cases illustrate that political changes cannot substitute for the hard work of building wealth.
Paul Gottfried discusses his recent book, Fascism: The Career of a Concept.
Years after his death, more students and scholars than ever are reading and building on the work of Murray Rothbard. Meanwhile, the Conservative movement that so often attacked him is quickly vanishing.
Subsidies, government quotas, and regulations of workers won't make us richer or better off. Only private owners and entrepreneurs can determine the best way to use labor (and capital).
Terrorism gripped the headlines again as terrorists struck Brussels, but this latest colossal security failure for Europe and the West is not likely to lead to an evaluation of the value of state security.
Pointing out the follies of Western foreign policy is not to apologize for Islamic radicals. It is simply to point toward a way that the West could make a positive impact in favor of ordinary Westerners right now, with the added benefit of being morally correct as well.