What Education Needs

On September 30, 2010, by The Freeman | Ideas On Liberty

As an antidote to the blather masquerading on MSNBC as serious discussion of education, I prescribe the wisdom of Joseph Priestley (1733-1804).

Obama-Men: Innocents Abroad; Politicos at Home

On September 30, 2010, by Ray McGovern

Paging through Bob Woodward’s Obama’s Wars, I should not have been surprised that the index lacks any entry for "intelligence." The excerpts that dribbled out earlier this week had made unavoidably clear that there was, in fact, no entry for intelligence in the disorderly process last fall that got the Obama administration neck-deep in the [...]

Invading Pakistan

On September 30, 2010, by Justin Raimondo

JR on phase two of Obama’s war

Tea Party vs. War Party?

On September 30, 2010, by Patrick J. Buchanan

Neocons scramble to get Tea Party on board, says Pat Buchanan

The War Addicts

On September 30, 2010, by Tom Engelhardt

Afghanistan in 2016 and then some, by Tom Engelhardt

Rise in Af-Pak Cross-Border Attacks Spurs Backlash

On September 30, 2010, by Jim Lobe

The steady increase in U.S. cross-border attacks from Afghanistan into the frontier areas of Pakistan – whether by drone missiles or attack helicopters – is causing a serious backlash from both the region’s residents and Islamabad’s government and military leadership. In the latest case, the government of President Asif Ali Zardari Thursday closed NATO’s primary [...]

Better Safe Than Sorry?

On September 30, 2010, by Charles V. Peña

“Better safe than sorry” is a popular English idiom that can be traced back to Irish novelist Samuel Lover’s Rory O’More (1837). Essentially, it means that it is better to take precautionary actions rather than be sorry that you didn’t if something bad happens. One example was when we were worried about the H1N1 (or [...]

Ireland needs its apocalypse now

On September 30, 2010, by admin

angloirishThe Republic of Ireland’s Minister for Finance announced this morning that its bailout of Anglo Irish Bank will be €10bn more than anticipated, and that the Irish government is effectively nationalizing the country’s second biggest bank, Allied Irish Banks. The Irish budget deficit for this year will now be 32%, with the bank bailouts costing around 20% of GDP. This is a direct consequence of the Irish government’s bank deposit guarantee which I wrote about on Wednesday, which assures 100% of deposits in an effort to avoid bank runs. But this guarantee assumes that the state itself will not become bankrupt, something which is now probably likely.

If Ireland does go bankrupt, the options will then be a sovereign default or calling in either the International Monetary Fund or the European bailout fund, the latter of which would likely impose punitive measures to punish Ireland for her low corporation tax rate. This would end Ireland’s chances of recovering to the days of the Celtic Tiger and, under EU management, would doom its economy for decades. The longer it takes for the Republic to be put out of its misery, the more leverage the EU will have. A collapse now seems inevitable – the only question is when it will come.

Ireland should take three painful steps to end its purgatory and put itself on the road to recovery. Firstly, it should end its 100% bank deposit guarantee and stop protecting banks and savers from their own mistakes. This would remove a large part of the budgetary burden. Secondly, it should default on some or all of its debt and fix its budget deficit through cuts in current expenditure. A fire sale of capital building projects and the privatization of other state assets (the state-owned gas and electricity companies, for instance) would bring in some much-needed revenue and help with the private sector recovery by opening up the number of industries subject to competition. Finally, the government should withdraw from the eurozone immediately. This would allow for a currency revaluation that would end the trade stasis that the euro has locked Ireland into, with artificially high prices depressing Irish exports.

These steps would be painful, mirroring Iceland’s collapse last year. But to continue further without a currency revaluation and trying to prop up the banks through further deficit spending would make the eventual economic collapse significantly worse. Ireland needs to allow the collapse to occur now, rather than risking a generation-spanning catastrophe by postponing the inevitable.

Joseph Sobran, 1946-2010

On September 30, 2010, by Jeffrey Tucker

We received the sad news today that Joseph Sobran, always a good friend to libertarianism and the Mises Institute, has died. He was surely one of the great stylists of the 20th century and a wonderfully inventive thinker – a man who loved liberty with his whole heart and worked desperately to explain its principles to others even as he never stopped refining his own understanding of the idea. He wrote for The Free Market and spoken several times at Mises Institute events. If you do not know his work, sample this gem on how to teach your children about… Continue ReadingRelated posts:

FTL2010-09-30

On September 30, 2010, by Free Talk Live

Plague on America :: Moving Toward Liberty :: The Crazy Lead Testing Law Continues to Destroy :: Misunderstanding Walmart and International Manufacturing :: Not Paying the Gang :: Biased Judge :: Aggression Scenarios and Certainty :: Aliens :: UL Testi…

Web-Only Segment of Tonight’s Show: Why Vote?

On September 30, 2010, by John Stossel

My FBN show tonight asked: “Do we really want everyone to vote?”  Lots of people don’t know much at all about even basic American history. And why vote when we have such lousy choices?  At the moment, the choice is between Democrats who gave us stimulus, Obamacare and a trillion dollar deficit…and [...]

Depression, Anxiety, Alzheimer’s, Autism, ADD?

On September 30, 2010, by LewRockwell.com

Fix your broken brain by healing your body. Article by Joseph Mercola.

The Ultimate Cram Down

On September 30, 2010, by LewRockwell.com

You’re on the receiving end of the biggest in history. Article by Chris Kitze.

Will the Dollar Rebound?

On September 30, 2010, by LewRockwell.com

Or just be dissolved into a global currency. Article by Eric Blair.

The Forever Fighters

On September 30, 2010, by LewRockwell.com

Tom Engelhardt on the criminal gang of war.

Phony Money and Fractional Reserves

On September 30, 2010, by LewRockwell.com

Mike Maloney tells a bankster convention what they don’t want to hear.

A Real October Surprise

On September 30, 2010, by LewRockwell.com

The Cuban missile crisis and the election of 1962. Article by Rhodes Cook.

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