The Costs of “Doing Nothing” on Climate Change Sound Pretty Good
The regulatory costs of reaching the IPCC's goal of limiting global warming would be greater than the estimated cost of climate change damages.
The regulatory costs of reaching the IPCC's goal of limiting global warming would be greater than the estimated cost of climate change damages.
Hunter Lewis on why Bernie Sanders' prescriptions for the economy would only make crony capitalism worse. My review of 'Where Bernie Went Wrong'.
Peter Dreier in the Huffington Post declares that "Jesus Was a Socialist", but the very scriptures he cites to support that claim demonstrate the opposite.
The solutions being proposed for how to "fix" Obamacare are just more of the same kinds of interventions that have caused the problems in the first place.
The UN recognizes the harm caused by central banks' inflationary monetary policy, but still advocates even more government intervention into the market.
The New York Times advocates increasing the minimum wage while refusing to see the evidence of the harm caused by outlawing jobs.
Paul Krugman argues that what is needed to grow the economy is more government spending, but his fallacies are glaring.
It is in the state's interest to indoctrinate the public with the belief that the "free market" is to blame for consequences of state interventions.
Paul Krugman is a true believer in printing money to solve economic problems caused by printing money.
Watch what happens when I challenged this guy's anti-free-market dogma.
The New York Times editors argue that CO2 emissions can be taxed without harming consumers, but in so doing only illustrate their own cognitive dissonance.
Krugman holds Denmark up as an example of how socialism works, when in fact, it ranks higher than even the US in the Economic Freedom Index.
Paul Krugman knows that the Bush tax cuts didn't cause the economic collapse, but places the blame there anyway.
Paul Krugman has a very good reason why he doesn't want you to listen to anything Ron Paul has to say about Fed policy and the economy.
I was on the Tom Woods radio show this week to discuss my book Ron Paul vs. Paul Krugman: Austrian vs. Keynesian Economics in the Financial Crisis.
Paul Krugman can't see how to achieve long-term economic growth because he is a high priest of the state religion with unwavering faith in central planning.
Paul Krugman declares that the Obama stimulus plan was good for the economy. But what is his evidence?
Paul Krugman makes vain argument that the federal minimum wage should be raised because the law of supply and demand doesn't apply to labor wages.
I was honored by being asked to contribute an essay on Keynesian economics for a student reference textbook; trouble was it was required to be "neutral".
The criteria Paul Krugman uses when he declares Obamacare a great "success" are obtuse and perverse.
I am a truly independent journalist and Research Fellow at The Libertarian Institute whose work is focused on exposing dangerous mainstream propaganda that serves to manufacture consent for criminal government policies.
I'm the author of several books, including Obstacle to Peace: The US Role in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict The War on Informed Consent, Ron Paul vs. Paul Krugman: Austrian vs. Keynesian Economics in the Financial Crisis, and The War on Informed Consent, which features a Foreword by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
Topics I have covered over the years include 9/11 and the "war on terrorism", the war on Iraq, the Israel-Palestine conflict, the role of the Federal Reserve in the economy, and so-called "public health" policies including vaccines and the COVID-19 lockdown madness.
The aim of my work is to empower people with the knowledge needed to see through the lies and to create a brighter future for our children.
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