• John & Nisha Whitehead - The Rutherford Institute
America's founders rejected concentrated power. They denounced standing armies. They distrusted government secrecy. They risked their lives to escape a ruler who could tax without consent, wage war without accountability, and govern without meaning
Ever since I founded The Future of Freedom Foundation in 1989, I have primarily focused my attention on making the moral case for the genuinely free society.
Never mind Fancy Bear, or the NSO Group, the biggest threat to the open internet today is from the Big Tech corporations on which it has come to depend.
Tucker Carlson's comments about debt become a doorway into something much bigger, because once credit cards, mortgages, addiction, media manipulation, and engineered dependence start getting viewed as part of the same system...
Banksy becomes a way into a bigger question here, because once rebellious art starts being protected, promoted, or tolerated depending on the message it carries, it gets harder to tell where counterculture ends...
In the run-up to the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence this coming Fourth of July, the Washington Post recently published a long article about how Americans celebrated the 100th anniversary of the Declaration in 1876.
Joining me today is Dennis Kucinich, here to discuss the US government's ongoing war against Iran, the illegal nature of the attacks, and the role that Israel, Netanyahu personally, and Zionism played in the creation and elongation of this war. We
Even among "sincere friends of freedom," disagreement over government's role runs deep. Can a state be big enough to defend liberty without also violating it?
"Happy Freedom Day, Esther!" said Mr. Locke, stopping just long enough to knuckle the brim of his cap before scurrying down the street with his bag of supplies.
"There is no art which one government sooner learns of another than that of draining money from the pockets of the people."--Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations
Arguments have become heated among classical liberals, libertarians, Objectivists, and conservatives over the rationales, justifications, and constitutional legitimacy of Donald Trump's new war with Iran.