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Will More Federal Money Help Our Schools? Peter Suderman on Fox Business Posted by: ReasonTV
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By: EconTruth. on 11 Nov 11, 04:43:04
Absolutely great book! Combines a lot of my favorite economics lessons (spontaneous order, changes in standard of living over time, dispersed knowledge, specialization, and unintended consequences to name a few). I don't know that it offered anything groundbreaking, but it's still very valuable because it's such a comprehensive mix of important economic lessons in a VERY understandable format. Two thumbs up! ?
By: Syncopator. on 27 Oct 11, 14:01:05
This is Polyanna Capitalism-- the idea that free markets can do no wrong, or at least government can only make things worse. We'd better hope that's not "the way the world works.". Just before he mentioned Atlas? Shrugged, I was thinking, "this guy wants to be the next Ayn Rand." He's not writing about "how the world works," only how he imagines it. Just like Rand.
By: Wormtail81. on 28 Dec 09, 17:13:08
i.e. The? Objectivist message.
By: Wormtail81. on 28 Dec 09, 17:12:43
The problem is that not everyone? relates to that message.
By: quenarosima. on 18 Jun 09, 07:26:54
Nice try. Keep? it up check out esteembpo + com for social media marketing. sdsdsd
By: yourdadsdesire. on 19 Mar 09, 02:32:10
Anyone have summaries of this book? Like they do? on sparknotes/cliffnotes...?
By: rma002. on 18 Nov 08, 23:49:54
Great Video. Though I would argue that Atlas Shrugged made the case for free markets by making the case for human happiness; as opposed to sacrifice and Altruism. The virtue of happiness and free-markets are linked. ? In any case, the theme of Atlas Shrugged was the role of the mind in human existence, the need for the mind to be free (and the need for free-markets) was an extension of that.
By: Kobeycheese. on 01 Nov 08, 06:20:32
"there can? be no argument against that?" My friend, how are you so self assured? There is an argument agains everything.