A Community Organizer Goes to War

On March 31, 2011, by Patrick J. Buchanan

Now that Benghazi has been spared what we were assured would be a massacre by Muammar Gadhafi’s army, why are the U.S. Air Force, Navy, CIA, and Special Forces still attacking in Libya? If our objective was to spare the defenseless people of Benghazi from slaughter, why, mission accomplished, did we not stop bombing? Why [...]

Libya and the Obama Cult

On March 31, 2011, by Justin Raimondo

Justin Raimondo on how the President conned us all

Libya Hypocrisy

On March 31, 2011, by Charles V. Peña

‘Legal’ war can still be unnecessary, says Chuck Pena

Say No to This Illegal War

On March 31, 2011, by Rep. Ron Paul

Rep. Ron Paul’s statement in front of the Foreign Affairs Committee in the US House of Representatives: The American people have once again been suckered into an unconstitutional, undeclared, illegal, and unwise war. This is not a war in response to an attack on the United States. This is not a war against a regime [...]

A Victim of the State, pt. 2

On March 31, 2011, by The Freeman | Ideas On Liberty

Now even speaking out against injustice can subject a person to criminal investigation. What’s next?

Two simple rules for running the economy

On March 31, 2011, by Sam Bowman

There are two insights about human behaviour that are pretty fundamental to economics:

1. People respond to incentives.

2. Knowledge is limited.

These sound elementary, and they are, but it’s often astonishing how easily they’re forgotten. Here’s an example, carried in yesterday’s Financial Times:

Total, the French oil and gas group, and one of the biggest producers in the UK, has become the latest company to warn about the effect of last week’s Budget tax rise on future exploration investment in the North Sea. . . .

Meanwhile, Valiant Petroleum, the explorer, said it had put on hold a £93m project. Centrica, the utility, said it was seeking meetings with the government in order to press its case for gas to be excluded from the tax increase. On Tuesday, Statoil, the Norwegian oil and gas group, said it was postponing $10bn (£6.2bn) worth of investment in two projects after the chancellor raised the supplementary tax on production from 20 per cent to 32 per cent.

People respond to incentives. (Stephen Landsburg thinks that this statement alone summarizes most of economics.) If government makes the incentives to do something worse then, other things being equal, people will do less of it. So it is with the North Sea oil companies – tax them more, and some of them will leave if there are better opportunities in operating elsewhere. That means less tax revenue overall.

It’s not as simple as that, of course, because the precise response is hard to pinpoint. They might cut their profits. Or they might pass on the cost of business to their customers. The BBC’s Stephanie Flanders wondered about this too:

I asked Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, what would stop the oil companies passing on the cost of the extra tax onto consumers, at the pump. His answer, give or take, was that he didn’t think they would, but they’d be looking out for it. Hmmm.

Knowledge is limited. It’s hard to predict the consequences of any action that we take in our own lives. Now think about a society with millions of people, each with their own goals and preferences (which are constantly shifting). Governments hire armies of economists and other consultants to try to figure this sort of thing out, but they’re still naked in the dark. Even small government actions can have big unforeseen consequences, because only individuals know their precise response to a change in circumstances – and even then, they only know in their actions.

People respond to incentives. Knowledge is limited. They’re almost self-evidently true, but politicians (and quite a few economists) don’t seem to recognise this. We can’t make water run uphill and we can’t design a chaotic, cloud-like system like society. I wish our rulers would stop trying to do so.

FTL2011-03-31

On March 31, 2011, by Free Talk Live

Means vs Ends :: Jury Nullification Advocates in Orlando Win Again :: So-called Selflessness :: Cult of Personality :: Bee Keepers :: NH Political System Success :: Free Keene TV :: Vodka Tampons :: Teaching Young People about Alcohol :: More Choices :: Collectivist Speak :: EMT’s Gory Picture Taking :: Morbidity :: China :: Constitution :: Online Gambling

8. “Truth in Philosophy”

On March 31, 2011, by Stephan Kinsella (Editor)

by Tibor R. Machan Abstract: Can there be truth in philosophy? A problem: it is philosophy, its various schools, that advances what counts as true versus false, how to go about making the distinction. This is what I wish to focus on here and see if some coherent, sensible position could be reached on the [...]

Applied Austrian Economics

On March 31, 2011, by Jeffrey Tucker

In my own memory, Frank Shostak has called every short and long-term trend throughout all these turbulent years, not just globally but nationally as well. His archive on Mises.org is extensive and he remains one of our most popular writers. Over time I’ve learned to listen to his forecasts very carefully because they are based on his own money supply measure and his own indicators concerning the health of the capital stock. Added to that is a great intuition drawn from his studies of the Austrian School (he was a leading student of Ludwig Lachmann but his own attachment is… Continue Reading

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The Whelps of Tiger Moms and Irish Setter Dads

On March 31, 2011, by Wirkman Virkkala

Amy Chua, the Tiger Mom phenom, has finally received an apt check and mate from P.J. O’Rourke, in The Weekly Standard. Proclaiming himself an “Irish Setter Dad,” he finds the perfect use for the new Chua tome: I gather Ms. Chua is a total bitch with her children, making them finish homework before it’s assigned, [...]

If You Can’t Get Enough of Debates over Fractional Reserve Banking

On March 31, 2011, by Steve Horwitz

Steven Horwitz …then you should head on over to the Cobden Centre blog where Anthony Evans has a new post looking at the role of option clauses and notices of withdrawal in said debates.

Thursday: 5 Iraqis Killed, 14 Wounded

On March 31, 2011, by Margaret Griffis

At least five Iraqis were killed and 14 more were wounded in the latest violence. U.S. forces were involved in one incident that occurred when a bus driver couldn’t understand their commands.

16 Foods High in Vitamin C

On March 31, 2011, by LewRockwell.com

How to super-charge your diet with a major dose of this essential nutrient. Article by Edward Group.

The Only Effective Protection Against Government

On March 31, 2011, by LewRockwell.com

Take away its authority to create and control money, says Steve Saville.

Invasion of the Smelly Pests

On March 31, 2011, by LewRockwell.com

And they aren’t federal employees.

Wow, That Was Fast

On March 31, 2011, by LewRockwell.com

Libyan fighters set up a central bank.

Small Fish Fry, Big Ones Wiggle Off the Hook

On March 31, 2011, by LewRockwell.com

Bob Bauman on tax-police tactics.

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