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The New Deal Debunked
Ludwig von Mises Institute ^ | November 2004 | Thomas J. DiLorenzo

Posted on 08/29/2005 11:39:24 AM PDT by Marxbites

Volume 24, Number 11 November 2004

The New Deal Debunked Thomas J. DiLorenzo

Macroeconomic model builders have finally realized what Henry Hazlitt and John T. Flynn (among others) knew in the 1930s: FDR’s New Deal made the Great Depression longer and deeper. It is a myth that Franklin D. Roosevelt "got us out of the Depression" and "saved capitalism from itself," as generations of Americans have been taught by the state’s education establishment.

This realization on the part of macroeconomists comes in the form of an article in the August 2004 Journal of Political Economy entitled "New Deal Policies and the Persistence of the Great Depression: A General Equilibrium Analysis," by UCLA economists Harold L. Cole and Lee E. Ohanian. This is a big deal, since the JPE is arguably the top academic economics journal in the world.

"Real gross domestic product per adult, which was 39 percent below trend at the trough of the Depression in 1933, remained 27 percent below trend in 1939," the authors write. And, "Similarly, private hours worked were 27 percent below trend in 1933 and remained 21 percent below trend in 1939."

This should be no surprise to anyone who has studied the reality of the Great Depression, for US Census Bureau statistics show that the official unemployment rate was still 17.2 percent in 1939 despite seven years of "economic salvation" at the hands of the Roosevelt administration (the normal, pre-Depression unemployment rate was about 3 percent). Per capita GDP was lower in 1939 than in 1929 ($847 vs. $857), as were personal consumption expenditures ($67.6 billion vs. $78.9 billion), according to Census Bureau data. Net private investment was minus $3.1 billion from 1930–1940.

Cole and Ohanian write as though they were surprised—even shocked—to discover these facts, not so much because they were bamboozled by the Myth of the New Deal, but because of their devotion to "neoclassical model building" as opposed to the study of economic reality. They label as "striking" the fact that the recovery from the Great Depression was "very weak" (a dramatic understatement). And why is it so striking? Because "[t]hese data contrast sharply with neoclassical theory."

The neoclassical theory of depressions might well be thought of as a Frankenstein’s Monster theory. As explained by Cole and Ohanian, "The weak recovery is puzzling because the large negative shocks that some economists believe caused the 1929–33 downturn—including monetary shocks, productivity shocks, and banking shocks—become positive after 1933." Thus, according to neoclassical theory, the economy during a depression is somewhat like a prostrate Frankenstein’s Monster, with economists playing the role of mad scientists who "shock" the beast into becoming a living being once again. They do this with various "injections" of government spending or easy credit that will supposedly cause a "roaring" recovery (just as the rejuvenated beast roared as he left the laboratory to terrorize the townsfolk in the movie, Young Frankenstein).

"The monetary base increases more than 100 percent between 1933 and 1939," the authors write, making the case that such a "monetary shock" should have returned the economy to normalcy. They invoke the authority of well-known macroeconomists Robert Lucas and Leonard Rapping, who once proclaimed that "positive monetary shocks should have produced a strong recovery, with employment returning to its normal levels by 1936."

But as Murray Rothbard showed in America’s Great Depression, it was the easy money policies of the early and mid-1920s that created all the malinvestment that was the trigger for the Great Depression. The only wise thing to have done was to allow the liquidation of hundreds of overcapitalized businesses to occur. Instead, the Fed increased the monetary base by 100 percent in five years, causing more of the same overcapitalization problems that were the source of the problem in the first place.

On top of that, virtually every single one of FDR’s "New Deal" policies made things even worse and prolonged the Depression. Austrian economists have known this for decades, but at least the neoclassical model builders have finally caught on—we can hope.

Cole and Ohanian apparently emerged from the rarified world of macroeconomic model building for a long enough period of time to discover that the so-called First New Deal (1933–1934) was one giant cartel scheme, whereby the government attempted to enforce cartel pricing and output reductions in hundreds of industries and in agriculture. This of course was well documented in John T. Flynn’s book, The Roosevelt Myth, first published in 1948. Henry Hazlitt had also written about it some 15 years earlier. "New Deal cartelization policies are a key factor behind the weak recovery, accounting for about 60 percent of the difference between actual output and trend output," the authors write.

The fact that it has taken "mainstream" neoclassical economists so long to recognize this fact is truly astounding. For generations their own neoclassical textbooks have taught that cartels "restrict output" to raise prices. It has also been no secret that the heart and soul of the First New Deal was to use the coercive powers of government to prop up wages and prices by cartelizing the entire economy.

FDR and his advisors mistakenly believed that the Depression was caused by low prices, therefore, high prices—enforced by threats of violence, coercion and intimidation by the state—would be the "solution." Moreover, it is hardly a secret that if less production takes place, fewer workers will be needed by employers and unemployment will subsequently be higher. Thus, the First New Deal could not possibly have been anything but a gigantic unemployment-producing scheme according to standard neoclassical economic theory.

FDR’s tripling of taxes, his regulation of business, and his relentless antibusiness propaganda also contributed to a worsening of the Great Depression, but his labor policies were probably the most harmful to the employment prospects of American workers. In this regard the most disappointing thing about the Cole-Ohanian article is that they do not even cite the pioneering work of Richard Vedder and Lowell Gallaway—Out of Work: Unemployment and Government in Twentieth-Century America—first published in 1993.

Indeed, it is somewhat scandalous that they do not cite this well-known work while making essentially the same arguments that Vedder and Gallaway do. They recite many of the same facts about labor policy: The NIRA codes established minimum wages for less-skilled and higher-skilled workers alike; employers were told that they must bargain collectively with unions, which were given myriad legislated advantages in the bargaining process, all enforced by the newly-created National Labor Relations Board. All of these policies made labor more expensive. Consequently, as the economic law of demand informs us, the inevitable result has to be less employment.

Strike activity doubled from 14 million strike days in 1936 to 28 million a year later, and wages rose by about 15 percent in 1937 alone. The union/nonunion wage differential increased from 5 percent in 1933 to 23 percent by 1940. Newly-enacted Social Security payroll and unemployment insurance taxes made employment even more expensive. What all of this means is that during a period of weak or declining derived demand for labor, government policy pushed up the price of labor very significantly, causing employers to purchase less and less of it.

Vedder and Gallaway conducted an econometric evaluation of these labor cost-increasing policies and concluded that most of the abnormal unemployment of the 1930s would have been avoided were it not for these policies. They estimated that by 1940 the unemployment rate was eight percentage points higher than it would have been without the legislation-induced growth of unionism and government-mandated employment costs. They conclude that "The Great Depression was very significantly prolonged in both its duration and its magnitude by the impact of New Deal programs" (p. 141).

Cole and Ohanian reach the exact same conclusions, but express them in the somewhat convoluted language of the "top economic journals": "New Deal labor and industrial policies did not lift the economy out of the Depression. . . . Instead, the joint policies of increasing labor’s bargaining power and linking collusion with paying high wages prevented a normal recovery by creating rents and an inefficient insider-outsider friction that raised wages significantly and restricted employment . . . the abandonment of these policies coincided with the strong economic recovery of the 1940s."

This last conclusion—that the abandonment of FDR’s policies "coincided" with the recovery of the 1940s is very well documented by another author who is also ignored by Cole and Ohanian, Robert Higgs. In "Regime Uncertainty: Why the Great Depression Lasted So Long and Why Prosperity Resumed after the War" (Independent Review, Spring 1997), Higgs showed that it was the relative neutering of New Deal policies, along with a reduction (in absolute dollars) of the federal budget from $98.4 billion in 1945 to $33 billion in 1948, that brought forth the economic recovery. Private-sector production increased by almost one-third in 1946 alone, as private capital investment increased for the first time in 18 years.

In short, it was capitalism that finally ended the Great Depression, not FDR’s harebrained cartel, wage- increasing, unionizing, and welfare state expanding policies. It’s good to see that the Journal of Political Economy, the University of Chicago, and UCLA are finally beginning to catch up to the libertarian scholarship of Richard Vedder, Lowell Gallaway, Robert Higgs, Jim Powell (author of FDR’s Folly) and such predecessors of theirs as Henry Hazlitt, John T. Flynn, Murray Rothbard, F.A. Hayek, William H. Hutt, Benjamin Anderson, and others associated with the Austrian School.

Better late than never.

______________________________

Thomas J. DiLorenzo is professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and author of The Real Lincoln (Three Rivers Press/Random House, 2003). His latest book is How Capitalism Saved America: The Untold History of Our Country, From the Pilgrims to the Present (Crown Forum/Random House, 2004) (tomd@ mises.org).


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: corporatism; economics; fdr; keynes; lies; socialism; stateeducators; statism

1 posted on 08/29/2005 11:39:27 AM PDT by Marxbites
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To: Marxbites
The union/nonunion wage differential increased from 5 percent in 1933 to 23 percent by 1940.

Whoa!

2 posted on 08/29/2005 11:49:32 AM PDT by aposiopetic
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To: Marxbites

Welcome, Marxbites, to FR! Thanks for posting this article.


3 posted on 08/29/2005 11:59:38 AM PDT by aposiopetic
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To: Marxbites
They conclude that "The Great Depression was very significantly prolonged in both its duration and its magnitude by the impact of New Deal programs" (p. 141).

But FDR and his cronies of socialist and communists meant well. Roosevelt's "Fireside Chats" were more filling than food, more uplifting than a job. The New Deal was the political and economic equivalent of the medical placebo. And for about half of all American voters, then and now, meaning well is more important than doing well.

4 posted on 08/29/2005 12:00:46 PM PDT by elbucko
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To: Marxbites

I'm really starting to majorly like our local neighbor DiLorenzo (lives 15 min from our town). Between "debunking" Lincoln AND F'n Roosevelt, he's got to be a great guy! ;-D


5 posted on 08/29/2005 1:16:13 PM PDT by the OlLine Rebel (Common sense is an uncommon virtue.)
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To: Marxbites

bttt


6 posted on 08/29/2005 1:18:38 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons

bttt ?????

Thanks to all !!

Why do Republicans after RWR never mention Hayek or von Mises. These are the saviours of the ideas of small govt, low/no taxes and the liberty envisioned by our founders?

Hayek's "The Road to Serfdom" was RWR's bible, and the spark that made him quit the socialist Democrat party.

mises.org is chock full of the very best in economics by the best in class authors in modern history.

We need a Hayekian as the new Fed Chairman and a Janice Rogers Brown to reverse the corruptions that FDR & pals did to the Gen'l Welfare, Commerce & Equal Protection clauses of the constitution for their carte blanche taxations and growth of the beast that's become their built-in voting base.


7 posted on 08/29/2005 2:00:53 PM PDT by Marxbites (Mises.org answers to the question)
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To: Marxbites
bttt = bump to the top.

Hayeck and von Mises are mentioned all the time on FR. Some of us have a few problems with von Mises, though.

It took the Dem party almost 100 years to get us to where we are today; please don't yearn for instant gratification in over turning all of the damage...ain't gonna happen, but a lot of headway has been made.

8 posted on 08/29/2005 2:13:01 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons

Well, after a hundred years, there's no time like the present to push as hard as possible to right the wrongs.

Re: Hayek & Mises - I know von Mises has some problems, but the site with Di Lorenzo & Rothbard's, etc. articles are great.

Also, I was referring to our elected Republicans who seem to have chucked small govt as an ideal to be re-achieved, who instead, seem more concerned with feathering their own re-election nests.

Tom Coburn and Ron Paul seem to be the only ones trying anymore.


9 posted on 08/29/2005 2:39:46 PM PDT by Marxbites (Mises.org answers to the question)
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To: Marxbites
Rothbard is also a problem.

Please don't push Libertarian idols as Conservative icons.

Incrementalism is the ONLY way that we can/will undo the Socialist garbage foisted on American by the Dems. And that's what has been going on; especially thanks to President Bush.

Oh, so you're a Paulist. You'll find a few rather vocal comrades here, but no, not the majority.

Just hang out on the Ron Paul threads, then.

10 posted on 08/29/2005 2:50:04 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons; Marxbites
Incrementalism is the ONLY way that we can/will undo the Socialist garbage foisted on American by the Dems. And that's what has been going on; especially thanks to President Bush.

Noting that after 5 years of incremental rollbacks of the New Deal under Bush, we find his Justice Department before the Supreme Court arguing to uphold Wickard v. Filburn as precedent, I can only conclude that we are dealing in exceedingly fine increments.

11 posted on 08/29/2005 4:55:22 PM PDT by tacticalogic (Say goodnight, Grace.)
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To: tacticalogic
It's taken the left almost 100 years to get us where we are. President Bush has rolled back a lot of things, but he isn't a benevolent dictator and he can't magically get rid of everything, in the blink of an eye.

Yes, it's frustrating, but it's the reality that we all have to deal with.

12 posted on 08/29/2005 5:39:03 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons
President Bush has rolled back a lot of things, but he isn't a benevolent dictator and he can't magically get rid of everything, in the blink of an eye.

The New Deal is only about 70 years old. I don't know anyone who's expecting a 180 overnight, I just don't see anything that amounts to more than a few milliseconds of arc. Can you provide an example of a discernible rollback of New Deal policies under George Bush?

13 posted on 08/29/2005 5:50:25 PM PDT by tacticalogic (Say goodnight, Grace.)
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To: tacticalogic
The "NEW DEAL" was bad, but Wilson's agenda was worse. There's no point at all to only go back 70 odd years to look for problems which need fixing.

I suggest that you read Southack's personal page, where the list of the things that President Bush has done since taking office. It's a HUGE list.

14 posted on 08/29/2005 5:57:17 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons
The "NEW DEAL" was bad, but Wilson's agenda was worse. There's no point at all to only go back 70 odd years to look for problems which need fixing.

Maybe it was. But the topic is the New Deal, and if you don't think there's any point in discussing it, then don't. If the thread isn't about what you want it to be about, find one that is.

15 posted on 08/29/2005 6:01:17 PM PDT by tacticalogic (Say goodnight, Grace.)
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To: tacticalogic
tsk, tsk, tsk...I don't need a lecture from you, you who have no idea whatsoever what President Bush has done and is capable of doing.

The actual topic of this thread is the debunking of the mythologizing of the NEW DEAL, but you and the rest of the Bushbashers haven't actually tackled THAT subject at all. Instead, it been wall to wall Bushbashing and caviling about President Bush.

Not only was the New Deal NOT good for this nations, a lot of it was pure Socialism and yes, some people knew it back them and a few of the programs WERE dismantled back then, for being unconstitutional.

How about we talk about that, or are you only interested in trashing President Bush and people who, unlike you, know factual history?

16 posted on 08/29/2005 6:19:12 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: nopardons

IOW, no, you don't have a single example to support your claims of Bush "rolling back the New Deal", so you're going to try and bluff your way out of it with condescention and insults. I'm only interesed in discussing things with people who aren't determined to be insufferable twits, thank you.


17 posted on 08/29/2005 6:30:22 PM PDT by tacticalogic (Say goodnight, Grace.)
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To: tacticalogic

Now, now, boys and girls - I didn't mean to start a fight. I voted for W, GHWB & RWR after being a dumbed down democrap my first 28 years of life, now 52. I was left, then staunchly Republican, now I am seeing that BOTH parties will crap on the constitution, i.e. a la Spector, (and I know he's a RINO too), just to keep their power. In fact after the CW, where govt and big biz became more cozy than ever before, and the falling prices in freight rates, telephone, oil, etc, due to terrific free market competition in the industrial revolution, were all leading to more prosperity for the average American. The BIGS, whose profits were getting squeezed, just bought pols on BOTH sides until they had the Interstate Commerce Clause instituted, and thusly Congress created the first monopolies where none before existed, with regulations that set and protected their pricing and profits against upstart competition. BOTH PARTIES!!!!

The New Deal was enabled by the very interventionism that caused the recession, a too loose FED that turned to tight, that FDR then turned into a decade long depression. The intellectual class, was even more responsible than immigrant marxists, for bringing their glowing praises of the "scientific" central planning they'd seen in their visits to euro-dictator lands and the "progress" there WE here in America should emulate - for the "good" of the people. Stalin puppet Wm Duranty of the NYTs being a prime example in the mold of modern day CNN's Peter Arnott licking Saddam's boots and lying to the world.

It is also true that we didn't need to get into WWI as they were all about petered out, but the UK cut the comm cables such that they became the conduit thru which all reportage of the war had to be filtered thru them, to our grave disadvantage. The UK had blockaded the Kaiser's shipping after all, and big biz and their bought pols saw profits galore and Wilson whether duped or complicit took us to war.

A war, in which we allowed the victors to totally decimate Germany in a manner 180 degrees from Marshall Plan type policy that brought the rise of Hitler. I can understand the Germans - they were as devastated and confused as Americans were when they foolishly fell for the New Deal. We chose the Kaiser's socialism, and they chose fascist Nazism.

All of this horrible loss of life and resources that resulted in two world wars was avoidable if only Govts had stayed out of otherwise free markets as we did for our first hundred years or so.

Never mind the Fed that with it's power to inflate enabled politicians to finance wars and welfare statism, and not to be forgotten, 40 years worth of socialist Democrat re-/elections.

So while W IS the best bet today, he's far below RWR's lofty perch. He allowed Turd Kennedy, olympic swimmer, to write the education bill, a $45BIL increase, only to be backstabbed by him, and a totally irresponsible perscription drug bill that makes SS seem like child's play.

The Austrian economists foretold of the Great Depression, but everybody was so busy praising Keynes they were not heard or believed but by a small minority of classical free market, small govt liberals (read founders) - a moniker now stolen by leftists.

Another tidbit is that nearly all Presidents & VP's and their cabinets have been members of the CFR, which the Rockefeller Foundation, with Rothschild influence, created. Not unlike the Fed's creation by Paul Warburg (Rothschild cartel/family member) and Sen Aldrich in a secret Jekyll Island confab.

Here's as good a cogent description as I've read anywhere:
//////////////////////
By John Pounders, Paradigm Publishing, Copyright 1996

My wife and I visited Jekyll Island, Georgia, in April, 1996. It immediately took on a fascination because I remembered that Jekyll is known as the birthplace of the Federal Reserve. In fact, the Clubhouse/hotel on the island has two conference rooms named for the "Federal Reserve."

In 1886, a group of millionaires purchased Jekyll Island and converted it into a winter retreat and hunting ground, the USA's most exclusive club. By 1900, the club's roster represented 1/6th of the world's wealth. Names like Astor, Vanderbilt, Morgan, Pulitzer and Gould filled the club's register. Non- members, regardless of stature, were not allowed. Dignitaries like Winston Churchill and President McKinley were refused admission.

In 1908, the year after a national money panic purportedly created by J. P. Morgan, Congress established, in 1908, a National Monetary Authority. In 1910 another, more secretive, group was formed consisting of the chiefs of major corporations and banks in this country. The group left secretly by rail from Hoboken, New Jersey, and traveled anonymously to the hunting lodge on Jekyll Island.

The meeting was so secret that none referred to the other by his last name. Why the need for secrecy? Frank Vanderlip wrote later in the Saturday Evening Post, "...it would have been fatal to Senator Aldrich's plan to have it known that he was calling on anybody from Wall Street to help him in preparing his bill...I do not feel it is any exaggeration to speak of our secret expedition to Jekyll Island as the occasion of the actual conception of what eventually became the Federal Reserve System."

At Jekyll Island, the true draftsman for the Federal Reserve was Paul Warburg. The plan was simple. The new central bank could not be called a central bank because America did not want one, so it had to be given a deceptive name. Ostensibly, the bank was to be controlled by Congress, but a majority of its members were to be selected by the private banks that would own its stock.

To keep the public from thinking that the Federal Reserve would be controlled from New York, a system of twelve regional banks was designed. Given the concentration of money and credit in New York, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York controlled the system, making the regional concept initially nothing but a ruse.

The board and chairman were to be selected by the President, but in the words of Colonel Edward House, the board would serve such a term as to "put them out of the power of the President." The power over the creation of money was to be taken from the people and placed in the hands of private bankers who could expand or contract credit as they felt best suited their needs.

Why the opposition to a central bank?

Americans at the time knew of the destruction to the economy the European central banks had caused to their respective countries and to countries who became their debtors. They saw the large-scale government deficit spending and debt creation that occurred in Europe.

Shortly after the United States gained its freedom, the Rothschilds attempted to saddle the country with a private central bank. This Bank of the United States was abolished by President Andrew Jackson with these words:

The bold effort the present bank has made to control the government, the distress it had wantonly produced...are but premonitions of the fate that awaits the American people should they be deluded into a perpetuation of this institution or the establishment of another like it.

But European financial moguls didn't rest until the New World was within their orbit. In 1902, Paul Warburg, a friend and associate of the Rothschilds and an expert on European central banking, came to this country as a partner in Kuhn, Loeb and Company. He married the daughter of Solomon Loeb, one of the founders of the firm. The head of Kuhn, Loeb was Jacob Schiff, whose gift of $20 million in gold to the struggling Russian communists in 1917 no doubt saved their revolution.

The Fed controls the banking system in the USA, not the Congress nor the people indirectly (as the Constitution dictates). The U.S. central bank strategy is a product of European banking interests.
//////////////

Basically the FED guarantees an unlimited Govt of innumerable powers, we taxpayers being their slaves.

P.S. - Just watched the President's speech at NAS Coronado, CA, still wiping the tears he evoked in me for the love of the greatest nation ever conceived by man. A much better speech than usual.


18 posted on 08/30/2005 9:48:46 AM PDT by Marxbites (Mises.org answers to the question)
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To: Marxbites
Something for your collection.
19 posted on 08/30/2005 5:57:18 PM PDT by tacticalogic ("libertarian" - what Repblicans call republicans.)
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To: tacticalogic

Good night!

That's great - Olasky has always been one of those whose words I trust.

Maybe FDR isn't as much the demon I thought - then again, I have NO tolerance for his appeasement of Stalin or his blind, or not so blind maybe, idiocy in having the Reds (Alger Hiss among others) right alongside him in the WH for years & at Yalta, and which W at least had the nads to apologize to the world for.

And idiots like Doris Kearns Goodwin still sing the praises of FDR as does the majority in academe and media.

Do you realize today's college grads can't even name the Sect of Defense?? and it's not like his name's never in the news, but to the contrary is the leftmedia's main whipping boy #2 right after W.

While I doubt I'll be voting for anyone but Republicans (or electable libertarians locally), I too have become oh so impatient with Reps behaving too much like Dems in the entitlement and pork barrel spheres.

Let's hope Roberts DOES overturn the unconstitutional regarding the corrupted Commerce, Gen'l Welfare & Equal Protection clauses. I know Rogers Brown wants to and I'd much rather have her instead! Lets also hope Reps do go "nuclear" when Rhenquist bows out.

In my mind there is nothing more important than restoring our pre-Marxist small Govt Constitution.


20 posted on 08/31/2005 11:26:56 AM PDT by Marxbites (Mises.org answers to the question)
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