The Executive’s Legal Limits on Tariffs and Foreign Policy
John Eastman makes sweeping claims in his recent article on President Trump’s emergency tariffs. The Supreme Court’s conservatives split on the issue—specifically over whether Congress’s delegation of authority in the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) was legitimate.
Massachusetts 1690: The First Western Fiat Experiment
This first experiment with government-issued bills of credit presents a natural historical test case for Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), particularly its claims about chartalism and the state’s role in originating money. This took place in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1690.
What Is the State of the Union?
DONORBOX TEST
Creative Destroyer: The Apolitical Story of the Surgery Center of Oklahoma
‘Nature-Al’ Entrepreneurship: Being Green Without the State
The Bill of Rights Against the States
The Bill of Rights Against the States
Most Americans have no idea their state has a constitution. They cannot name a single right it protects. Ask where their rights come from, and they will either plead the fifth or point to the federal Bill of Rights. What they do not know is that colonies first, then states, had declarations of rights before the federal government existed, often more expansive than anything the federal document would guarantee.