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By Joshua Mawhorter A subtle subset of the statist non sequitur is what we may now name the statist insinuation or statist implication. This commonly
By Dann E. Kroeger That is where we are today. The Federal Reserve has used its tools to lock inflation
By Vincent Cook On its webpage explaining what democratic socialism is, the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) states that its goal
By Sergio Martinez The 2025 Nobel Prize in Economics honors three economists whose work embodies an idea first coined by Joseph...
By Wanjiru Njoya A federal court in Virginia recently ruled that the name of Confederate General Stonewall Jackson, who is regarded as
By Frank Shostak Many think of the economy as being like a space ship, which occasionally slips from the path
By Reem Ibrahim It has finally happened. The British Government has announced plans to introduce mandatory Digital ID. The new
By George Ford Smith Wars are mass-murder, massive theft, and unrelenting propaganda. In this country they’re lucrative overseas entanglements, as
By Wanjiru Njoya Free speech is not dead—it has just been parceled out among favored groups. This explains why the
By Sergio Martínez The Mexican federal government has announced a new 8% excise tax on violent video games. The justification? That violent
By Sako Garabedian The noun doctrine begins with a simple truth: governments like enemies who can’t surrender. Armies can be
By Cláudia Ascensão Nunes The European Central Bank has presented the digital euro as a symbol of financial autonomy and
By William L. Anderson People who can recall or who are aware of President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s farewell speech to the
By Ryan McMaken As most of the world’s “liberal” democracies continue to embrace more ruinous censorship, war, crippling inflation, crushing
By Lipton Matthews For much of the twentieth century, the history of industry in the Global South was written in
By Pedro Urso The environmental debate is often hijacked by discourses that view the market and capitalism as irreconcilable enemies
By Frank Shostak According to the leader of the monetarist school, Milton Friedman, the key cause of business cycles are
By Wanjiru Njoya Many people were shocked to see the identitarian left erupting in ghoulish celebration when news broke that
By Thomas J. DiLorenzo Economists have been studying and writing about government bureaucracy for quite a long time. Ludwig von
By Wanjiru Njoya In “Government by Judiciary: The Transformation of the Fourteenth Amendment” Raoul Berger argues that the Fourteenth Amendment
By Frank Shostak According to much popular mainstream economic thinking, the policy of so-called “price stability” does not always mean
By Jimmy Alfonso Licon The assassination of Charlie Kirk is a tragedy on several levels. It robs his family and friends of
By George Ford Smith “The need to limit the discretion of subordinates is present in every organization.”— Ludwig von Mises, Bureaucracy
By Wanjiru Njoya Egalitarians sometimes deny that there is any conflict between equality and the doctrines of individual liberty—free speech,
By Mark Nayler Spain’s Socialist-led government has recently forgiven €83.3 billion in debt owed by fifteen of the country’s seventeen...
By Stanisław Wójtowicz Anarcho-capitalism is a libertarian vision of a stateless society, where security, law and dispute resolution would be
By Wanjiru Njoya In Shakespeare’s Henry VI, a rebel alarmingly named Dick the Butcher says: “The first thing we do, let’s
By Ryan McMaken Following the murder of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, many critics of Kirk posted content on social media
By Ryan McMaken he Federal Reserve is set to lower the target policy interest rate this week in spite of
By Lika Kobeshavidze Every time we ask an AI tool a question, it silently consumes electricity and water. But until now,
By Frank Shostak There is almost complete unanimity among economists and various commentators that inflation is about general increases in
By Finn Andreen Human conflict is an intrinsic part of human nature; it is as natural as tears. As Leo
By Katrina Gulliver The lumber market in recent years has been a rollercoaster. For those operating logging businesses, or lumber
By Wanjiru Njoya Defenders of the Civil Rights Act are always at great pains to portray themselves as eminently reasonable,
By Thomas E. Woods, Jr. Now, this being a Mises Institute event and on the bureaucracy, I decided that in
By Tho Bishop Modern America has been one of constant shock: decades of war, economic turmoil, covid lockdowns, contested elections,
By Connor O’Keeffe Last week, exactly one month after the Bureau of Labor Statistics released a jobs report bad enough
By Ryan McMaken he Bureau of Labor Statistics this morning released new revised benchmark payroll totals used for estimating employment in...
By Alan Mosley On September 3, 2025, federal authorities announced that they had dismantled the pirated sports‑streaming empire known...
By Wanjiru Njoya Writing in Chronicles about his “alleged collaborators in infamy,” Paul Gottfried skewers the tendency to lump together all arguments
By Ryan McMaken Following the release of last month’s official federal jobs numbers, President Trump complained that the commissioner of
By William L. Anderson As President Trump continues to impose his will on numerous government agencies, his critics become increasingly
By Ryan Turnipseed If you ask any American libertarian who the worst presidents of all time were, you are likely
By Ryan McMaken It’s been a big week for “the data.” At Wednesday’s FOMC press conference, Fed Chair Jerome Powell announced
By Ryan McMaken During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the party of laissez-faire and free markets—known today as “classical liberals”—often
By Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr Substantial parts of the world are at war, the Mideast and Ukraine attract the most attention,
By Frank Shostak In order to gain insight into the state of the economy, some analysts utilize consumer and business
By Dr. Wanjiru Njoya Free market capitalism is often mistakenly associated with sinister One World globalists and “open borders” liberals who care
By Oscar Damberg The method of Austrian economics is praxeology, fundamentally grounded upon the action axiom. The axiom’s most popular
By Marcos Giansante In any infectious outbreak, one of the first steps in the epidemiological response is to locate case one—the