One Year After
This scathing address delivered by Dr. Jordan at the Thirtieth Annual Meeting of the National Industrial Conference Board, 16 May 1946, one year after the end of World War II.
This scathing address delivered by Dr. Jordan at the Thirtieth Annual Meeting of the National Industrial Conference Board, 16 May 1946, one year after the end of World War II.
Perhaps we would have a rational foreign policy — if Americans could be brought to realize that the first necessity is the renunciation of the lie as an instrument of foreign policy.
Murray Rothbard on the immediate postwar period:
For a while the postwar ideological climate seemed to
Four years after the conflagration of 2003, we in southern California once again are enjoying the sight of pink skies not caused by the sun, the ar
Thomas Woods's forbidden questions cover a variety of topics, but a common thread in his answers unifies the book: Throughout American history, the federal government has been the principal enemy of liberty.
There’s no doubt that prosperity has smiled brighter and brighter on the last four generations.
You may say it another way: that the intentions of mass production cannot be realized unless management and labor are both free. So long as that freedom existed in the motorcar industry, the cost of an automobile went lower and lower until it became, pound for pound, the cheapest manufactured thing in the world, not the Ford car only but all cars; and automobile labor at the same time was the highest-paid labor of its kind in the world.
No person or group of people is without value — not even those whom our own government chooses to label the enemy.
James Fenimore Cooper, America’s first great national novelist, widely influenced our literature and Americans’ sense of history in the
Reader “Albert Nock” was kind enough to send me notice of some new research on v