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How to Reverse the Monetary Breakdown of the West

How to Reverse the Monetary Breakdown of the West

For more than half a century, the global economy has operated under a monetary system divorced from gold. The 1971 collapse of the Bretton Woods system, where the U.S. dollar’s convertibility to gold was suspended, ushered in the fiat money era, a regime in which paper currencies are backed by nothing but government decree. Economist Murray Rothbard, in What Has Government Done to Our Money?, particularly in the chapter “The Monetary Breakdown of the West,” details how this transition has distorted economic incentives, weakened the real economy, and fueled financial speculation at the...

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Revisiting Rothbard’s Argument on Tariffs

Revisiting Rothbard’s Argument on Tariffs

As American consumers and businesses face the looming possibility of additional tariffs under a second Trump administration, it is worth revisiting the incisive critique of protectionism put forth by economist Murray Rothbard in his book Power and Market. Rothbard’s analysis exposes protectionism not as a tool for national prosperity but as a mechanism for enriching politically connected interests at the expense of the general population. With policymakers entertaining yet more trade restrictions, his arguments remain as relevant as ever. Protectionism, in its essence, involves the use of...

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Dean Acheson’s Taiwan Dilemma

Dean Acheson’s Taiwan Dilemma

In the aftermath of World War II, U.S. policymakers felt they faced an increasingly dire situation in China. By late 1949, Mao Zedong’s Communist forces had decisively defeated Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists (Kuomintang/KMT), pushing them off the mainland to Taiwan. In the mind of Dean Acheson, secretary of state under President Harry Truman, the collapse of the Nationalists raised pressing questions. Could Taiwan be held against a Communist invasion? And was Chiang Kai-shek the right leader for this task? Acheson’s initial plans, however fleeting, to replace Chiang underscore the...

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The Economics of Deadwood

The Economics of Deadwood

California’s catastrophic wildfires have become an annual tragedy. Beyond the devastation they bring to communities and ecosystems, these fires are a powerful metaphor for the unintended consequences of human intervention in natural systems. A primary culprit in California’s wildfire crisis is the state’s stringent environmental regulations, which often prevent the clearing of deadwood and other combustible materials. By not allowing these natural fuels to be managed by interested private companies, the state creates the perfect conditions for devastating infernos. This dynamic offers an...

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The Illusion of Wartime Prosperity

The Illusion of Wartime Prosperity

That war is of benefit to the business of voluntary exchange to mutual benefit is, as one of the last British bearers of the classical liberal flame, Norman Angell, remarked in 1909, the great illusion. Certainly there were some industries that gained, such as the makers of armaments, but on the whole society as a whole suffered a significant decline in its level of general welfare. Long before Angell made the remark, a critique of the intensifying protectionism, imperialism, and armaments procurement of the period that preceded the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, the great...

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Reintroducing Liberty’s Master Historian

Reintroducing Liberty’s Master Historian

On June 1, 1983, at a morning session of the Cato Institute Summer Seminar, attendees bore witness to what remains to this day one of the greatest single revisionist retellings of the tragic and formative period of world history: 1914-1945. For three hours, Dr. Ralph Raico held forth, touching on every relevant subject to the horrible thirty years of war that gave rise to communism, Nazism, nuclear bombs, the Cold War, and the all powerful state. He expertly tied together the decline of classical liberalism in the late nineteenth century and the rise of statism, the formation and growth of...

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America’s Origins of Russophobia

America’s Origins of Russophobia

For those that grew up in the United States in the 1990s and 2000s, the explosion of Russophobia over the past decade likely came as something of a surprise. A brief survey of the history of Russophobia, however, reveals that the decade and a half after the end of the Cold War was something of an anomaly in the past century and a half of American foreign policy, with a blend of inherited geopolitical fears and ideological tensions leading to a generally anti-Russian sentiment in Washington. Our investigation begins with the so-called “Testament of Peter the Great.” An eighteenth century...

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The DOGE(s) Before DOGE

The DOGE(s) Before DOGE

President-elect Donald Trump’s announcement of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), led by Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, represents the latest in a long line of ambitious attempts to streamline the U.S. federal government and address fiscal inefficiencies. While the symbolic aspects of DOGE—its internet meme-inspired acronym and high-profile leadership—signal a modern approach to government reform, the initiative bears striking similarities to previous efforts, notably the Keep Commission under President Theodore Roosevelt, the Grace Commission under President Ronald Reagan, and...

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