New batch of tickets to the Mises Seminar now available. Don’t wait until it’s sold out. Meet royaltyTickets very cheap. Lifetime subscription to Economics.org.au included.

  1. More people = More fun — Neville Kennard says immigrants don’t know the rules, and that’s fantastic.
  2. Sell the CES — Viv Forbes on a Centrelink-type disaster in 1991.
  3. The Unconstitutionality of Government in Australia (demonstrated in under 300 words) — by the Economics.org.au editor-in-chief!
  4. Paul Hogan and Ron Manners vs Government — from The Bulletin in 1975 and 1977.
  5. Lang Hancock 1978 George Negus Interview — Negus asks whether a limited government could really stay limited, and thereby shows himself, in this limited sense, superior to those at the CIS, the IPA and Catallaxy, who all inexplicably have failed to engage with anarchocapitalist arguments, even if it is by someone they call a distinguished fellow or someone who makes the writings of those they respect available. For example, Economics.org.au has now published 50 items featuring Bert Kelly — in comparison, the CIS (who name a lecture series after him and call him, like Neville Kennard, a distinguished fellow), the IPA and everyone else in the universe (with all the money in the world!), combined, have made available: zero. By the way, this Hancock interview is very interesting in many ways, including his comments on the Workers Party.
  6. Why not starve the taxation monster? — Lang Hancock, The Australian, August 3, 1978, p. 8, as a letter to the editor.
  7. David Stove on John Anderson — the legendary Australian philosopher, David Stove, on John Anderson, who was an influence on Paddy McGuinness.
  8. Tariffs get the fork-tongued treatment — Bert Kelly in 1982, tries to explain that corruption and lies are normal in politics.
  9. Politician sacrifices his … honesty — Bert Kelly in 1975, on the amazing and brave sacrifice that politicians make.
  10. Bert Kelly reduces governments to its absurdities — Bert Kelly applies protectionist logic, as implemented at the federal level, to the states.
  11. Bert Kelly reviews The War Diaries of Weary Dunlop — in 1987.
  12. Bert Kelly reviews We Were There — Kelly tells Quadrant to stop sending him books to review, because it stops him from reading books on tariffs.