-
they can be quite determined beggars. lol!
-
at what stage in my reading would recommend i get into the topographical books on socialism? i'm thinking the end somewhere.
-
done comics, onto I, Pencil. :)
-
thanks for that, i've listened to most if not all of Woods lectures. He's quite easy to follow. Just looking at the comics now, looks good. I heard about Irwin's book and I, pencil... are these really worth reading before Economics in 1 Lesson? I want get my brain refreshed with classic economic science first. As for the politics, I've
-
I have been living with the widow of the founder of the Socialist Worker Party here in Britain. So I've been reading Marx, Lenin, Paul Foot, Tony Cliff and contemporary articles. Attended Marxism 2008 and 2009. Been on the field at anti-Globalisation demos in Europe, on picket lines at factories, occupations on university campuses, on the streets
-
nice! had a look at some of the titles. will probably put hazlitt on hold and read a few of those essays first.
-
icelandic would be good too.
-
nice one. i've been reading austrian blogs, watching the lectures on youtube and google. recently downloaded all the books off mises.org and have jumped into Economics in 1 Lesson (Hazlitt) to start my reading on firm ground. it is ALL about human action though! Not sure if I'lll read that next or Bastiat. Then maybe Menger. Then onto Mises
-
-
I have just read Lenin's Imperialism and given a small lecture on it for a bunch of socialists I know. I thoroughly enjoyed the book. The research is very well compiled and gives a great historical account of how we progressed. My one criticism however is very potent. And it's one no doubt many learned Austrians will be all too familiar with