Ryan McMaken on the Fallout of the Government’s Covid-19 Response
Pete Quinones and Ryan McMaken discuss the government’s and public's responses to the coronavirus.
Pete Quinones and Ryan McMaken discuss the government’s and public's responses to the coronavirus.
The lasting and far-reaching harms caused by this authoritarian precedent far outweigh those caused by the COVID-19 virus. The American people must decide for themselves how and when to reopen society and return to their daily lives.
So far, when it comes to disarming the population, governments haven't been quite as terrible as one might have predicted during the COVID-19 panic.
The nonaggression principle—"anything peaceful"—comes as close to a value-free analysis in a political, ethical, economic, and legal theory as conceivably possible. It was insufficient for Rothbard, because he rightly found it insufficient for liberty.
The quality of the models being used by politicians to set COVID-19 policy is only as good as the data collected. Unfortunately, the data is not very good. Meanwhile, real costs arise from the ruined economy.
“Whenever a single definite object is made the supreme end of the State…the State becomes for the time inevitably absolute.” We cannot allow combating a virus to overwhelm all other values in society.
Pete Quinones and Jeff Deist discuss the government’s response to the coronavirus.
Campaign finance laws favor incumbents and the rich and famous. Real change requires more freedom and decentralization in how campaigns are funded.
Bob Murphy and Oren Cass have a friendly discussion about their disagreements on economic policy.