Tom Woods: Rothbard Changed my Mind about War
Tom Woods recounts how Murray Rothbard convinced him that Peace and Liberty cannot be severed.
Tom Woods recounts how Murray Rothbard convinced him that Peace and Liberty cannot be severed.
James Champlin, a 19th-century critic of protectionism, anticipated many of the free-trade insights of the Austrian school.
Murray N. Rothbard (1926–1995) was just one man with a typewriter, but he inspired a worldwide renewal in the scholarship of liberty.
The taxpayers will complain a little, but they'll be sure to re-elect most of the politicians who gave us this status quo.
Samuel Bostaph (University of Dallas) discusses his recent book, Andrew Carnegie: An Economic Biography.
On the latest episode of Mises Weekend, Jeff Deist and Matt McCaffrey discuss Murray N. Rothbard's enduring legacy.
Jeff Deist and Matt McCaffrey discuss Murray N. Rothbard's enduring legacy, plus the new Rothbard Reader.
March 2 would have been Murray Rothbard's ninetieth birthday. His immense knowledge, creativity, and devotion to liberty are unequaled.
In this excerpt from his brilliant Mises: The Last Knight of Liberalism, Guido Hülsmann illustrates how Carl Menger's experience as a financial journalist led to his developing the revolutionary foundations of the Austrian school of economics.