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Want to learn about Libertarian Economics? Why the rise and eventual triumph of The Liberty Movement is an inevitable historical necessity? Why every other economic system is corrupt, and only this system is good? Interested in understanding what Libertarian Economics really means? Then please read this book!
At one and the same time, this short collection of essays is a stirring, passionate defense of The Liberty Movement, and is also an academically rigorous, intellectual, sophisticated analysis of the political and economic ideas that justify The Liberty Movement. Opening with a deep dive into Coase Theorem and the Law and Economics school of thought, this book explores the economic principle that every economic system will always eventually arrive at an end point of the most economically efficient outcome, like order naturally arising from chaos. The essay explains that Libertarian Economics is the most efficient economics and is therefore inevitable. It also explains why the corrupt Liberal-Conservative welfare-state status-quo naturally evolved as a way for Capitalism to try to bribe the forces of Socialist Marxist revolution, by paying politicians and advocacy groups with lobbying fees and paying fines to regulators and paying taxes to fund the welfare state, as a cost of doing business in order to allow Capitalism to exist and prevent Marxist revolution by the disgruntled working class. This has created a corrupt political system in which the rich and big business break the law and pay fines and get a slap on the wrist with a wink to the political class, while the middle class suffers, and the working class become second class citizens held to a legal double standard. Capitalism is held hostage and forced to pay a ransom to the Liberal political establishment in the form of taxes and fines, and nobody wins, except for the corrupt politicians. The Liberty Movement will restore honor and integrity to politics, by setting Capitalism free.
This book proves Libertarian Economics will achieve widespread poverty eradication and world peace. And it concludes with an essay on concrete details about how Libertarian Economics will work in the real world, with the privatization of natural monopolies and the deregulation of health insurance and healthcare as focal examples, showing that Libertarian Economics can be an effective, practical, workable solution.
Russell Hasan was born the son of a white Jewish mother and a dark-skinned Muslim father—and that isn't the strangest thing about him. His father had ties to the mafia—nope, not the weirdest thing about him. He thought he was a gay man for many years before realizing he is agender asexual—relatively normal compared to what truly makes him strange. Do you want to know what the weirdest, strangest thing about Russell is?
He's a WRITER.
Yes, that's right. He writes. Why? How? Why would he want to do that to himself? How could he allow this to happen to himself? He is still trying to figure that one out. Therapy can cure lots of things and alcohol and drugs can cure other things, but the only cure for being a writer is to write, so he writes. He's not into BDSM, yet for some reason he has chosen to punish himself by having a passion for writing and a need to write. Despite having made the huge mistake of choosing to be a writer, his books have sold over 10,000 copies, so perhaps it was not the worst mistake he ever made after all. He does not have one particular bestseller but has instead spread those 10,000 sales across many books he wrote. His magical journey of self-torture begins when he has the idea for a new book, and then continues when he wakes up at 6am to write from 6am to 8am before work every day (he has a day job—he's not insane! His day job is being a lawyer, the most boring, evil job in the world, by the way), and, after many cups of Starbucks matcha tea and Coca Cola (never Pepsi—yuck!) he somehow puts words onto a page. He has written 30 books, both nonfiction and fiction, but, as something of a twist on the traditional successful indie author model, he is known more for his indie nonfiction, not his fiction. But he does write fiction. Some of his fiction is good too, probably, he hopes.