by Walter Williams | May 2, 2019 | Books
Sowell shows that socioeconomic outcomes differ vastly among individuals, groups and nations in ways that cannot be easily explained by any one factor, whether it’s genetics, sex or race discrimination.
by Michael Munger | May 2, 2019 | Economics
Some creative rethinking can put us on the road to a better tomorrow.
by Richard M. Ebeling | May 2, 2019 | History
I recently have been reading a number of books written by European travellers who visited the United States, particularly, in the early and mid-decades of the 19th century.
by Larry Elder | May 1, 2019 | Price Controls
After all the studies and the near-unanimous opinion of economists — and even after the negative real-world effect of the minimum wage — it still remains popular.
by John Stossel | Apr 30, 2019 | POLITICS
Socialists like Bernie Sanders tell us that “the rich get richer, and the poor get poorer.” That’s a lie. Yes, rich people got absurdly rich. Last year, says Oxfam, “the wealth of the world’s billionaires increased (by) $2.5 billion a...
by Walter Williams | Apr 30, 2019 | Education
The 1215 Magna Carta limited the power of central government and it forced a reigning monarch to grant his English subjects rights. It laid the foundations for limited constitutional governments, an idea offensive to most leftists.
by Jaana Woiceshyn | Apr 29, 2019 | Crime
Voluntary trade is the only way for human beings to deal with one another, to make their flourishing possible and to enhance it through division of labor.
by Richard M. Ebeling | Apr 28, 2019 | Money & Banking
Central banking is a form of central planning. The Federal Reserve has a legal monopoly over the monetary system of the United States.
by John Stossel | Apr 23, 2019 | Energy, Environment
The Green New Deal’s goal is to move America to zero carbon emissions in 10 years.