Libertarianism From the Ground Up
In Common Law Liberalism, legal scholar John Hasnas offers a new vision for a free society.
In Common Law Liberalism, legal scholar John Hasnas offers a new vision for a free society.
Under collectivism, "a man must be prepared to break every moral rule," F.A. Hayek observed in 1944.
Joseph Stiglitz thinks redistribution and regulation are the road to freedom—he’s wrong.
Economist Friedrich Hayek inspired an early foray into electronic cash.
Marcos Falcone discusses Argentine President Javier Milei's fiery speech at the World Economic Forum's annual conference in Davos on the latest episode of Just Asking Questions.
Sohrab Ahmari denounces Argentina's new president as a faux populist. Good for Milei.
The Chile Project surveys neoliberalism's most polarizing experiment.
No one could have considered this possibility, except perhaps the many food-processing facilities that immediately did exactly that.
New York politicians got out of the way for once, and something beautiful happened.
Law professor Andrew Koppelman and Soho Forum Director Gene Epstein debate whether libertarianism has been corrupted.
Law professor Andrew Koppelman and Soho Forum director Gene Epstein debate whether libertarianism has been corrupted.
No amount of experience can solve the "knowledge problem."
The authors of The Individualists talk Rand, Friedman, Hayek, Rothbard, and the "struggle for the soul" of the libertarian movement.
A new entrant in the anti-neoliberalism genre fails to land any blows.
Libertarians should recognize language as a quintessential example of spontaneous order.
My contribution to the Balkinization symposium on Andrew Koppelman's new book, Burning Down the House.
A new biography tells the story of the economist’s early life and career.
Libertarian History/Philosophy
The Burning Down the House author says the shift from Hayek's classical liberalism to Rothbard's anarcho-capitalism is a moral and practical disaster.
Libertarian History/Philosophy
Burning Down the House argues that the shift from Hayek's classical liberalism to Rothbard's anarcho-capitalism has led the movement astray.
The idea that the Fed has the knowledge necessary to control the economy with perfectly calibrated policies was always an illusion.
The intellectual watchdog keeps tabs on everyone from The 1619 Project's Nikole Hannah-Jones to Mises Institute's Hans-Hermann Hoppe in the name of serious scholarship.
Libertarian History/Philosophy
Intellectual watchdog Phil Magness talks Nikole Hannah-Jones, Nancy MacLean, Hans-Hermann Hoppe, and Kevin Kruse.
The co-founder of "the free encyclopedia that anyone can edit" talks about the power of decentralization and the rise in subscription models for journalism.
The authors of COVID-19: The Great Reset and their most conspiratorial critics share an unfounded faith in the competence of central planners.
Politics is filled with words that mean different things in different mouths, but "neoliberalism" is an especially tangled case.
We've turned the presidency into an omnipotent office, and we expect that our gifts and government checks will be delivered on time.
The peerless 90-year-old scholar is the subject of a new documentary and biography.
Circumstances change and the world may grow more complicated, but authoritarians never vary from their demand for more power over our lives.
The 1987 debate that foreshadowed the divide in today's cryptocurrency community
Watch part one of a four-part documentary series about the cypherpunk movement of the 1990s.
"The Definitive Capitalism vs. Socialism Rap Battle" is live!
Historian Jerry Z. Muller says we waste too much time fixating on measurements that lead us astray.
In a bold new book about Hayek, the George Mason economist says "too much time and effort has been put into repackaging and marketing a fixed doctrine of eternal truths."
A review of The Knowledge Illusion: Why We Never Think Alone
Nicolas Maduro's Venezuela is one place where Friedrich Hayek's most dire warnings remain relevant.
How five 20th century economists subtly remade the political landscape
The libertarian economist predicted Europe's current problems 17 years ago.
Rothbard's For a New Liberty is an eloquent statement on how libertarians should grapple with political reality.
It won't bring back the money but will drive America down the road to serfdom
It'll eliminate tax loopholes that offer relief from America's oppressive rates
A guaranteed income would reduce the humiliations of the current welfare system while promoting individual responsibility.
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