Rothbard and the American Revolution

Americans are taught that the Constitution completed the Revolution. The Articles of Confederation were weak, disorder reigned, Shays’s Rebellion terrified the countryside, and sober statesmen in Philadelphia heroically designed a “more perfect Union,” as the story goes. The Constitution thus appears as the Revolution’s crowning achievement.

But, as Rothbard showed, the Constitution was not the fulfillment of 1776, but rather its undoing.

In Honor of the 100th Anniversary of the Birthday of Dr. Murray Rothbard

Few figures in modern intellectual history carried an idea to its logical conclusion as relentlessly as Murray Rothbard. Building upon the formidable theoretical structure developed by Ludwig von Mises, Rothbard accomplished a remarkable synthesis in economic and political thought. Where Mises constructed a rigorous scientific explanation of how economies function, Rothbard extended that framework into a comprehensive philosophy of social order.