The spread-the-work schemes rest also, as we began by pointing out, on the false assumption that there is just a fixed amount of work to be done. There could be no greater fallacy. There is no limit to the amount of work to be done as long as any human need or wish that work could fill remains unsatisfied. In a modern exchange economy, the most work will be done when prices, costs, and wages are in the best relations to each other. - Henry Hazlitt
Mr. President, Don’t Scapegoat Private Schools - Neal McCluskey, Cato
How Capitalism Humanized the Family - Joseph Sunde, Acton
Amtrak’s Budget - Chris Edwards, Cato
Too Much Money Going to the Wrong Places - Randal O'Toole, Cato
Iris Murdoch’s Moral Vision and Modern Television - Matthew Murphy, Intercollegiate Review
President Obama’s Support For Parenting Equality - Jayme Metzger, The Federalist
Columbia Students Feel ‘Triggered’ By Ovid - Ethan Epstein, Weekly Standard
And We Must Avert Another - Mark L. Movsesian, Liberty Law Blog
Which “Common Law” Does the Seventh Amendment Protect? - Mike Rappaport, Liberty Law Blog
Obama Gets Names of Saudi Royals Wrong - Daniel Halper, Weekly Standard
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