Mises Institute
Friday, May 30, 2025
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The Cultural Consequences of Inflation
Daniel Morena Viton
It is easy to think of inflation as just being economic in scope. Yet, as inflation becomes an expected part of the body politic, it affects the culture as well, encouraging everyone to try to live beyond their means.
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The American-Israeli Nineteenth-Century Ways of War
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
This brief historical sketch brings us to how the American and Israeli militaries of today have adopted a nineteenth-century-style war of extermination against what they consider to be another “lesser race.”
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The One Bloated Brobdingnagian Bill
President Trump’s so-called “One Big, Beautiful Bill” is more of the same: big and bloated.
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The Burdens of Federal Public Debt
Massive federal debt shaped America’s early republic, fueling corruption, taxes, and centralized power.
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Take the Deal, President Trump
Deal-making is said to be President Trump’s specialty, yet after five rounds of indirect talks with Iran – most recently just days ago – we seem as far away from an agreement as ever.
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COVID ZIRP Triggers ABCT in LV Industrial RE
The Zero Interest Rate Policy (ZIRP) implemented by central banks during covid continues to provide real world examples of the Austrian Business Cycle Theory (ABCT).
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Ludwig von Mises on Peace and Social Cooperation
The free market replaces the struggle for survival found in the animal world with social cooperation in which everybody benefits. Capitalism is a system of peace, not war.
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Poland’s Turn Toward a Market Economy Saved It from Poverty
Łukasz Dominiak joins Ryan McMaken to talk about Poland’s rise from poverty.
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The World at War
Ralph Raico offers a compelling, classical liberal perspective on the economic roots of twentieth-century conflict. Raico weaves together history and theory to illuminate the deeper causes of the world wars—insights that remain strikingly relevant in the context of ongoing debates over intervention and perpetual war.
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