Do Rich People Pay Their “Fair Share”?
The core assumption at work here is that more good things could be done if only more people were paying more in taxes.
The core assumption at work here is that more good things could be done if only more people were paying more in taxes.
Private owners are perfectly capable of deciding how their bathrooms can best be used. It's not a religious matter.
On Mises Weekends this week, Daniel McAdams joins Jeff in studio to talk foreign policy.
From April 6, 1959: As inflation increases, apologists emerge to suggest that, after all, inflation may be a very good thing—or, if an evil, at least a necessary evil.
Marijuana was legalized, the owners were permitted, and they asked the government to conduct a business inspection. Instead, the police busted them and stole all their stuff!
Thanks to the Rothbard Reading Group at Southeast Missouri State University for hosting Joseph Salerno last Tuesday, April 19.
George Monbiot's attack on neoliberalism fails to account for the conflict between the Austrian school and the neoliberals.
In spite of Ben Bernanke's assurances to the contrary, it is clear that China still sees gold as money.
In Ron Paul’s America, or Hans Hoppe’s private law society, voluntary “socialist” arrangements would be perfectly allowable and legal. But libertarian communities are never permitted in statist societies.
This is the fruit of free labor. It is able to create more wealth for everyone than slave labor once provided for the masters.