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+Liberdade+LiberdadeO 80.º aniversário de "O Caminho para a Servidão", por Richard EbelingO professor norte-americano Richard M. Ebeling, que conheceu F.A. Hayek pessoalmente, descreve o contexto da publicação desta obra clássica do liberalismo,  traçando também algumas comparações com os dias de hoje. Ler na Biblioteca: https://maisliberdade.pt/biblioteca/o-80-aniversario-de-o-caminho-para-a-servidao-de-f-a-hayek/ Narração: Pedro Almeida Jorge.2024-03-2917 minThe Forge of FreedomThe Forge of FreedomEpisode 97. My Passion for Liberty with Jacob Hornberger, Libertarian Candidate for PresidentShow Notes: Episode 97. My Passion for Liberty with Jacob Hornberger, Libertarian Candidate for President Jacob Hornberger, author of My Passion for Liberty, discusses his journey to libertarianism and the founding of the Future of Freedom Foundation. He emphasizes the importance of principled libertarianism and the need to dismantle infringements on freedom. Hornberger also advocates for open immigration, arguing that it aligns with the non-aggression principle and that the current immigration system perpetuates a crisis. He shares the influence of Leonard Read and his close working relationship with Richard Ebeling...2024-02-021h 56The Libertarian AngleThe Libertarian AngleThe Dark Legacy of World War IIIn this week's Libertarian Angle, Jacob Hornberger and Richard Ebeling discuss the dark legacy of World War II.2023-06-0835 minThe Secular FoxholeThe Secular FoxholeRandsDay BoostagramWhat is the one stumbling block that has crippled mankind for more than two millennia? Tune in to find out. Martin had sent a digital telegram (boostagram) with a note and a treasure of 221,905 Satoshis, to Podcasting 2.0 podcast with Adam Curry & Dave Jones.Call-to-Action: After you have listened to this episode, add your $0.02 (two cents) to the conversation, by joining (for free) The Secular Foxhole Town Hall. Feel free to introduce yourself to the other members, discuss the different episodes, give us constructive feedback, or check out the virtual room, Speakers' Corner, and step up on the d...2023-02-0227 minThe Libertarian AngleThe Libertarian AngleThe Wealth of NationsWhy are some nations wealthier than other nations? Adam Smith addressed this question in his opus of 1776, and FFF president Jacob Hornberger and Citadel professor Richard Ebeling apply those lessons to today’s problems. Please subscribe to our email newsletter FFF Daily here.2023-02-0230 minTea Party MediaTea Party MediaNew Podcast ApplicationsI review 15 new podcast applications..Call-to-Action: After you have listened to this episode, add your $0.02 (two cents) to the conversation, by joining (for free) Tea Party Media Town Hall. Feel free to introduce yourself to the other members, discuss the different episodes, give us constructive feedback, or check out the virtual room, Speakers' Corner, and step up on the digital soapbox. Welcome to our new place in cyberspace!Show notes with links to articles, blog posts, products and services:Value for value model - Value4Value dot infoPG Tips teaMuscovado sugarBreez FoldGeyserFountainMy profile page on...2023-01-2025 minThe Secular FoxholeThe Secular FoxholeDr. Richard Ebeling on LiberalismOur newest episode, the first for the New Year, features Professor Richard Ebeling, where we discuss his recent defense of Liberalism. Tune in for his penetrating insights on a number of issues.Call-to-Action: After you have listened to this episode, add your $0.02 (two cents) to the conversation, by joining (for free) The Secular Foxhole Town Hall. Feel free to introduce yourself to the other members, discuss the different episodes, give us constructive feedback, or check out the virtual room, Speakers' Corner, and step up on the digital soapbox. Welcome to our new place in cyberspace!Sh...2023-01-1546 min+Liberdade+LiberdadeBiblioteca: O Centenário da Crítica de von Mises ao Socialismo, Richard Ebeling2022 marcou o centenário da publicação da influente obra "Socialismo", do economista austríaco Ludwig von Mises (1881-1973). Para o assinalar, partilhamos um texto do professor Richard Ebeling, com o qual poderás ficar a conhecer melhor a importância e a atualidade deste marcante e profético livro. Ler na Biblioteca: https://maisliberdade.pt/biblioteca/o-centenario-da-critica-de-von-mises-ao-socialismo/Narração: Pedro Almeida Jorge2023-01-0222 minKeith Knight - Don\'t Tread on AnyoneKeith Knight - Don't Tread on AnyoneWhy is South Korea Wealthier Than North Korea?For a New Liberalism: https://www.amazon.com/New-Liberalism-Richard-Ebeling/dp/163069178X  Richard M. Ebeling, an AIER Senior Fellow, is the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise Leadership at The Citadel, in Charleston, South Carolina. ----------------------------------------------------------- The Voluntaryist Handbook: https://libertarianinstitute.org/books/voluntaryist-handbook/  Support the show, PayPal: KeithKnight590@gmail.com or Venmo: @Keith-Knight-34 LBRY / Odysee: https://odysee.com/@KeithKnightDontTreadOnAnyone:b    BitChute: KeithKnightDontTreadOnAnyone https://www.bitchute.com/channel/keithknightdonttreadonanyone/  Minds: https://www.minds.com/KeithKnightDontTreadOnAnyone/  GETTR: https://gettr.com/user/an_capita...2022-10-2655 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJuly 12, 2022 Horace Walpole, Henry David Thoreau, Oscar Hammerstein II, Richard Buckminster Fuller, The Manual of Plant Grafting by Peter MacDonald, and Hugh JohnsonSubscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart   Support The Daily Gardener Buy Me A Coffee    Connect for FREE! The Friday Newsletter |  Daily Gardener Community   Historical Events 1757 On this day, Horace Walpole wrote a letter to his friend John Chute Esquire about the heat wave coursing through Europe. July of 1757 set many records for heat. At the time, it was the hottest month ever recorded in Paris history and for the country of England. The English physician John Huxham, a provincial doctor remembered for his study of fevers, noted that the heat caused many health issues for people. Horace's letter from his home at Stra...2022-07-1215 minINSPIRADOR | Descubre ideas, proyectos y temasINSPIRADOR | Descubre ideas, proyectos y temasRichard Ebeling Speech During the Ceremony for Honor GraduatesAt the 2022 distinction ceremony, honorary doctor Richard Ebeling congratulated the graduates in his introductory address. In the same way, he exhorted them to continue on that path of excellence that has led them to graduation. During his speech, Dr. Ebeling spoke about the environment that has allowed graduates to fully develop. Values ​​such as dignity and respect encourage skills such as reasoning, reflection, thought and debate, which are characteristics that the institution leaves them with in their personal and professional careers. However, freedom and liberty are the most important values that the institution offers because they allows us to choose our...2022-05-2806 minINSPIRADOR | Descubre ideas, proyectos y temasINSPIRADOR | Descubre ideas, proyectos y temasHonorary doctor Richard Ebeling delivers speech to UFM GraduatesDuring the graduation ceremony in May 2022, the honorary doctor, Richard Ebeling, shared a few words to the graduates about the importance of the ideas and philosophy of the institution and how these remain relevant today more than ever. In his speech, he highlighted how Francisco Marroquín University since its foundation, based on its ideals, its mission and its principles, has dedicated to promoting the right of the individual to have control over his own life. And how these fundamentals are defined in a route to follow now that they are defined in graduates, to put them into practice in a...2022-05-1909 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerMay 12, 2022 Charles-Joseph Lamoral, Edward Lear, Florence Nightingale, Andreas Schimper, P. Allen Smith's Garden Home by P. Allen Smith, and Care Of Garden Hose by BF Goodrich in 1943Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart   Support The Daily Gardener Buy Me A Coffee    Connect for FREE! The Friday Newsletter |  Daily Gardener Community   Historical Events 1735 Birth of Charles-Joseph Lamoral, French Field Marshal, writer, and member of the princely family of Ligne ("Leen-ya"). Charles once wrote, I should like to inflame the whole world with my taste for gardening.  There is no virtue that I would not attribute to the man who lives to project and execute gardens.   1812 Birth of Edward Lear, English artist, musician, and writer.  Edward is remembered for his literary nonsense in poetry and prose. He once wrote, As for myself...2022-05-1212 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerMay 5, 2022 Thomas Edward Brown, Richard Watson Dixon, Christopher Morley, Mavis Batey, The Magical World of Moss Gardening by Annie Martin, and Napoleon BonaparteSubscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart   Support The Daily Gardener Buy Me A Coffee    Connect for FREE! The Friday Newsletter |  Daily Gardener Community   Historical Events   1830 Birth of Thomas Edward Brown, late-Victorian scholar, schoolmaster, poet, and theologian from the Isle of Man. Thomas was published under T.E. Brown, and here's a little excerpt from his poem called My Garden.  A GARDEN is a lovesome thing, God wot! Rose plot, Fringed pool, Fern'd grot— The veriest school Of peace; and yet the fool Contends that God is not— Not God! in gardens! when the eve is cool? Nay, but I have a sign; 'Tis very...2022-05-0513 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerMarch 29, 2022 William Baldwin, R. S. Thomas, Yûrin no Niwa, COVID Garden Prep, Homegrown Tea by Cassie Liversidge, and Richard Evans SchultesSubscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart   Support The Daily Gardener Buy Me A Coffee    Connect for FREE! The Friday Newsletter |  Daily Gardener Community   Historical Events 1779 Birth of William Baldwin, American physician, and botanist.  William is remembered as one of the first botanists to explore Georgia and Florida and parts of Latin America and the West Indies. William was brought on as the botanist for Stephen Long's 1819 expedition to find the headwaters of the Missouri River. Six months later, William Baldwin died at Franklin, Missouri, at the age of 40 and was buried on the banks of the Missouri River. Today we know about Wil...2022-03-2915 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerMarch 21, 2022 Jean-Paul Friedrich Richter, Harry Lutf Verne Fletcher, Richard Henry Martin Robinson, The Essentials of Garden Design by John Brookes, and Phyllis McGinleySubscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart   Support The Daily Gardener Buy Me A Coffee    Connect for FREE! The Friday Newsletter |  Daily Gardener Community   Historical Events 1763 Birth of Jean-Paul Friedrich Richter, German Romantic writer. He's remembered for his humorous novels and stories. He once wrote, When one reads a poem in January, it is as lovely as when one goes for a walk in June.   1902 Birth of Harry Lutf Verne Fletcher, ("Luh-tf")(pen names John Garden and John Hereford), Engish writer. Harry wrote many books on gardening. In Purest Pleasure (1948), he wrote, Who has learned to garden who did not at the same time learn...2022-03-2107 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerFebruary 16, 2022 Marie Clark Taylor, David Austin, the New Jersey State Flower, Sleepy Cat Farm by Caroline Seebohm, and Elizabeth Gilbert Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart   The Daily Gardener Friday Newsletter Sign up for the FREE Friday Newsletter   Facebook Group The next time you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community, where you'd search for a friend and request to join.   Historical Events 1911 Birth of Marie Clark Taylor, American botanist. In 1941, she became the first woman to earn a Ph.D. in botany from Fordham University. She spent her career at Howard University, becoming a beloved professor and mentor. Marie herself taught biology at Cardozo high school in Washington D.C early in her career. At Howard, she was passionate about training f...2022-02-1610 min+Liberdade+LiberdadeA União Soviética desapareceu há 30 anos, mas teremos aprendido as lições?, Richard Ebeling(Nova versão corrigida) 2021 marca os 30 anos do fim da União Soviética, mas será que temos transmitido devidamente às novas gerações as lições a retirar deste regime tirânico? No presente artigo, o economista americano Richard M. Ebeling descreve a sua experiência na revolução de agosto de 1991, e analisa as recentes tendências políticas manifestadas pelas camadas mais jovens da população ocidental. Narração: Mariana Durão. Ler em +Liberdade.2021-12-0720 min+Liberdade+LiberdadeA União Soviética desapareceu há 30 anos, mas teremos aprendido as lições?, Richard Ebeling2021 marca os 30 anos do fim da União Soviética, mas será que temos transmitido devidamente às novas gerações as lições a retirar deste regime tirânico? No presente artigo, o economista americano Richard M. Ebeling descreve a sua experiência na revolução de agosto de 1991, e analisa as recentes tendências políticas manifestadas pelas camadas mais jovens da população ocidental. Narração: Mariana Durão. Ler em +Liberdade.2021-12-0720 minDiscourse Magazine PodcastDiscourse Magazine PodcastRemixed Religion in America: Ben Klutsey talks to Tara BurtonIn this fourteenth installment of a series on liberalism, Benjamin Klutsey, the director of academic outreach at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, speaks with Tara Isabella Burton about religion in America today, encompassing everything from yoga to witchcraft to wellness culture. They discuss the decline of trust in religious institutions, contemporary spirituality’s focus on self-determination, the role of the internet in creating new religious affinities and much more. Burton is a writer of both fiction and nonfiction works, including the novels “Social Creature” and “The World Cannot Give” and the nonfiction book “Strange Rites.” She has a doctorate in...2021-09-1050 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerSeptember 10, 2021 Pumpkin Pie Cereal Treats, Richard Spruce, Redouté, Robert Koldewey, Lilian Gibbs, Cyril Connolly, Ella Griffin, The Well-Gardened Mind by Sue Stuart-Smith, and David HosackToday we celebrate a botanist remembered for his work collecting cinchona trees in South America. We’ll remember the French royal painter known as the "the Raffaele of flowers." We'll also learn about the German architect who thought he’d discovered the Hanging Gardens of Babylon over a hundred years ago. We’ll recognize the work of the British Botanist who is remembered in the name of a bamboo, an English writer who was often inspired by nature, and we’ll also take a look back at a discovery by South African botanists. We hear an excerpt from a fun fict...2021-09-1025 minLiving Wealthy RadioLiving Wealthy Radio519: Richard Ebeling, Freedom the Answer to COVID [REPLAY]This interview tackles the dire new reality in which we find ourselves in a COVID-1984 world. Who would have thought just a few months ago that going to work or not wearing a mask could land you in jail? It didn’t seem to take much to plunge our society into totalitarianism. But as this talk […] The post 519: Richard Ebeling, Freedom the Answer to COVID [REPLAY] first appeared on Living Wealthy Radio.2021-09-0640 minHayek Program PodcastHayek Program PodcastPeter Boettke & Richard Ebeling on the Modern State of LiberalismOn this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Peter Boettke and Richard Ebeling discuss the emergent threats to today's liberal order and what can be done to foster a spirit conducive to liberty, both subjects of Ebeling's book, "For a New Liberalism." Along the way, the pair recall the work of previous scholars, such as Lionel Robbins and Wilhelm Roepke, as masters of economics and advocates for the humaneness and value of a free and open society. They also address the coevolution of liberal political and economic orders, particularly highlighting the role of free trade. CC Music: Twisterium2021-08-111h 06Hayek Program PodcastHayek Program PodcastPeter Boettke & Richard Ebeling on the Lost Papers of Ludwig von MisesOn this episode of the Hayek Program Podcast, Richard Ebeling joins Peter Boettke to discuss his work on the lost papers of Ludwig von Mises. Ebeling recounts the history of Mises's escape from the Nazi expansion into Europe, the confiscation of his papers, and how Ebeling's later discovery of the papers in Russia led to the creation of the three volume series, "The Selected Works of Ludwig von Mises." Additionally, Boettke and Ebeling discuss the continuing relevance of Mises's critiques of socialism and how the work of Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk shaped his thinking. CC Music: Twisterium2021-07-281h 14Discourse Magazine PodcastDiscourse Magazine PodcastReaching Our Potential as a Liberal Society: Ben Klutsey talks to Pete BoettkeIn this thirteenth installment of a series on liberalism, Benjamin Klutsey, the Director of Academic Outreach at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, speaks with Peter Boettke about the promise held by the idea of liberal cosmopolitanism and the importance of considering the political economy of institutional arrangements in reaching our potential. Boettke is a University Professor of Economics and Philosophy at George Mason University, the BB&T Professor for the Study of Capitalism, and the Director of the F. A. Hayek Program for Advanced Study in Philosophy, Politics and Economics at Mercatus. Boettke’s analytical framework is gr...2021-07-1654 minDiscourse Magazine PodcastDiscourse Magazine PodcastDefending the Constitution of Knowledge: Ben Klutsey talks to Jonathan RauchIn this twelfth installment of our series on liberalism, Benjamin Klutsey, the Director of Academic Outreach at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, talks with Jonathan Rauch about fallibilism, groupthink, cancelers and trolls, and why the constitution of knowledge is better than the marketplace of ideas. Rauch is a senior fellow in the Governance Studies program at the Brookings Institution. His latest book is “The Constitution of Knowledge: A Defense of Truth” (2021). Previous works include “The Happiness Curve: Why Life Gets Better After 50” (2018), “Political Realism: How Hacks, Machines, Big Money, and Back-Room Deals Can Strengthen American Democracy” (2015) and “Gay Marriage...2021-06-2545 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJune 1, 2021 Alberta Botanic Garden, Richard Irwin Lynch, Edith Wharton, Practical Houseplant Book by Zia Allaway and Fran Bailey, and Colleen McCulloughToday we celebrate a gardener who transformed and developed the Cambridge Botanic Garden. We'll also learn about a writer and gardener who won a Pulitzer for her writing and praise for her work in garden design. We hear an excerpt about the first day of June. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about houseplants featuring projects, profiles, and guidance. And then we’ll wrap things up with the story of a world-famous writer and her personal paradise on an Australian island.   Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart To listen to the show while you're at home, just ask Alexa or...2021-06-0127 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerMay 12, 2021 Garden Therapy for Dementia, Florence Nightingale, Manitoba’s Prairie Crocus, Spring at Green Gables, Natural Affairs by Peter Bernhardt, and National Limerick DayToday we celebrate a woman named after Florence, Italy, and who loved flowers her entire life.  We'll learn about the Floral Emblem of Manitoba. We hear an excerpt about spring at Green Gables. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about the relationship between people and plants. And then we’ll wrap things up with some garden limericks for National Limerick Day.   Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart To listen to the show while you're at home, just ask Alexa or Google to “Play the latest episode of The Daily Gardener Podcast.” And she will. It's just that easy.   The Daily...2021-05-1216 minHello, UserHello, UserEpisode 4 with Mick Ebeling Description: Today’s guest is Mick Ebeling, Founder and CEO of self-financed tech incubator NotImpossibleLabs. Mick’s mission and projects are proof that impossible is only a temporary state. We discuss technology’s role in identity, being a problem-solver, and having the conviction to create a better world.   Key Takeaways: [2:03] Mick shares the mission and the focus of Not Impossible Labs and how his incubator breaks the rules. [5:28] Why storytelling is so powerful. [7:41] How a prototype morphed into something so much bigger.[13:21] A personal family tragedy drives Richard to make a difference in the world and find ways to protect humanki...2021-04-1233 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerFebruary 2, 2021 Ideas For Your Garden, The Nature Principle at Home, How to Propagate 375 Plants by Richard Rosenfeld, and February's Snowdrop FairyToday we celebrate a star from the silent film age, whose best movie featured a blind woman selling flowers. We'll also learn about Candlemas - the ancient celebration of the quickening of the year. Candlemas is associated with the snowdrop, candles, and predicting just how much longer winter will last…. We hear a passage about a wonderful mini-farm - an inspiring example of the Nature Principle at home. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that teaches how to propagate almost 400 plants - and if you get it, I see many baby plants in your future... And then we’l...2021-02-0221 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJanuary 15, 2021 How to Grow and Care for Spirea Shrubs, the British Museum, Richard Buxton, Identifying Wildlife in the Winter Garden, A Year at Brandywine Cottage by David Culp, and The Garden of a Commuters Wife: Mabel Osgood WrightToday we celebrate living virtually - we can tour one of the world’s greatest museums - which opened on this day in 1759. We'll also learn about a man who endeared himself to his countrymen when he published a book about the plant life found within sixteen miles of his hometown. We’ll hear some thoughts on identifying wildlife in the winter garden. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a beautiful book that’s full of incredible wisdom from a seasoned gardener and stylist. And then we’ll wrap things up with the story of the woman who wrote about her...2021-01-1522 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerDecember 14, 2020 New Apple Variety in Wiltshire, John Claudius Loudon, Richard Hale Goodwin, John Bannister Tabb, Alchemy of Herbs by Rosalee De La Foret and the State Flower of AlabamaToday we celebrate the English garden writer who fell in love with one of the world’s first science fiction writers - and she turned out to be a woman. We'll also learn about the Connecticut botanist and conservations who created a new undergraduate degree program he called Human Ecology. We’ll hear a delightful interview with the month of December in today’s poem. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that helps us turn our cupboards into our very own kitchen apothecary through recipes that help and heal us. And then we’ll wrap things up with the s...2020-12-1415 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerNovember 20, 2020 What to Know Before Planting Bulbs, Penelope Hobhouse, Richard Fagan, August Henry Kramer, Martine Bailey, Gardens of the Arts and Crafts Movement by Judith Tankard, and the Misnaming of LespedezaToday we celebrate the gardener and writer who turns 91 today. We'll also learn about the man who created the world’s smallest rose garden. We’ll recognize the lost work of an American botanist and painter. We salute November with an excerpt from a book by an American historical crime novelist. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a fantastic book about the Arts and Crafts Movement, which gave us wonderfully inspiring homes and gardens. And then we’ll wrap things up with the story of a misnamed plant - and it’s too late to change it now.   Subscribe Apple | Goo...2020-11-2021 minLiving Wealthy RadioLiving Wealthy Radio476: Dr. Richard Ebeling, Freedom the Answer to COVIDThis interview tackles the dire new reality in which we find ourselves in a COVID-1984 world. Who would have thought just a few months ago that going to work or not wearing a mask could land you in jail? It didn’t seem to take much to plunge our society into totalitarianism. But as this talk brings out in stunning clarity, freedom is always the better way. The post 476: Dr. Richard Ebeling, Freedom the Answer to COVID first appeared on Living Wealthy Radio.2020-11-0940 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerNovember 2, 2020 Daniel Seghers, Richard Mant, Gladys Taber, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Gardens in Detail by Emma Reuss, and Saving the BladderwortToday we celebrate the Flemish artist who became known for painting floral garlands. We'll also learn about the English poet who wrote about the flower known as The Traveller's Joy. We’ll celebrate the new month with some words about November. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a close look at gardens - 100 of them - in an engaging book that travels to the world's most interesting gardens to analyze why and how they are designed. And then we’ll wrap things up with a little story about the bladderwort plant - a rare insect-eating plant with pretty yellow flower...2020-11-0214 minDiscourse Magazine PodcastDiscourse Magazine PodcastFor a New Liberalism: Ben Klutsey talks to Richard EbelingDr. Richard Ebeling, BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise Leadership at The Citadel, joins us for today’s podcast. Dr. Ebeling discusses his new book, For a New Liberalism, and the importance of living out the ideals of Liberalism in our lives every day. The audio, as well as the transcript of this conversation between Klutsey and Ebeling, has been slightly edited for clarity.  Love the show? Consider giving us a rating on Apple Podcasts and be sure to check out the Discourse Magazine for more. Resources mentioned: Richard Ebe...2020-10-161h 06The Bob Murphy ShowThe Bob Murphy ShowRichard Ebeling Fills in the History of the Austrian SchoolRichard Ebeling is the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise Leadership at The Citadel. (He was also a professor at Hillsdale College, where he taught Bob Murphy.) As a master of the history of economic thought, as well as a personal participant in some of the major events, Richard recounts to Bob some of the important history of the Austrian School in the 20th century. Mentioned in the Episode and Other Links of Interest: The YouTube version of this episode.Richard Ebeling’s AIER essay on Krugman.Richard’s interview with G.L.S. Shackle.Rich...2020-09-2200 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerAugust 13, 2020 The 10 Berries Birds Love, Peter Kalm, the Snowberry, Edward von Regal, Benedict Roezl, John Gould Vietch, Richard Willstätter, August by Maggie Grant, Not Your Mama's Canning Book by Rebecca Lindamood, and Albert Ruth’s TwinflowerToday we celebrate an early Swedish explorer of Niagara Falls. We'll also learn about a plant that Thomas Jefferson loved. We salute the Russian botanist who arranged plants by geography. We also recognize the Czech, who became the most famous collector of orchids in the world. And, we'll remember the lives of a British plant hunter and a German chemist. I've got a wonderful poem about August for you today. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about canning - the author says you'll be able to make your mamma jealous with your canning skills after getting her bo...2020-08-1337 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerAugust 1, 2020 The Largest Seed in the World, Richard Savage, Charles Henry Bass Breck, Edwin Way Teale, Franklyn Hugh Perring, August Poems, In Bloom by Ngoc Minh Ngo, and the Origin of Plant NamesToday we celebrate an English poet who didn't want gardens to be monetized. We'll also learn about the 8th generation seedsman of a beloved Boston company. We remember the naturalist who followed the seasons up and down the country. We also recognize the exuberant botanist, who created the Dot Map. We welcome the new month with some poems about "the Queen of the Ripe Season" - August. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that was created by one of the world's best garden photographers. It's a beauty. And then we'll wrap things up with a little Q&A...2020-08-0130 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJuly 31, 2020 How To Grow A Mood-boosting Garden, Daniel Defoe, Mary Vaux Walcott, Richard Morris Hunt, Francis Ledwidge, Sydney Dylan Ripley, Outstanding American Gardens by Page Dickey, and National Avocado DayToday we remember the beloved English writer who was punished for treason but adored with flowers. We'll also learn about the female botanical illustrator who is known as the "Audubon of botany." We celebrate the Dean of American Architecture. We also salute the "poet of the blackbirds." We honor the establishment of the horticulture program at the Smithsonian Gardens. In Unearthed Words, we say goodbye to July and hear some poems about the fleeting summer. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that celebrates 25 years of the Garden Conservancy through over 50 gardens from across the country. And then we...2020-07-3123 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJuly 25, 2020 L.A. Music Producer Mark Redito, Cleome, Oxford Botanic Garden, William Forsyth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Charles Joseph Sauriol, Elizabeth Lawrence, Walt Whitman, Weeds by Richard Mabey, and A Case of Floral OfferingsToday we remember the founding of a garden that inspired the book Alice in Wonderland. We'll also learn about the botanist remembered with the Forsythia genus. We'll salute the Lake poet who likened plant taxonomy to poetry. We also revisit a diary entry about a garden visitor and a letter from a gardener to her sister. Today's Unearthed Words feature an excerpt from a July Afternoon by Walt Whitman. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about the unloved flowers as they have been referred to Weeds. And then we'll wrap things up with an unforgettable story of fl...2020-07-2527 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJuly 21, 2020 Hosting a Garden Tour During COVID, Central Park, Maine State Flower, Edith Wilder Scott, Summer Poetry, Philosophy in the Garden by Damon Young, and Rose Care During SummerToday we remember the creation of legislation that turned 778 acres of land into a beloved park in New York City. We'll also learn about the State Flower of Maine - it's the only floral emblem that does not produce a blossom. We salute the Swarthmore ("SWATH-more") College alumni and horticulturist who created a magnificent garden at their home known as Todmorden ("Todd-MORE-din"). We'll also read some poems that celebrate the new habits we cultivate in the summer. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about authors and their gardens - love this topic. And then we'll wrap things up...2020-07-2127 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJuly 16, 2020 Hanging Garden Ideas, Tarragon, Elijah Fenton, Camille Corot, Orville Redenbacher, July Flowers in Poetry, Scentual Garden by Ken Druse, and the Charles Clemon Deam BiographyToday we celebrate an English poet who was good friends with Alexander Pope. We'll also learn about the French painter, famous for his landscapes. We celebrate the co-creator of a new hybrid of popcorn called "snowflake." We also celebrate some of the flowers of the July garden with some poetry. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that helps us explore the world of botanical fragrance. And then we'll wrap things up with a story about a legendary Indiana botanist. But first, let's catch up on some Greetings from Gardeners around the world and today's curated news.   Subscribe App...2020-07-1623 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJuly 2, 2020  An Audience of Plants, Buying Flowers in July, Marian Farquharson, Herman Hesse, Ralph Hancock, Kate Brandegee, Cordelia Stanwood, NASA's ECOSTRESS, July Poetry, Glorious Shade by Jenny Rose Carey, and the Richard Wettstein MemorialToday we celebrate a female botanist who fought to get recognition for women by the Linnaean Society. We'll also learn about the German poet who loved trees. We'll celebrate the Welsh garden-marker extraordinaire and also one of the all-time greats - a botanist from California. And, we'll also honor the life of The Bird Woman of Ellsworth, who helped us to better understand birds and their individual uniqueness. We will also celebrate the month of July with some poetry. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about gardening in shade. (Shade gardens don't have to be dark and bo...2020-07-0226 minLiving Wealthy Radio - PodcastLiving Wealthy Radio - PodcastDr. Richard Ebeling, Freedom the Answer to COVID This interview tackles the dire new reality in which we find ourselves in a COVID-1984 world. Who would have thought just a few months ago that going to work or not wearing a mask could land you in jail? It didn’t seem to take much to plunge our society into totalitarianism. But as this talk brings out in stunning clarity, freedom is always the better way. Joining us today is Dr. Richard Ebeling, a leading member of the Austrian school of economics and former president of the FEE or Foundation for Economic Education. He writes and le...2020-05-1840 minContra KrugmanContra KrugmanEp. 221 The Destructive Coronavirus Response, Cheered by KrugmanGuest co-host Richard Ebeling -- who was one of Bob's own economics professors -- joins me to discuss Krugman's qualified support for the $2 trillion coronavirus relief bill recently signed into law, and why we shouldn't be cheering. Show notes for Ep. 2212020-04-1232 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerApril 3, 2020 Gardening for Resilience, Magnifying Glass for the Garden Tote, Nikolay Rumyantsev, John Burroughs, Kate Brandegee, Graham Stuart Thomas, The Overstory by Richard Powers, and The Wake-Robin by Rebecca Salsbury Palfrey UtterToday we celebrate the birthday of a Russian Count who funded an expedition that led to the discovery of the California poppy. We'll also learn about one of the country’s most beloved naturalists. We celebrate the life of the second woman to be professionally employed as a botanist in the United States. She died 100 years ago today. We also celebrate a nurseryman whose passion for plants was sparked with the gift of a Fuschia. Today’s Unearthed Words feature words about rainy, windy April. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about a little cottage that you might...2020-04-0336 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerApril 2, 2020 Prospect Cottage, Pascua Florida, Maria Sibylla Merian, Job Baster, American Farmer, The Overstory by Richard Powers, and Max ErnstToday we celebrate the discovery and naming of the state of Florida. We'll also learn about one of the best botanical illustrators ever born as well as the man who introduced goldfish to Holland. We celebrate the publication of the first successful agricultural journal. Today's Unearthed Words feature words about April. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about trees that was released a year ago today - and it won the Pulitzer Prize in fiction. And then we'll wrap things up with the fascinating story of the German artist who found surreal inspiration in the natural world. Bu...2020-04-0229 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerFebruary 4, 2020 The American Museum & Gardens, Weeds to Love and Loathe, Augustin Pyramus de Candolle, Henri Dutrochet, John Heinz, Lanning Roper, Winter Words,Witch Doctor's Apprentice by Nicole Maxwell, Grow Light, and the 1931 Early SpringToday we celebrate the Swiss botanist who started a botanical Dynasty and the man who coined the term osmosis. We’ll learn about the American landscape architect who made England his home and cheered on so many gardeners with his book Successful Town Gardening. Today’s Unearthed Words feature words about winter. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book about hunting for medicinal plants in the Amazon. I’ll talk about a garden item to help you get growing and then we’ll wrap things up with the early spring warm-up of 1931 - it was extraordinary. But first, let’s catc...2020-02-0423 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJanuary 23, 2020 Orchid and Tropical Bonsai Show, How To Grow Microgreens, John Drayton, Edouard Manet, Agoston Haraszthy, Pierre Joseph Lenne, Al Schneider, Peggy Lyon, January by John Updike, The Cabaret of Plants by Richard Mabey, Owl PlantersToday we celebrate the amateur botanist who was a two-time governor of South Carolina and the birthday of a French modernist painter who left peonies. We'll learn about the man who brought European grapes to California and the most important Prussian garden-artist of the 19th century. Today’s Unearthed Words feature a poem about January. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that helps us truly see plants. I'll talk about a garden item that is absolutely adorable, and they come in a six-pack so you'll have plenty for gifts, and then we’ll wrap things up with a char...2020-01-2322 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJanuary 16, 2020 Planting Hope, Marks Hall Arboretum, Antonio José Cavanilles, Wine Bricks, Carole Lombard, Louisa Yeomans King, January Poems, Murder Most Florid by Mark Spencer, Tree Branch Hooks, and Lengthening Days by Vita Sackville-WestToday we celebrate the Spanish Enlightenment priest and botanist who named the Dahlia and the glamorous movie star who traded in her star sapphire collection for a tractor. We'll learn about the item vintners were selling during prohibition and the woman who became the most widely read American Garden author in the United States. Today’s Unearthed Words feature thoughts on the blackest month of the year: January. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a new book written by a 20-year Fellow of the Linnaean Society - he's the man who began his career as a forensic botanist after gett...2020-01-1628 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJanuary 14, 2020 Wes Shaw of Horniman Gardens, Richard Wilford on Alpines, Adolphe-Théodore Brongniart, Pierre-Joseph Redouté, Henri Fantin-Latour, Walter Hood Fitch, A Garden of Marvels by Ruth Kassinger, 3-Vase Propagation StationToday we celebrate the Father of Paleobotany and the botanical illustrator honored by King Charles X. We'll learn about the botanical painter who got sick of painting flowers (he'd painted 800 of them) and the botanical illustrator who worked for Curtis's Botanical Magazine and Kew Gardens. Today’s Unearthed Words feature the hidden (and often unappreciated) transformations happening in our garden during January. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that helps us understand plant physiology through an intimate and entertaining memoir. I'll talk about a garden item that can help you propagate your house plants, and then we’ll wra...2020-01-1426 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerNovember 22, 2019 Gravel Garden Beds, 30 Top Landscape Perennials, Edwin Jellett, Doris Duke, George Eliot, Herb Topiaries by Sally Gallo, Yule Log, and November Strawberries in 1843 Today we celebrate the man who wrote extensively about the history and flora of Germantown and... We'll learn about the 11-roomed garden created to honor the tobacco magnate James Buchanan Duke. We'll hear some beautiful thoughts on nature by an English Victorian author who was born on this day in 1819. We Grow That Garden Library with an adorable old book on topiaries. I'll talk about foraging for a Yule Log, and then we'll wrap things up with a friendly post about November strawberries from 1843. But first, let's catch up on...2019-11-2223 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerNovember 7, 2019 An Ingenious Compost Bin, Hedge Planting, Hardy Annuals to Sow Now, Winter's Day, Warren Manning, Willis Linn Jepson, Irvin Williams, Ruth Pitter, Thoreau, Onward & Upward in the Garden by Katherine White, Outdoor Rugs, and Norman TaylorToday we celebrate the Landscape Architect, who left a mark on over 50 towns in the United States.  We'll learn about The Botany Man, who helped start The Sierra Club. We'll hear beautiful words about the mists of November from two of the world's best nature writers. We Grow That Garden Library with the book written by the wife of the author of Stuart Little and Charlotte's Web. I'll talk about getting your outdoor rugs cleaned, and then we'll wrap things up with the story of an award-winning botanical writer who was onc...2019-11-0723 minThe Tom Woods ShowThe Tom Woods ShowEp. 1528 Public Goods, Education, and Other Excuses for State PowerRichard Ebeling joins me to discuss some of the tough questions libertarians face.2019-11-0635 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerOctober 31, 2019 Four Herbs for Women, 10 Black Foliage Plants, John Evelyn, John Keats, Andrew Jackson Downing, Richard Morris Hunt, Charles Totty, The Best of Thymes by Marge Clark, Cover Crops and Short SunflowersToday we celebrate the gardener who had his home and garden trashed by the Russian Czar and the poet who wrote one of his most famous poems under the plum tree in his garden. We'll learn about the American Landscape Architect who never lived to see the big park he dreamed of, and we'll learn about the horticulturist who created the first International Flower show in NYC. We'll hear the October Poem about woodbines (or honeysuckle). We Grow That Garden Library with an herb-based cookbook. I'll talk about late-season cover crops (and no, it's not too late), and then we...2019-10-3123 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerSeptember 10, 2019 Time to Power Wash, David Hosack, Richard Spruce, George Bentham, Beverley Nichols, Oak by William Bryant Logan, Addressing Rot ASAP, and Plants on the PillRight about now is the perfect time to get out the power washer.  Clean your water features, edging, rocks, fountains, and your outdoor entertaining spaces. The reality is that once you start up that power washer, the list of things that you can clean with it goes on and on. As you're working, you invariably find more things to wash. When it comes to our maintenance free decking, I'll add a little Dawn dish soap to help release the dirt out of the grooves. And, this week and next is the exact best time of y...2019-09-1016 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerAugust 9, 2019 Surprise Plants, Ludwig Winter, Walden, George Vasey, Bunny Mellon, Richard Comb Miller, David Hoffman, Black Lace Elder, Japanese Flame Tree, and San FranciscoEvery now and then, plants can surprise you.   In this case I’m talking about more than just a beautiful bloom or general survival. I’m talking about variations that could lead to exciting new varieties. This topic was covered in the newspaper out of Richmond Indiana on this day in 1938.   Here’s what it said:  "Black Hull Wheat - the wheat that increased production by millions of bushels in the Southwest - came from just one plant discovered in his wheat field by Earl Clark in Sedgwick county, Kans. The Wayzata ever-bearing strawberry came from just one plant discovere...2019-08-0911 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJuly 31, 2019 Poppies, Christopher Lloyd, Daniel Defoe, Mary Vaux Walcott, Richard Morris Hunt, Smithsonian Gardens, Robert Frost, Gardenista by Michelle Slatalla, Updating Beds, and National Avacado DayDid you know that poppies were Christopher Lloyd's his favorite flower?  In his short essay about poppies, he introduces 'Goliath' poppies which grow to 4 feet tall and offer the largest blooms of any poppy.   Lloyd wrote about the blooms saying, "They are rich crimson, which is as exciting as scarlet. In choosing plant neighbors to vie with it, I have been best pleased with an equally bright and pure yellow giant buttercup. Ranunculus acris ‘Stevenii.’ It is, however, shocking to discover that there are some gardeners (and non -gardeners) of congenitally weak and palsied constitution who do not like strong...2019-07-3109 minFFF LibertyViewFFF LibertyViewThe Ongoing Destruction of American LibertyThe Future of Freedom Foundation returned to FreedomFest in 2019 with its program, “The Ongoing Destruction of American Liberty.” Held on July 18, 2019 in Las Vegas, Nevada, FFF president Jacob Hornberger, FFF policy advisor James Bovard, and Citadel professor Richard Ebeling discussed the destructive nature of socialism and the benefits of a free society.2019-07-301h 38FEE AudioXPFEE AudioXPClemson 2019 | Myths of International TradeFoundation for Economic Education is proud to present a series of lectures from the “Morality of Capitalism” seminar that happens every year in May at Clemson University in South Carolina. FEE and the Clemson Institute for the Study of Capitalism bring together some of the best and brightest economic minds in the country at this 3-day seminar for college students. You'll have an incredible opportunity to dive deeper into why free enterprise and strong character offer the best opportunity to generate wealth for everyone. Enjoy this lecture by Richard Ebeling "Myths of International Trade...2019-07-2500 minFEE AudioXPFEE AudioXPClemson 2019 | Historical Perspective on SocialismFoundation for Economic Education is proud to present a series of lectures from the “Morality of Capitalism” seminar that happens every year in May at Clemson University in South Carolina. FEE and the Clemson Institute for the Study of Capitalism bring together some of the best and brightest economic minds in the country at this 3-day seminar for college students. You'll have an incredible opportunity to dive deeper into why free enterprise and strong character offer the best opportunity to generate wealth for everyone. Enjoy this lecture by Richard Ebeling "Historical Perspective on Socia...2019-07-2500 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJuly 3, 2019 Clearance Plants, Gilbert Laing Meason, Michael Keens, Lambertus Bobbink, William Henry Davies, Grow in the Dark by Lisa Eldred Steinkopf, Hakonechloa All Gold, Richard Evans Schultes, and Calvin SperlingSometimes the plant gods smile on you with a clearance sale featuring something truly spectacular like Japanese Forest Grass or in this case, Hakonechloa 'All Gold'. My local Lowes was clearancing them for $3 a pop - and it was just what the plant doctor ordered to dress up our  cabin up north. In 2009, my garden idol, Margaret Roach tweeted, "Another plant I cannot garden without: Hakonechloa 'All Gold.' Solid gold in the shade." She's right.     Brevities #OTD  On this day in 1796, Gilbert Laing Meason was born.   Laing Meason was a friend of Sir Walter Scott and he invented the te...2019-07-0309 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJuly 2, 2019 Delphinium, Marian Farquharson, Ralph Hancock, Hugh C. Cutler, ECOSTRESS, Herman Hesse, Seasonal Flower Arranging by Ariella Chezar, Dividing Solomon's Seal, and the Richard Wettstein MemorialDo you have delphiniums in your garden? I used to start out every summer by planting twenty delphinium in front of my porch. By the time I my red lilies were popping, my delphinium would be 4 feet tall.  In that same area, I had planted white astilbe and alyssum; I had a little red, white, and blue garden under my American flag for 4th of July. The Delphinium is one of the birth flowers for the month July. It's also known as 'Larkspur' and 'Knight's-spur'. During the Victorian age, people essentially used flowers as emojis: and the delphinium symbolized l...2019-07-0209 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJune 7, 2019 Garden Journal Format, Louis Claude Richard, Daniel Boone, Fletcher Steele, Jack Harlan, Jean Arp, Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Robin Karson, Photo Friday, and the Southeastern Plant Symposium  I ran across a fascinating old journal as I was researching this show - what I especially loved about it was the layout.     If you want to copy it here's what you do:   Dedicate a page of your journal to each type of plant in your garden. Make some notes about the characteristics of the plant. (Maybe what you like about it as well) Then leave room to chart the major events with the plant.   For instance, after describing Kalmia Angustifolia, it says this:  June 7, 1908  First Flowers June 15th  Generally comes into bloom July 13  Still in flower Ra...2019-06-0709 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerJune 5, 2019 New Gardens, Sir John Richardson, Allan Octavian Hume, World Environment Day, Saalu Marada Thimmakka, Alice Mackenzie Swaim, The Gardener's Bed-Book, Richardson Wright, Pruning Spring-Flowering Shrubs, and Psalm 27Is your garden new to you this year?   Recently at a garden center, I ran into a woman who had just moved. She was tentatively buying just a few plants - curious to see what would work in her new space.    One of the things we ended up talking about was the micro-climate she had enjoyed living in an inner-ring suburb of the twin cities - one with milder temperatures thanks to the heat island from the buildings but also helped greatly by the older, dense tree canopy.   Even little moves can be big moves when it comes to a ne...2019-06-0509 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerMay 28, 2019 Unkind Garden Advice, William Herbert, Hippeastrum, Carl Richard Nyberg, Amaryllis and Alteo, Amaryllis Poem, Minta Collins, Medieval Herbs, Exposed Tree Roots and the Wentworth Lilacs of New HampshireGardeners.   Horticultural experts.   Professors, even.   On the garden path, you can, from time to time, run into people that decimate you faster than a Japanese Beetle on green beans.   Let's just set one thing straight. Gardening is good for you, but people who give garden advice can be bad for you.    What they fail to realize is that gardening is an activity of the head AND the heart.   I'm here to tell you, gardening is the absolute most wonderful pastime. But don't let anyone diminish your love for it. If the folks giving you advice aren't respectful, helpful, or loving...2019-05-2809 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerMay 21, 2019 Bolting Rhubarb, Alexander Pope, Henri Rosseau, Pope's Grotto at Twickenham, The Land of the Blue Poppies, Frank Kingdon Ward, Installing Garden Paths, and Richard Walter PohlIs your rhubarb bolting already?   When your rhubarb seems to be bolting too early, ask yourself these questions...   Is your rhubarb an heirloom or a new variety? Older varieties tend to bolt sooner. Try planting a newer variety.   Is your rhubarb very established? The older your rhubarb, the quicker it bolts. If you divide your established rhubarb, it revitalizes your plant and can thwart flowering.   Has it been super cold, hot, or is your rhubarb otherwise stressed? These threatening conditions can cause rhubarb to bolt. Make sure to mulch around your rhubarb to keep it c...2019-05-2109 minThe Daily GardenerThe Daily GardenerMay 8, 2019 Plant Problems, the US Botanic Garden, Emil Christian Hansen, Paul Kremer, Veggie by Orbitec, Sir David Attenborough, Chris Woods, Gardenlust, Angelica archangelica, and a 1912 Recipe for Rhubarb Pudding  You know the saying bad things come in threes?   The dishwasher stops working. You get in a car accident. Your credit card gets stolen.   Well, when it comes to our plants; like us, they can be experiencing a constellation of problems as well.   Yet, we often see plants as far less complex; minimizing their needs to a singular solution.   "It just needs more sun."   "Better drainage will do the trick."   Instead of just trying one solution, consider that maybe multiple changes are needed.         Brevities #OTD On this day in 1820, President James Monroe signed a bill granting “a tract of public land in...2019-05-0809 minFEEcastFEEcastCapitalism Isn’t Only for CapitalistsCapitalism is a top trending search term. What does it actually mean? Is it an economic system run by capitalists or swayed by consumers? Does it benefit capital at the expense of labor or is it responsible for the rising living standards or workers in industrialized countries? The FEEcast crew discusses this much maligned and much misunderstood term. Show Notes: Article: What Is "Capitalism" Anyway?” by Richard Ebeling Video: “Why Should My Boss Get All the Profits?” by Seamus Coughlin Article: “Only 53 US Companies Have Been on the Fortune 500 since 1955, Thanks to the C...2018-06-0135 minMoney Metals\' Weekly Market Wrap PodcastMoney Metals' Weekly Market Wrap PodcastAudio: Nominee to Chair Fed -- Good or Bad for Gold? | November 10th, 2017Dr. Richard Ebeling, Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise Leadership at The Citadel, calls the alarm about the increasingly dangerous monetary policy our nation has been pursuing and how it could lead to an economic disaster.       2017-11-1036 minMoney Metals\' Weekly Market Wrap PodcastMoney Metals' Weekly Market Wrap PodcastAudio: Nominee to Chair Fed -- Good or Bad for Gold? | November 10th, 2017Dr. Richard Ebeling, Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise Leadership at The Citadel, calls the alarm about the increasingly dangerous monetary policy our nation has been pursuing and how it could lead to an economic disaster.        This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit moneymetalsexchange.substack.com2017-11-1036 minAn Economy Of OneAn Economy Of OneEdward W. "Ed" Conard and Richard M. EbelingEdward W. "Ed" Conard is an American businessman, author and scholar. He is the author of two top-ten New York Times bestsellers: The Upside of Inequality: How Good Intentions Undermine the Middle Class and Unintended Consequences: Why Everything You've Been Told About the Economy Is Wrong. He is a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research Richard M. Ebeling is an American libertarian author, and was president of the Foundation for Economic Education (FEE) from 2003 to 2008. Ebeling is currently the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise Leadership at The Citadel in Charleston, South...2017-09-1140 minThe Human Action PodcastThe Human Action PodcastDr. Richard Ebeling on the State of the Austrian SchoolOur old friend Richard Ebeling joins Mises Weekends to discuss the health of—and future prospects for—the Austrian school. There are far more Austrian and Austrian-friendly thinkers in academia, business, and the financial industry than ever before. Richard attended the famous South Royalton conference, so he knows just how far we've come. But are Austrians making real progress against the dominant neo-Keynesian orthodoxy? Are we growing on a per-capita basis? And what would Hayek, Rothbard, and Margit von Mises—all of whom Dr. Ebeling knew and spent time with—think of Austrian economics today?2017-07-0726 minAn Economy Of OneAn Economy Of OneRecent ransomware attacks and protecting your dataJohn Crabtree, Virtual Chief Information Officer/Nemsys, talks about the recent ransomware attacks and keeping your data safe. Amazon 20 year IPO anniversary and what it means. Dr. Richard Ebeling, BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise Leadership at The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina talks about the morality of capitalism. Trump is criticized no matter what he does.2017-05-2239 minCurious Minds at WorkCurious Minds at WorkCM 067: Mick Ebeling on Achieving the ImpossibleHave you ever felt powerless to improve the lives of those less fortunate than you? Mick Ebeling believes that the key to helping many is to start by helping just one. He shares details and examples of this in his book, Not Impossible, The Art and Joy of Doing What Couldn’t be Done. Mick explains that through this philosophy, we not only solve an immediate problem, but we also learn more about what else we can do. Thought leader, speaker, and founder of Not Impossible, Mick and his team are crowdsourcing solutions through tech to help people around the gl...2016-12-1930 minFFF LibertyViewFFF LibertyViewAn Introduction to Austrian Economics, Part 9Purchase Richard Ebeling’s related ebook “Austrian Economics & Public Policy” at Amazon.com. Austrian Economics is the most powerful explanation of why governments, no matter how well-intentioned, lack the knowledge, wisdom and ability to direct the lives of multitudes of people better than those people can do for themselves. In this series of easy-to-understand lectures, economist Richard Ebeling introduces you to the central ideas in Austrian Economics, as well as their importance for us today. Richard is the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise at The Citadel, former president of The Foundation for Ec...2016-10-2429 minFFF LibertyViewFFF LibertyViewAn Introduction to Austrian Economics, Part 8Purchase Richard Ebeling’s related ebook “Austrian Economics & Public Policy” at Amazon.com. Austrian Economics is the most powerful explanation of why governments, no matter how well-intentioned, lack the knowledge, wisdom and ability to direct the lives of multitudes of people better than those people can do for themselves. In this series of easy-to-understand lectures, economist Richard Ebeling introduces you to the central ideas in Austrian Economics, as well as their importance for us today. Richard is the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise at The Citadel, former president of The Foundation for Ec...2016-10-1724 minFFF LibertyViewFFF LibertyViewAn Introduction to Austrian Economics, Part 7You can purcharse Richard Ebeling’s related ebook Austrian Economics & Public Policy at Amazon.com. Austrian Economics is the most powerful explanation of why governments, no matter how well-intentioned, lack the knowledge, wisdom and ability to direct the lives of multitudes of people better than those people can do for themselves. In this series of easy-to-understand lectures, economist Richard Ebeling introduces you to the central ideas in Austrian Economics, as well as their importance for us today. Richard is the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise at The Citadel, former president of Th...2016-10-1022 minFFF LibertyViewFFF LibertyViewAn Introduction to Austrian Economics, Part 6You can purcharse Richard Ebeling’s related ebook Austrian Economics & Public Policy at Amazon.com. Austrian Economics is the most powerful explanation of why governments, no matter how well-intentioned, lack the knowledge, wisdom and ability to direct the lives of multitudes of people better than those people can do for themselves. In this series of easy-to-understand lectures, economist Richard Ebeling introduces you to the central ideas in Austrian Economics, as well as their importance for us today. Richard is the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise at The Citadel, former president of Th...2016-10-1024 minFFF LibertyViewFFF LibertyViewAn Introduction to Austrian Economics, Part 5Buy the book here: Austrian Economics is the most powerful explanation of why governments, no matter how well-intentioned, lack the knowledge, wisdom and ability to direct the lives of multitudes of people better than those people can do for themselves. In this series of easy-to-understand lectures, economist Richard Ebeling introduces you to the central ideas in Austrian Economics, as well as their importance for us today. Richard is the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise at The Citadel, former president of The Foundation for Economic Education, and the former Ludwig von Mises...2016-09-2618 minFFF LibertyViewFFF LibertyViewAn Introduction to Austrian Economics, Part 4Buy the book here: Austrian Economics is the most powerful explanation of why governments, no matter how well-intentioned, lack the knowledge, wisdom and ability to direct the lives of multitudes of people better than those people can do for themselves. In this series of easy-to-understand lectures, economist Richard Ebeling introduces you to the central ideas in Austrian Economics, as well as their importance for us today. Richard is the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise at The Citadel, former president of The Foundation for Economic Education, and the former Ludwig von Mises...2016-09-2614 minFFF LibertyViewFFF LibertyViewAn Introduction to Austrian Economics, Part 3Buy the book here: https://www.amazon.com/Austrian-Economics-Public-Policy-Prosperity-ebook/dp/B01L8I3V80/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1472558404&sr=8-3&keywords=richard+ebeling#nav-subnav Austrian Economics is the most powerful explanation of why governments, no matter how well-intentioned, lack the knowledge, wisdom and ability to direct the lives of multitudes of people better than those people can do for themselves. In this series of easy-to-understand lectures, economist Richard Ebeling introduces you to the central ideas in Austrian Economics, as well as their importance for us today. Richard is the BB&T Distinguished Professor...2016-09-1215 minFFF LibertyViewFFF LibertyViewAn Introduction to Austrian Economics, Part 2Buy the book here: Austrian Economics is the most powerful explanation of why governments, no matter how well-intentioned, lack the knowledge, wisdom and ability to direct the lives of multitudes of people better than those people can do for themselves. In this series of easy-to-understand lectures, economist Richard Ebeling introduces you to the central ideas in Austrian Economics, as well as their importance for us today. Richard is the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise at The Citadel, former president of The Foundation for Economic Education, and the former Ludwig von Mises...2016-09-0817 minFFF LibertyViewFFF LibertyViewAn Introduction to Austrian Economics, Part 1Buy the book here: Austrian Economics is the most powerful explanation of why governments, no matter how well-intentioned, lack the knowledge, wisdom and ability to direct the lives of multitudes of people better than those people can do for themselves. In this series of easy-to-understand lectures, economist Richard Ebeling introduces you to the central ideas in Austrian Economics, as well as their importance for us today. Richard is the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise at The Citadel, former president of The Foundation for Economic Education, and the former Ludwig von Mises...2016-09-0815 minCurious Minds at WorkCurious Minds at WorkCM 006: Mick Ebeling on How to Achieve the ImpossibleMick Ebeling is the Founder of Not Impossible Labs, an online crowdsourcing platform that dramatically improves the lives of millions by creating low-cost, open-source, and do-it-yourself devices. For example, through a combination of marking and hacking, Not Impossible Labs developed 150-dollar devices that helped people with ALS communicate with loved ones for the first time in years, as well as prosthetic limbs for Sudanese children for as low as 50 dollars. The philosophy of Not Impossible Labs is to help one to help many, that is, to create a life-changing solution for one person, and then think about how to scale...2015-11-0932 minLiberty Talk RadioLiberty Talk RadioThe Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy with Dr. Richard M. EbelingWe are pleased that Dr. Richard M. Ebeling, the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise Leadership at The Citadel, in Charleston, South Carolina has agreed to be our guest.  Dr. Ebeling is recognized as one of the leading members of the Austrian School of Economics. His most recent book, Monetary Central Planning and the State will be published in November 2015 by the Future of Freedom Foundation in eBook format.  He writes a regular column on political and economic policy issues on the news and commentary website, EpicTimes. Dr. Ebeling is also the co-editor of When We Are Free...2015-09-0300 minWall St For Main StWall St For Main StRichard Ebeling: More Centrally Planned Credit Bubbles Coming Soon!Jason Burack of Wall St for Main St interviewed Austrian School Economist and author Richard Ebeling. Richard is currently the BB&T Distinguished Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise Leadership at The Citadel in Charleston, South Carolina.Richard's full bio can be found here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_...Richard's weekly articles can be found here: http://www.epictimes.com/richardebeling/He also writes Austrian School of Economics books and occasionally writes for the Mises Institute. During this 30+ minute interview, Jason asks Richard to explain the differences between the 3 major...2015-03-2000 minButler on BusinessButler on BusinessButler on Business 2014.09.25Alan covers the headlines. Todd predicts a selloff. Andy Hoffman talks about the global Fiat current regime. Jay Taylor talks about the economy. The show ends with Dr. Richard Ebeling.2014-09-2600 minButler on BusinessButler on BusinessButler on Business 2014.07.01Alan covers current events. Todd observes the new all-time high in the S&P. Ralph Benko talks about a return to the gold standard. Tom Essaye comments on the new highs as well as the U.S. economy. John Whitehead of the Rutherford Institute weighs in on recent Supreme Court decisions. Dr. Richard Ebeling discusses Independence Day as well as Fed monetary policy.2014-07-0100 minButler on BusinessButler on BusinessButler on Business 2014.06.03Alan discusses how President Obama broke the law with yesterdays announced prisoner exchange and also covers some other current events. Todd discusses the new trading range. Redmond Weisenberger describes the environmental opposition to the Canadian tar sands. Tom Essaye talks about the economy. Jimbo describes the Bilderberg Group, the Trilateral Commission and the Council of Foreign Relations. Dr. Richard Ebeling describes the importance of the Second Amendment and also the works of Adam Smith.2014-06-0300 minButler on BusinessButler on BusinessButler on Business 2014.05.21Alan covers current events followed by an earlier interview with Dr. Richard Ebeling on the Feds QE programs. Todd discusses how sometimes the best trade is no trade at all. Ileana Johnson discusses the notion of income inequality. Dan Holler talks about yesterdays primaries and pending legislation. The show ends with John Rubino, author of the book The Money Bubble2014-05-2100 minButler on BusinessButler on BusinessButler on Business 2014.05.16Alan compares the official CPI-U reported for April with the number it would have been had they calculated it the way it was done in 1980. Todd describes how he worked with his dad in the Chicago meat business. Jimbo discusses the FEMA camps. Carl Nordgren talks about his new book and then the curriculum he uses to teach entrepreneurship to his students at Duke. The show ends with Dr. Richard Ebeling and the story of Austrias bout of hyperinflation.2014-05-1600 minButler on BusinessButler on BusinessButler on Business 2014.04.24Alan discusses comments by Fed Chairman Janet Yellen insisting that Japan curtail its version of QE. Todd calls in from a conference in Las Vegas. Terry Bird discusses immigration reform. Mike Larson talks about the bind and real estate markets. Amanda Maxham weighs in on Earth Day and then opposes mandatory food labeling. Dr. Richard Ebeling describes why governments almost always grow.2014-04-2400 minButler on BusinessButler on BusinessButler on Business 2014.02.28Alan starts the show reviewing the fourth quarter retail sales and the January durable goods reports. Todd comments on todays stock market rally. Jim Zauderer discusses the civil unrest currently taking place in several countries. Jay Taylor and Alan talk about monetary policy. Dr Richard Ebeling discusses the free market as an alternative to Obmacare.2014-02-2800 minButler on BusinessButler on BusinessButler on Business 2014.02.21Ileana Johnson joins us in the first segment to explain the dynamics of the civil unrest in Ukraine. Todd vents on the Fed and the misleading economic reports coming out of the media. Joe Profit tells us about his book. Carl Nordgren and Colin Jones to discuss whether college athletes should be paid. Dr. Richard Ebeling discusses the economy and then his article on the rise of collectivism and the fall of classical liberalism.2014-02-2100 minButler on BusinessButler on BusinessButler on Business 2014.01.28Alan talks about the latest deflation phobia, this time coming from the IMF. Todd explains how he is handling his S&P short. Dr. Richard Ebeling discusses LBJs War on Poverty, as well as the State of the Union Address he wishes Obama would give. David Morgan talks about the precious metals market. Dr. Mark Thornton and discuss a wide variety of economic topics. The show ends with a conversation about the Panic of 1873.2014-01-2800 min