Public Servants: Who is Serving Whom?
Public servants on average are paid better than their private sector taxpaying counterparts. How exactly are they our "servants"?
Public servants on average are paid better than their private sector taxpaying counterparts. How exactly are they our "servants"?
It's a thrill to see all that Mises University has accomplished over the years.
From 1971, Henry Hazlitt shows how government solutions to poverty, from welfare to minimum wage laws, will never work.
Trump's idea of renegotiating the national debt isn't nearly as crazy as the New York Times thinks it is.
Unfortunately, The Donald then went on to make a strong endorsement of the monetary status quo.
The Trump phenomenon, Brexit, and the ongoing wars against sound money illustrate the growing divide between the voters and the elites.
A challenge to the monetary policy status quo is a much bigger threat to Wall Street than anything Sanders has proposed.
Citing grave concerns that "this banknote could facilitate illicit activities," those desperate inflationists intrepid crime fighters at the ECB will cease production of the 500-euro note.
More central banks are moving key interest rates to where they've never been seen before.
If Comedy Central thinks women's soccer players should be paid more, they need to convince people that its more fun to watch women's soccer.