Selling War: The British Propaganda Campaign Against American “Neutrality” in World War II by Nicholas Cull
Great Britain learned an important lesson from World War I.
Great Britain learned an important lesson from World War I.
This is much more than a book: it is a confrontation. It consists of a lecture on constitutional interpretation delivered at Princeton University by Justice Scalia of the Supreme Court.
In this outstanding book, Jeremy Shearmur approaches the thought of Friedrich Hayek from an original angle.
Israel Kirzner has achieved greatest renown as an Austrian economist for his work on entrepreneurship.
Unless you agree with Emerson that a foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds, you will find little in this ill- thought-out book to like.
Jeff Madrick, an economic journalist of statist bent, shows us the mind of a true leftist at work.
For once a publisher's blurb does not exaggerate. The Economics of Time and Ignorance has indeed been "one of the seminal works in modern Austrian economics" and the book's welcome reissue, with a new introduction, offers an opportunity for its examination here.
To most conservatives, constitutional interpretation is straightforward.
The conduct of contemporary American foreign policy flies in the face of the Constitution and much of our history.
Elizabeth Fox-Genovese has had an idea brilliant in its simplicity and common sense. Feminism arouses furious passions, as supporters and opponents incessantly battle one another.