Last night I went to the College of Charleston to attend a lecture from my favorite journalist, John Stossel. This week was Adam Smith Week at the College of Charleston’s school of business and was put on by the Initiative for Public Choice and Market Process (Facebook): Founded in the Fall of 2008 with a [...]
Last night I went to the College of Charleston to attend a lecture from my favorite journalist, John Stossel. This week was Adam Smith Week at the College of Charleston’s school of business and was put on by the Initiative for Public Choice and Market Process (Facebook):
Founded in the Fall of 2008 with a generous gift from the BB&T; Charitable Foundation, the Initiative for Public Choice & Market Process is designed to examine and stimulate discussion of the following topics:
- The role of government institutions in a capitalistic society
- The relationship between government and the individual
- The relationship between political and economic freedom
- The moral structure of a free market economyThe success of the Initiative for Public Choice & Market Process depends on the support of foundations and private individuals who share its commitment to advancing the understanding and appreciation of the system of free minds and free markets. We are deeply grateful to all who support our venture.
link: Initiative for Public Choice and Market Process – College of Charleston
I’m glad to see these types of groups gaining traction at universities around the country. At Clemson (my Alma Mater) they have the Institute for the Study of Capitalism and they host similar events, and send speakers to news programs such as Stossel’s.
Anyway, the lecture was great and the Q&A; session was even better. The audience was about half students and half non-students, and so the questions covered a wide spectrum and Stossel had a good answer for each one. Stossel has a very simple premise: force doesn’t work, freedom does. He thinks the government should only serve three roles: police, justice system, national defense (stressing the “defense” part.) This rational and logical premise makes it extremely easy for him to give perfectly sensible answers on just about any question anybody could ask of him, and he showed that after his speech.
The speech itself was short and sweet and it was interesting because he spent most of the time talking about his personal story of how he started out as a typical liberal journalist and he won 19 Emmy’s by reporting on how evil corporations were screwing the little guy, but after he realized that the government did nothing to prevent these things, and in fact made them much worse, he began to change his outlook and his politics. Doing so got him shunned in his professional world of journalism and if it wasn’t for the high ratings his segments got on 20/20 they would have let him go long ago. In the political climate of Obama-mania last year they weren’t letting him do the segments he wanted to, so he finally left and went over to Fox Business where he has his own weekly 1-hour show. We are all much better off now that he’s made that move, because he gets to cover whatever topic he wants to and he gets his own hour every week.
Another interesting tidbit was that Stossel donate’s his shows to high school’s around the country who are interested in presenting materials about economics and politics in the classroom, and now as a part of Fox he can do this for free. When he was with ABC, he would actually have to purchase the rights to do this from the ABC network. Can you believe that? Those smug elitists who are always promoting the liberal propaganda, supposedly for the “common man,” would make Stossel pay them for his own segments so he could donate them to charity. What a crock.
After the speech there was a book signing and even though I’ve already read his books I bought a new copy to get signed and got my picture taken with him. Unsurprisingly, he’s a pretty down to earth and friendly guy. Most people who advocate freedom (not controlling your life for your “own good”) seem to be that way.
I’m not sure what happened to the bottom half there, I guess it was something to do with the electric cycles of the environmentally friendly lights in the lecture hall.
Great news for anybody that likes John Stossel March 25, 2010John Stossel Former Co-host of ABC’s 20/20 Currently host of Fox Business News “Freedom and its Enemies” 7:00 pm Physicians Auditorium (CofC) link: BB&T; Free Market Process Speaker Series – College of Charleston If I’m in town I’ll definitely be hitting that up.
Great news for anybody that likes John Stossel
March 25, 2010
John Stossel
Former Co-host of ABC’s 20/20
Currently host of Fox Business News
“Freedom and its Enemies”
7:00 pm
Physicians Auditorium (CofC)
link: BB&T; Free Market Process Speaker Series – College of Charleston
If I’m in town I’ll definitely be hitting that up.
I am currently reading “Wealth of Nations” by Adam Smith and I am really enjoying it. It’s amazing to read such clear thought and apolitical examination of markets. I was inspired to go out there and see if there were any Adam Smith fans on the internets and lo and behold, there are. I found [...]
I am currently reading “Wealth of Nations” by Adam Smith and I am really enjoying it. It’s amazing to read such clear thought and apolitical examination of markets. I was inspired to go out there and see if there were any Adam Smith fans on the internets and lo and behold, there are. I found a blog run by a group of people who apply Smith’s principles to modern events. Here’s a great article from their website (now featured on the right side of the page under “Brilliance”):
Well, it turns out that the UK is in for an even deeper recession than originally suspected. The CBI (Confederation of British Industry) says unemployment may rise to 2.9 million in 2010, instead of the 1.8 million previously forecast. The UK economy shrank for the first time in 16 years between July and September of this year. CBI warns this is far from over; the size of the economy could decrease by 1.7 percent in 2009, which is a staggering change from the 0.3 percent predicted in September.
CBI blames two major factors for the economic slowdown that lies ahead, which is expected to cause five quarters of negative growth. First of all, the banking crisis has diminished the accessibility of credit and credit insurance for all kinds of businesses. Secondly, the negative reports about the economy resulted in a decrease in consumer confidence, reducing the demand for products and services. This declining consumer spending, in addition to less investment spending and significant drops in inventory, will be the largest contributors to the downturn.
Unite, the UK’s largest union, has come up with a plan to stimulate the economy by increasing public spending and instituting stricter regulation of the financial sector. But why would one want to do that when too much box-ticking regulation helped get us here in the first place? While they hassled firms and companies with nonsense procedures and stipulations, stifling innovation and impeding progress among businesses, regulators completely neglected the bigger issue of financial stability. Although some regulation will surely be needed, the economy will fair much better if companies have more say in their operations and management, and regulators get back to focusing on the big picture.
Ultimately, as long as competition and free market ventures are put on the backburner, the bad news will just keep coming.
Indeed.
This site is pretty brutal, and unfortunately accurate. The same could honestly be said of both of the candidates though, as McCain was a pretty bad pick as well. Check out the video:
This site is pretty brutal, and unfortunately accurate. The same could honestly be said of both of the candidates though, as McCain was a pretty bad pick as well. Check out the video:








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