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  • August 21, 2008
    Pravda
    Should People in Democratic Glass Houses Throw Stones?
    … U.S. is sincere. Rather, they believe the critique of Russia’s actions is merely an instrument of American foreign policy. Absent a belated U‑turn, American foreign policy – conducted by those living in an democratic glass house – will continue …
    By Patrick Basham
  • August 19, 2008
    Blog
    Want Help from Washington? Gamble, Don’t Save
    … They also are witnessing their nest eggs shrinking as the value of their homes plummets and the stock market tumbles. Policymakers in Washington, D.C., seem more focused on rescuing those who behave badly by putting at risk taxpayers who …
    By David Boaz
  • August 19, 2008
    Globe Asia
    The Greenback and Commodity Prices
    … of oil and other commodities, but it probably has been a small one.” And when presenting his Semi‐​annual Monetary Policy Report to Congress on July 15, Fed Chairman Bernanke repeated the standard Fed line, namely that the weak dollar …
    By Steve H. Hanke
  • August 19, 2008
    Cato Daily Podcast
    Stagflationary Signals
    Stagflationary Signals
    Featuring Gerald P. O’Driscoll Jr. and Caleb O. Brown
  • August 18, 2008
    South China Morning Post
    Polluted Markets
    … which included subprime mortgages, few people were paying much attention to the potential for disaster. A combination of loose monetary policy, lax risk assessment, and the ability to easily shift risk off the balance sheets of conventional mortgage lenders by …
    By James A. Dorn
  • August 18, 2008
    American Conservative
    Czechoslovakia on Their Minds
    … details of who did what to precipitate Russia’s war against Georgia are not very important,” explained leading neocon foreign‐​policy ideologue Robert Kagan — who insists that he isn’t a neocon at all — in a column in the Washington …
    By Leon T. Hadar
  • August 14, 2008
    Blog
    Truth-Squading Fursbee
    … 91 percent agree that workers pay for health benefits through reduced wages. The average “employer contribution” to the average family policy is roughly $9k. That means that if employers weren’t providing health benefits, the labor market would force them …
    By Michael F. Cannon
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