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Private: Freedom Daily – 1996

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January 1996 The White Rose: A Lesson in Dissent by Jacob G. Hornberger Optimism and Concern in Contemporary America by Richard M. Ebeling Washington Gibberish by Sheldon Richman Vigilant Distrust, Part 2 by John C. Sparks The White Rose A Different Vision for Schools by Rodney Lewis Book Review — Shakedown: How the Government Screws You from A to Z by Richard M. Ebeling To receive your personal copy of Freedom Daily, subscribe to our print version ($25 per year) or our email version ($15 per year).   February 1996 The Failure of the Republican “Revolution,” Part 1 by Jacob G. Hornberger If Liberty Mattered — Once More, a Presidential Candidate’s Press Conference, Part 1 by Richard M. Ebeling Public Schools and the Assault on the Family by Sheldon Richman Did the Supreme Court Flush the Fourth? by James Bovard A Free Market in Human Organs by Ron Brown Book Review — Austrian Economics for Investors: Ludwig von Mises Goes to Wall Street by Richard M. Ebeling To ...

Freedom, Not Growth

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All politicians favor economic growth. They all promise to create jobs and "grow the economy." That is a vintage Republican issue, but the Democrats aren't dummies. Many of them have learned that the old appeal to class warfare and other quasi-Marxist themes are pass. They too have thrown themselves onto the growth bandwagon. Bill Clinton's so-called New Democrats can take credit for grafting the rhetoric of growth to the policies of big government. Hence, Clinton can both declare that "the era of big government is over" and propose an increase in the minimum wage and myriad other interventions in the economy. This may come as a shock to Republicans and Democrats alike, but growth should be of no concern to the government. The idea that the state is the steward of the economy is an intrinsically statist idea. In ...

Freedom, Not Growth

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All politicians favor economic growth. They all promise to create jobs and "grow the economy." That is a vintage Republican issue, but the Democrats aren't dummies. Many of them have learned that the old appeal to class warfare and other quasi-Marxist themes are pass. They too have thrown themselves onto the growth bandwagon. Bill Clinton's so-called New Democrats can take credit for grafting the rhetoric of growth to the policies of big government. Hence, Clinton can both declare that "the era of big government is over" and propose an increase in the minimum wage and myriad other interventions in the economy. This may come as a shock to Republicans and Democrats alike, but growth should be of no concern to the government. The idea that the state is the steward of the economy is an intrinsically statist idea. In ...

Private: Freedom Daily – 2001

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January 2001 Lets Retire the Drug War by Jacob G. Hornberger Food, Education, and Health Care by Jacob G. Hornberger The Fundamental Rights of the European Union: Individual Rights or Welfare-State Privileges? Part 1 by Richard M. Ebleing Young People Arent Skeptical Enough by Sheldon Richman Clintons Kosovo Fraud by James Bovard The Second Amendment Protects an Individual Right by Benedict A. LaRosa Morals and ...