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it falls short of the standard of "George" and "Edgar" as a persuasive introduction to libertarian philosophy . That's interesting, because I felt similarly about Edgar. Now that you mention it, I agree. Edgar tried to distill the concepts of minimum wages and really supply & demand into a digestible video designed for somebody
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I posted this on reddit : I like it, but I feel like it's too unfocused to be persuasive to anybody not already initiated. "George Ought to Help" is great because it's a simple concept that's well executed and relatively brief. This video gets into like 6 different ancap topics with visually distracting and inexplicably weird cartoon
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But seriously, this is incredible. I can't think of deserts more just than this, and so speedy! I guess I'm so used to statist courts that I forget how quickly and mercilessly the market can mete out justice.
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Holy smokes. What at first seemed like a shameful waste of 2.5 hours has turned into the gift that keeps on giving. It's too bad no one in real life gives a flip about my libertarian drama, but the intrigue and mystery is almost too much to keep bottled up. I gotta tell someone about how Wenzel isn't who he claims to be!!
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Not knowing anything else about him, I have a hard time believing he's a libertarian at all. His thinking is muddled and he doesn't seem to know how to debate. He's highly emotional and more interested in seeking revenge for getting his feelings hurt than arriving at the truth. He talks like Walter Block but thinks like Nancy Pelosi.
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This is the most ridiculous nonsense I've ever listened to. How is this moron prominent?
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ItsI I cant delve into it too much but from what i remember Rothbard's thesis was that the Panic of 1819 was direct fallout from the inflationary policies that were used to finance the War of 1812. If i were in your AP history class i might ask the teacher to help me investigate the trajectory of cotton prices from before the war until 1819, and
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Morris and Linda Tannehills' Market for Liberty is probably a good start.
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Is there a non Fed compititetion where my friends and I could have more flexibility? Doubtful. Also I'm still pondering going into a Fed compitetion with an AE perspective. Do this. If you know your stuff and can argue whatever position you have, you will impress people. And if you're interested in pursuing economics as a career the competition
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@Wheylous- You even have Obama's folksy, vomit-inducing idioms down pat.