The Libertarian Institute is proud to announce publication of the last book by our late, great, sorely missed co-founder, managing editor and dear friend, the heroic Will Grigg: No Quarter: The Ravings of William Norman Grigg This book is a fitting legacy for a great...
Featured Articles
Boycotting Boycotts
by James Leroy Wilson | Jul 4, 2019 | Featured Articles, Politics
Another day, another controversy about Colin Kaepernick and so-called patriotism. This time, Nike pulled a line of shoes with the Besty Ross flag on the back because Kaepernick objected that it was flown in the slavery era. Others say it's objectionable because white...
The Sons of Liberty Flag: How a Group of American Patriots Led the Colonies to Rebellion
by Sam Jacobs | Jul 2, 2019 | Featured Articles, Libertarianism
The origins of the Sons of Liberty flag go back to 1765, when a secretive group of patriots known as “the Loyal Nine” was formed – the group behind the original Boston Tea Party. The flag was then known as “the Rebellious Stripes” and it was banned by the British...
Antiwar.com: Now What?
by Scott Horton | Jun 30, 2019 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy, Libertarianism, Scott Horton
Reprinted from Antiwar.com. The question, “Now what?” seems appropriate today. First of all, R.I.P. Justin Raimondo. As Tom Woods said, Justin was the soul of this site. Despite popular misunderstanding, he was not the editor or webmaster (that’s me, Jason Ditz and...
Justin Raimondo, RIP (1951-2019)
by Eric Garris | Jun 30, 2019 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy, Libertarianism
Reprinted from Antiwar.com. Justin Raimondo, former editorial director and co-founder of Antiwar.com, is dead at 67. He died at his home in Sebastopol, California, with his husband, Yoshinori Abe, by his side. He had been diagnosed with 4th stage lung cancer in...
The 16th Amendment: How the U.S. Federal Income Tax Became D.C.’s Favorite Political Weapon
by Sam Jacobs | Jun 28, 2019 | Economics, Featured Articles, Politics
The American Revolution was sparked in part by unjust taxation. After all, the colonists in Boston rebelled against Britain for imposing “taxation without representation,” and summarily tossed English tea into the harbor in protest in 1773. Nowadays Americans...
Money-Supply Growth Remained Sluggish in May
by Ryan McMaken | Jun 28, 2019 | Featured Articles, Politics
Money supply growth inched up in May, rising slightly above March's and April's growth levels. But overall growth levels remain quite low compared to growth rates experienced from 2009 to 2016. March's growth rate, for examples, was at a 12-year (145-month) low. In...
Soldiers Without Guns
by David Swanson | Jun 28, 2019 | Featured Articles, Politics
https://youtu.be/ImwipiavM8k A new film by Will Watson, called Soldiers Without Guns, ought to shock a great many people — not because it utilizes a yet more gruesome form of violence or bizarre form of sex (the usual shockers in movie reviews), but because it...









