4 episodes

A one-day seminar for high school students and anyone concerned about the heavier and heavier tax burden. Recorded in Auburn, Alabama, on 15 April 2013.

Taxes Are What We Pay for an Impoverished Society Mises Institute

    • Business

A one-day seminar for high school students and anyone concerned about the heavier and heavier tax burden. Recorded in Auburn, Alabama, on 15 April 2013.

    Panel Discussion

    Panel Discussion

    All services that government provides can be privately provided goods and services. All voluntary arrangements are better than coercive ones.  Anarchy is simply no rulers, but not no rules.

    Taxes and History

    Taxes and History

    The parasite - the state - has to have a host. First there had to be production before there could be something to tax or steal. Kings waged dynastic wars requiring high taxation. Revolutions and secession resulted.

    Taxes and the Black Hole of Government Spending

    Taxes and the Black Hole of Government Spending

    Taxes are not just wrong, they are destructive. It is highly questionable that private parties could not create goods and services that consumers want at higher quality and lower costs.

    The Myth of a Fair Tax

    The Myth of a Fair Tax

    The myth of the fair tax is the myth of the just tax. Taxation is a coerced, not voluntary, exchange. It is false to say bureaucrats pay taxes. They consume taxes. They plunder. They are the tax eaters. The rest of us are tax payers.

Top Podcasts In Business

REAL AF with Andy Frisella
Andy Frisella #100to0
The Dough
Lemonada Media
The Ramsey Show
Ramsey Network
The Marketing Architects
Marketing Architects
Money Rehab with Nicole Lapin
Money News Network
The Money Mondays
Dan Fleyshman

More by Mises Institute

The Human Action Podcast
Mises Institute
Radio Rothbard
Mises Institute
Economics 101
Mises Institute
Audio Mises Wire
Mises Institute
The Politically Incorrect Guide to American History
Mises Institute
A History of Money and Banking in the United States Before the Twentieth Century
Murray N. Rothbard