Free Markets

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Rob Blackstock

Why they do and should rise on Valentine's Day.

Murray N. Rothbard

The same old protectionist fallacies, back again.

Llewellyn H. Rockwell Jr.

The policy agenda of the Clinton administration is usually described as halting, pragmatic, and poll driven. But in its approach to the issue of medical insurance and the drive to socialize medical care, it has been systematic, principled, and highly strategic. The Clinton government is using the failures and internal contradictions of the welfare state to pursue a program of universal entitlements.

Morgan N. Knull

To hear educators and activists talk, one might actually believe that apathy threatens to become the defining existential feature of American youth.

Christopher Mayer

How two different economies dealt with the inevitable.

Llewellyn H. Rockwell Jr.

Politics takes no account of individuals. You and I are merely a tiny speck on the vast blob called "the American people," and what this blob "thinks" is only relevant insofar as it accords with a political agenda advantageous to the State and its friends.

William L. Anderson

In what can only be termed as truly bizarre, an Alabama local of the steelworkers union demanded that Alabama Governor Fob James close the international port at Mobile to all steel imports. Besides the fact that it would be clearly a violation of the U.S. Constitution for the governor to grant the union's demands, it would illegally abrogate existing contracts between suppliers and purchasers. It would also be bad economics.

Thomas J. DiLorenzo

The coalition of government bureaucrats, politicians, trial lawyers, and "political activists" who have orchestrated the demonization of "Big Tobacco" are about to wage a similar smear campaign against what the pressure group Common Cause has labeled "Big Booze." The beer, wine, and liquor industries will be demonized; dramatically higher taxes will be called for; and unconstitutional bans and restrictions on commercial advertising will be vigorously lobbied for. This was the political modus operandi of the anti-smoking movement, and it will now be carried over to other industries.

What is the right policy for dealing with an economic downturn?