George Hagedorn


Related Freeman Articles

Article

Deregulation - What Prospects?

OCTOBER 01, 1975 by GEORGE HAGEDORN

Let's admit that government is not a universal problem solver.

Article

Buying Up Surpluses

AUGUST 01, 1971 by GEORGE HAGEDORN

Pricing goods or services out of the market always raises the problem of what to do about the "surplus."

Article

Transportation: Regulation vs. Competition

MAY 01, 1971 by GEORGE HAGEDORN

Government regulation of transportation has resulted in injury, rather than benefit, to the industries regulated and to the public.

Article

Uneven Inflation

APRIL 01, 1971 by GEORGE HAGEDORN

The uneven response of various prices and incomes introduces distortions and inequities into the economy.

Article

Uses of Ignorance

DECEMBER 01, 1970 by GEORGE HAGEDORN

Why persist in projecting our ignorance to what is unknowable in principle?

Article

National Goals

APRIL 01, 1970 by GEORGE HAGEDORN

Goals that depend upon coercive measures may destroy people.

Article

Capital Gains

AUGUST 01, 1969 by GEORGE HAGEDORN

It's not real income being taxed, but the principal of the thing.

Article

Failure of Politics

SEPTEMBER 01, 1968 by GEORGE HAGEDORN

Taxing producers invariably aggravates the problems of the poor.

CURRENT ISSUE

May 2013

From natural systems to human systems, we start to notice patterns in nature that are products of good flow. Adrian Bejan discusses this crucial insight--and how it makes freedom even more needful--in this month's interview. Zachary Caceres looks at what emergence can tell us about the universe, the market, the heart, and the sacred; Mike Reid recounts the tragedies produced when the State tries to impose its order on people who have already developed their own; Gary Galles channels Leonard Read: the State is a clenched fist, he says, so it cannot create; Brad Taylor says democracy might just be another imposed order in some situations; Karl Borden wonders whether an individual's right to be left alone can be part of the order of things; and much, much more.Download Free PDF

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