His more unsavory side included close ties to the KKK and support for a federal Department of Education, half a century before we were cursed with one when President Jimmy Carter created it.
Read MoreHannah Arendt's Chilling Thesis on Evil →
If Evil comes calling, do not expect it to be stupid enough to advertise itself as such. It’s far more likely that it will look like your favorite uncle or your sweet grandmother. It just might cloak itself in grandiloquent platitudes like “equality,” “social justice,” and the “common good.”
Read MoreThey Lost Their Heads for Power →
How will we know if the evil that power promotes is lurking in our midst? What will it say beneath its mask? I’ll venture this: It will say things like “Pack the Court!” It will seek to silence dissenting opinions. To sow chaos and confusion, it will redefine nature itself, or assault any longstanding custom or principle that stands in its way. It will lure us with false promises.
Read MoreWhat Did You Do For Freedom Today? →
Keep this list in a prominent place as a reminder to do what you can on freedom’s behalf every single day.
Read MoreCivil Society: America's Great Heritage →
We cannot restore civil society if we have no confidence in ourselves and think that government has a monopoly on compassion. We’ll never get there if we tax away nearly half of people’s earnings and then, like children who never learned their arithmetic, complain that people can’t afford to meet certain needs.
Read MoreJohn Bozeman, Frontier Entrepreneur →
A society without entrepreneurs is a society of stagnation and decline, of monotony and impoverishment, of bureaucrats and paperwork.
Read MoreIs Elisjsha Dicken a Good Samaritan or a Murderer? →
A Good Samaritan takes charge of a bad situation, improves it as best he can, and prevents further harm. That is exactly what Elisjsha Dicken did in Greenwood. This article is also available at The Stream via https://stream.org/yes-elisjsha-dicken-is-a-good-samaritan-and-he-deserves-a-medal/.
Read MoreHenry Flipper Loved America and Its Constitution →
He knew America didn’t invent slavery. He understood that while some Americans enslaved his parents, other Americans helped free them.
Read MoreThe Abuse of Money, Part 2 →
The Abuse of Money, Part 2. Progressives criticize entrepreneurship and free markets as “all about money.” They pretend to be representatives of a higher calling which, it turns out, is even more about money than what they oppose. Part 1 of this essay is here: https://informeorwell.com/opinion/the-abuse-of-money-part-1/.
Read MoreMencius: Advocate for Limited Government →
More than two millennia ago, Chinese scholars identified freedom and limited government as elements of virtue. They knew that huge, overbearing government was an enemy of virtue itself.
Read MoreThe Abuse of Money, Part 1 →
One of the enduring fallacies about money is that it must be a duty of the government to provide it (despite government’s sorry track record). We will never be free of destructive inflations or deflations until we toss that bit of flim-flam into the bonfire.
Read MoreJoseph Warren: The Forgotten Founding Father →
“Act worthy of yourselves,” advised this great American patriot.
Read MoreAncient China's Philosophers Would Detest Mao and the CCP →
The founders of ancient but enduring Chinese philosophies would be horrified to know that a Chinese leader starved and slaughtered 65 million of his countrymen to impose a system cooked up by a degenerate German scribbler named Karl Marx.
Read MoreEvil is on the Loose →
Sometimes Evil is manifested in an act so horrible no one can excuse it, such as a school shooting. Then Evil goes to work to get people to ignore real causes and support fake solutions, like disarming the innocent.
Read MoreLibertarian Institute Interview, 6/17/22 →
In this June 17, 2022 interview by Keith Knight of the Libertarian Institute, we discussed a wide variety of topics from the Great Depression to the nature of profit to the virtues of entrepreneurship to the evils of the welfare state.
Read MoreWisdom About Taxes From the 14th Century →
Muslim scholar Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406) understood economics and human incentives in a way many modern-day politicians do not.
Read MoreThe Origins of Vandalism →
As eerie parallels between today’s societies and that of ancient Rome echo all around us, we’re overdue for a wake-up call.
Read MoreThank You, Poland! →
To receive the highest honor Poland bestows upon a foreigner, I am humbled and grateful.
Read MoreLessons Montana May Have Learned from Michigan →
I’ve always believed that the biggest dangers of government are mission creep and creeps on a mission. Even good governments are tempted to bend the rules, but we should all be glad when the rules are good and are there for a good reason.
Read MoreWhen Thoughts Turn to Gold →
So gold is barbarous but unbacked, inconvertible, irredeemable paper money cranked out by elitist officialdom is not?
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