Posted on 11/16/2006 9:22:30 AM PST by HAL9000
BREAKING NEWS: Economist Milton Friedman has died. Full story to follow shortly.
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
Since neither of the major parties offered that option, and none of the minor parties has attracted sufficient attention to shake up the duopoly, that choice wasn't really on the table.
Sadly, I think the whole Katrina fiasco, convinced me that Americans want a Nanny state. It's too easy to manipulate people into thinking that government should be responsible whenever something goes wrong.
<]:^)~<
Libertarianism is neither social liberalism (take money from people at gunpoint and use it to hire people to create porno "art") nor social conservatism (take money from people at gunpoint and use it to hire police to confiscate porno "art").
Holy cow. His twin brother Nilton just died also on another thread.
Good point. Pity that the GOP didn't follow his argument to its logical conclusion and completely remove that bit of Peanut Head's legacy -- I suppose the rot was starting to set in even back then....
What is needed is to get government out of the education business altogether.
I once had Milton Friedman as a "substitute" professor. We were all amazed when he walked in.
A good Friedman book to read, for those who aren't very familiar with his work, is Capitalism & Freedom.
I think that last statement is true, even now.
<< "What is needed in America is a voucher of substantial size available to all students, and free of excessive regulation." -- Milton Friedman >>
"Or, better yet, get the damned government the Hell out of what it dares to call 'education!'" -- Brian Allen
<< So too dies Randian (who?) economic thinking. >>
Over our dead bodies!
Vale Ayn - Vale Milton.
My favorite Milton quote:
It is a mystery to me why... it is regarded as a sign of Japanese strength and American weakness that the Japanese find it more attractive to invest in the U.S. than Japan. Surely it is precisely the reverse - a sign of U.S. strength and Japanese weakness.
- Milton Friedman
Sad. "Free to Choose" was the first conservative book I read.
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'Free to choose' is a classic, a real eye opener. Friedmen changed the world with that book and his other writings.
I suggest we abolish the payroll withholding system he developed (while he was still a Keynesian) in his honor.
Friedman was one of my inspirations to pursue a finance degree. His work 'Monetary History of the United States' is my favorite.
Milton Freedman had bowel movements that were bigger than Paul Krugman.
Dr. Milton Friedman who won the 1976 Nobel Prize for economics poses for a photo in a 1977 file photo. Friedman has died at age 94, a spokesman for the Milton & D. Rose Friedman foundation says. (AP Photo/Eddie Adams, File)
The Cato Institute think-tank announced that US Nobel prize-winning economist Milton Friedman, seen here in 2002, died at the age of 94(AFP/File/Tim Sloan)
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RIP
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"Governments never learn. Only people learn."
"Many people want the government to protect the consumer. A much more urgent problem is to protect the consumer from the government."
"I am in favor of cutting taxes under any circumstances and for any excuse, for any reason, whenever it's possible."
"The government solution to a problem is usually as bad as the problem."
"We have a system that increasingly taxes work and subsidizes nonwork."
"Nobody spends somebody else's money as carefully as he spends his own. Nobody uses somebody else's resources as carefully as he uses his own. So if you want efficiency and effectiveness, if you want knowledge to be properly utilized, you have to do it through the means of private property."
"Only government can take perfectly good paper, cover it with perfectly good ink and make the combination worthless."
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