The percentage of correct decisions which individuals make is very high when they are risking their own money and their own future. The percentage of correct decisions is very low when made by politicians, so-called intellectuals, and others, regardless of their intelligence, who are not faced with the discipline of having to pay for their own mistakes with their own earnings.
– A.W. Stewart
HORNBERGER'S BLOG
October 7, 2021 The Washington Post and the JFK Records Deadline
In my blog post yesterday entitled “Mainstream Press Silence on the JFK Deadline, I took the mainstream media to task for remaining steadfastly silent about the upcoming October 26 deadline for the release of the CIA’s long-secret JFK assassination-related records. Instead, I pointed out, the mainstream media simply continues reveling in labeling people who question the official lone-nut theory of ...
Civil Liberties and Structural Safeguards
by Michael J. Glennon
Michael Glennon gave the fourth talk in our webinar “Restoring Our Civil Liberties.” Drawing from his book ...
The Trillion Dollar Platinum Coin Idea
by Jacob G. Hornberger and Richard M. Ebeling
Have you heard about the $trillion platinum coin that statists are now proposing to get around the ...
The Police State's Reign of Terror Continues
by John W. Whitehead
You think you’ve got rights? Think again. All of those freedoms we cherish—the ones enshrined in the Constitution, ...
Congress Doesn't Need to Bail Out Social Security by Laurence M. Vance
The Social Security Board of Trustees has released its annual report on the long-term financial status of the Social Security Trust Funds, and ...
FFF Civil Liberties Conference Every Tuesday at 7pm EST through November 16
Online via Zoom
Speakers: Tom Palmer, Stephen Halbrook, Jim Bovard, Michael Glennon, Richard Ebeling, Jonathan Turley, Andrew Napolitano, Ron Paul, and Jacob Hornberger
The Libertarian Angle Thursday, October 21, 2021
World Wide Web
Speaker: Jacob Hornberger
Jacob Hornberger to Speak
at CAPA Conference Saturday and Sunday November 20-21, 2021
World Wide Web
Speakers: Andrew Kreig, Dr. Cyril Wecht, Russ Baker, James Wagenvoord, Jacob Hornberger, Tink Thompson, Gary Aguilar, and others.