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The Quotable Mises thing seems to strip out all hyphens; there are a lot more examples of that.
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If the Politburo wanted to stop Stalin, they would've had to overthrow him; the man was more or less a dictator whose death was the first opportunity to limit the power of the premier(or was it first secretary?), which the Politburo promptly seized.
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While Microsoft might have temporarily killed off the competition, remember that it was only temporary - Mozilla Firefox hit hard and fast enough to make Microsoft abandon the idea that it could stick with version 6 of IE forever. The browser market is perfect proof that, absent coercion, a monopoly that rests on its laurels is soon eviscerated by more
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I think Kinsella mentioned that this sort of thing could only count as fraud, since trademarks are positive rights. No fraud, no tort.
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There's also a lot more being spent on transporting kids to and from school; the rising price of gas is doing its part.
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Having your worldview disproven is extremely discomfiting; doublethink exists for just this very reason. All you can do is have patience.
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It looks like it can be simplified into "there's no magic difference between barter and non-barter markets".
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Patton also wanted to pursue a "race to Berlin" strategy, that would've seen Germany defeated before it was all in ruins(his British counterpart(Montgomery, I believe) also wanted to do so, but Eisenhower insisted on keeping a broad front).
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First off, Lincoln had his own income tax - it just didn't stick. Second, look at what he did to Maryland; there's a reason their anthem's extremely pro-Confederate.
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Eugene, there's a concept called "implied warranty"; specifically, the warranties of fitness for a particular purpose and merchantability mean that, unless explicitly stated , a good that won't work for the intended purpose or is in no shape to do so leaves the seller liable; thus, unless a restaurant explicitly made clear to its patrons