Funny business response to a union’s “Shame on …” sign
It's the Subaru of Wichita item; skip if you've seen it already.
It's the Subaru of Wichita item; skip if you've seen it already.
Who killed Louis of Orleans?
I have just posted a new paper, “Uncertainty, Evolution, and Behavioral Economic Theory” on SSRN (co-authored with Geoffrey Manne). The upshot of the paper is that even if the findings of behavioral economics are sound and robust, those findings have little relevance for understanding or predicting the behavior of firms. Drawing on a classic article […]
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On languages and dialects and what it means to speak English.
The federal government owns large amounts of unused property that is going to waste. Sadly, government officials have little incentive to address the problem. This sad state of affairs unintentionally demonstrates the advantages of private property rights.
Looks like a violation of the First Amendment -- and there's a federal appellate case that's pretty closely on point.
A new Cato Institute ebook publishing a long series of posts I wrote a few months ago.
Columbia Professor Philip Hamburger has a typically elegant piece exploring some of the deeper issues.
A recent federal district court case from Alaska shows how concepts of qualified immunity, sovereign immunity, and defenses on the merits often get confused with one another.