U.S. History

Displaying 2951 - 2960 of 3505
Llewellyn H. Rockwell Jr.

So long as we are talking about founding documents, the one that really deserves more attention is the Declaration of Independence. Now here is an inspiring document that shows us where we should go in the future!

N. Joseph Potts

A new book by NYU Professor William Silber has just come out offering an explanation for

Doug Bandow

Lebanese Muslims saw aggression, not liberty, and fought back with the only effective weapons that they had at the time. The point is not that Americans deserved to be attacked, but that they would not have been attacked but for being placed in the middle of a distant sectarian conflict. No wonder US policymakers prefer not to talk about the causes of terrorism.

David Gordon

For Rothbard, the Articles of Confederation were not, contrary to most historians, an overly weak arrangement that needed to be replaced by the more centrally focused Constitution. Quite the contrary, the Articles themselves allowed too much central control.

Stephen Carson

Joe Kissell at Interesting Thing of the Day does a little investigation to try to piece together

Mises.org

Maybe the authors of the Federalist Papers were liars.

Gary Galles

James Wilson (9/4/1742–8/28/1798) was one of the most important of America’s founding fathers, but is now one of the least known.

Ron Paul

<a href="http://store.mises.org/Foreign-Policy-of-Freedom-A-P359C0.aspx"><img src="http://store.mises.org/images/ForeignPolicy_T.jpg" border=0 align="right"></a>From Ron Paul's historic new book: Noninterventionism is not isolationism. Nonintervention simply means America does not interfere militarily, financially, or covertly in the internal affairs of other nations. It does not mean that we isolate ourselves; on the contrary, our founders advocated open trade, travel, communication, and diplomacy with other nations. Thomas Jefferson summed up the noninterventionist foreign policy position perfectly in his 1801 inaugural address: "Peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations — entangling alliances with none." Washington similarly urged that we must, "Act for ourselves and not for others," by forming an "American character wholly free of foreign attachments."