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why can't i find walter block's 'privatize roads and highways! Now!'? Has it been published?
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thank you very much!
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[quote]it's possible insurance companies might charge drivers higher premiums[/quote] my main interest is whether or not the cost of poor saftey conditions can be passed off to the road owners, not the drivers, in the form of insurance the road owner pays to protect him from liability for killing his customers by letting crazies on his roads
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today the federal government owns and operates highways on which 40 thousand people die every year. Does it, as the owner of such highways, strive to minimize the danger of these highways, considering it lets 16 year old kids on the road i must use to get to work that was built with stolen property? If the highways were pirvately owned and operated
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i have recently designed the following course for my own use: rigourous introductory study centers around rothbard's 'man, economy, and state', via robert murphy's accompanying study guide as an auxillary map, and with mises' 'human action', 'theory of money and credit', and böhm-bawerk's 'capital and interest'
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touché!
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i don't see how critical reading precludes the existance of essential treatises. Can you name a monograph as instructive as 'human action' or 'man economy and state'?
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i care not whether the work builds upon rothbard's ethics, though since i would say i subscribe to them at least in principal, i balk somewhat at a work that disparages them. (Though as with inquisitor's suggestion, superficial annoyances are easily ignored) perhaps i mischaracterized rothbard's work as 'definitive treatise' in a
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thanks for the reply! I hadn't heard of reisman's work, and upon inspecting it, it appears i have stumbled upon a bizarre libertarian rift with this ayn rand controversy. Am i allowed to read 'capitalism', or is it tainted? I am offended at this anti-rothbard sentiment
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is rothbard's masterpiece, along with it's accompanying study guide and 'human action', 'the theory of money and credit', 'capital and interest', and 'principals of economics' for reference, still the definitive and rigorous introduction to praxeological economic analysis?