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"The idea that an expanding economy implies that all industries must be simultaneously expanding is a profound error. In order that new industries may grow fast enough it is usually necessary that some old industries should be allowed to shrink or die."

- Henry Hazlitt (Economics In One Lesson)

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Regime Uncertainty in the 1930s: A New Deal Insider’s Account PDF  | Print |
Book Reviews - History
Written by Robert Higgs   

In the mid-1990s, when I was engaged in the research that would eventually be published early in 1997 in an article titled "Regime Uncertainty" (a modestly revised version of which appears as chapter 1 of my Depression, War, and Cold War), I had not read Raymond Moley's book After Seven Years, published in 1939. Mea culpa. I should have read it much earlier. I am embarrassed to admit that although I purchased a copy in a used-book store many years ago, it sat on my shelf unread until recently.

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Hamilton's Curse: How Jefferson's Arch Enemy Betrayed The American Revolution--And What It Means For Americans Today - by Thomas Dilorenzo PDF  | Print |
Book Reviews - History
Written by J. D. Seagraves   

In Hamilton's Curse, author Dr. Thomas J. DiLorenzo traces the roots of America's economic and political systems to the first secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton. We are truly living in "Hamilton's Republic," says Dr. DiLorenzo -- but this is far from a good thing.

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While it is Thomas Jefferson's face that graces Mount Rushmore, and tremendous lip service is paid to his greatness as a political thinker and president, in reality, Jefferson's ideas have been entirely marginalized, while those of his arch rival Hamilton now form the backbone of the American political establishment. The Revolution of 1776 was a Jeffersonian Revolution to throw off the yoke of British mercantilist imperialism and install it its place a voluntary union of free and independent states. Hamilton and his acolytes, however -- no matter how bravely and earnestly they fought against the Red Coats -- wanted to import British mercantilism to America with the U.S. aristocracy (Hamilton and his Federalist buddies) on the receiving end of the mercantilist spoils system. In fact, DiLorenzo argues that the Constitution itself was a virtual coup against the free republic of the Articles of Confederation for the purpose of increasing the authority of the central government -- key to Hamilton's plans.
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