How Government Debt Reshapes the Economy

Government debt is no longer a distant policy problem—it is a present economic reality shaping everything from inflation to interest rates. The United States continues to run massive deficits year after year, with total debt climbing into levels that would have once been considered unthinkable. Yet, despite the scale of the problem, political incentives remain unchanged: spend more, borrow more, and push the consequences into the future.

Gold, Rules, and the Limits of Monetary Control: The Fallacy of Monetary Control

In 1971, when the last formal link between the dollar and gold was severed, more than a monetary system collapsed. Something more subtle, and more consequential, was quietly abandoned: the very idea of a limit—not a technical constraint subject to adjustment—but an ontological boundary separating what can be deliberately produced from what can only emerge through human action over time. Once that boundary disappeared, money ceased to resist and became, for the first time, fully administrable.

Government Regulations Create Monopolies and Stifle Competition

From our freedom to use or transform our private property emerges the freedom to trade it with anyone we choose. This freedom to trade inadvertently transforms mankind into a global supercomputer where private sector companies are always engaged in the process of economic competition which motivates companies to innovate and copy the innovations of competitors.