Here is the first September News Edition of Letter of Liberty.
Paul Rosenberg on the six groups that will benefit from a war with Syria
Daniel McCarthy on why the war on Syria might promote the proliferation of WMDs
Anthony Gregory on the twisted premises implicit in the drive for war with Syria
Robert Wenzel gives us ten Murray Rothbard articles in order to give us economics in ten lessons.
Chris Rossini on the fact that the wrong questions are being asked about fast-food wages
This week's Mondays with Murray edition deals with Rothbard's views on the use of torture; it seems that he had some contradicting views on them; in his masterpiece The Ethics of Liberty, Rothbard held that while torture is generally unacceptable, the police should be exonerated if in fact torture did reveal the truth about a crime; however, in his manifesto For A New Liberty, Rothbard seemed to oppose any compulsion regarding crime from the criminal.
Chris Mayer on Syria and the perpetual war economy
Gary Galles on how the state destroys social cooperation
Marc Clair on how libertarian ideas are gaining steam, evident in the fact that even the neocon warmonger John Bolton seems to oppose the war on Syria
Paul Craig Roberts on how Obama is trying to get Congress to approve of his war
Paul Huebl on why left-liberals were mistaken and are mistaken about Obama
James Tracy on the century-old White House tradition of lying people into foreign war
Did you know that coconut oil has 160 uses?
Paul Schwennesen on a free-market solution to the food-safety problem
Jacob Hornberger on perpetual chaos and crises
Edward Group on eight facts about sauna
Richard Ebeling: Why Not Privatize Foreign Policy?
An editorial from The Freeman on hacking the Leviathan
Glenn Jacobs, otherwise known as the wrestler Kane, shows us that the real divide in America is between the people and the government. This was the view of the classical liberals, that there was a class conflict between the productive and the exploitative classes, not the Marxist theory of rich vs. poor.
C. Jay Engel on why apathy is the norm
Ron Paul on why it doesn't matter whether Congress approves of Obama's war plans or not
Paul Rosenberg on the six groups that will benefit from a war with Syria
Daniel McCarthy on why the war on Syria might promote the proliferation of WMDs
Anthony Gregory on the twisted premises implicit in the drive for war with Syria
Robert Wenzel gives us ten Murray Rothbard articles in order to give us economics in ten lessons.
Chris Rossini on the fact that the wrong questions are being asked about fast-food wages
This week's Mondays with Murray edition deals with Rothbard's views on the use of torture; it seems that he had some contradicting views on them; in his masterpiece The Ethics of Liberty, Rothbard held that while torture is generally unacceptable, the police should be exonerated if in fact torture did reveal the truth about a crime; however, in his manifesto For A New Liberty, Rothbard seemed to oppose any compulsion regarding crime from the criminal.
Chris Mayer on Syria and the perpetual war economy
Gary Galles on how the state destroys social cooperation
Marc Clair on how libertarian ideas are gaining steam, evident in the fact that even the neocon warmonger John Bolton seems to oppose the war on Syria
Paul Craig Roberts on how Obama is trying to get Congress to approve of his war
Paul Huebl on why left-liberals were mistaken and are mistaken about Obama
James Tracy on the century-old White House tradition of lying people into foreign war
Did you know that coconut oil has 160 uses?
Paul Schwennesen on a free-market solution to the food-safety problem
Jacob Hornberger on perpetual chaos and crises
Edward Group on eight facts about sauna
Richard Ebeling: Why Not Privatize Foreign Policy?
An editorial from The Freeman on hacking the Leviathan
Glenn Jacobs, otherwise known as the wrestler Kane, shows us that the real divide in America is between the people and the government. This was the view of the classical liberals, that there was a class conflict between the productive and the exploitative classes, not the Marxist theory of rich vs. poor.
C. Jay Engel on why apathy is the norm
Ron Paul on why it doesn't matter whether Congress approves of Obama's war plans or not
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