The Immorality of Trump’s War with Iran Matters
Barbarians at the Redemption Gate
When interest rates are pushed artificially low in the midst of constantly-increasing costs of living, the avenues by which average Americans save and grow their wealth are limited. Frugality—demonstrated by spending less than you earn and socking away a portion of your income in bank CDs—becomes an exercise in frustration as widespread price inflation eats away any nominal increase in wealth.
In the ensuing search for higher yield, average Americans are pushed to take more risk in order to earn returns that have a chance of outpacing relentless price inflation.
The Military Draft Is Slavery
[This short article from the 1960s can be found as “Abolish Slavery! — Part III” in Never a Dull Moment: a Libertarian Look at the Sixties, edited by Justin Raimondo.]
Cheap Calories, Expensive Consequences: How Federal Policy Contributes to Chronic Disease
Cheap Calories, Expensive Consequences: How Federal Policy Contributes to Chronic Disease
The United States’ national debt now totals roughly $38.7 trillion, exceeding $355,000 per taxpayer. Such figures invite scrutiny of the government programs driving chronic budget deficits. According to the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, “one of the largest drivers of that rising debt is federal spending on major healthcare programs, such as Medicare and Medicaid.
The Mistaken Identity of Prediction Markets
Individualism in Rothbard’s Natural Rights Libertarianism
The Iran War Brings More Inflation and New Strength to the Yuan
How the Iranian war may lead to the end of the petrodollar
“The conflict could be remembered as a key catalyst for erosion in petrodollar dominance and the beginnings of the petroyuan.”