Jeffrey Tucker

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Jeffrey Tucker Speaker Sponsor Membership Sponsor Speaker Student Sponsor Membership Sponsor Student Event Schedule Venue Information MembershipLevel Corporate Membership Corporate 5:30pm – Cocktails Milwaukee Athletic Club WISCONSIN FORUM Family Family Membership Single Membership Single 6:30pm – Dinner 758 North Broadway 7:30pm – Speech Milwaukee, WI 53202 8:30pm – Q&A Public & Private Parking 2016-2017 SEASON Since being founded in 1965 by some of Featured Speaker: Milwaukee’s industrial leaders to help educate employees about free market concepts, Wisconsin Forum’s speakers have included Jeffrey Tucker authors, business leaders, economists, educators, entrepreneurs, journalists, and Nobel Laureates. Notable Wisconsin Forum speakers include Arthur Dining with the speaker during sponsored event. sponsored during speaker the with Dining event. sponsored during speaker the introduce to Option dinners guest additional (10) Ten events. (5) five for sponsorships student Two (2) Two entrepre and leaders business with Dining events. (5) five for sponsorships student Two (2) Two students. and leaders educational with Dining Three (3 events. (5) five for sponsorship student One (1) events. (5) five for dinner One (1) events. (5) five for dinner One (1) WI ForumWI Laffer, Cal Thomas, Charlie Sykes, Donald ( ( Boudreaux, Edith Efron, Edward Crane, Rt Hon. 2 2 ) dinner ) ) dinner for five (5) events. (5) five for dinner ) Enoch Powell, Eric O’Keefe, Sheriff David Clarke, ) dinner ) David Horowitz, Gary Johnson, Henry Hazlitt, James M. Buchanan, Amb. John Wood, Joseph s Seasonal MembershipBenefits Bast, Lawrence Reed, Leonard Read, Lew s for five (5) events. (5) five for for five (5) events. (5) five for Rockwell, Mark Belling, Mark Skousen, Mark Thornton, Amb. Michael Novak, Milton Friedman, Murray Rothbard, Richard Epstein, Robert Levy, Rev. Robert Sirico, Ron Paul, Stephen Moore, Thomas Sowell, Tom Woods, Walter Williams, William Buckley, and Yuri Maltsev. Wisconsin Forum offers the opportunity during sponsored event. sponsored during to hear and interact with articulate BOARD OF DIRECTORS speakers to discuss economic, moral, President: Ryan Law and philosophical principles. neurs. Law Tanning Co. & Global Cycling Supply We invite you to become a member for Vice President: John Savage Attorney at Law the 2016-2017 season and attend five events dedicated to the principles of Treasurer: Jess Ripp freedom, individual responsibility, and Ripp Realty the free market. Secretary: Jason Kuwayama Price $2500 $600 $450 $250 $800 Godfrey & Kahn Naheed Bleecker Charles Breeden Program Manager Marquette University Aaron Ensley Daniel Schneck Single Single Organization three within Reservations be must Reservations 501(c)(3) Nonprofit 501(c)(3) receive m and fee late shall da(3) advance in days (4) four least at director executive the with confirmed Clergy Clergy Single Guest Single Brookfield Academy To Solution, Inc. Teacher, or or Teacher, GuestPricing be charged a $10 $10 a charged be Tim Peterson ys of the event event of the ys Student, Student, Guest dinner Sales Automation Support, Inc. of the event. the of Executive Director Contact Information Status: Status: . ay ay Lowein B. Bystrom III PO Box 2171, 17345 Civic Drive not not The goal of Wisconsin Forum is to provide an Brookfield, WI 53045 $ $ 30 60 Mobile: (414) 639-5414 opportunity for business leaders, educators, and [email protected] students to interact with, and learn from, the leading www.WisconsinForum.org economic and business scholars of our age. Jeffrey Tucker Dr. Mark Skousen Michael Miller Thursday, September 15, 2016 Thursday, November 10, 2016 Wednesday, March 8, 2017 The Eugenic Origins of Totalitarianism: How the Election Results Affect Poverty, Charity, and Justice for the Poor How Demographic Panic Drove the Economy, the Stock Market, and You Progressive Era Politics “Poor people are poor because they lack the institutions Dr. Mark Skousen is one of the most preeminent of justice that enable them to create prosperity for their ”Evolution, in a word, if unchecked by man’s selective economists, a successful investment newsletter author, own families and their own communities.” power, may result in degeneration as well as in what we a professor for several universities, a writer of more than Michael Miller is the director and producer of Poverty Inc. choose to call progress. It is to prevent this result that twenty-five books, and the founder and producer of and a Research Fellow at the Acton Institute. Mr. Miller every civilized nation has been driven, by a whole FreedomFest in Las Vegas. Dr. Skousen will be the best will share his informative perspective and important century of experiment, to the adoption of stringent commentator you can rely on for a practical review of the advice about charity and justice for the poor. Poverty Inc. factory legislation as regards sanitation and hours of implications of the U.S. Presidential election for your is the eye-opening documentary about how poverty has labor.” – Fabian socialist Sidney Webb in 1912. business, your portfolio, and your personal well-being. become a multi-billion dollar industry, winning over 50 He can give us words of wisdom from his knowledge of international film festival honors and winning the Jeffrey Tucker will explain the dark origins of progressive the people, principles, and practices that work. He will prestigious $100,000 Templeton Freedom Award. policies such as the minimum wage and their ties to the back his analysis with examples and give us insights to eugenics movement, which sought to advance desirable the measurements he considers most meaningful. Dr. Chris Preble human characteristics through pseudoscience and Tuesday, April 4, 2017 racially discriminatory public policy. As one of the most Ira Winkler zealous voices of freedom, Mr. Tucker is guaranteed to How U.S. Foreign Policy Makes Us educate and entertain guests with his wit and charm. He Tuesday, January 17, 2017 Less Safe, Less Prosperous, and Less Free has guested the John Stossel show, The Glenn Beck If You Tweet What You Have for Lunch, Program, featured at FreedomFest, keynoted the Young You Deserve to be Robbed Americans for Liberty national convention, and is in constant demand to speak at libertarian, technology, and monetary conferences around the world. Social networking has become a blessing and a curse for U.S. foreign policy is focused on much more than organizations around the world. While it can be used to preserving the security of the United States. For much of promote an organization, all too frequently it acts against the last 70 years, U.S. policymakers, both Republicans you. Your employees unknowingly give out damaging and Democrats, have held out the U.S. military as the information. For example, an Israeli military operation guarantor of global security. U.S. policymakers should had to be cancelled, when a soldier posted a pending raid instead restrain their impulse to go to war when on his Facebook page. A web design company was American interests are not at stake, and encourage other seriously embarrassed when one of its employees countries to take responsibility for defending themselves casually tweeted that he was working on a campaign and their interests. As the wealthiest and most militarily page for a politician who had not actually announced he powerful country in the world, the United States will was running for office. Mr. Winkler will highlight the retain the ability to defend itself, and to assist others. dangers organizations face from social networking and But we should avoid the temptation to try to remake the will provide methods for preventing losses. world by force. .
Recommended publications
  • 109-120 Tucker Book Review
    BOOK REVIEWS Libertarianism—A Primer. By David Boaz. New York: The Free Press, 1997. Libertarianism: A Reader. David Boaz, ed. New York: The Free Press, 1997. What It Means to Be A Libertarian. By Charles Murray. New York: Broadway Books, 1997. Reviewed by Jeffrey Tucker* he American anti-statist intellectual tradition includes a wide variety of thinkers, from left utopians to secessionist T agrarians to right anarchists. Seemingly small theoret- ical differences between them can produce hugely different an- swers to the all-important question: what is to be done? Murray Rothbard’s primary contribution to this tradition was to firmly tie anti-statism to a strict adherence to property rights, rights which the state tramples on by its very existence, and rights which are best protected and enforced by private parties. The answer to the question of what is to be done follows clearly: gov- ernment power must be curbed and eliminated, to be replaced by private association. But modern libertarians haven’t always fol- lowed up on this radical Rothbardian project. Some libertarian writers—let’s call them left-libertarians—prefer to concentrate on the personal liberties associated with this political doctrine, while submerging property-centered social theory and a radical critique of the State, especially of the imperial state, within a larger laundry list of other aspects of libertarian policy. David Boaz’s primer may not be the prime example of ap- plied left-libertarianism (the post-Goldwater works of Karl Hess better deserve this moniker) but it nonetheless fits comfort- ably in that category. The reader is left with no doubt about where Boaz stands on lifestyle issues (drugs, sex, speech, etc.) and the policy concerns of the punditry class (how this or that program can be improved), but is left to speculate on precisely how strict Boaz’s utopia would be with regard to the protection of property rights, or how or on what level of society those rights would be enforced.
    [Show full text]
  • A Regulatory and Economic Perplexity: Bitcoin Needs Just a Bit of Regulation
    Washington University Journal of Law & Policy Volume 47 Intellectual Property: From Biodiversity to Technical Standards 2015 A Regulatory and Economic Perplexity: Bitcoin Needs Just a Bit of Regulation Daniela Sonderegger Washington University School of Law Follow this and additional works at: https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/law_journal_law_policy Part of the Banking and Finance Law Commons, and the Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics Commons Recommended Citation Daniela Sonderegger, A Regulatory and Economic Perplexity: Bitcoin Needs Just a Bit of Regulation, 47 WASH. U. J. L. & POL’Y 175 (2015), https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/law_journal_law_policy/vol47/iss1/14 This Note is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School at Washington University Open Scholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in Washington University Journal of Law & Policy by an authorized administrator of Washington University Open Scholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A Regulatory and Economic Perplexity: Bitcoin Needs Just a Bit of Regulation Daniela Sonderegger [T]here is something special about Bitcoin that makes it inherently resistant to government control. It is built on code. It lives in the cloud. It is globalized and detached from the nation state, has no own institutional owner, operates peer to peer, and its transactions are inherently pseudonymous. It cannot be regulated in the same way as the stock market, government currency markets, insurance, or other financial sectors. —Jeffrey Tucker1 INTRODUCTION Set aside all of the legal and regulatory parameters and simply take a moment to imagine a world that functions on a single digitalized currency, regulated not by a central authority, but rather by the individual users who take part in the system.
    [Show full text]
  • A Response to the Libertarian Critics of Open-Borders Libertarianism
    LINCOLN MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW __________________________________ VOLUME 4 FALL 2016 ISSUE 1 ____________________________________ A RESPONSE TO THE LIBERTARIAN CRITICS OF OPEN-BORDERS LIBERTARIANISM Walter E. Block, Ph.D. Harold E. Wirth Eminent Scholar Endowed Chair and Professor of Economics Joseph A. Butt, S.J. College of Business I. INTRODUCTION Libertarians may be unique in many regards, but their views on immigration do not qualify. They are as divided as is the rest of the population on this issue. Some favor open borders, and others oppose such a legal milieu. The present paper may be placed in the former category. It will outline both sides of this debate in sections II and III. Section IV is devoted to some additional arrows in the quiver of the closed border libertarians, and to a refutation of them. We conclude in section V. A RESPONSE TO THE LIBERTARIAN CRITICS OF OPEN-BORDERS LIBERTARIANISM 143 II. ANTI OPEN BORDERS The libertarian opposition to free immigration is straightforward and even elegant.1 It notes, first, a curious bifurcation in international economic relations. In the case of both trade and investment, there must necessarily be two2 parties who agree to the commercial interaction. In the former case, there must be an importer and an exporter; both are necessary. Without the consent of both parties, the transaction cannot take place. A similar situation arises concerning foreign investment. The entrepreneur who wishes to set up shop abroad must obtain the willing acquiescence of the domestic partner for the purchase of land and raw materials. And the same occurs with financial transactions that take place across 1 Peter Brimelow, ALIEN NATION: COMMON SENSE ABOUT AMERICA’S IMMIGRATION DISASTER (1995); Jesús Huerta De Soto, A Libertarian Theory of Free Immigration, 13 J.
    [Show full text]
  • Catholic Social Teaching and the Market Economy
    Journal of Markets & Morality Volume 15, Number 1 (Spring 2012): 11–20 Copyright © 2012 Catholic Social Teaching and the Market Economy Philip Booth Professor of Insurance and Risk Management, Cass Business School A Reply to Editorial and Programme Director Daniel K. Finn Institute of Economic Affairs This article examines the use of sources in an essay by Daniel Finn. Booth claims that Finn’s citations of Booth’s own work (as well as that of others) fail to respon- sibly and properly account for the original context of those references as well as their clear implications. After outlining the differences between libertarianism and neoconservatism, as well as between Catholic social thought and Catholic social teaching, Booth proceeds to examine three specific citations attributed to him by Finn. Booth concludes by looking at Finn’s characterization of positions attributed to Robert Sirico and Rodger Charles, as well as with a statement about the pos- sible contributions to Catholic social thought to be gained from public choice and Austrian economics. In a contribution to a controversy in the Journal of Markets & Morality, Daniel Finn discussed what he described as “Nine Libertarian Heresies Tempting Neoconservatives to Stray from Catholic Social Thought.”1 This is an inauspi- cious title for an article in an academic journal. To begin with, it is not obvious why libertarian heresies would tempt neoconservatives. Neoconservatives are not libertarian, and they tend to believe in using the state to achieve neocon- servative aims. This is one reason why George W. Bush ranks with Presidents Roosevelt and Johnson as one of the three presidents who expanded the scope of the state most rapidly.
    [Show full text]
  • Protection Under Australian Consumer Laws? the Regulatory Risks and Challenges of Bitcoin
    The University of Notre Dame Australia ResearchOnline@ND Law Papers and Journal Articles School of Law 2018 Do consumers need a ‘Bit’ more protection under Australian consumer laws? The regulatory risks and challenges of Bitcoin Chinelle Van Der Westhuizen The University of Notre Dame Australia, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://researchonline.nd.edu.au/law_article Part of the Law Commons This article was originally published as: Van Der Westhuizen, C. (2018). Do consumers need a ‘Bit’ more protection under Australian consumer laws? The regulatory risks and challenges of Bitcoin. Curtin Law and Taxation Review, IV, 59-77. This article is posted on ResearchOnline@ND at https://researchonline.nd.edu.au/law_article/89. For more information, please contact [email protected]. © 2018 Dale Pinto and authors. This article originally published in the Curtin Law and Taxation Review, 2018: - Van Der Westhuizen, C. (2018) Do consumers need a ‘Bit’ more protection under Australian consumer laws? The regulatory risks and challenges of Bitcoin. Curtin Law and Taxation Review, IV, 59-77. Permission granted by the Curtin Law and Taxation Review for use on ResearchOnline@ND. 59 DO CONSUMERS NEED A ‘BIT’ MORE PROTECTION UNDER AUSTRALIAN CONSUMER LAWS? THE REGULATORY RISKS AND CHALLENGES OF BITCOIN Chinelle Van Der Westhuizen* ABSTRACT The creation of Bitcoin, as a digital currency, has been a significant development in the world of finance, in that it provides an alternative method of payment to consumers and businesses who use Bitcoin as a means to buy or sell goods or simply as an investment arrangement.
    [Show full text]
  • Sanchez-Yourworkyourlifefreeyourselffirst.Pdf
    FEE’s mission is to inspire, educate, and connect future leaders with the economic, ethical, and legal principles of a free society. Find us online at: FEE.org Facebook.com/FEEonline Twitter.com/FEEonline (@feeonline) Foundation for Economic Education 1819 Peachtree Road NE, Suite 300 Atlanta, Georgia 30309 Telephone: (404) 554-9980 ISBN (print): 978-1-57246-533-1 2016 Published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License by The Foundation for Economic Education Your Life, Your Work First Free Yourself Edited by Dan Sanchez iv Omnipotent Government Contents Introduction by Dan Sanchez . 1 Part 1: Self-Improvement Self-DisciplineMustBeSelfish by Dan Sanchez 7 Character,Liberty,andEconomics by Lawrence W. Reed . 11 AreYouNotSelfishEnough? by Dan Sanchez 15 HowNotToBeaLoser by Jeffrey Tucker . 23 WhattheSelf-EsteemMovementGotDisastrouslyWrong by Dan Sanchez 29 GoalsInspireUs,butSystemsTransformUs by T.K. Coleman . 35 WhatEpicurusCanTeachUsaboutFreedomandHappiness by Joey Clark 41 HowtoAttainOuterExcellenceandInnerPeace by Dan Sanchez 49 HackYourHabitstoTransformYourLife by Dan Sanchez 53 Ludwig von Mises v Part 2: Career MiserableinYourJob?Here’sWhy by Jeffrey Tucker . 59 YourCareerIsanEnterprise by Dan Sanchez 65 TheSecretWeaponYoungPeopleHaveontheJobMarket… by Isaac Moorehouse 69 AdviceforYoung,UnemployedWorkers by Jeffrey Tucker . 73 EntrepreneurshipIsforEverybody by Dan Sanchez 81 HowtoDevelopaWorkEthicandBeanAmazingEmployee by Jeffrey Tucker . 85 SuccessIsMoreAboutMindsetthanSkillset by Barry Brownstein. 93 EconomicsHelpsYouDealwithDifficultPeople
    [Show full text]
  • Bourbon for Breakfast Living Outside the Statist Quo
    Bourbon for Breakfast Living Outside the Statist Quo Bourbon for Breakfast Living Outside the Statist Quo By Jeffrey Tucker © 2010 by the Ludwig von Mises Institute and published under the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Ludwig von Mises Institute 518 West Magnolia Avenue Auburn, Alabama 36832 mises.org ISBN: 978-1-933550-89-3 For Murray N. Rothbard 5 Introduction The title of this book is drawn from one of those defining moments in life in which a small phrase* shatters the social-cultural convention and reveals completely new possibilities. I tell the story herein in the essay on morning drinking. A great scholar and Southern gentlemen—a man who has written the ultimate guidebook to the writing of the King James version of the Gos- pels—invited me for an early breakfast, 7:00 a.m. and then offered me coffee. I said, “yes, thank you.” He then added: “would you like bourbon in that coffee?” What is revealed in that sentence and the shock it elicited? We believe, for whatever reason, that drinking hard liquor in the morning is unseemly, contrary to social norms, something to hide, a habit of the lower classes that is dangerous or even evil. But are any of these assumptions true? A new form of prohibitionism has swept the country, imposed on us by our government masters and their cultural backers, even as alcohol consumption rises and rises. Evidently, we live two realities: the one the government imposes on us and the one we adopt in our real lives.
    [Show full text]
  • Liberty Applied: Current Events & Controversies
    January 31–February 1 | Co-sponsored by IHS and The Free Market Institute at Texas Tech University Immigration Technology and Freedom Explore such topics as: The Decline of U.S. Economic Freedom Markets for human organs Register by January 24 at: TheIHS.org/Liberty-Applied Faculty Dr. Robert A. Lawson holds the Jerome M. Fullinwider Endowed Centennial Chair in Economic Freedom in the O’Neil Center for Global Markets and Freedom in the Cox School of Business at Southern Methodist University. He is co-author of the widely-cited Economic Freedom of the World annual reports, published by the Fraser Institute, which present an economic freedom index for over 140 countries. Jeffrey Tucker serves as distinguished fellow of the Foundation for Economic Education, Executive Editor of Laissez Faire Books, research fellow of the Acton Institute, and CEO of the social network startup Liberty.me. He is the founder of the CryptoCurrency Conference, serves as economic consultant to the popular podcast Let’s Talk Bitcoin, and writes a fortnightly column for Crisis Magazine. He is author of Bourbon for Breakfast, It’s a Jetson’s World, and A Beautiful Anarchy, and thousands of articles, introductions, and prefaces. Dr. Benjamin Powell is the inaugural Director of the Free Market Institute and Visiting Professor in the Rawls College of Business at Texas Tech University. He is the North American Editor of the Review of Austrian Economics. He is also editor of Making Poor Nations Rich: Entrepreneurship and the Process of Development, co-editor of Housing America: Building Out of a Crisis and author of the upcoming Cambridge University Press book Sweatshops: Improving Lives and Economic Growth.
    [Show full text]
  • Are Antitrust Laws Immoral? Jeffrey Tucker Director of Research Ludwig
    The Journal of Markets & Morality 1, no. 1(Spring 1998), 75-82 Copyright © 1998 Center for Economic Personalism Controversy: Are Antitrust Laws Immoral? Jeffrey Tucker Director of Research Ludwig von Mises Institute Most issues in economics raise parallel moral concerns. Should we have a social safety net, or does this merely decrease the incentive to work and increase the incentive to fall into the net? Should the public be taxed to provide “public services,” or does this coercively impinge on the value of private property itself? Should monetary policy be used to drive up rates of employment in the short run, or does this approach risk setting off infla- tion in the long run? In each case, the violability or inviolability of private property, the meaning and application of justice, and the morality of ad- hering to strict standards of individual liberty are at issue as much as ques- tions of economic efficiency are. In dealing with all of these issues, economists have been as influenced by moral traditions as they have been by non-normative arguments. Hume contributed to the theory of the balance of payments but also to the idea of what constitutes the public good. Adam Smith celebrated the invisible hand of markets but also investigated the moral basis of civil society. In the pre- Smithian intellectual history of economics, the leading economic thinkers were scholastic theologians known as well among Church historians as his- torians of economic thought1. More recently, the works of John Rawls and Robert Nozick have occasioned much debate in public-choice economics and welfare economics.
    [Show full text]
  • The Forking Phenomenon and the Future of Cryptocurrency in the Law
    UIC REVIEW OF INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW THE FORKING PHENOMENON AND THE FUTURE OF CRYPTOCURRENCY IN THE LAW CHELSEA D. BUTTON ABSTRACT In the evolving and ever-changing world of cryptocurrency, new and exciting phenomena arise, including hard forks. Hard forks occur when two groups supporting a cryptocurrency disagree on how the code should evolve. If the changes are incompatible, the code diverges into two chains, essentially doubling the amount of each holder’s coin. Forking a coin is theoretically easy. However, maintaining a fork requires great effort and support by members of the community. This Article discusses the November 15, 2018 Bitcoin Cash hard fork and subsequent lawsuit, analyzing anti-trust, negligence, and conversion claims. Forcing de facto fiduciary duties on developers and miners fails to consider that cryptocurrency is a product, likening developers to copyright holders, and the basic premises of fiduciary law. Next, this Article examines the effect of lawsuits on crypto-communities, including legal and economic ramifications of hard forks. While developers may hold some power in cryptocurrency management, external regulations would be impractical and lead to serious ramifications. This Article proposes that developers and miners should protect themselves through contract law and public blockchain networks should be treated as pseudo-sovereigns with internal regulations, for situations such as hard forks. Cite as Chelsea D. Button, The Forking Phenomenon and The Future of Cryptocurrency in the Law, 19 UIC REV. INTELL. PROP. L. 1 (2019). THE FORKING PHENOMENON AND THE FUTURE OF CRYPTOCURRENCY IN THE LAW CHELSEA D. BUTTON I. INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................ 1 II. BACKGROUND ................................................................................................................ 3 A. The Basics: What Is Cryptocurrency? ................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Right Wing Collectivism.Pdf
    FEE’s mission is to inspire, educate, and connect future leaders with the economic, ethical, and legal principles of a free society. Find us online at: FEE.org Facebook.com/FEEonline Twitter.com/FEEonline (@feeonline) Foundation for Economic Education 1819 Peachtree Road NE, Suite 300 Atlanta, Georgia 30309 Telephone: (404) 554-9980 ISBN (ebook): 978-1-63069-608-5 ISBN (print): 978-1-63069-610-8 2017 Published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License by The Foundation for Economic Education Right-Wing Collectivism The Other Threat to Liberty Jeffrey Tucker Contents Preface by Deirdre Nansen McCloskey .. ix Introduction . 1 I. The Scene The Violence in Charlottesville. 11 Lessons from the Charlottesville March. 17 My Lunch with a Nazi .. 23 II. The Politics The New Revanchism . 31 Trumpism: The Ideology. 39 Waking Up to the Reality of Fascism . 45 Two Flavors of Tyranny . 53 Do You Know What a Nation Is? . 57 Why Is Trump Waging War on the Freedom Caucus? .. 63 III. The History Policy Science Kills . 69 Why the Holocaust Should Matter to You . 79 The Intellectual Conceit of IQ Ideology . 85 The Eugenics Plot of the Minimum Wage. 93 The Misogynist Origins of American Labor Law . 101 iv IV. The Philosophy Five Differences Between the Alt-Right and Libertarianism .. 115 The Prehistory of the Alt-right .. 123 Fichte, Ruskin, Chamberlain, Gentile, and Eliot: Champions of Fascist Control . 131 Thomas Carlyle, the Founding Father of Fascism . 141 The Brooding Baron of 20th-Century Fascism . 151 We Fight to Feel Alive .. 163 V. The Future The West Is a Portable Idea, Not Blood and Soil.
    [Show full text]
  • Plumb-Line Libertarianism: a Critique of Hoppe
    Plumb-Line Libertarianism: A Critique of Hoppe Walter Block Loyola University New Orleans 1. Introduction It is one thing to make temporary strategic alliances with the forces of either left or right. This may properly be done for several reasons. One reason is to try to convert them to the one true faith. In doing so we say to the leftist: You favor freedom for pot smoking, so how about gold owning? Both, not just the one freedom you favor in this case, can be derived from the “humanistic” principles you ostensibly, but not consistently enough, favor. Similarly, we say to the denizens of the right: You oppose government restrictions such as the minimum wage and rent control, so how about applying the very same philosophical principles which lead you to these conclusions to freedom for homosexuals to engage in consensual adult behavior on the very private property to which you pay lip service? Similarly, it is entirely appropriate, and fully consistent with libertarianism, to make temporary alliances with left- or right-wingers in order to promote a common interest. Libertarians, for example, may support socialists in their anti-war efforts, or conservatives in their promotion of freedom of association and opposition to enforced affirmative action or coercive unionism. But whatever our purposes in these transitory associations, as libertarians we must always maintain our own identity. Otherwise, all that is unique and vital in this philosophy will be lost. And this would be a tragedy of gigantic proportions, in that this political-economic perspective is that last best hope for mankind, and for his very survival.
    [Show full text]