French libertarian, François-René Rideau (who apparently runs Bastiat.org ) offers advice on his blog for communicating monetary economics to cute young actresses: In a bus to NYC early in January 2005, I meet this gorgeous girl who is reading a course in Economics. The textbook is open on a praise of the Fed and its role in regulating the
Dear President Harter, I should like to include myself among those who have come to the defense of Professor Hans-Hermann Hoppe. If the freedom to teach is not as important as the freedom to learn, then there is little hope for the university as a place of dialogue and debate, where serious issues may be considered and scholarship pursued. These
I recently stumbled on an old article in The Village Voice called ‘The Goldbug Variations’ by Julian Dibbell . Written in early 2002, it is a review of sorts, both of the book Cra$hmaker and of the sound-money movement in general. Dibbell describes Cra$hmaker as ‘a book for sound-money cranks.’ He continues: An ultra-wonky libertarian
6. Price Gouging Price gouging -- charging higher prices under emergency conditions -- evokes strong emotional responses that are understandable but terribly wrong-headed. In the words of economist Walter Williams, “passionate issues require dispassionate analysis.” The passion generated by price increases for necessities in an emergency is just
Batman is no stranger to Mises.org. ( 1 , 2 , 3 ) How does the Caped Crusader feel about peace, freedom, and prosperity? Ambivalent, at best. Some of us thought Batman Begins was not only the best big-screen appearance for the Dark Knight, but also a sign that the scales were tipping in favor of free markets (and maybe even Austrian insights), but
Ludwig von Mises was born on September 29th, 1881. One hundred years later, The Libertarian Review put out a Mises Centennial Celebration issue, which included tributes from those who had known him personally. (Ralph Raico presented a version of his centennial tribute at the opening of the recent Mises University : audio , video .) Bettina Bien
This 10-minute video made in 1947 is designed to convince us all that the survival of the federal government (in the form of Congress) is critical to our well being. With its supposed nightmare of state currencies and militias, and a country without a post office, it is hilarious and, well,
“Chronic unemployment is obviously a political disease that springs from the primitive notion that government can improve everyone’s income and working conditions by legislation and regulation.” Hans Sennholz tells the truth: Politics Causes Unemployment -- and the minimum wage laws are only part of the picture. “Whenever government forcibly
Before this past summer, I’d listened to every Mises University available in MP3. Even the lectures the same professors repeat over the years -- Gordon ‘s ‘Theory and History,’ Salerno ‘s ‘Profit, Loss, and Entrepreneurship’ and ‘The Marginalist Revolution,’ Hoppe on Praxeology -- I enjoy the review and I enjoy seeing what they do regularly and
While looking up the names of some of Mises’s relatives, I came upon this piece of personal history at JewishGen® ShtetLinks: Adele Mises Remembers . . . A Day in the House of My Parents (Mrs. Adele Mises dictated her reminiscences to a relative around 1929. Born in 1858, she was a granddaughter of Moses Kallir, grandniece of Mayer Kallir,
What is the Mises Institute?
The Mises Institute is a non-profit organization that exists to promote teaching and research in the Austrian School of economics, individual freedom, honest history, and international peace, in the tradition of Ludwig von Mises and Murray N. Rothbard.
Non-political, non-partisan, and non-PC, we advocate a radical shift in the intellectual climate, away from statism and toward a private property order. We believe that our foundational ideas are of permanent value, and oppose all efforts at compromise, sellout, and amalgamation of these ideas with fashionable political, cultural, and social doctrines inimical to their spirit.