Ellie McFarland is a commentator and general hot-take provider.

Gun Control: Americans Have Been Lucky during the COVID-19 Panic, but It’s Still a Toss-Up

Listen to the Audio Mises Wire version of this article.

If history has taught us anything, it’s that a crisis is the lifeblood of state growth. The coronavirus saga offers a treasure trove of power grabs that elected officials are seeking to ram through while Americans must make significant readjustments in their daily lives due to state-imposed shutdowns around the nation.

Milton Kiang is a former Hong Kong and Canadian lawyer living in Vancouver, Canada.

The Fed’s New Asset-Buying Programs: Nationalization of Financial Markets?

That central banks are distorting markets is no longer a surprise to anyone. But the current pandemic succeeded in what the financial crisis of 2008 failed to achieve, namely to put the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet under political control. The Federal Reserve aims to intervene in financial markets to limit losses caused by the coronavirus pandemic, but the collateral risks of such a decision outweigh the benefits pursued.

Americans Have No Savings. Thank (in Part) the Fed.

Two weeks ago, during a March 17 address to the nation in response to the COVID-19 outbreak, President Donald Trump asked that Americans work from home, postpone unnecessary travel, and limit social gatherings to no more than 10 people.

And last week, on March 27, Trump signed a stimulus package of over $2 trillion dollars to provide relief to an economy on the precipice of collapse.

The aid package includes handouts and loans to individuals, small businesses, and other distressed industries.