Toward Liberty: The Idea that is Changing the World : 25 Years of Public Policy from the Cato InstituteDavid Boaz Cato Institute, 2002 - 460 sider In this collection, scholars and political leaders make the case for freedom, free enterprise, and the rule of law. |
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Side
... central planning of the 20th century , true liberalism is making a comeback . Everywhere that governments will allow it , people are choosing open markets , open soci- eties , and responsibility for their own lives . Information ...
... central planning of the 20th century , true liberalism is making a comeback . Everywhere that governments will allow it , people are choosing open markets , open soci- eties , and responsibility for their own lives . Information ...
Side 7
... central planning . Even during that period , though , the massive capitalist engine set in mo- tion by liberalism kept working , and living standards continued to rise in most of the world . By the end of the century , the last ...
... central planning . Even during that period , though , the massive capitalist engine set in mo- tion by liberalism kept working , and living standards continued to rise in most of the world . By the end of the century , the last ...
Side 13
... central planning , that the freedom to choose is about more than economics , that taxing enter- prise makes no more sense than subsidizing irresponsibility , that war is sometimes necessary but always enormously destructive , that ...
... central planning , that the freedom to choose is about more than economics , that taxing enter- prise makes no more sense than subsidizing irresponsibility , that war is sometimes necessary but always enormously destructive , that ...
Side 29
... Central and Western Europe , Southeast Asia , and Latin America . In Latin Amer- ica , for the first time in history , civilian governments — born of more or less free elections — are in power in nearly every country . ( The ex ...
... Central and Western Europe , Southeast Asia , and Latin America . In Latin Amer- ica , for the first time in history , civilian governments — born of more or less free elections — are in power in nearly every country . ( The ex ...
Side 30
... central- ism . We should also remember that the West achieved its victory over communism at a time when its societies were full of inferiority complexes : ordinary democracy offered scant " sex appeal " next to the fireworks of the ...
... central- ism . We should also remember that the West achieved its victory over communism at a time when its societies were full of inferiority complexes : ordinary democracy offered scant " sex appeal " next to the fireworks of the ...
Innhold
FOREIGN AFFAIRS | 243 |
The Constitution and the Evolution of US Foreign Policy | 245 |
The Case for US Strategic Independence | 254 |
Does US Intervention Overseas Breed Terrorism? | 264 |
Fools Errands? | 274 |
TRADE AND INTERNATIONAL FINANCE | 287 |
The Globalization of Finance | 289 |
Using the Market for Social Development | 297 |
81 | |
95 | |
105 | |
Ending Welfare as We Know It | 111 |
Preschool in the Nanny State | 125 |
THE REGULATORY STATE | 129 |
The High Cost of Government Regulation | 131 |
EnviroCapitalism vs Environmental Statism | 139 |
Federal Deposit Insurance Source of SL Crisis | 147 |
Parasite Economy Latches onto New Host | 155 |
A WORLD IN TRANSITION | 159 |
Fear and Loathing in the Soviet Union | 161 |
Workers against the Workers State | 168 |
Let a Billion Flowers Bloom | 180 |
Prospects for Peaceful Change in South Africa | 182 |
Democracy and Market | 192 |
The Communist Road to SelfEnslavement | 199 |
Chinas Quiet Property Rights Revolution | 206 |
Why Socialism Collapsed in Eastern Europe | 214 |
The Delicate Mixture of Intentions and Spontaneity | 222 |
Private Education Emerges in China | 229 |
Market Socialism or Market Taoism? | 232 |
Free Trade from the Bottom Up | 308 |
Why the IMF Should Not Intervene | 320 |
LAW AND LIBERTY | 327 |
Economic Affairs as Human Affairs | 329 |
Reckoning on Two Kinds of Error | 337 |
The Constitutional Protection of Economic Freedom | 345 |
National Emergency and the Erosion of Private Property Rights | 353 |
The Forgotten Ninth and Tenth Amendments | 370 |
Privacy as Property Right | 379 |
Clintons Chilling Constitutional Legacy | 388 |
The War on Drugs | 400 |
DEMOCRACY AND CULTURE | 409 |
Myths of Individualism | 411 |
Rights and Responsibilities | 419 |
The Right to Do as You Please and Take the Consequences | 422 |
Are Libertarians AntiGovernment? | 425 |
Creating a World of Free Men | 428 |
Is Our Culture in Decline? | 433 |
Affirmative Action Cant Be Mended | 442 |
The Future of Liberty | 452 |
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Toward Liberty: The Idea that is Changing the World : 25 Years of Public ... David Boaz Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 2002 |
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Populære avsnitt
Side 398 - Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.
Side 246 - The great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign nations is, in extending our commercial relations to have with them as little political connection as possible.
Side 386 - The Fourth and Fifth Amendments were described in Boyd v. United States, 116 US 616, 630, as protection against all governmental invasions "of the sanctity of a man's home and the privacies of life.
Side 82 - ... so shall him require. And take only the wages, livery, meed, or salary, which were accustomed to be given in the places where he oweth to serve, the xx.
Side 382 - I like my privacy as well as the next one, but I am nevertheless compelled to admit that government has a right to invade it unless prohibited by some specific constitutional provision.
Side 368 - In view of the ease, expedition and safety with which Congress can grant and has granted large emergency powers, certainly ample to embrace this crisis, I am quite unimpressed with the argument that we should affirm possession of them without statute. Such power either has no beginning or it has no end. If it exists, it need submit to no legal restraint. I am not alarmed that it would plunge us straightway into...