A Tale of Two Bureaucracies
Bureaucracy and Grove City College: How One College Resisted the Bureaucratization of Higher Education
Looking Back at the Crossroads: Liberty or Socialism
Hazlitt Against Keynes on Unemployment and Wages: A Lesson for Modern Macroeconomics
Federal Judges Co-Opted America’s State Constitutions
Millennials: In Costco We Trust
When the latest CPI number came in hot at 0.4% for March and the annual core CPI inflation rate held at 3.8%, Betsey Stevenson, professor of economics at the University of Michigan appearing on CNBC’s Squawk Box said nonchalantly “Three percent inflation is no big deal.” The comment got a rise out of co-host Becky Quick who reminded the professor that the three percent was adding on to the already higher prices consumers continue to suffer with.
Navigating the Slippery Slope: How Hoover’s Interventions Paved the Way for the Great Depression
FISA Exchanges Real Liberty for Phantom Security
House Speaker Mike Johnson betrayed liberty and the Constitution by making a full-court press to get a “clean” reauthorization of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance (FISA) Act through the House.
How States Think: The Rationality of Foreign Policy
There is little doubt that John Mearsheimer is one of the most prominent, and controversial, thinkers in the field of international relations alive today. His most important work, The Tragedy of Great Power Politics (2014, New York: Norton), continues to be the de facto handbook to the theory of offensive realism and this theoretical lens has played a very prominent role in the debate over the underlying causes of the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine.