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MisesEurasia Review |
By Gregory Bresiger President Trump is waging or threatening to wage several presidential wars, ostensibly violating the Constitution, which specifies
By Frank Shostak The yearly growth rate of the consumer price index (CPI) closed at 2.4 percent in February against
By Carlos Boix War is the ultimate government intervention. It is the excuse for all kinds of evils to be
By Ryan McMaken It’s difficult to find much of anything we might call “good” coming out of the current US-Israel
By Ryan McMaken The US Supreme Court now has before it the case of Trump vs. Barbara. The Trump administration is
By Andy Fischer Karl Marx believed machines would eventually turn workers into something disposable. In The Communist Manifesto, Marx and Engels
By Frank Shostak Some commentators are of the view that one cannot trust the market economy, which is seen as inherently unstable.
By Carlos Boix People in high office and their friends are at the receiving end of anger and frustration due
By Vincent Cook Americans should know the “color revolution” drill by heart now. We are told that Ruritania is run
By Artis Shepherd When interest rates are pushed artificially low in the midst of constantly-increasing costs of living, the avenues
By Ali Hashemifara You have probably heard of the widely believed myth that Napoleon was very short. Evidence proved after his death,
By Joshua Mawhorter In 1994, Sam Francis originally coined a term: “anarcho-tyranny.” He described this phenomenon as “the combination of...
By Don Stacy II Commonly discussed in radical political circles is the Overton window (also called the window of discourse), which is
By Thiago V. S. Coelho “Freedom to roam” is marketed as a wholesome civic ideal: fresh air, exercise, social inclusion,
By Ian Foster Goats are everywhere in Malawi. With a population exceeding 10 million as of 2024 and growing, they will surely
By Frank Shostak According to much popular economic thinking, there are three factors determining the market interest rates. The first is liquidity,
By Thiago V. S. Coelho Argumentation theorists in the pragma-dialectical tradition start from a simple requirement for any reasonable...
By Dr. Wanjiru Njoya Ever since people began warning about the threat from Cultural Marxism, the Marxists’ main line of
By Attila Rebak In the spring of 1812, British textile workers smashed power looms across Nottinghamshire, convinced that the machines would
By George Pickering As Mark Thornton has detailed in his brilliant book, The Skyscraper Curse, Austrian School economists’ unique theory of the
By James Anthony In large-scale medical tragedies like the handling of tobacco-caused death and disease or thalidomide-caused birth defects, most of
By George Ford Smith Artificial intelligence is rapidly becoming one of the most capital-intensive industries in history. Consider: Semiconductor...
By Ryan McMaken Murray Rothbard is well known as an opponent of warfare perpetrated by states. This includes acts of
By Dr. Wanjiru Njoya Here is a challenge for those who like solving mysteries—the case of the disappearing Marxists. You
By Ryan McMaken Donald Trump today, in a post on his social media platform Truth Social, stated that his goal
By Nicoleta Tanase On January 3, 2026, the capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro by US forces marked a turning point
By Ryan McMaken The Trump administration has unilaterally—without any Congressional debate or vote, of course—forced Americans into yet another war.
By Dr. Wanjiru Njoya “If I have an hour to solve a problem, I’d spend 55 minutes thinking about the
By Lipton Matthews I recently attended an event at the Prosperity Institute in the United Kingdom, and, as a foreigner listening
By Dr. Wanjiru Njoya In an article published by Chronicles, titled “Wokeness and Capitalism,” Neema Parvini argues that “the woke prerequisites – mass
By Hein Htet Kyaw History often remembers the 1962 coup in Myanmar as a sudden seizure of power by a
By Lipton Matthews Britain and the United States are often described in the same breath: advanced economies that have moved
By Connor O’Keeffe As panic builds within the GOP over the approaching midterm elections, Republicans have renewed a push for
By Dr. Wanjiru Njoya In his 1995 article titled “Repeal ’64,” Lew Rockwell argued against extending the Civil Rights Act 1964 to
By Dr. Wanjiru Njoya In his book The Essential Rothbard, David Gordon observes that, “Rothbard was no ivory-tower scholar, interested only in academic
By Joakim Book With all eyes on the winter storm raging through America last month, a silent hero was working in the
By Finn Andreen Considering the recent development of the European Union, it seems appropriate to look at a meme that
By Dr. Madhusudan Raj On January 9, The Telegraph reported, “Ukraine and the United States are planning to sign a “prosperity” deal to
By Dr. Wanjiru Njoya Professor Clyde Wilson’s observation that “history is not a mathematical calculation or scientific experiment but a...
By Joshua Mawhorter If economics is continually beset with fallacies, and if Biblical interpretation is likewise beset...
By Ryan McMaken While not surprising, it has nonetheless been remarkable how quickly American conservatives have been convinced to ignore
By Frank Shostak Often, we observe that two pieces of data, which are not supposed to have any relationship, appear
By Patrick Frise The scale of fraud uncovered in recent years has exposed how government transfer programs function, even as
By Ryan McMaken The idea of political unity has long been a popular trope and slogan in politics. “He’s a
By Ulrich Fromy History presents us with a troubling paradox: states that most fervently defend economic freedom at home often
By William L. Anderson Since the 1960s, when racial turmoil exploded in the United States, there have been reparations demands,
By Marisa Jarquin Self-defense and gun ownership are constantly being attacked in modern discourse and by the mainstream media, yet
By Mark Thorton I know that hyperinflation of the US dollar seems like a remote possibility, but alerting yourself to
By Larsen Plyler Through the 1600s, the English established colonies along the North American coast. Of course, these colonies shared
By Thiago V. S. Coelho As Étienne de la Boétie pointed out, the state is absolutely dependent on ideological support, without which