Why We Can't Have Nice Things: Bootleggers, Baptists, and Ballots
"You need an argument for why this is good for society. That's important, but you also need money."
"You need an argument for why this is good for society. That's important, but you also need money."
Is the publc getting what it wants from the administrative state?
GAO: Congress has been buying planes that lack crucial parts and haven't undergone full testing, so costly upgrades will eventually be needed.
The market's failure to produce an ideal outcome cannot alone justify activist policy, because governments can also fail to produce the ideal.
Right now, most licensing boards require that the majority of members be from the same licensed profession. It's not difficult to see how that leads to anti-competitive rules.
He's got his reasons, but they all suck. And will accelerate Facebook's decline as a destination in cyberspace.
Facebook and the end of the open Internet era
New York City's new zoning ordinance would give the city an effective veto over proposed hotel projects in much of the city.
Despite being a finalist for the National Book Awards, Democracy in Chains is fatally flawed history.
A controversial attack on a libertarian-leaning economist mangles the facts beyond recognition. But the book still has something to teach us.
Michael Munger on the radicalism of public-choice economics, the failure of Democracy in Chains, and how the libertarian movement needs to evolve.
People are people whether they are acting in the marketplace or in the political arena.
Democracy in Chains mangles the facts beyond recognition. But the book still has something to teach us.
Libertarian History/Philosophy
Nancy MacLean's conspiracy tract Democracy in Chains grossly misrepresents limited-government philosophy and the work of Nobel laureate James M. Buchanan.
In Memoriam: Antony Jay, co-creator of Yes, Minister
How five 20th century economists subtly remade the political landscape
Washington Post columnist Robert Samuelson makes the case.
Soda tax moralizers are easy to find, but where are our sweetened-beverage bootleggers?
A non-voter who passed away just before Election Day.
Ludwig von Mises and Sanford Ikeda on the perils of interventionism
Romney's explanation of his election loss may be closer to the truth than a lot of people want to believe.
Would it shock you to hear that presidents play politics with disaster relief?
How America's favorite billionaire plays politics to make money