Politics
Molinari describes the inevitable consequences of monopolized security: rising costs, declining quality, and the use of force against the very citizens the government claims...
Hi, what are you looking for?
Clark Packard and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon On May 7, the US Court of International Trade (CIT) struck down the Trump administration’s 10 percent across-the-board import...
Bill Anderson offers a ground-level view of California’s decline, arguing that the state’s deep entanglement of government with water, energy, housing, and transportation has...
To complain against the state’s actions, argues Hobbes, is to ultimately complain against yourself because you originally authorized the state through social contract and...
To complain against the state’s actions, argues Hobbes, is to ultimately complain against yourself because you originally authorized the state through social contract and...
Molinari describes the inevitable consequences of monopolized security: rising costs, declining quality, and the use of force against the very citizens the government claims...
Molinari argues that majority rule is no more legitimate than royal absolutism when it violates individual rights.
Molinari distinguishes between society, which arises naturally from voluntary human cooperation, and government, which imposes itself through force.
Molinari describes how coercive control over defense led to the familiar abuses of taxation, war, and the suppression of individual liberty.
Molinari draws a parallel between monopoly and communism, arguing that both represent departures from the principle of free competition.