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Do you sell cupcakes, run a home photography studio, or tutor kids in your living room? If so, you might be breaking the law....
The modern American right could stand to gain from the insight of Richard M. Weaver. Weaver, a twentieth-century conservative of the Southern tradition, perceived...
What kind of goods and experiences comprise a “normal life”? In 1900, Henry George thought millionaires lived abnormally because they had telephones in their...
The laws of economics can be seen at work nearly everywhere if one only endeavors to take note of them. That which Frédéric Bastiat...
On September 5, President Trump signed an executive order making The Department of War an official secondary name for The Department of Defense, seemingly...
This year marks the ninetieth anniversary of the Banking Act of 1935, the law that gave the Federal Reserve its current structure. Often overshadowed...
In a recent Wall Street Journal op-ed, former Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia President Patrick Harker recounts an interaction with a protester who did...
“History doesn’t repeat, but it often rhymes,” is a famous saying attributed to American author Mark Twain. When you read today’s news about the...
In a recent Wall Street Journal op-ed, former Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia President Patrick Harker recounts an interaction with a protester who did...
“History doesn’t repeat, but it often rhymes,” is a famous saying attributed to American author Mark Twain. When you read today’s news about the...
This year marks the ninetieth anniversary of the Banking Act of 1935, the law that gave the Federal Reserve its current structure. Often overshadowed...
National security is the textbook case of a subsidized public good — taxpayer-funded, centrally coordinated, and traditionally insulated from market prices. Ukraine’s wartime economy,...
“I don’t give a sh*t what you call it.” So wrote Vice President J.D. Vance in response to journalist Brian Krassenstein, who questioned Vance’s...