The Aristotelian-Thomistic Roots of Austrian School

Aristotelian-Thomistic realist philosophy may be the strongest foundation for disciplines such as praxeology. As David Gordon notes in his book The Philosophical Origins of Austrian Economics, the Austrian School and realist philosophy seem made for each other. The Austrian School defends methodological individualism, a view of individual human action that Aristotle had already articulated in the Nicomachean Ethics.

Time Stolen by the State: Why Infrastructure Fails under Chronic Interventionism

In emerging democracies, infrastructure is rarely treated as a means. It becomes a promise, a symbol, sometimes a substitute for progress itself. Metro systems, highways, ports, and monumental public works are announced as proof that the state is moving history forward. Yet years pass, costs multiply, and delivery remains modest. What is lost in the process is not only money, but time, the most irreplaceable of all resources.

There Are No Good Outcomes in Trump’s Latest Attempt at Regime Change in Venezuela

Early Saturday morning, after months of military buildup, strikes on boats, and verbal threats, US forces entered Venezuela on President Trump’s orders and captured President Nicolás Maduro.

A few dozen Venezuelan soldiers and civilians were reportedly killed in the bombings carried out to cover the American soldiers who flew in to grab the Venezuelan leader.

Marisa1

Marisa Jarquin serves as the Executive Director of Guate Libre and Se Libre, based in Guatemala.