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Lawrence W. Reed

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golf.jpg

Government Putts →

July 10, 2006

I’ve always thought that if all that local governments did was keep the streets safe, the traffic moving, and the sewers flowing, they would have a full-time job on their hands.

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Free Market Moments on the Silver Screen →

May 1, 2006

Hollywood capitalists occasionally take a break from vilifying capitalism.

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Grover Cleveland Cared →

March 2, 2006

In his veto of the Texas Seed Bill, Cleveland warned against a general disregard of the “limited mission” of the federal government. He didn’t think Congress or the president should torture the Constitution until it confessed that disaster relief was among the responsibilities of Washington.

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No More Czars, Please →

October 21, 2004

Give us no more czars! Give us no pharaohs, emperors, shoguns, sheikhs, sachems, commissars, or potentates of any kind! 

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Make America Safer By Making Government Smaller →

August 2, 2004

On one day, we learn that government failed horribly to accomplish its primary mission. A few days later, people who want to lead the nation tell us that we must send government more of our money and trust it more than ever with not only our lives, but just about everything else too. 

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Why Limit Government? →

June 21, 2004

Remarks delivered at the 27th annual Heritage Foundation Resource Bank meeting in Chicago, June 21, 2004.

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Telecom Regulations are Anti-Competition →

May 1, 2004

If we strip away the technical particulars that often cloud this policy debate, what we essentially are left with are disparate visions about the power of markets to maximize technological innovation. It is clear that the regulatory model has failed to achieve policy objectives.

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A Museum You Don't Want to Miss →

March 1, 2004

Communism was one of history’s most infamous lies. What it wrought stands as a horrible testament to the “planned chaos” of the omnipotent state. 

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Lessons from the First Airplane →

July 1, 2003

Though most Americans know something of that fateful day in 1903, far fewer are aware of the rivalry between the Wright brothers and another inventor/entrepreneur—one Samuel Pierpont Langley.

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Remembering Prague Spring →

May 1, 2003

Empires, however, have a funny way of crumbling unexpectedly. The seeds of dissipation are sown by the empire-builders themselves when they impose their will at the point of a gun.

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From Crystal Palace to White Elephant in 150 Years →

March 1, 2003

Britain's Great Exhibition of 1851 celebrated innovation, free trade, and free enterprise but the Millennium Dome of 2000 was a just another government boondoggle.

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Seven Principles of Sound Policy →

February 18, 2003

This is about some very critical fundamentals, bedrock concepts that derive from centuries of experience and economic knowledge. They are, in my view, eternal principles that should form the intellectual backdrop to what we do as policymakers inside and outside of government.

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Cigarette Taxes Are Hazardous to Your Health →

November 1, 2002

Like Prohibition, high taxes lead to big profit opportunities for people who break the law, which leads to smuggling, which in turn invites some pretty nasty people into the business.

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TR and the Panama Canal Affair →

October 1, 2002

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.

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Confessions of a Secret Marxist →

August 23, 2002

Karl and Groucho. Two men named Marx. Both brought tears to the eyes of millions but for very, very different reasons.

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A Privatization Revolution in a Most Unlikely Place: 2002

June 1, 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.

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The Man Who Ate Hamtramck's Government →

March 1, 2002

In November 2000 Louis Schimmel swept away the government of Hamtramck, Michigan, and literally took over the city–lock, stock, and barrel.

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A Think Tank for Those Who Don't Think →

January 1, 2002

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.”

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Public Money for Private Charity? A Lesson from Emperor Julian →

August 1, 2001

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.

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Save Us From Great Ideas (Especially at Taxpayer Expense) →

July 1, 2001

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.

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One of history’s most infamous con artists was born in the little town where I now live—Newnan, in Coweta County, Georgia. And we’re not proud of him. He departed this world on this very date, July 7, in 1898.

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