The Week in Review: October 8, 2016
Rather than focus too much on lamenting politics and the state, we should be heartened by how far we've come — and go forward confidently.
Rather than focus too much on lamenting politics and the state, we should be heartened by how far we've come — and go forward confidently.
Alarmed by successful entrepreneurship and low prices for consumers, government seeks, yet again, to shut down small businesses.
The claims about a "moneyless" utopian village in India turn out to be false. No one with an understanding of economics should be surprised.
Democracy virtually assures that only bad and dangerous men will ever rise to the top of government.
The national debt and cutting government spending simply are not topics the voters care about anymore.
Economists Stephen Cohen and Bradford DeLong are spouting an unfortunate amount of enthusiasm for Alexander Hamilton's corporatist economics.
An adoption of digital currencies by central banks could bring the next generation of central bankers more power than their predecessors imagined.
This is the main fallacy of term limits: it presumes the problem is the people in government, and not the government itself.
Frightened by an unstable economy and low returns, savers are saving even more and frustrating the plans of central bankers.
The federal government is using the threat of foreign hackers as an excuse to further nationalize elections in the United States.