When Kennedy Bucked the U.S. National-Security State on Cuba

Among the 10 points in Iran’s peace proposal that President Trump has now agreed to use as a basis for peace negotiations between the United States and Iran is a plank that prohibits any more attacks on Iran. That point reminds me of what John Kennedy agreed to in his peace agreement with the Soviet Union to resolve the Cuban Missile Crisis, an agreement that ultimately led to his assassination at the hands of the U.S. national-security establishment.

Peter Jacobsen

Peter Jacobsen is an Associate Teaching Professor of Economics and the Otto Fellow at the University of Kansas.

Why I Side with Ludwig von Mises

People readily line up on one side or another of great economic debates. How do they choose which side to take?

This is clearly a question worth asking. I have asked it of myself, and it has led me to being an Austrian and especially a Misesian.

To try to answer the question of why people decide about economics, let’s begin at the beginning, by asking how people decide anything. As a general rule, they rely on emotion, factual observation, logic, or intuition.