We’re taught that the swashbuckling visionary Teddy Roosevelt rushed to the aid of freedom fighters in Panama, helped them secure their independence from Colombia, and then led the building of the Canal in just the right spot. Maybe the truth is a little different — from this 2002 book review.
Read MoreConfessions of a Secret Marxist →
Karl and Groucho. Two men named Marx. Both brought tears to the eyes of millions but for very, very different reasons.
Read MoreA Privatization Revolution in a Most Unlikely Place: 2002
Seventeen years since I wrote this article, Rwanda’s score on the Heritage Foundation’s Index of Economic Freedom makes it the 39th freest economy in the world, out of nearly 180 countries ranked.
Read MoreThe Man Who Ate Hamtramck's Government →
In November 2000 Louis Schimmel swept away the government of Hamtramck, Michigan, and literally took over the city–lock, stock, and barrel.
Read MoreA Think Tank for Those Who Don't Think →
Socialists take aquariums and turn them into fish soup. The endless socialist quest for whatever it is socialists quest for all adds up to pitifully little—nothing more, in fact, than what French economist Frédéric Bastiat dismissed more than a century and a half ago as “legalized plunder.”
Read MorePublic Money for Private Charity? A Lesson from Emperor Julian →
Most people of faith—whether they be Christian, Jew, Muslim, or something else—would ordinarily be the first to argue that God doesn’t need federal funds to do His work; just a change of heart will do, one heart at a time.
Read MoreSave Us From Great Ideas (Especially at Taxpayer Expense) →
Every day, somebody somewhere gets a great idea and thinks nothing of stealing from others through government to fund it. Those of us who are troubled by these trigger-happy statists need to become more active and vocal in exposing their schemes.
Read MoreWhy Term Limits? →
Do we need a reminder that long-term pols with lots of “experience” in Washington have blessed Americans with trillions in debt and a federal government that sucks more and more from our wallets year after year after year?
Read MoreSocialists at War in "Enemy at the Gates" →
Think about it: a major motion picture that dares to lump Nazis and communists into one reprehensible socialist dung-heap. Extraordinary!
Read MoreKeep the Electoral College →
Thankfully, the question of abolishing the Electoral College is moot because the hurdles a constitutional amendment has to jump are simply too high.
Read MoreGet Rid of the Labels →
We need to recognize that shorthand just won’t do the job when talking about how complex principles apply to current-day issues.
Read MoreIncentives and Disincentives: They Really Do Matter! →
The best way to reform welfare programs is to eliminate them.
Read MoreGovernment Deposit Insurance: A Dumb Idea →
Sadly, those who think government must provide deposit insurance fail to realize how much of the problem they see is already the result of government’s own handiwork.
Read MoreGuns, Gun Laws and Liberty →
Does the mere prevalence of guns in American society contribute to gun violence? If statistics matter, the answer is no.
Read MoreThe Census: Inquiring Minds Want to Know →
The first census in 1790 included a question about race and residence, but that was about the sum of it. In the years since, the census has morphed into much more than a head count.
Read MoreA Tribute to the Jitney →
Jitneys have a long and honorable tradition in America.
Read MoreGovernment Education Reinvents Government →
To note that government rests on the use of force is not some radical anarchist idea. It is the very definition of the institution and its ultimate distinguishing feature. For much of the last half millennium, political scientists of virtually every stripe accepted the notion as fact. No respectable scholar tried to paper it over and pass government off as some kind of voluntary, benevolent society.
Read MoreThe Roosevelt Myth →
Running against Herbert Hoover in 1932, Roosevelt campaigned as an advocate of limited government, even (correctly) accusing Hoover of “reckless and extravagant spending” and of thinking “that we ought to center control of everything in Washington as rapidly as possible.”
Read MoreA Tax is Not a User Fee →
At all levels of government, there’s a bipartisan effort to impose new or higher taxes and mislabel them as seemingly less onerous “user fees”. Sometimes, a user fee is indeed a user fee. Other times, it’s not that at all. Instead, it’s a tax hike disguised by a misnomer.
Read MoreEnding Corporate Welfare as We Know It →
Corporate welfare is one of the toughest nuts to crack in Washington. While almost everyone says he is opposed to it, Congress hasn’t done much about it.
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