Monday, October 6, 2014

Friday Highlights: Alan Greenspan in Foreign Affairs, controverts Keynes's characterization of gold as a "barbarous relic." John Tamny writes the departure of Bill Gross from Pimco unmasks the Fed as a credit destroyer; William Kristol says Bell-Booker is really a five point race

Monetary Reform

Alan Greenspan in Foreign Affairs, controverts Keynes's characterization of gold as a "barbarous relic." 

AEI's blog, AEIdeas, posts, circulates to its subscribers, and then without explanation deletes, within minutes, a blog by Mark J. Perry entitled Stagnant real wages?  It just ain't so...


From Forbes.com, John Tamny writes the departure of Bill Gross from Pimco unmasks the Fed as a credit destroyer.

In the Weekly Standard, William Kristol says Bell-Booker is really a five point race; At the Daily Caller, David Wagner details Jeff Bell’s case for the middle class.

The Daily Beast gives the sane case to audit the Fed.

From Forbes.com, Nathan Lewis writes dozens of countries have already kicked the fiat currency habit.

At TGSN, Ralph Benko presents part 3 of his interview with Steve Lonegan.

Tax

In The Hill, Grover Norquist defends Brownback’s tax cuts

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