• Best of Web
  • Home
  • Classics
  • Blog
  • Radio
  • Heroes
  • Books
  • Quotes
  • Talks
  • News
  • About
Menu

Lawrence W. Reed

  • Best of Web
  • Home
  • Classics
  • Blog
  • Radio
  • Heroes
  • Books
  • Quotes
  • Talks
  • News
  • About
term limits.jpg

Why Term Limits? →

May 1, 2001

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 More
enemy.jpg

Socialists at War in "Enemy at the Gates" →

April 6, 2001

Think about it: a major motion picture that dares to lump Nazis and communists into one reprehensible socialist dung-heap. Extraordinary!

Read More
map electoral.jpg

Keep the Electoral College →

March 1, 2001

Thankfully, the question of abolishing the Electoral College is moot because the hurdles a constitutional amendment has to jump are simply too high. 

Read More
Comment
label.jpg

Get Rid of the Labels →

January 1, 2001

We need to recognize that shorthand just won’t do the job when talking about how complex principles apply to current-day issues.

Read More
Comment

Incentives and Disincentives: They Really Do Matter! →

November 1, 2000

The best way to reform welfare programs is to eliminate them.

Read More
deposit.jpg

Government Deposit Insurance: A Dumb Idea →

October 1, 2000

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 More
Comment
guns.jpg

Guns, Gun Laws and Liberty →

August 1, 2000

Does the mere prevalence of guns in American society contribute to gun violence? If statistics matter, the answer is no.

Read More
Comment

The Census: Inquiring Minds Want to Know →

May 1, 2000

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 More
jitney.jpg

A Tribute to the Jitney →

January 1, 2000

Jitneys have a long and honorable tradition in America.

Read More
Comment
school.jpg

Government Education Reinvents Government →

December 1, 1999

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 More
1 Comment
cigarette.jpg

The Roosevelt Myth →

September 1, 1999

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 More
Comment
Taxes.jpg

A Tax is Not a User Fee →

June 1, 1999

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 More
Comment
CorporateWelfarevsSocialWelfare.jpg

Ending Corporate Welfare as We Know It →

May 1, 1999

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.

Read More
Comment
UN.jpg

The Poverty of the United Nations →

January 1, 1999

The fact is that Americans consume more because Americans produce more. 

Read More
sprawl.jpg

What is "Urban Sprawl"? →

October 1, 1998

Depicting sprawl as a “monster” or a “plague on the land” may capture headlines, but it doesn’t inform.

Read More
trust.jpg

Trust Not in What the Government Can Do For You →

June 1, 1998

What’s lamentable here is that some of our politicians lie, cheat, and steal. It is not lamentable that Americans lose faith in them when they do those things. It is laudable, because it is common sense being appropriately applied.

Read More
Comment

Hayek was Right: The Worst Get to the Top →

February 1, 1998

The docile and gullible will accept a ready-made system of values, even a rotten one.

Read More
Double Standards.jpg

Food for Thought and Double Standards →

January 1, 1998

Winning the war of ideas requires that we not let the other side get away with judging free markets against perfection while they judge their own deficient prescriptions against mere good intentions.

Read More
Comment

Educating Those With Special Needs →

November 1, 1997

The private sector, including private sectarian schools, religious schools, nonpublic agencies, and homeschools, offers a wide variety of education programs for this difficult-to-educate population.

Read More
price.jpg

The Predatory Price-Cutting Bogeyman →

July 1, 1997

Anti-capitalist literature is rife with demons, monsters, and other assorted bogeymen, but so are fairy tales.

Read More
Comment
← Newer Posts Older Posts →

Recent “Best of Web”

Featured
Government Shutdown Exposed the Biggest Lie in Education
Oct 31, 2025
Government Shutdown Exposed the Biggest Lie in Education
Oct 31, 2025

“For decades, teachers unions and the liberal allies they bankroll in D.C. have told the American people that without the federal bureaucracy, education would crumble,” writes Ryan Walters.

Oct 31, 2025
Millions Gather to Express Total Ignorance
Oct 18, 2025
Millions Gather to Express Total Ignorance
Oct 18, 2025

“We're going to join our voices together and let the message ring loud and clear that we are uneducated rubes in desperate need of a middle-school social studies class,” said one man. Problem is, they DID have middle-school social studies, at great expense to the taxpayer, and still turned out to be rubes. Maybe there’s a connection??

Oct 18, 2025
Argentina's Economy Didn't Collapse; It Roared Back to Life
Sep 25, 2025
Argentina's Economy Didn't Collapse; It Roared Back to Life
Sep 25, 2025

Writes Dionysis Partsinevelos, “Experts warned that electing a chainsaw-wielding libertarian outsider as president would push the country over the edge. Instead, the unthinkable happened: Argentina’s economy started working again.”

Sep 25, 2025

Recent Quotes

Featured
Murphy on America
Feb 11, 2025
Murphy on America
Feb 11, 2025

“The true meaning of America, you ask? It’s in a Texas rodeo, in a policeman’s badge, in the sound of laughing children, in a political rally, in a newspaper. ... In all these things, and many more, you’ll find America. In all these things, you’ll find freedom. And freedom is what America means to the world. And to me” — Actor, poet, and the most decorated American of World War II, Audie Murphy.

Feb 11, 2025
Mill on Freedom
Feb 1, 2025
Mill on Freedom
Feb 1, 2025

“The only freedom which deserves the name is that of pursuing our own good in our own way, so long as we do not attempt to deprive others of theirs, or impede their efforts to obtain it. Each is the proper guardian of his own health, whether bodily, or mental and spiritual. Mankind are greater gainers by suffering each other to live as seems good to themselves than by compelling each to live as seems good to the rest.”

Feb 1, 2025
Best-Selling Japanese Novelist Eiji Yoshikawa on Do-Gooders
Mar 20, 2023
Best-Selling Japanese Novelist Eiji Yoshikawa on Do-Gooders
Mar 20, 2023

“There’s nothing more frightening than a half-baked do-gooder who knows nothing of the world but takes it upon himself to tell the world what’s good for it — from his book, Musashi.

Mar 20, 2023

Recent Blogs

Featured
Montana's First Non-Indigenous Settlement
Nov 18, 2025
Montana's First Non-Indigenous Settlement
Nov 18, 2025

The St. Mary’s Mission and Museum in Stevensville is well worth your time when you’re in western Montana.

Nov 18, 2025
Dusting Off an Old but Important Story
Nov 13, 2025
Dusting Off an Old but Important Story
Nov 13, 2025

France was on the verge of national bankruptcy when the Revolution began in 1789. A rising chorus of panicked legislators called for printing paper money as a solution, but many people still remembered the ruin their ancestors suffered only 70 years before.

Nov 13, 2025
I (Identify As), Pencil
Nov 11, 2025
I (Identify As), Pencil
Nov 11, 2025

I was born a lawnmower but now I am a pencil. You can’t erase me, but I can erase you. Literally. So don’t offend me.

Nov 11, 2025