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Media Asset
Author:
Mark Thornton
Online Publish Date:
Interviewed by host Ben Stone, Mark Thornton talks about Bitcoins, fiat greenbacks, the Federal Reserve, and the Iron Law of Prohibition.
Media Asset
Author:
Mark Thornton
Online Publish Date:
Interviewed by host Scott Horton, Mark Thornton talks about the increasingly popular and mainstream Austrian school of economics, how sound economic theory leads to a thorough understanding of foreign and monetary policy, and
Media Asset
Author:
Mark Thornton
Online Publish Date:
Broadcast on RT’s Prime Interest program, Mark Thornton talks to producer Bob English about Edward Snowden, the financial markets, and the Fed.
Media Asset
Author:
Mark Thornton
Online Publish Date:
Interviewed by Ken McClenton on “The Exceptional Conservative Show” on 27 May 2013, Mark Thornton talks about the historical reaction of Wall Street to government intervention, and discusses whether or not we need the Federal
Media Asset
Author:
Mark Thornton
Online Publish Date:
Interviewed by Scott Horton, Mark Thornton discusses why we need to lower the debt ceiling; the dangers of a depreciating dollar; why the NSA’s spy data is more useful for blackmail than fighting terrorism; and the Fed’s money-creation shell
Media Asset
Author:
Patrick Newman
Online Publish Date:
From the session on “Studies in Economic History,” presented at the Austrian Economics Research Conference. Recorded 22 March 2013 at the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama.
Media Asset
Author:
Peter G. Klein
Online Publish Date:
Peter G. Klein presents a Misesian commentary on Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke’s recent decision against tapering the Fed’s ongoing quantitative easing scheme. Klein is the Mises Institute’s Executive Director and Carl Menger Research
Mises Daily
Author:
Ryan McMaken
Online Publish Date:
In April 2011, two years shy of its 100th birthday, the Fed held its first press conference in history in response to mounting criticism of its lack of transparency. In other words, the Fed felt that it had to walk out into the sunshine and defend itself. And, as no doubt part of the same public relations effort, recent Fed publications reveal a