Mises Wire

Recap of Mises University

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Wow, what a week Mises University 2024 was! I have been a Mises University faculty member for over 30 years, and this—the 38th year of Mises U—may have been the best! Students came from 12 countries, 29 states, and 69 colleges and universities, including Yale and Princeton. The faculty, always outstanding, was truly inspiring and the students responded with great enthusiasm and endless questions.

A true highlight of the week was the presentation by Dr. Robert Malone, our special guest speaker. Dr. Malone discussed his forthcoming book, “PsyWar: Enforcing the New World Order” (written with his wife, Jill). It was an engaging and important talk, and the students were utterly captivated by it. You can also listen to this engaging talk here. As of this writing, it has 355,000 views!

Dr. Malone informed us of the government’s new term, “malinformation,” which is information that is true but makes the recipient of the information “distrustful of government.” What could be more American and more patriotic than that, you might say. The Department of Homeland Security, however, wants to use it to declare the purveyors of such information as possible “domestic terrorists.”

Dr. Malone was so inspired by Murray Rothbard’s “What Has Government Done to Our Money?” that he reviewed it (along with Murray’s “Anatomy of the State”) in his Substack column which has over 500,000 readers. After reading his intelligent review, I immediately invited him to speak at Mises U and he and his wife Jill graciously and excitedly accepted our invitation and thoroughly enjoyed their two days at the Mises Institute.

My own lecture, “Axis of Evil: America’s Three Worst Presidents,” has 70,000 views as of this writing, but the Big Moment of the conference was the appearance of our “mystery speaker,” Dr. Ron Paul, on Friday. The students were indeed surprised and ecstatic. Ron presented an hour-long lecture, took questions, and stood for pictures. Recalling the advice of Leonard Read, Ron said that “the most important thing you can do is educate yourself” and that the type of education offered by the Mises Institute “absolutely . . . is the answer.”

Mises University students have always been impressive and motivated, and they seem to be getting more and more so every year. In attendance were several successful entrepreneurs who had not yet turned 20! The student who won the first prize in the oral exam was Russian-born Guriy Borodkin (now a U.S. citizen) who is only 18 years old and he competed against much older Ph.D. students.

The week ended on Saturday afternoon with guests arriving to help us celebrate Lew Rockwell’s 80th birthday. We celebrated with a catered barbecue dinner and a beautiful birthday cake in honor of my friend and hero, the great Lew Rockwell. On display was a poster with birthday wishes from around the world, and I would like to share part of one of them by my friend, Hans-Hermann Hoppe. “I know you are too humble to say this, but I can certainly do it,” wrote Hans. “You are the world’s greatest living promoter of sound economics in the tradition of Ludwig von Mises and Murray N. Rothbard and, more generally, of liberty, peace, common sense, and reason.”

What a thrilling experience this year’s students had: eye-opening lectures, wisdom from our special guests, meeting new friends and establishing relationships to last a lifetime. The students take all of this with them as they go forward and it is thanks to the generosity of supporters like yourself. Thank you for all your support of Mises University and of the Mises Institute in general. I hope to see you soon at one of our upcoming events.

If you would like to help next year’s students have their “best week of the year,” please consider donating to Mises University 2025 today. You can donate here.

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