Category Archives: Ludwig von Mises

“We Are All Austrians Now”

Ah, the Austrian School.  That marvelous brand of free-market reasoning borne of a turn-of-the-century respect for laissez-faire capitalism, nurtured to maturity beneath the sun-kissed awnings of prewar Austria-Hungary’s street-side salons and coffee shops, and from there, exported across the world … Continue reading

Posted in Austrian school, classical liberal, Commanding Heights, Friedrich Hayek, Keynesian, libertarian, Ludwig von Mises, PBS, Peter Schiff, Public Square, Thomas Woods | 2 Comments

Trading Spaces: America’s Place in Tomorrow’s Economy

While the readers of this blog have continued their search for solid ground, Americans everywhere are struggling to maintain a foothold against the backsliding currency crisis as fallout from the asset bubble foments a nuclear winter of frozen credit and … Continue reading

Posted in Austrian school, China, classical liberal, Crash Proof, currency pegs, deflation, dollar, Economics in One Lesson, Federal Reserve, foreign policy, Henry Hazlitt, inflation, libertarian, Ludwig von Mises, manufacturing economy, monetary policy, Paul Krugman, Peter Schiff, Public Square, RMB, Ron Paul, service economy, the Fed, Thomas Woods, trade deficit, Yuan | Leave a comment