War breeds atrocities. From the earliest conflicts of recorded history to the global struggles of modern times inhumanities, lust and pillage have been the inevitable by-products of man’s resort to force and arms. Unfortunately, such despicable acts have a dangerous tendency to call forth primitive impulses of vengeance and retaliation among the victimized peoples. The satisfaction of such impulses in turn breeds resentment and fresh tension. Thus does the spiral of cruelty and hatred grow. – U.S. Supreme Court Justice Frank Murphy, Yamashita v. Styer [1946]
HORNBERGER’S BLOG
May 26, 2023
America’s Immigration Police State:: Warrantless Trespasses, Searches, and Seizures
In yesterday’s blog post, I addressed one aspect of the immigration police state that is part of the enforcement of America’s socialist system of immigration controls — domestic highway checkpoints. I pointed out that such police-state checkpoints are a central feature of communist and totalitarian regimes. Another part of America’s immigration police state is warrantless trespasses and searches of farms and …
Rein in the FBI
by John W. Whitehead
Power corrupts. We know this. In fact, we know this from experience learned the hard way at the hands of our own government….
The Importance of Austrian Economics
by Jacob G. Hornberger and Richard M. Ebeling
How far would you really go to secure the nation’s borders in the so-called name of national security? Would you give the government …
America’s Comeback
by Laurence M. Vance
When most Americans hear the word comeback, they immediately think of sports. Whether it is football, basketball, golf, …
Why Keep Waging the War on Drugs?
by Jacob G. Hornberger and Richard M. Ebeling
What’s the point of having a war on drugs? FFF president Jacob G. Hornberger and Citadel professor …