From Mises Institute <[email protected]>
Subject Healthcare Regulation Is Bankrupting Americans. Plus: Some Bureaucracies Are Good. Here's Why.
Date March 23, 2024 1:00 PM
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Mises Institute
Saturday, March 23, 2024


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Personal Medical Bankruptcy: Made in DC
Stephen Anderson
When the government wants to make something more affordable, that usually means new subsidies, laws, and regulations that drive up the real price. Higher medical prices will mean more medical bankruptcies.

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A Tale of Two Bureaucracies
David Brady, Jr.
If we hold a functioning moral society to be ideal, then we must reject “middle of the road” solutions that bureaucrats offer. Only natural market price mechanisms create prosperity for all.

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Bureaucracy: Applying Mises’s Insights to Our Present Day
New York City’s government has imposed draconian rent controls. The natural outcome has been massive shortages.

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Police Dogs Have Abolished Constitutional Due Process
Congress and the courts have eviscerated the Constitution to empower police dogs. The injustices are massive, but the authorities don't care.

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Become a Patron Today
Human Action was arguably the most important book of the twentieth century. Help us spread Mises’s ideas to more and more people in the twenty-first century.

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Haiti, Jimmy Barbeque, and Uncle Sam
On this episode of Radio Rothbard, Ryan and Tho are joined by Marcel Gautreau to discuss the situation unfolding in Haiti.

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Why We Don't Need Government Funding for "Moonshots"
Are massive government funding projects necessary to promote science or industrial growth?

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The Drug War
Economist Mark Thornton shows that one unintended consequence of drug prohibition is an increase in potency. This phenomenon is known as the Iron Law of Prohibition.

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