U.S. Economy
Capitalism and the Burger Wars
The glories of private enterprise are most evident in the marvels we take for granted. For example, free enterprise created the marvelous, if much derided, institution of fast food. If there were a bureau of hamburger production, they'd be as scarce as budget cuts. As it is, citizens of every social and economic standing have daily access—in minutes—to a balanced meal denied to kings only two centuries ago.
Making Economic Sense, by Murray Rothbard
Murray Rothbard had a remarkable ability to ask fundamental questions that others, even those within his own free-market camp, missed. After Rothbard touched an issue, it could never remain the same.
Decline Is Real, The
Middle-class incomes, the core of what we call the "standard of living," have been falling for more than two decades. Though people have known this intuitively, only recently have we heard much about it. Economists and the media have been conditioned to look for the ups and downs in the business cycle, meanwhile missing the single most ominous trend in American economic life.
To Renew America, by Newt Gingrich
To Renew America conveys a vivid sense of its author's unusual personality. But the vital core of the book lies elsewhere.
Forgotten Lessons: Selected Essays of John T. Flynn
Creating A New Civilization: The Politics Of The Third Wave, by Alvin Toffler and Heidi Toffler
Newt Gingrich claims that "Alvin and Heidi Toffler have given us the key to viewing current disarray within the positive framwork of a dynamic, exciting future" .
Alien Nation: Common Sense About America’s Immigration Disaster, by Peter Brimelow
The customary approach to immigration by libertarians has been a simple one.
Making Economic Sense
Is It The Economy, Stupid?
One of the persistent Clintonian themes of the 1994 campaign still endures: if "it's the economy, stupid," then why hasn't President Clinton received the credit among the public for our glorious economic recovery? Hence the Clintonian conclusion that the resounding Democratic defeat was due to their failure to "get the message out" to the public, the message being the good news of our current economic prosperity.