Friday, July 30, 2010

KA-POW! #39 - Woods

This week's “Kick-Ass Post O’th’ Week” (KA-POW) goes to Thomas E. Woods, Jr. for “Mises's Vision of the Free Society” :

He [Mises] focuses primarily on the necessity of large-scale social cooperation. This social cooperation, by which complex chains of production function to improve the general standard of living, can be brought about only by an economic system based on private property. Private property in the means of production, coupled with the progressive extension of the division of labor, has helped to free mankind from the horrific afflictions that once confronted the human race: disease, grinding poverty, appalling rates of infant mortality, general squalor and filth, and radical economic insecurity, with people often living one bad harvest away from starvation. Until the market economy illustrated the wealth-creating possibilities of the division of labor, it was taken for granted that these grotesque features of man's condition were the fixed dictates of a cold and merciless nature, and thus unlikely to be substantially alleviated, much less conquered entirely, by human effort.

Thursday, July 29, 2010

“987-6687”

You are found out...

[Sorry, the review period has ended.]

Friday, July 23, 2010

KA-POW! #38 - Rothbard

This week's “Kick-Ass Post O’th’ Week” (KA-POW) goes to Murray N. Rothbard (again) for “Carter's Energy Fascism” :

... Here, we must point to a vital distinction that lies at the heart of economic science: between "scarcity" and a "shortage." Not only are all forms of energy scarce, but all goods and services, without exception, are scarce as well. That is, people could always use more of them if available. We have always lived in a world of scarcity for all goods, and we always will, short of the Garden of Eden; economic development over the centuries has consisted in making goods relatively less scarce than heretofore. The test of whether or not any good or service is scarce is very simple: is its price greater than zero? If it is, then it is scarce. Happily, air is not scarce, and so its price on the market is zero (although this is not true of conditioned air.)

Thursday, July 15, 2010

KA-POW! #37 - Rothbard

This week's “Kick-Ass Post O’th’ Week” (KA-POW) goes to Murray N. Rothbard for “Carter's Energy Fascism” :

... What the State, what every would-be tyrant wants, of course, is war. War, especially a war that the State is in no danger of losing, provides the perfect milieu for all power to redound to the State, for siphoning wealth from private into governmental hands, for 'making the bastards obey'. War, as Randolph Bourne so perceptively pointed out a half-century ago, "is the health of the State."

For, generally, in their private lives, people wish only to go about their business in freedom, to be left alone with the money they have earned to run their lives as they see fit. Throughout history, governments and their rulers have sought to pull the wool over the eyes of their subjects, to make them like, or at least be resigned to, the oppression and exploitation they suffer at the hands of the State.

Thursday, July 8, 2010

“Night Tripping”

What the hell just happened? ...

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Friday, July 2, 2010

KA-POW! #36 - Mises

This week's “Kick-Ass Post O’th’ Week” (KA-POW) goes to Ludwig von Mises for “The Market Economy as Affected by the Recurrence of the Trade Cycle” :

The boom is called good business, prosperity, and upswing. Its unavoidable aftermath, the readjustment of conditions to the real data of the market, is called crisis, slump, bad business, depression. People rebel against the insight that the disturbing element is to be seen in the malinvestment and the overconsumption of the boom period and that such an artificially induced boom is doomed. ...

...[W]e must call the boom retrogression and the depression progress.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

“Beyond Columbia”

Big Tuck tapped the breast of his body armor and said...

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“Car Theft: There’s an App for That!”

Consumers might not realize that stealing cars...

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