The Useless Penny
David Owen writing for the New Yorker (Penny Dreadful: They’re horrid and useless. Why do pennies persist?) provides a number of anecdotes illustrating the perversity of our monetary system:
David Owen writing for the New Yorker (Penny Dreadful: They’re horrid and useless. Why do pennies persist?) provides a number of anecdotes illustrating the perversity of our monetary system:
It’s nice to see A.J. Nock mentioned in the NYT. And, say, isn’t that song “Won’t you come home Bill Buckley” actually written by Murray Rothbard?
Consumers shell-shocked by ever higher records for oil and gasoline prices may have been surprised by the mild Producer Price Index (PPI) update recently issued.
The Labor Department reported that from March to April, wholesale prices rose only 0.2 percent, half of what the markets had been expecting. The primary cause for this tame reading was that energy prices fell 0.2 percent, and in particular gasoline prices fell by 4.6 percent.
What, you think I misunderstood the news?
Two weeks ago marked the 60th anniversary of a prescient essay (pdf) promoting gold as redeemable money. It was written by Howard Buffett, father of the famed investor, Warren. Several years ago Joseph Stromberg wrote an interesting biography about Howard, a four-term congressman of the Old Right. While many libertarians laud him for his defense of free-markets and personal liberties, his foreign policy views also make for a laudatory remembrance.
[This essay is chapter 15 of the book Egalitarianism As a Revolt Against Nature.]
One would not think someone legal historian M.J.C. Vile called “in some ways the most impressive political theorist that America has produced” would remain virtually unknown here. But that is true of John Taylor of Caroline.
John Taylor served in the Continental Army, the Virginia Legislature and the U.S. Senate. But he is best characterized for causes that, from today’s perspective, he was on the losing side of.
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