Current Market Conditions: 8 Oct. 2008
Jeffrey Tucker interviews Kevin Duffy. Recorded 8 October 2008.
Jeffrey Tucker interviews Kevin Duffy. Recorded 8 October 2008.
Leading Austrian Economists discuss Henry Hazlitt's classic book Economics in One Lesson. Interview 11 of 12.
Leading Austrian Economists discuss Henry Hazlitt's classic book Economics in One Lesson. Interview 8 of 12.
Leading Austrian Economists discuss Henry Hazlitt's classic book Economics in One Lesson. Interview 7 of 12.
Leading Austrian Economists discuss Henry Hazlitt's classic book Economics in One Lesson. Interview 9 of 12.
Jeffrey Tucker interviews Robert Higgs. Recorded 6 October 2008.
Leading Austrian Economists discuss Henry Hazlitt's classic book Economics in One Lesson. Interview 5 of 12
Leading Austrian Economists discuss Henry Hazlitt's classic book Economics in One Lesson. Interview 4 of 12
Leading Austrian Economists discuss Henry Hazlitt's classic book Economics in One Lesson. Interview 3 of 12.
Jeffrey Tucker interviews Frank Shostak. Recorded 30 September 2008.
Leading Austrian Economists discuss Henry Hazlitt's classic book Economics in One Lesson. Interview 2 of 12.
The Fed is essentially a giant counterfeiting machine. That would be criminal for you, but is legal for JPMorgan's men under the Federal Reserve Act written by the big bankers.
Here are inconvenient truths that counter the fallacies of Al Gore's documentary film - An Inconvenient Truth. Man is not causing catastrophic global warming. Carbon Dioxide is the stuff of life, not a pollutant.
Markets find value the best. Government intervention destroys the price signals that markets require. Government cannot create money out of thin air. Time Will Run Back is a novel that begins in a socialist world where no one knows what the economy is doing because there are no prices. Socialism is unraveled.
Honest money and private property rights are the foundation for a peaceful society. The price system is what makes this work because it reflects the real availability of each scarce product and service, especially during emergency times.
The Constitution spelled out that the federal government is limited to certain powers. Is it allowed? should be the first question about any proposed legislation. Today there are no recognized limits. The Supreme Court declared in the late 1930s that everything the federal government does will be assumed to be constitutional.
As a decentralized communication system facilitating the sending and receiving of messages by billions of people, the Internet has greatly shifted
From “Choice in Currency: A Path to Sound Money”; the Mises Circle in Vancouver. Recorded 13 September 2008.
From “Choice in Currency: A Path to Sound Money”; the Mises Circle in Vancouver. Recorded 13 September 2008.
From “Choice in Currency: A Path to Sound Money”; the Mises Circle in Vancouver. Recorded 13 September 2008.