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Thursday, March 13, 2025
Trump, defying his Own Logic, does not Want Canadians to Take our Stuff and Gives us their Money.
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Get Your Free Copy of “Trickle Down” Theory and “Tax Cuts for the Rich”
Dear Rod,
I hear from people all the time that Thomas Sowell is one of their heroes. For those people—and you may be among them—I’m thrilled to share a digital copy of one of his commentaries with you, absolutely free: “Trickle Down” Theory and “Tax Cuts for the Rich.”
Greg
Greg Stamps | Online Development Hoover Institution | Stanford University |
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Harwood Salons: Has Market Liberalism Failed?
The debate over economic freedom has never been more urgent. As protectionism and industrial policy gain traction, what lessons can we learn from history - and how can we chart a better path forward?
Join us on Wednesday, March 19, at 6:00 p.m. for an engaging discussion with Dr. Samuel Gregg, AIER's Friedrich Hayek Chair in Economics and Economic History. He'll explore what has worked, what hasn't, and how we can revive the case for free markets in today's policy landscape.
This is a great opportunity for you to connect with like-minded individuals in your community and gain key insights on the future of economic freedom.
Spots are filling up fast — register now to secure yours!
Registration required. REGISTER HERE
Harwood Salons - Nashville is made possible through the generosity of supporters like you. We encourage you to become a member or make a donation to support the American Institute for Economic Research and ensure the continuation of these important events. All donations are tax-deductible and directly contribute to sustaining Harwood Salons - Nashville.
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David Frum on Donald Trump’s Betrayal of Ukraine
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Wednesday, March 12, 2025
Recommended Readings on Free Trade Versus Protectionism
Everything You Need to Know About Open Markets, Comparative Advantage, and Globalization
by Williamson M. Evers, Independent Institute, January 24, 2025 -
Introduction
Economists, going back to Adam Smith and David Ricardo, are virtually unanimous that free trade benefits consumers and the overall economy. But there exist special interests who would gain in the short run from protectionist barriers. And there is a large segment of the public that doesn’t understand the arguments for free trade. Not surprisingly, there are politicians who are all too willing to gain votes by catering to protectionist interests.
People, farms, firms, and factories in America should be able to trade freely with people, farms, firms, and factories across international boundaries. You should, for example, be able to buy shoes made in Ethiopia. Economist William Niskanen stresses the moral case for free trade: Individuals have the right “to make consensual arrangements across national borders.” Without governmental interference, such voluntary interaction is harmonious and mutually beneficial. People don’t trade unless they believe they will be better off afterwards.
Much international trade can be explained by comparative advantage. Economist Donald J. Boudreaux explains that “the chief nontrivial insight” found in the idea of comparative advantage is that an economic concern’s “technical ability to produce a product” is, by itself, “irrelevant” for resolving whether “that entity should produce that product itself” or “acquire that product by first producing something else and then trading that something else” for the desired product.
Trade barriers are put in place by politicians and bureaucrats who use the machinery of government to disrupt voluntary trade and grant privileges to special interests at the expense of consumers and the general public. Jobs that are protected from the gales of competition are jobs in stagnant industries that are under no pressure to improve and innovate. Free trade provides the best deals for consumers and encourages the economy to grow.
These politicians and bureaucrats—who could be aligned with either Democrats or Republicans—cloak their bestowing of special privilege in the rhetoric of public benefit. They are sometimes successful because they are concentrating on getting their privileges, while much of the public’s attention is elsewhere.
What are some of the frequent rhetorical stratagems of the advocates of protectionist privilege?
They say that new-born industries need hot-house protection. They claim that their country needs to be strong or dominate in allegedly key industries. They claim to have special insight into what the national interest requires—and it turns out to require protecting these special interests. As James Bovard puts it, so-called “fair trade” means “subjugating” the wishes of consumers to those of government officials and the special interests they are helping.
They say that high tariffs will bring in an abundance of tax revenues—forgetting that a Laffer Curve exists for tariffs. As economic historian F. W. Taussig pointed out in 1888, if a government raises tariffs, thereby building up protected domestic businesses, then products of these domestic businesses will replace imports, and revenues from tariffs on those imports will fall.
Advocates of protection claim they worry about the “balance of trade.” Milton Friedman, Nobel Laureate in economics, clarified that a “favorable balance of trade” actually means “exporting more than we import,” sending “abroad goods of greater total value than the goods we get from abroad.” He asks, “In your private household,” wouldn’t you prefer “to pay less for more” rather than the other way around, yet that is what would be called an ‘unfavorable balance of payments.”
Yet despite rhetorical ploys like “balance of trade” and despite the special interests putting considerable time and money into obtaining privileges, we have enjoyed epochs of relative free trade.
Why have these free trade periods come about? It is because civically-active people have held—call it what you will—ideals, philosophies, or ideologies that support freedom of trade and acted on behalf of those ideals. (read more)
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Ex-Sen. Brian Kelsey says he has received a Trump pardon
by Melissa Brown, The Tennessean, March 11, 2025 - Key Points:
- Former state Sen. Brian Kelsey pleaded guilty in a campaign finance case. He received a 21-month sentence.
- Just 15 days after reporting to federal prison, Kelsey said he received a pardon from President Donald Trump.
- In a social media statement, Kelsey blamed his case on a "weaponized Biden DOJ." But the investigation against Kelsey began in 2019 during the first Trump administration.
"God used Donald Trump to save me from the weaponized Biden DOJ," Kelsey said in a social media post on Tuesday evening. (Read it all)
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Comrade Trump: Is Trump a Russian Asset?
by Rod Williams, March 12, 2025- As we have watched America side with Russia in the war in Ukraine and adopt the Russian talking points; cut off the sharing of intelligence with Ukraine thus giving Russia a battlefield advantage; vote with Russia, North Korea, Syria and a few other authoritarian governments in the UN against a UN resolution condemning Russia's aggression against Ukraine; suggest Russian be welcomed back into the G-7; and move to weaken the NATO alliance, one must wonder, why? Could it be that Trump is a Russian asset? While this was being spoken about only on some smaller podcast and blogs, now more and more serious sources are asking the questions. It is a reasonable question to ask.
In this video, DW host Brent Goff examines the considerable volume of evidence that suggest Trump is a Russian asset and interviews journalist and New York Times bestselling author Craig Unger who says that Donald Trump is indeed a Russian asset. DW is a respected international news service funded by the German government and broadcasting in 32 languages.
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Sunday, March 09, 2025
Congress Can Stop This Tariff Madness Right Now
The law that President Trump is using to cause such havoc is known as IEEPA. It’s supposed to be for emergencies, but, given that it gives the president free rein to determine when an emergency is in force, it’s effectively a non-justiciable enabling act. Congress can repeal it, amend it, or pass a separate law that supersedes it, and there’s nothing that anybody can do to stop it. Such a law could exempt Canada and Mexico from its provisions, or make clear that other tariff deals involving those countries (like the one Trump signed in 2019) have precedence, or do anything else that Congress wants it to do, because — again! — Congress has plenary power over tariffs. Heck, if Congress passed a law that simply read, “All delegation of the legislature’s Article I, Section 8 tariff powers is hereby rescinded,” that would immediately be the law of the land.
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David French to teach "The Foundations of Free Speech" at David Lipscomb this Spring
Update: March 9, 2025- I have just registered for this class. This is a great opportunity to learn something from a great teacher and an experienced and accomplished person who knows his subject.
by Rod Williams, Jan. 28, 2025- Last year I took a one-day-a-week, multi-week, non-credit course at David Lipscomb University taught by David French on the Constitution. The title of the course was The American Foundings. The course primarily debt with the post-civil war 13th, 14th, and15th amendments and how these changes restructured our national governance and changed the nature of federalism.
David French |
David French is an opinion columnist for the New York Times. He was previously a staff writer for National Review. He writes about law, culture, religion and armed conflict. He often appears on The Bulwark podcast and on various news panel discussions. He is a veteran of Operation Iraqi Freedom and a former constitutional litigator who has litigated numerous cases involving religious liberty. He is a visiting professor at David Lipscomb University and is a resident of Franklin, Tennessee.
For more information and registration, follow this link.
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Saturday, March 08, 2025
There Is No Constitutional Shortcut to Slashing Spending
These programs have to be undone the same way they were created.
By Andrew C. McCarthy, National Review, March 8, 2025 - On Thursday, a second federal court issued a preliminary injunction blocking the Trump administration from pausing federal spending. Judge John J. McConnell Jr. of the federal district court in Rhode Island issued his ruling Thursday in a 45-page opinion. He joins Judge Loren L. AliKhan, of the federal district court in Washington, D.C., who issued a similar ruling in a 39-page opinion last week. ....
.. when it comes to freezing domestic spending, the president’s problem isn’t the partisan affiliation of the jurists; it’s the Constitution’s bedrock separation of powers principle.
Congress decides by statute what the government will spend taxpayer money on. The president’s job is to carry out those decisions — to execute the laws faithfully. The president lacks impoundment power of the extravagant breadth the administration likes to imagine.
... In terms of nullifying policy, a president may undo previously issued executive orders and agency guidance memos — although even with respect to that, the Supreme Court ... has required compliance with the Administrative Procedure Act. A president, however, has no authority to negate statutes by executive order.
If Trump wants spending to conform to his policy priorities, he can veto future budget bills that don’t do so ... the president has no power to “veto” that spending just because he disagrees with it.
... I’m not saying presidents have no impoundment power at all ... A president may refuse to spend funds if he can establish that such spending would violate the law. .... A president may also pause spending for a reasonable period of time to ensure its lawfulness, provided that doing so does not countermand Congress’s directions about when the funds should be expended.
... Beyond those narrow exceptions, the president cannot legitimately nullify spending Congress has enacted into law. When Congress writes a domestic spending law, it tends not to add the proviso “as long as expenditures are consistent with the president’s policy priorities.” That would get the Constitution exactly backward. The president takes an oath to carry out the laws, not rewrite them; and those laws predominantly reflect Congress’s priorities. (Read it all)
Rod's Comment: Please read the full article for an explanation of why a President cannot just refuse to spend money appropriated by Congress. In the article, the nuances and case law are examined. Trump's refusal to spend money appropriated by Congress is clearly unconstitutional. There is a method to impound funds, but a procedure must be followed and that must involve Congress. It is astounding that most Republicans can now justify governing in violation of the Constitution. I am pleased that National Review remains committed to the principle it has espoused since its founding while so many other Republicans and conservative organizations have abandoned those sacred principles.
For more on this topic see the following:
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