The Origins of Libertarian IP Abolitionism

David Gordon has a great article up today on LewRockwell.com, Sam Konkin and Libertarian Theory, which devotes a good deal of space to discussing Konkin’s role in the anti-IP movement. David is absolutely correct here:

Konkin’s work on IP deserves at least equal recognition as his better-known defense of counter-economics and agorism; and, to the extent that anti-IP views come to prevail among libertarians, I predict that Sam Konkin will be a name we shall often hear.

Life Coach Says Blow That Refund Check

As society is built on savings and accumulated capital, personal finance dictates that individuals live within their means and save for rainy days. However, author, inspirational speaker, and life coach John P. Strelecky counsels us to live each day like we are dying.

Strelecky says we don’t know what the future brings, so spend more time doing what you want. “Invest in you and the life you really want to live. Live your bucket list now,” he says.

What’s a Job Good For?

Most people say that a job is good for making money. So, if you don’t need money, what’s the point? The fabled English aristocratic class of the late 19th and early 20th century apparently thought that way, if the caricatures painted by Jeeves and Wooster, Brideshead, and the like have any truth to them. Their main job was getting dressed and undressed. It seems like young Americans are thinking the same way.

So What Are You Doing This Summer?

Summer is fast approaching, and that means it’s going to be time for some of my favorite summer traditions: week-long seminars on economics, political theory, and philosophy aimed at the study of liberty. I have attended and taught at seminars sponsored by the Mises Institute, the Foundation for Economic Education, and the Institute for Humane Studies. This summer, I’m teaching at an IHS “Liberty and Society” seminar at Bryn Mawr College near Philadelphia. A friend from IHS asked me to mention that the application deadline for IHS summer seminars is tomorrow. Here’s a quick rundown.