| The Sovietization of American Life
Victor Davis Hanson (American Greatness)
Behind all our disasters there looms an ideology, a creed that ignores cause and effect in the real world—without a shred of concern for the damage done to those outside the nomenklatura. Missing baby formula, Tombstonesque weekend shoot-ups in Chicago, electricity brownouts, scarce meat, and $7 per gallon diesel fuel…. Is this uncannily close to the Soviet model? READ MORE » |
| The Decline of American Liberalism
By Arthur A. Ekirch, Jr. |
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| Bernanke’s Prescription for Inflation—Give the Fed More Power
Judy L. Shelton (New York Sun)
Ben Bernanke just wrote his second memoir, 21st Century Monetary Policy: The Federal Reserve from the Great Inflation to COVID-19, and Mr. Bernanke’s tome—wait for it—hails all the recent innovations that have enlarged the Fed’s “toolkit.” For this consummate government technocrat, the only real sin would be to constrict the Fed’s “policy space.” So, let’s follow Martin Luther’s advice and “sin boldly”—as fast as possible. READ MORE » |
| Boom and Bust Banking
The Causes and Cures of the Great Recession
Edited by David Beckworth |
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| Should the United States Treat Taiwan Differently Than Ukraine?
Ivan Eland (National Interest)
The short, and completely sufficient, answer is: no. Taiwan is not any more strategic to the United States than Ukraine is, and U.S. commitments toward both countries should be reassessed and scaled back. READ MORE » |
| War and the Rogue Presidency
Restoring the Republic after Congressional Failure
By Ivan Eland |
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| FBI Ballot Initiative
K. Lloyd Billingsley (American Greatness)
Thanks to Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), between December 2020 and November 2021, the FBI potentially queried the data of more than 3 million Americans without a warrant. But there is hope. The authorities for Section 702 sunset if not legislatively renewed in 2023. Could there be a greater reason to flip Congress this November? READ MORE » |
| American Surveillance
Intelligence, Privacy, and the Fourth Amendment
By Anthony Gregory |
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| George Stigler, Memoirs of an Unregulated Economist
Art Carden (American Institute for Economic Research)
In 1982, University of Chicago economist George Stigler received a Nobel Prize, and in 1988 he published his intellectual autobiography, Memoirs of an Unregulated Economist. And it is a great read. The take-away? Seemingly “irrational” institutions start to make sense once we understand, in light of economics: human action, the importance of the exchange, and the costs of reaching agreements. We need more such books…. READ MORE » |
| Choice
Cooperation, Enterprise, and Human Action
By Robert P. Murphy |
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