It Hurts to Pay for Strained China-USA Relations
American politicians are beating war drums. They forget that bad relations are costly in many ways.
American politicians are beating war drums. They forget that bad relations are costly in many ways.
With negative growth now dipping below negative 6 percent, money-supply contraction is approaching the biggest declines we've seen in decades.
As markets settle down after the last set of bank failures, political elites claim the crisis is behind us. But it is not over, not by a long shot.
Contrary to Krugman, DeSantis and others warning about a CBDC aren’t being paranoid: they are simply drawing the obvious conclusions from history.
The passage of an income tax in the early twentieth century was an enormous shift toward a far more centralized and powerful US state.
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes famously claimed that taxes were the price people paid for civilized society. The problem is that taxes themselves are antisocial.
There is a concerted effort in the legacy press to paint a picture of Jack Teixeira as an antigovernment Trump-loving right-winger who is undeserving of whistleblower protections.
Not only does the Great Reset promise us better weather and happiness (while owning nothing), it also promises to transform humanity itself. Some of us are not so sure.
If the dollar does lose its position as the global reserve currency, it will be catastrophic for the American economy.
Although equality and "equity" are modern buzzwords, the only way to reach such a social nirvana is through violent means. Do we really want to go there?