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The Way To Wealth Benjamin Franklin 250th Anniversary Edition: Commentary
By Dr Agon fly
In 1758, Benjamin Franklin published the 25th and final issue of Poor Richard's Almanac. As a preface to this final edition, he wrote The Way to Wealth and introduced Father Abraham as the main character in the tale. Father Abraham embodied the financial wisdom that "Poor" Richard Saunders - one of Benjamin Franklin's many pen names - incorporated in the 25 years during which the almanac was a staple on mantels above fireplaces, in personal libraries and on the tables of colonial America. In 2008, on the 250th anniversary year of that event, Dr Agon Fly is adding a unique and timely perspective to this classic book about money and life.

Money, Bank Credit, and Economic Cycles
By Jesus Huerto DeSoto
Can the market fully manage the money and banking sector? Jesus Huerta de Soto, professor of economics at the Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, Madrid, has made history with this mammoth and exciting treatise that it has and can again, without inflation, without business cycles, and without the economic instability that has characterized the age of government control.

The Middle-Class Millionaire: The Rise of the New Rich and How They Are Changing America
By Russ Alan Prince & Lewis Schiff
Sandwiched between the rich and the middle class are 8.4 million American households with a net worth between $1 million and $10 million. Prince and Schiff present intriguing statistical nuggets from their survey of 586 middle-class millionaire households. Although these people may be rich by most definitions, many were raised middle class, earned rather than inherited their wealth and still retain middle-class values.

Mobs, Messiahs, and Markets: Surviving the Public Spectacle in Finance and Politics
By William Bonner & Lila Rajiva
Collectively, people think and act in ways that are different from how they think and act as individuals. Understanding these differences, says William (Bill) Bonner—a longtime maverick observer of the financial world and the vagaries of the investing public—is vital to preserving your wealth and personal dignity. From the witch hunts of the early modern world to the war on terror, from the dot-com mania to the real estate bubble, people have always been caught up in frauds, conceits, and wild guesses—often with devastating results.

When in the Course of Human Events: Arguing the Case for Southern Secession
By Charles Adams
Using primary documents from both foreign and domestic observers, prominent scholar Charles Adams makes a powerful and convincing case that the Southern states were legitimately exercising their political rights as expressed in the Declaration of Independence when they seceded from the United States.

For Good and Evil, Second Edition : The Impact of Taxes on the Course of Civilization
By Charles Adams
Behind every significant event in history there is a tax story. Adams, a tax attorney, presents the history of taxation from ancient times to the present. He studies tax law and collection procedures in ancient Egypt, Rome, Israel, Asia, Europe, and the United States, describing how taxation played a pivotal role in such earth-shattering events as the fall of Rome, the signing of the Magna Carta, and the American Revolution.

I.O.U.S.A. One Nation - Under Stress - In Debt
By Addison Wiggin and Kate Incontrera
"I.O.U.S.A" will accompany a new feature-length documentary based on the writings of Agora's "The Daily Reckoning". According to filmmaker Patrick Creadon, 'America's federal debt is $8.6 trillion and growing at a frightening rate. In addition, our major entitlement programs (Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid) are dangerously unfunded. As a country, we are slowly spending ourselves to death.' "I.O.U.S.A" also picks up where the best-selling "Empire of Debt" left off.

The Losing Game Why You Can't Beat Wall Street
By T.E. Scott and Stephen Edds
The Losing Game is neither a sophisticated nor a complicated look at the stock market. Rather, it is one man's heartfelt opinion of a system he believes to be little more than legalized gambling on a national scale. The book is not a technical discussion of how the markets function, nor does it offer readers a way to beat the system. In fact, Scott does much the opposite. He believes that the deck is so stacked against the average investor, and that Wall Street has so many opportunities to siphon money from the investor, that very few people walk away from it richer than they began.

Just Get Out of the Way : How Government Can Help Business in Poor Countries
By Robert E. Anderson
Economic growth is the only way out of poverty, and the private sector is best at generating that growth. This text recommends policymakers take into account the institutional weaknesses typical of developing countries and devise simpler, market-oriented policies for these countries. Highlights the fact that economic growth is essential to reducing poverty.

Social Security : False Consciousness and Crisis
By John Attarian
Despite two decades of warnings about Social Security's projected bankruptcy, nothing is being done. This critical history argues that a major cause of the impasse is the misleading manner in which Social Security was depicted to the public, and the beliefs about the program which prevail as a result.

Good to be King: The Foundation of Our Constitutional Freedom
By Michael Badnarik
Michael Badnarik has created a constitutional primer that will edify and entertain schoolchildren and seasoned libertarians alike. Good to be King: The Foundation of Our Constitutional Freedom presents a thoroughly readable explanation of how our constitutional republic should work, and how the system became broken in the first place.

The Man Nobody Knows
By Bruce Barton
Bruce Barton's most famous book, The Man Nobody Knows (1925), depictes Jesus Christ as a successful businessman, salesman, publicist and role model for the modern businessman. The Man Nobody Knows makes Christ's story useful for business executives of all time. Barton had discovered "the founder of modern business." Barton focuses on Jesus' success as an executive and his ability to not only pick men, but to recognize the hidden qualities in each of those men.

The Law
By Frederic Bastiat
A great "giveaway" book. Buy them in quantity from Foundation for Economic Education, Inc., 30 South Broadway, Irvington on Hudson, NY 10533. www.fee.org.

The Bastiat Collection
By Frederic Bastiat
In two volumes, here is The Bastiat Collection, the main corpus of his writings in English in a restored and elegant translation that includes some of the most powerful defenses of free markets ever written. This restoration project has yielded a collection to treasure. After years of hard work and preparation, we can only report that it is an emotionally thrilling moment to finally offer to the general public.

Between The Lines
By Walter Beller
“Between the Lines” is not your usual World War II memoir. In describing the Allied bombardment of civilians, the building of defensive walls to keep out foreigners, and why Adolf Hitler was a popular leader in Germany, Walter Beller’s gripping account of growing up in the war zone between France and Germany during World War II speaks volumes about important issues of our day.

Forced Into Glory
By Lerone Bennett, Jr.
Beginning with the argument that the Emancipation Proclamation did not actually free African American slaves, this dissenting view of Lincoln's greatness surveys the president's policies, speeches, and private utterances and concludes that he had little real interest in abolition.

Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk
By Peter L. Bernstein
With the stock market breaking records almost daily, a study of the concept of risk seems quite timely. Peter Bernstein has written a comprehensive history of man's efforts to understand risk and probability. Along the way, he demonstrates that understanding risk underlies everything from game theory to bridge-building to winemaking.

The Battle for the Soul of Capitalism
By John C. Bogle
There is no one better qualified to tell us about the failures of the American financial system and the grotesque abuses that have taken place in recent years than John Bogle, who as founder and former chief executive of the Vanguard mutual funds group has seen firsthand the innermost workings of the financial industry. A zealous advocate for the small investor for more than fifty years, Bogle has championed the restoration of integrity in industry practices. As an astute observer and commentator, he knows that a trustworthy business and financial complex is essential to America’s continuing leadership in the world and to social and economic progress at home.

Financial Reckoning Day : Surviving the Soft Depression of the 21st Century
By William Bonner and Addison Wiggin
This is an extremely valuable book - the best financial book I've read in 40 years! This well-organized book presents insights into the current U.S. economy by comparing contemporary economic events with historical ones, especially such systems as Japan's in the 1990s and the United States in the 1930s.

Empire of Debt : The Rise of an Epic Financial Crisis
By William Bonner and Addison Wiggin
Bonner and Wiggin enumerate a long list of chronic ailments that imperil the American financial system--a massive trade deficit, soaring personal and government debt, a housing bubble, runaway military expenditures.

The FairTax Book
By Neal Boortz and John Linder
As Boortz and Linder reveal in this first book on the FairTax, this radical but eminently sensible plan would end the annual national nightmare of filing income tax returns, while at the same time enlarging the federal tax base by collecting sales tax from every retail consumer in the country.

Churchill, Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost the Worl
By Patrick J. Buchanan
Were World Wars I and II—which can now be seen as a thirty-year paroxysm of slaughter and destruction—inevitable? Were they necessary wars? Were the bloodiest and most devastating conflicts ever suffered by mankind fated by forces beyond men’s control? Or were they products of calamitous failures of judgment? In this monumental and provocative history, Patrick Buchanan makes the case that, if not for the blunders of British statesmen—Winston Churchill first among them—the horrors of two world wars and the Holocaust might have been avoided and the British Empire might never have collapsed into ruins. Half a century of murderous oppression of scores of millions under the iron boot of Communist tyranny might never have happened, and Europe’s central role in world affairs might have been sustained for many generations.

A Path to Financial Peace of Mind
By Dwayne Burnell
In A PATH TO FINANCIAL PEACE OF MIND, financial educator and personal financial coach, Dwayne Burnell challenges the status quo by questioning the common financial messages we hear everyday. He shares a tried and true financial strategy for managing and building long lasting wealth that's been widely overlooked by conventional media. The book presents case studies with carefully crafted examples to help you understand the effects of time, interest, and risk on your money. You will not only learn how to shield your savings from stock market losses, but also how to achieve healthy, predictable growth while maintaining liquid access to your cash. Dwayne makes this powerful tool easy to understand and implement as part of a lifetime financial strategy for individuals, couples and families of any age and income level.

Spiritual Economics: The Principles and Process of True Prosperity
By Eric Butterworth
This straightforward, nontheological approach to prosperity has been effective for thousands. Learn to work with the flow of life and attract wealth in every area of your life.

Economics for Real People
By Gene Callahan
The fun and fascinating guide to the main ideas of the Austrian School of economics, written in sparkling prose especially for the non-economist. Gene Callahan shows that good economics isn't about government planning or statistical models. It's about human beings and the choices they make in the real world.

Basic Economics, Second Edition 1988
By Clarence B. Carson
Intended as an introduction to economics for beginners, but it is full of insight for those who have already studied economics. It is written in plain English, minus all the charts and graphs which make academic economics so difficult to learn. As Conservative Book Club declared: "Enter Clarence Carson, unburdened by economic mumbo-jumbo and the jargon of high priced experts. Not only does he give you the free market basics in words your teen-ager can understand, but he weaves the basics into a tapestry of American and world history."

Basic American Government
By Clarence B. Carson
The tone of the book is set in these opening observations: It would be a considerable fraud to do a book on American government which talked as if the Constitution were still being substantially observed, that pretended that when Presidents took the oath of office they intended to observe the bounds set by Constitution, that Congressmen recited their pledges with the same intent, and that federal judges were still construing the Constitution as it was written. In sum, any book on American government ought to make clear how remote from the Constitution the government has become.

Devil Take the Hindmost: A History of Financial Speculation
By Edward Chancellor
In Devil Take the Hindmost, Chancellor takes an entertaining, albeit sobering, look at the history of speculative manias and the mass delusion that surrounds them. Beginning with the "tulipomania" that gripped Holland in the 1630s, Chancellor chronicles the formations and irrational euphoria that can inflate markets, from shares of South Sea stock in England in the 1720s to real estate in Japan in the late 1980s.

The Richest Man in Babylon
By George Clason
This book holds the secrets to acquiring money, keeping money, and making money earn more money. Millions of readers have become familiar with George S. Clason's famous "Babylonian parables" through the distribution of these success secrets of the ancients by banks, insurance companies, investment houses and employers. Acclaimed as the greatest of all inspirational works on the subject of thrift and financial planning, these fascinating and informative stories have become a modern classic in their field. In language as simple as that of the Bible, this book presents a sure path to prosperity and happiness. It offers an understanding of—and a solution to—your personal financial problems which will guide you successfully through a lifetime. The Richest Man in Babylon is a book you will want to read yourself, recommend to friends, and give to young people just starting out in life.

Understanding the Modern Culture Wars
By Paul A. Cleveland
Paul Cleveland has done a wonderful job of charting the course of Western culture over the millennia. In this penetrating analysis of the key epochs of Western Civilization. Cleveland has synthesized where others have dichotomized... an outstanding book.

Umasking The Sacred Lies
By Paul A. Cleveland
In Unmasking the Sacred Lies, Dr. Cleveland clearly lays out the important foundational issues that policy makers sadly miss or deviously seek to mask. Then he examines several individual areas including education, the environment, welfare, and business policy revealing the sacred lies we have believed for far too long. The ideas in this book will more than likely challenge your view of what constitutes good policy.

Charlie Wilson's War: The Extraordinary Story of the Largest Covert Operation in History
By George Crile
In the early 1980s, a Houston socialite turned the attention of maverick Texas congressman Charlie Wilson to the ragged band of Afghan "freedom fighters" who continued, despite overwhelming odds, to fight the Soviet invaders. The congressman became passionate about their cause. At a time when Ronald Reagan faced a total cutoff of funding for the Contra war, Wilson, who sat on the all-powerful House Appropriations Committee, managed to procure hundreds of millions of dollars to support the mujahideen.

Against Intellectual Monopoly
By Michele Boldrin & David K. Levine
'Intellectual property'--patents & copyrights--have become controversial. We witness teenagers being sued for 'pirating' music, & we observe AIDS patients in Africa dying because of their lack of ability to pay for drugs that are expensively priced by patent holders. Are patents & copyrights essential to thriving creation & innovation?

The Sovereign Individual
By James Davidson, and Lord Rees-Mogg
The authors offer a sweeping analysis of the implications, especially financial, of the information age. The key result of this information revolution will be the advent of the "sovereign individual" and the death of mass democracy and the welfare state.

The Mystery of Capital
By Hernando de Soto
In this book, the renowned Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto proposes that capitalism fails in poor, postcommunist countries because they don't have the assets to make capitalism flourish.

A Century of War
By John Denson
Get this from Ludwig von Mises Institure (www.mises.org) John Denson, in a book that covers the history of America's large wars from 1860 through the Cold War, describes the twentieth century was the bloodiest in all history—not coincidentally a century of statism. More than 170 million people were killed by governments with 10 million having been killed in World War I and 50 million killed in World II. Of the 50 million killed in World War II, nearly 70 percent were innocent civilians, many as a result of the bombing of cities by Great Britain and America.

The Costs of War: America's Pyrrhic Victories
By John V. Denson
Deeply rooted in the ideals of the Found Fathers, The Costs Of War: America's Pyrrhic Victories is unique in its combination of historical scope and timeliness for current debates about foreign policy and military intervention. The Costs Of War will be of interest to historians, political scientists, economists and sociologists, as well as the non-specialist general reader with an interest in the financial, economic, social, cultural, political, technological, and humanitarian costs of war.

Reassessing the Presidency: The Rise of the Executive State and the Decline of Freedom
By John V. Denson
This remarkable volume is the first full-scale revision of the official history of the U.S. executive state. It traces the progression of power exercised by American presidents from the early American Republican up to the eventual reality of the power-hungry Caesars which later appear as president in American history. Contributors examine the usual judgments of the historical profession to show the ugly side of supposed presidential greatness.

The Real Lincoln : A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an Unnecessary War
By Thomas Dilorenzo
If you really want to learn the origin of the mess that our country is in, this book is essential reading. A peacefully negotiated secession was the best way to handle all the problems facing America in 1860. A war of coercion was Lincoln's creation. It sometimes takes a century of more to bring an important historical event into perspective. This study does just that and leaves the reader asking, 'Why didn't we know this before?'

How Capitalism Saved America
By Thomas Dilorenzo
Extolling free markets and upbraiding government intervention, economist DiLorenzo offers a tour of American economic history that is intended to counter anticapitalist ideas.

Lincoln Unmasked
By Thomas DiLorenzo
Thomas J. DiLorenzo, author of The Real Lincoln, is back... He reveals that most of what the average American knows about "Honest Abe" is simply false.

HAMILTON'S CURSE
By Thomas L. DiLorenzo
Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton were without question two of the most important Founding Fathers. They were also the fiercest of rivals. Of these two political titans, it is Jefferson --the revered author of the Declaration of Independence and our third president--who is better remembered today. But in fact it is Hamilton's political legacy that has triumphed--a legacy that has subverted the Constitution and transformed the federal government into the very leviathan state that our forefathers fought against in the American Revolution.

Inventing Money : The Story of Long-Term Capital Management and the Legends Behind It
By Nicholas Dunbar
Inventing Money is a fast moving and readable account that explains the development of finance over the centuries before recounting the brief but eventful life of LTCM.

The Pirates of Manhattan
By Barry Dyke
Go behind the scenes of modern finance and discover the people and organizations that ultimately control your financial life. Learn why you should invest in yourself and your loved ones first, and why the stock market and mutual fund industry pose a danger to your financial well-being, yet remain extremely profitable for Wall Street and its sidekicks, the banks and mutual fund companies of America. Together they form the Pirates of Manhattan! In this new, thoroughly researched work, author Barry James Dyke brings transparency to the American economic system and outlines why permanent life insurance should be a centerpiece of most Americans' financial plans instead of the stock market or mutual funds.

Eva the Real Key Creating Wealth
By Al Ehrbar
Economic Value Added (EVA) is the measure of a company's true profitability and a strategy for creating corporate and shareholder wealth. This inspirational book, interspersed with the success stories of EVA companies, explains why EVA works and how it can be increased.

Tuition Rising: Why College Costs So Much
By Ronald G. Ehrenberg
Ronald G. Ehrenberg explores the causes of this tuition inflation, drawing on his many years as a teacher and researcher of the economics of higher education and as a senior administrator at Cornell University. Using incidents and examples from his own experience, he discusses a wide range of topics, including endowment policies, admissions and financial aid policies, the funding of research, tenure and the end of mandatory retirement, information technology, libraries and distance learning, student housing, and intercollegiate athletics.

The Social Security Fraud
By Abraham Ellis
Purchase from Foundation for Economic Education, Inc., 30 South Broadway, Irvington on Hudson, NY 10533. www.fee.org

The Illusion of Victory
By Thomas Fleming
A best-selling historian takes a scathing new look at Woodrow Wilson's handing--and mishandling--of World War I, the war that spawned all the catastrophes of the twentieth century The political history of the American experience in World War I is a story of conflict and bungled intentions that begins in an era dedicated to progressive social reform and ends in the Red Scare and Prohibition.

The New Dealers' War
By Thomas Fleming
For many Americans, Franklin Delano Roosevelt is a beloved, heroic, almost mythic figure, if not for the "big government" that was spawned under his New Deal, then certainly for his leadership through the War. The New Dealers' War paints a very different portrait of this leadership. It is sure to spark debate. - taken from jacket of the book

As We Go Marching
By John T. Flynn
John T. Flynn's classic work from 1944 on how wartime planning brought fascism to America. Flynn was a prominent journalist and rare case of an American public intellectual who resisted the onslaught of both the warfare and welfare states during the period in which FDR ruled America. This study links the domestic policy of the New Deal with the drive for war and wartime central planning. He draws attention to the bitter irony that America was becoming precisely what we were fighting. His analysis of fascism is incisive and devastating.

The Roosevelt Myth
By John T. Flynn
Franklin D. Roosevelt is the most sainted president of the 20th century. You have to look far and wide to discover the truth about his character and policies. But as John T. Flynn noted in this landmark 1948 volume, FDR actually prolonged the Great Depression and deliberately dragged the country into a war that seriously compromised American liberties.

Men of Wealth
By John T. Flynn
This book reminds us what a remarkable writer and journalist John T. Flynn truly was. It is a first-class business history, by any standard. It is the story of great fortunes made by the most notable men of wealth in history: Jacob Fugger, John Law, Nathan Rothschild, Thomas Gresham, Robert Owen, Cornelius Vanderbilt, and all the way through J.P. Morgan and J.D. Rockefeller.

The Decline of the American Republic
By John T. Flynn
In 1955, John T. Flynn saw what few other journalists did: the welfare-warfare state conspired to bring down American liberty. The New Deal combined with World War Two had fastened leviathan control over a country born in liberty. This early analysis of the causes of the Great Depression and the failure of the New Deal also notes a point later demonstrated in detail by Robert Higgs: the economic boom of WW2 was false in every way, an artifice created by misleading government data and inflationary finance. Here we see the best of some of the last writings of the interwar "Old Right," a man whose opinions were deemed too libertarian for the likes of National Review.

MONEY & WEALTH IN THE NEW MILLENNIUM
By Norm Franz
Money and Wealth in the New Millennium is an easy-to-read biblical expose' about the global economic problems of the last days and how God plans to deliver His people.

The Sky's Not Falling: Why It's OK To Chill About Global Warming
By Holly L. Fretwell
The Sky's Not Falling: Why It's OK To Chill About Global Warming is for parents sick of seeing their kids indoctrinated by has-been politicians and Hollywood stars. Unlike books written by would-be celebrities without scientific or economics background, The Sky's Not Falling is everything a book about the environment written for kids should be: fact-filled, apolitical, fun and optimistic about the future of our magnificent, ever-changing planet.

The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference
By Malcolm Gladwell
Defining that precise moment when a trend becomes a trend, Malcolm Gladwell probes the surface of everyday occurrences to reveal some surprising dynamics behind explosive social changes. He examines the power of word-of-mouth and explores how very small changes can directly affect popularity. Perceptive and imaginative, The Tipping Point is a groundbreaking book destined to overturn conventional thinking in business, sociological, and policy-making arenas.

The Incredible Bread Machine: A Study of Capitalism, Freedom, & the State
By R. W. Grant
This book discusses some of the misconceptions about capitalism, such as the "robber barons" and the Great Depression and goes on to challenge prevailing assumptions about the need for government intervention in the private affairs and voluntary (market) relationships of peaceful people.

Foundations of Economic Value Added
By James L. Grant
An updated look at the role of economic profit analysis in the process of wealth creation Grant explains the pivotal role of economic value added (EVA) in the theory of finance, how to measure EVA with standard accounting adjustments, how to use EVA to value companies and their stock, and how to use economic profit principles to identify wealth-creating firms, industries, and even market economies.

Pearl Harbor: The Seeds and Fruits of Infamy
By Percy L. Greaves, Jr.
Pearl Harbor: The Seeds and Fruits of Infamy by Percy Greaves, Jr. (1906-1984), published for the first time in 2010, blows the top off a 70-year cover-up, reporting for the first time on long-suppressed interviews, documents, and corroborated evidence.

The Creature from Jekyll Island : A Second Look at the Federal Reserve
By G. Edward Griffin
"It's not Federal. There is no reserve. And it is not a bank!" Get this from American Media, P.O. Box 4646, Westlake Village, CA 913-59-1646. Or call 800-595-6596. Ask for quantity discounts. Or, try www.realityzone.com.

The Road to Serfdom
By F. A. Hayek, and Milton Friedman
A classic work in political philosophy, intellectual and cultural history, and economics, The Road to Serfdom has inspired and infuriated politicians, scholars, and general readers for half a century.

Economics in One Lesson
By Henry Hazlitt
Purchase from Ludwig von Mises Institute, 518 West Magnolia Ave., Auburn, AL 36832-4528. www.mises.org

The Failure of the "New Economics"
By Henry Hazlitt
Henry Hazlitt did the seemingly impossible, something that was and is a magnificent service to all people everywhere. He wrote a line-by-line commentary and refutation of one of the most destructive, fallacious, and convoluted books of the century. The target here is John Maynard Keynes's General Theory, the book that appeared in 1936 and swept all before it.

The Inflation Crisis and How to Resolve It
By Henry Hazlitt
Henry Hazlitt knew the works of Mises as well as anyone but he was not mainly a theoretician. He was a financial journalist, commentator, and interpreter of current events. In this sense, he was one of a kind: a learned economist with both feet in the real world of politics, financial markets, and the economics of everyday life. The Inflation Crisis and How to Resolve It , newly in print in hardcover at a low price, is his masterpiece on money. The book reappears just in time: we are in the midst of an inflation crisis even if the effects are not yet fully felt.

The Foundations of Morality
By Henry Hazlitt

The Cult of the Presidency: America’s Dangerous Devotion to Executive Power
By Gene Healy
The Bush years have given rise to fears of a resurgent Imperial Presidency. Those fears are justified, but the problem cannot be solved simply by bringing a new administration to power. In his provocative new book, The Cult of the Presidency, Gene Healy argues that the fault lies not in our leaders but in ourselves. When our scholars lionize presidents who break free from constitutional restraints, when our columnists and talking heads repeatedly call upon the “commander in chief ” to dream great dreams and seek the power to achieve them—when voters look to the president for salvation from all problems great and small—should we really be surprised that the presidency has burst its constitutional bonds and grown powerful enough to threaten American liberty?

Studies in Economic Nationalism
By Michael A. Heilperin
This work by Michael Heilperin, a giant in the area of monetary economics, might be one of the most rare - and unique - in the history of 20th century economic thought. It is one of the few books written during the mid-century period of hyper-nationalism that comes to terms with a gigantic puzzle. How did the age of mercantilism become the age of free trade only to revert again in the 20th century? It is an important problem to solve. Heilperin locates the issue as an ideological-political one. Faith in liberty declined at the same time the total state rose. The result was economic nationalism that was destructive to world prosperity and peace.

Crisis and Leviathan
By Robert Higgs
This seminal treatise in the history of ideas demonstrates what has come to be known as the Higgs thesis: that government grows in periods of crisis, for example, war and depression. He demonstrates this with a detailed look at twentieth century economic history. Higgs's thesis is so compelling that it has become the dominant paradigm for understanding the so-called ratchet effect: government grows during crisis and then retrenches afterwards, but not to the same level as before.

Think and Grow Rich
By Napoleon Hill
His work stands as a monument to individual achievement and is the cornerstone of modern motivation. THINK AND GROW RICH is the all time bestseller in the field.

The Myth of National Defense
By Hans-Hermann Hoppe
With eleven chapters by top libertarian scholars on all aspects of defense, this book edited by Hans-Hermann Hoppe it represents an ambitious attempt to extend the idea of free enterprise to the provision of security services. It argues that "national defense" as provided by government is a myth not unlike the myth of socialism itself. It is more viably privatized and replaced by the market provision of security.

Democracy: The God that Failed
By Hans-Hermann Hoppe
Hoppe shows that the transition from monarchy to democracy has not been favorable to the protection of civil rights and restricting the growth of government. In fact, just the opposite happened. Contemporaneous with this change, we have seen a decline in morals and individual responsibility.

Red Hot Lies
By Christopher Horner
From the author of the New York Times bestselling Politically Incorrect Guide(tm) to Global Warming (and Environmentalism) comes Red Hot Lies, an expos of the hypocrisy, deceit, and outright lies of the global warming alarmists and the compliant media that support them. Did you know that most scientists are global warming skeptics? Or that environmental alarmists have knowingly promoted false and exaggerated data on global warming? Or that in the Left's efforts to suppress free speech (and scientific research), they have compared global warming dissent with "treason"? Shocking, frank, and illuminating, Chris Horner's Red Hot Lies explodes as many myths as Al Gore promotes.

Emancipating Slaves, Enslaving Free Men: A History of the American Civil War
By Jeffrey Rogers Hummel
In this insightful treatment of the Civil War (addressing the causes, the war itself and Reconstruction), Hummel's text argues against the thesis that armed confrontation was inevitable. "As an excuse for civil war," he says, "maintaining the States territorial integrity is bankrupt and reprehensible. Slavery's elimination is the only morally worthy justification." But slavery, he suggests, was on its way out in any case.

The Sorrows of Empire
By Chalmers Johnson
n the years after the Soviet Union imploded, the United States was described first as the globe’s "lone superpower," then as a "reluctant sheriff," next as the "indispensable nation," and now, in the wake of 9/11, as a "New Rome." Here, Chalmers Johnson thoroughly explores the new militarism that is transforming America and compelling its people to pick up the burden of empire.

Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire
By Chalmers Johnson
Now with a new and up-to-date Introduction by the author, the bestselling account of the effect of American global policies, hailed as “brilliant and iconoclastic” (Los Angeles Times) The term “blowback,” invented by the CIA, refers to the unintended results of American actions abroad. In this incisive and controversial book, Chalmers Johnson lays out in vivid detail the dangers faced by our overextended empire, which insists on projecting its military power to every corner of the earth and using American capital and markets to force global economic integration on its own terms.

Who Moved My Cheese? An Amazing Way to Deal with Change in Your Work and in Your Life
By Spencer Johnson and Kenneth H. Blanchard
Change can be a blessing or a curse, depending on your perspective. The message of Who Moved My Cheese? is that all can come to see it as a blessing, if they understand the nature of "the cheese" and the role it plays in their lives.

The Retirement Myth
By Craig S. Karpel
Written in 1995, the author brings you face-to-face with the absurdity of the idea of "Retirement." It won't work! Over ten years have passed and it should be more evident to all the truth of his message. His description of the problem is superior - but his solution to the problem is marginal, at best.

Who Killed the Constitution?: The Fate of American Liberty from World War I to George W. Bush
By Thomas E. Woods & Kevin R.C. Gutzman
Our Constitution is dead, say Thomas E. Woods and Kevin R.C. Gutzman. And they prove it, with example after relentless example. The Left will appreciate some of their case studies -- such as the draft, free speech, and medical marijuana -- while the Right will cheer others: forced busing, the confiscation of Americans' gold, and the school prayer cases. But those who truly honor the Constitution will cheer it all.

Roots of American Order
By Russell Kirk
In this classic work, Russell Kirk describes the beliefs and institutions that have nurtured the American soul and commonwealth. His analytical narrative might be called "a tale of five cities": Jerusalem, Athens, Rome, London, and Philadelphia.

Rich Dad's Prophecy
By Robert Kiyosaki
Rich Dad’s Prophecy, by Robert Kiyosaki, is about a coming stock market crash said to come about as a result of retiring Baby Boomers liquidating their retirement plans. According to Kiyosaki, the tremendous stock boom from 1982 to 2000 came as a direct result of the 76 million Baby Boomers flooding the stock market with investment capital. This process is a simple example of supply and demand -in this case extremely high demand for stocks. Much of this stock is held within pension, IRA and 401k type retirement plans.

The Transfer Society: Economic Expenditures on Transfer Activity
By David Laband
Leband and McClintock surmise in their research that there is much more to U.S. economic activity than the producing of goods and services, and that group and individuals spend an enormous amount trying to appropriate the wealth of others (and conversely preventing that appropriation).

Discovery of Freedom: Man's Struggle Against Authority
By Rose Wilder Lane
This is a work that is so powerful it may well have launched the modern freedom movement. It must be read by anyone who is seriously interested in the heritage of liberty - not just in America, but the world over.

The Discovery of Freedom: Man's Struggle Against Authority
By Rose Wilder Lane
This is a book of timeless importance. It must be read by anyone who is seriously interested in the heritage of liberty--not just in America, but the world over. And reading it is a joy. Lane, who is said to have written the book 'at white heat,' was at once a brilliant thinker and a gifted storyteller.

Family Wealth Counseling: Getting to the Heart of the Matter
By E.G. "Jay" Link
Jay Links book is a much needed - and unique - contribution to a tapestry of work that is essential for healthy financial and emotional balance in todays increasingly affluent society. With eighty percent of todays millionaires being first generation, it is of paramount importance that we learn how to pass our wealth on to our children and our local and global communities in ways that will enhance all of our lives. Jays book will ensure that you and your family learn how to accomplish this important task.

What They Don’t Teach You At Harvard Business School
By Mark H. McCormack
Fascinating notes from a street-smart executive. McCormack shows how to read people, create the right impression, take the leading edge, sell successfully, and more.

Sound and Fury: The Science and Politics of Global Warming
By Patrick J. Michaels
The popular vision of an approaching apocalypse caused by global warming has no scientific foundation, says Patrick J. Michaels. Those who warn of a catastrophic greenhouse effect -- such as former Vice President Al Gore -- can justify neither their fears not their blueprints for dramatically interfering with the U.S. and world economies.

STEALING FROM AMERICA – A History of Corruption From Jamestown to Reagan
By Nathan Miller
From Publishers Weekly Miller (Spying in America) argues mischievously that the graft-taking politician, the fleecing business tycoon, and the crooked labor baron each "played a vital role in the development of modern American society." In this appalling, sometimes painfully amusing chronicle of greed, he spends little time judging the guilty, preferring to describe in colorful, lively prose how a gallery of rascals perpetrated grand larcency on the national and big-city levels and, for the most part, got away with it.

The Trillion Dollar Meltdown
By Charles R. Morris
The sub-prime mortgage crisis is only the beginning: A more profound economic and political restructuring is on its way

Overblown: How Politicians and the Terrorism Industry Inflate National Security Threats, and Why We
By John Mueller
Among possible U.S. terrorist targets listed by the Department of Homeland Security are a petting zoo in Alabama and a roadside water park in Florida. By listing such unlikely targets, the administration has heightened fear and the cost of protecting citizens, according to Mueller, a political science professor and national security consultant. He examines how terrorism hypervigilance is threatening civil liberties, the economy, and lives.

Broke
By John Mumford
America is broke, and only real business leadership can fix it Now is a time of big problems for America. With a mountain of debt and trillions more in unfunded obligations, by most accounting standards we are already insolvent. Alongside potential financial bankruptcy, a bankruptcy of values has left us ethically rudderless, threatening the effectiveness of our response. These are indeed big problems, and it will take big ideas and, most of all, a big dose of leadership to solve them. Pulling no punches, Broke looks America's toughest issues square in the face and doesn't flinch in singling out who's chiefly responsible: us. Whether or not we wanted them, business leaders now own these problems, argues renowned business turnaround expert and veteran Army officer John Mumford. And only by being truly accountable leaders can we pull both America and our own businesses back from the brink.

A Nation of Sheep
By Andrew Napolitano
In A NATION OF SHEEP, Judge Andrew P. Napolitano frankly discusses how the federal government has circumvented the Constitution and is systematically dismantling the rights and freedoms that are the foundation of American democracy. He challenges Americans to recognize that they are being led down a very dangerous path and that the cost of following without challenge is the loss of the basic freedoms that facilitate our pursuit of happiness and that define us as a nation.

Dred Scott's Revenge
By Judge Andrew Napolitano
In Dred Scott's Revenge, Judge Andrew Napolitano lays bare the twisted legal history of racism in America. "All men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights" wedded the American soul to the concept that freedom comes from our humanity, not from the government. But American governments legally suspended the free will of blacks for 150 years, and then denied blacks equal protection of the law for another 150 years.

Lies The Government Told You
By Judge Andrew P. Napolitano
In LIES THE GOVERNMENT TOLD YOU, Judge Andrew P. Napolitano reveals how America's freedom, as guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution, has been forfeited by a government more protective of its own power than its obligations to preserve our individual liberties.

The Strangest Secret
By Earl Nightingale
One morning more than 40 years ago, an amazing message was played for a group of salespeople at Earl Nightingales insurance agency. They were utterly electrified by what they heard. Word of the message spread like wildfire, and everyone who heard it was positively ignited into action. Thousands of requests for a copy of the recording came pouring in.

The Theory of Education in the United States
By Albert J. Nock
There is no way such a lecture series could appear on a campus of this sort today. For in these lectures, Nock goes to the heart of the matter of what is wrong with the structure of education in the United States: the policy, imposed by government, of universal admissions on the theory that everyone is equally educable.

Our Enemy, the State
By Albert J. Nock
What does one need to know about politics? In some ways, Nock has summed it all up in this astonishing book. Here was a prominent essayist at the height of the New Deal. In 1935, hardly any public intellectuals were making much sense at all. They pushed socialism. They pushed fascism. Everyone had a plan. Hardly anyone considered the possibility that the state was not fixing society but destroying it bit by bit.

Eat the Rich
By P.J. O'Rourke
O'Rourke skillfully takes us through several countries looking at Good Capitalism, Bad Socialism and everything in between. His insight and witty one liners make the read fast, fun and extremely enjoyable. While some may find it offensive, I found it hilarious. Anyone with an interest in economics, or those just looking for a laugh should hurry and pick up this book.

Parliament of Whores
By P.J. O'Rourke
If satirists are at their best when tussling with something they hate, then this is P.J. O'Rourke's masterpiece. He clearly hates government--and has hated it since before it was cool to do so--and for all the right reasons, too: it's clumsy, inefficient, hypocritical, greedy, and arrogant.

The Slight Edge: Secret to a Successful Life
By Jeff Olson
Self-improvement; A great deal has been written on the subject, but does any anyone really know how to successfully implement a creative and manageable plan for its accomplishment? The concept involves goal setting, planning, time management as well as patience, faith, understanding and real desire. Too many times, people approach self improvement haphazardly, unfocused and unclear as to exactly what they want. This is not a paper specifically concerning goal-setting, that will be addressed another time in greater detail, but rather a blueprint for the implementation of the plan you generate during your own self-improvement goal setting exercise.

F.I.A.S.C.O.: The Inside Story of a Wall Street Trader
By Frank Partnoy
FIASCO is the shocking story of one man's education in the jungles of Wall Street. As a young derivatives salesman at Morgan Stanley, Frank Partnoy learned to buy and sell billions of dollars worth of securities that were so complex many traders themselves didn't understand them.

The God of the Machine
By Isabel Paterson
Paterson looks at the whole sweep of history, from ancient to contemporary, and relates it to the ideas and principles of freedom. Her central concern is to discover the political forms which freedom and civilization require.

The Regulated Consumer
By Mary Bennett Peterson
At the outset of the Nadarite consumer movement, the Austrians had a vigorous response in this book by Mary Bennett Peterson. She discusses whether and to what extent product, safety, labor, communications, and other regulation helps or hinders the interest of the consumer. She argues that the right of contract and the freedom to trade are the best protections, and that regulations only end up privileging some producers over others. This book is an excellent case study in the application of Mises's principle of consumer sovereignty. It appeared in 1971, and its forecast of a hobbled production process and unprotected consumers have proven true many times over.

The Pension Idea
By Paul Poirot
Not long after WWII, in 1950, Paul Poirot of the Foundation for Economic Education wrote a little book, THE PENSION IDEA, in which he demonstrated that the idea would never work. His prophecy is now apparent. The publication has been out of print for many years. I think it is so important for everyone to understand that Infinite Banking Concepts got permission from FEE to re-publish the booklet and we now offer it for sale on this website.

FDR's Folly: How Roosevelt and His New Deal Prolonged the Great Depression
By Jim Powell
In FDR’s Folly, historian Jim Powell argues that it was in fact the New Deal itself, with its shortsighted programs, that deepened the Great Depression, swelled the federal government, and prevented the country from turning around quickly.

WILSON’S WAR – How Woodrow Wilson’s Great Blunder Led to Hitler, Lenin, Stalin & World War I.
By Jim Powell
The fateful blunder that radically altered the course of the twentieth century—and led to some of the most murderous dictators in history President Woodrow Wilson famously rallied the United States to enter World War I by saying the nation had a duty to make “the world safe for democracy.” But as historian Jim Powell demonstrates in this shocking reappraisal, Wilson actually made a horrible blunder by committing the United States to fight. Far from making the world safe for democracy, America’s entry into the war opened the door to murderous tyrants and Communist rulers. No other president has had a hand—however unintentional—in so much destruction. That’s why, Powell declares, “Wilson surely ranks as the worst president in American history.”

Conquer the Crash: You Can Survive and Prosper in a Deflationary Depression
By Robert R. Prechter
This book is essential reading. Robert Prechter explains why he thinks the boom times are behind us. Based on his interpretation of the Elliott Wave principle, Prechter believes that the U.S. economy is about to enter into a deflationary depression that few investors are prepared to deal with.

At the Crest of the Tidal Wave: A Forecast for the Great Bear Market
By Robert R. Prechter Jr.
Read this one before "Conquer the Crash." If you are already well versed in the Wave Principle and prepared for the change that is coming, then ignore this book. If you are not, then devour it cover from cover. Be prepared for a shift in the tectonic plates that make up your mind's notions about financial causality. Above all, get ready for a violent shaking of your faith in conventional economic wisdom.

The End of Money and the Struggle for Financial Privacy
By Richard W. Rahn
Richard Rahn is that rare, rare bird, an economist who can explain arcane matters in easy-to-understand language. Get the latest dope, in plain language, on the world banking and currency crisis, the techniques and importance of "foreign" bank accounts, and how modern technology may spell the ultimate demise to intrusive and totalitarian governments.

Atlas Shrugged
By Ayn Rand
Atlas Shrugged is the astounding story of a man who said that he would stop the motor of the world - and did. Tremendous in scope, breathtaking in its suspense, Atlas Shrugged is a mystery, not about the murder of a man's body, but about the murder--and rebirth--of man's spirit.

Learning to Avoid Unintended Consequences
By Leonard Renier
If something you thought to be true, wasn't true, when would you want to know about it? In your financial world, that defining moment occurs by understanding the Efficiency of Money. Learning to avoid the unintended consequences of transferring your wealth to others unknowingly and unnecessarily, should be everyone's goal. This book will show you how to recognize and overcome these transfers. It will identify those who create the transfers and how they do it. They are destroying our personal wealth by creating situations, controlling the outcomes, and profiting from it. Truth and knowledge will reduce or eliminate these transfers.

Why American History Is Not What They Say: An Introduction To Revisionism
By Jeff Riggenbach
Americans have been warring with each other for more than a century over the contents of the American-history textbooks used in the nation's high schools and colleges. Nor is the reason far to seek. If, as seems to be the case, these textbooks encompass one hundred percent of the information that most high school and college graduates in this country will ever encounter on the subject of American history, the American-history wars would appear to be well worth fighting. For what Americans know and understand about the history of the society in which they live will determine the degree of their willingness to honor and preserve its ideals and traditions. More than that: it will determine what they regard as the ideals and traditions of their society. It will determine nothing less than the kind of society they will seek to strengthen and perpetuate.

How Privatized Banking Really Works - Integrating Austrian Economics with the Infinite Banking Conce
By L. Carlos Lara and Robert P. Murphy, PH.D
The powerful combination of Austrian Economics, The Sound Money Solution and Privatized Banking, as described by R. Nelson Nash's Infinite Banking Concept, is the "new" idea in this book. What if there was a solution to government intervention and our current money madness? Would you hesitate one minute in wanting to know what it is? Of course not! No one would. The problem is so pervasive that a solution seems impossible and yet, there is a solution. This solution's only requirement is the action of a single person acting in a manner to help only himself, but in so acting ultimately he helps all of society.

Speaking of Liberty
By Llewellyn H. Rockwell
Speaking of Liberty is a collection of speeches delivered by Rockwell over a period of ten years. The book begins with economics, and explains why Austrian economics matters, how the Federal Reserve brings on the business cycle, why we need private property and free enterprise, the unrecognized glories of the capitalist economy, and why the gold standard is still the best monetary system. Other sections deal with war, Mises and his work, other important thinkers in the libertarian tradition, and the culture and morality of liberty.

The Left, The Right, and The State
By Lew Rockwell
Lew Rockwell's new manifesto is a clarion call creative and thought-provoking on every page for a principled liberty in our time. There are very few books in which you can open up any page and immediately find a quotable and inspiring passage that will make you think hard, laugh out loud, or see things a completely new way. This is certainly one of them.

Mencken The American Iconoclast
By Marion Elizabeth Rodgers
A towering figure on the American cultural landscape, H.L. Mencken stands out as one of our most influential stylists and fearless iconoclasts--the twentieth century's greatest newspaper journalist, a famous wit, and a constant figure of controversy. Marion Elizabeth Rodgers has written the definitive biography of Mencken, the finest book ever published about this giant of American letters.

The Case Against the Fed
By Murray Rothbard
By far the most secret and least accountable operation of the federal government is not, as one might expect, the CIA, DIA, or some other. Purchase from Ludwig von Mises Institute, 518 West Magnolia Ave., Auburn, AL 36832-4528. www.mises.org

A History of Money and Banking in the United States
By Murray Rothbard
In this volume, Murray Rothbard has given us a comprehensive history of money and banking in the United States, from colonial times to World War. Purchase from Ludwig von Mises Institute, 518 West Magnolia Ave., Auburn, AL 36832-4528. www.mises.org

What Has Government Done to Our Money?
By Murray Rothbard
The Mises Institute is pleased to present this very beautiful hardbound edition of Rothbard's most famous monetary essay--the one that has influenced two generations of economists, investors, and business professionals. The Mises Institute has united this book with its natural complement: a detailed reform proposal for a 100 percent gold dollar. The Case for a 100 Percent Gold Dollar was written a decade before the last vestiges of the gold standard were abolished. His unique plan for making the dollar sound again still holds up.

The Mystery of Banking
By Murray Rothbard
Long out of print, The Mystery of Banking is perhaps the least appreciated work among Murray Rothbard's prodigious body of output. This is a shame because it is a model of how to apply sound economic theory, dispassionately and objectively, to the origins and development of real-world institutions and to assess their consequences. It is "institutional economics" at its best. In this book, the institution under scrutiny is central banking as historically embodied in the Federal Reserve System — the "Fed" for short — the central bank of the United States.

For a New Liberty: The Libertarian Manifesto
By Murray Rothbard
For A New Liberty is Rothbard's introduction to libertarianism, his Libertarian Manifesto. It is Rothbard in top form--a libertarian classic that for more than two decades has been hailed as the best general work on libertarianism available.

The Panic of 1819
By Murray Rothbard
The Panic of 1819 was America's first great economic crisis. And this is Rothbard's masterful account, the first full scholarly book on the topic and still the most definitive. It was his dissertation, published in 1962 but nearly impossible to get until this new edition, the first with the high production values associated with Mises Institute publications.

Death By Government
By R.J. Rummel
The line, "I'm from the government and I'm here to help you," takes on new meaning after reading R.J. Rummel's devastating Death By Government. This century, estimates the University of Hawaii policial scientist, the State has killed almost 170 million people. The numbers are so horrifying, so unfathomable, so unbelievable-it is tempting to dismiss them as meaningless statistics. Rummel calls these murders "democide" rather than "genocide," because the latter focuses on the elimination of specific ethnic groups, while the former includes mass killings for any number of other reasons.

FREDERIC BASTIAT: Ideas and Influence
By Dean Russell

The Trouble With Mutual Funds
By Richard Rutner
This book examines what went wrong with the most popular investment concept in history and why today's massive outflow from funds could cause even greater disappointment. See www.troublewithmutualfunds.com.

How an Economy Grows and Why It Crashes
By Peter D. Schiff
Understanding how all the pieces of an economy fit together can be a daunting task - especially when the experts can't seem to do it. But when you get down to the basics, it is much easier than you may think. How an Economy Grows and Why It Crashes uses illustrations, humor, and accessible storytelling to take economics off its lofty shelf and put it back on the kitchen table where it belongs.

Free Banking: Theory, History and a Laissez-Faire Model
By Larry Sechrest
Free Banking: Theory, History and a Laissez-Faire Model by Larry Sechrest is a magnificent work, now rescued from undeserved obscurity with this new edition. Published in 1993, it is a formalization and extension of literature in the free banking area, with important correctives and clarifications. He argues that the debate over central banking and free banking is the most important economic issue of the day. Central banking accepts all the methodological precepts of socialist central planning. It is constructivist. The planners pretend to know more than they can know. They presume that their knowledge is better than the market. They use their power to override market signals of prices and interest. And the results are about as successful as socialism, and he proves this point with the first formal model of central vs. free banking, one that combines Hayek, Selgin, and Garrison to show that a competitive system would be self correcting where a centralized one is not.

Age of Inflation
By Hans F. Sennholz
Age of Inflation is an enlightening and sobering analysis of the history and theory of inflation in the twentieth century. Written from the perspective of the Austrian School, the Book Recounts the German experience with inflation and price controls from World War I to the end of World War II. It deftly exposes the errors of the monetarists and their faith in political money, and examines the policies and consequences of the Federal Reserve System, offering recommendations for restoring a sound monetary system. Age of Inflation, which is also available in Spanish (Tiempos De Inflación, Buenos Aires, Argentina), is an invaluable aid to students of economics who seek to understand one of the great evils of our time.

In Restraint of Trade
By Butler Shaffer
This extremely important study by Butler Shaffer professor of law and economist will change the way you think of the relationship between the state and business. It makes a deep inquiry into the attitudes of business leaders toward competition during the years 1918 through 1938 to see how those attitudes were translated into proposals for controlling competition, through political machinery under the direction of trade associations.

Boundaries of Order
By Butler Shaffer
Every once in a while, a treatise on libertarian philosophy appears that presages a new way of thinking about politics and economics. Mises's Liberalism, Rothbard's Ethics of Liberty, and Hoppe's Democracy: The God That Failed come to mind. Boundaries of Order by Butler Shaffer is in that tradition, scholarly yet passionate, and a completely fresh look at a marvelous intellectual apparatus by a mature intellectual who has been writing on law, economics, and history for four decades. It is the treatise on liberty and property for the digital age, one written in the Rothbardian/Hayekian tradition with a consistently anti-state message but with a unique perspective on how the great struggle between state and society is playing itself out in our times.

Paper Money
By Adam Smith
In the mid-1960s, money manager George J.W. Goodman began to write a series of irreverent and witty columns for New York magazine under the borrowed name of capitalism's founding theorist, Adam Smith. As "Adam Smith," Goodman went on to write several bestsellers about economics, the stock market, and global capitalism, including The Money Game, Supermoney, and Paper Money, from which this account of the origin of the modern currency market is excerpted.

THE GREAT DEPARTURE
By Daniel M Smith

Inside American Education
By Thomas Sowell
The American educational system, from grade school to grad school, is bankrupt, teachers are incompetent and schools cause social maladjustment, moral confusion and alienation, according to this blistering indictment by Sowell, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

The Millionaire Next Door
By Thomas Stanley and William Danko
In The Millionaire Next Door, Stanley and Danko summarize findings from their research into the key characteristics that explain how the elite club of millionaires have become "wealthy."

Den of Thieves
By James Stewart
A number-one bestseller from coast to coast, Den of Thieves tells, in masterfully reported detail, the full story of the insider-trading scandal that nearly destroyed Wall Street, the men who pulled it off, and the chase that finally brought them to justice. Pulitzer Prize winner James B. Stewart shows for the first time how four of the biggest names on Wall Street -- Michael Milken, Ivan Boesky, Martin Siegel, and Dennis Levine -- created the greatest insider-trading ring in financial history and almost walked away with billions, until a team of downtrodden detectives triumphed over some of America's most expensive lawyers to bring this powerful quartet to justice. Based on secret grand jury transcripts, interviews, and actual trading records, and containing explosive new revelations about Michael Milken and Ivan Boesky written especially for this paperback edition, Den of Thieves weaves all the facts into an unforgettable narrative -- a portrait of human nature, big business, and crime of unparalleled proportions.

Myths, Lies and Downright Stupidity
By John Stossel
In his latest book, "Myths, Lies and Downright Stupidity," John Stossel expands on his popular "Myth" segments on "20/20" and unearths truths often distorted -- or disregarded -- by the media.

The Ultimate Gift
By Jim Stovall
The Ultimate Gift, written by Jim Stovall, is a story of Red Stevens, an accomplished man, who learned too late that giving material things is more like taking than giving. He learned too late for all except his nephew Jason. The Ultimate Gift takes the reader through Jason’s incredible work to gain his Uncle Red’s inheritance, “the ultimate gift.”

Fooled by Randomness : The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and in the Markets
By Nassim Nicholas Taleb
In this look at financial luck, hedge fund manager Taleb addresses the apparently irrational movement of money markets around the world. Using his own investing experience and examples of others' successes and disappointments, he discusses theories like Monte Carlo math and the concept of Russian roulette.

The Quotable Mises
By Mark Thornton
The Quotable Mises is 300-plus pages of some of the most thrilling words on politics and economics ever written. In some ways, it is the perfect introduction to Mises's thought, something that immediately grabs one's attention and gives a fast and accessible presentation of the range of his ideas.

How to Think Like Einstein
By Scott Thorpe
In this totally accessible, ingenious book, you will learn the tricks and techniques used by Albert Einstein and other great minds to solve bewildering problems. From business and parenting to becoming more creative and improving relationships, How to Think Like Einstein provides the tools to discovering breakthrough solutions to everyday challenges.

Monetary Policy in the United States
By Richard H. Timberlake
In this extensive history of U.S. monetary policy, Richard H. Timberlake chronicles the intellectual, political, and economic developments that prompted the use of central banking institutions to regulate the monetary systems.

Extraordinary Popular Delusions & the Madness of Crowds
By Andrew Tobias and Charles Mackay
This work shows that the madness and confusion of crowds knows no limits, and has no temporal bounds. These are extraordinarily illuminating,and, unfortunately, entertaining tales of chicanery, greed and naivete. Essential reading for any student of human nature or the transmission of ideas.

The Proud Tower
By Barbara Tuchman
The fateful quarter-century leading up to the World War I was a time when the world of Privilege still existed in Olympian luxury and the world of Protest was heaving in its pain, its power, and its hate. The age was the climax of a century of the most accelerated rate of change in history, a cataclysmic shaping of destiny. In The Proud Tower, Barbara Tuchman concentrates on society rather than the state. With an artist's selectivity, Tuchman bings to vivid life the people, places, and events that shaped the years leading up to the Great War: the Edwardian aristocracy and the end of their reign; the Anarchists of Europe and America, who voiced the protest of the oppressed; Germany, as portrayed through the figure of the self-depicted Hero, Richard Strauss; the sudden gorgeous blaze of Diaghilev's Russian Ballet and Stravinsky's music; the Dreyfus Affair; the two Peace Conferences at the Hague; and, finally, the youth, ideals, enthusiasm, and tragedy of Socialism, epitomized in the moment when the heroic Jean Jaurès was shot to death on the night the War began and an epoch ended.

The March of Folly
By Barbara Tuchman
Twice a winner of the Pulitzer Prize, author Barbara Tuchman now tackles the pervasive presence of folly in governments through the ages. Defining folly as the pursuit by governments of policies contrary to their own interersts, despite the availability of feasible alternatives, Tuchman details four decisive turning points in history that illustrate the very heights of folly in government: the Trojan War, the breakup of the Holy See provoked by the Renaissance Popes, the loss of the American colonies by Britain's George III, and the United States' persistent folly in Vietnam. THE MARCH OF FOLLY brings the people, places, and events of history magnificently alive for today's reader.

A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century
By Barbara Tuchman
The 14th century gives us back two contradictory images: a glittering time of crusades and castles, cathedrals and chivalry, and a dark time of ferocity and spiritual agony, a world plunged into a chaos of war, fear and the Plague. Barbara Tuchman anatomizes the century, revealing both the great rhythms of history and the grain and texture of domestic life as it was lived.

The Guns of August
By Barbara W. Tuchman
Historian and Pulitzer Prize-winning author Barbara Tuchman has brought to life again the people and events that led up to World War I. With attention to fascinating detail, and an intense knowledge of her subject and its characters, Ms. Tuchman reveals, for the first time, just how the war started, why, and why it could have been stopped but wasn't. A classic historical survey of a time and a people we all need to know more about, THE GUNS OF AUGUST will not be forgotten.

Christianity and War
By Laurence M. Vance
These thirteen essays, organized under the headings of Christianity and War, The Evils of War, Specific Wars, and The U.S. Global Empire, have one underlying theme: opposition to the warfare state that robs us of our money, our liberty, and in some cases our life. Although many of these essays reference contemporary events, the principles discussed in all of them are timeless: war, militarism, empire, interventionism, the warfare state, and the Christian attitude toward these things. It is the author s contention that Christian enthusiasm for the state, its wars, and its politicians is an affront to the Saviour, contrary to Scripture, and a demonstration of the profound ignorance many Christians have of history.

Going Broke by Degree
By Richard Vedder
The dramatic rise in university tuition costs is placing a greater financial burden on millions of college-bound Americans and their families. Yet only a fraction of the additional money colleges are collecting—twenty-one cents on the dollar—goes toward instruction. And, by many measures, colleges are doing a worse job of educating Americans. Why are we spending more—and getting less? In Going Broke by Degree, economist Richard Vedder examines the causes of the college tuition crisis. He warns that exorbitant tuition hikes are not sustainable, and explores ways to reverse this alarming trend.

The Pearl Harbor Myth
By George Victor
Did U.S. intelligence know of Japan's coming attack on Pearl Harbor? Did President Roosevelt know? If so, why did he withhold warnings from the commanders in Hawaii? The answers are embedded in the cogent analysis of The Pearl Harbor Myth. Based on voluminous data that does not appear in other books on the topic, it discusses in detail Roosevelt's developing strategy-both military and diplomatic-and his secret alliances to save the world from Hitler. It contains a wealth of fresh material on secret diplomacy; on secret military strategy, planning, and intelligence; and on disguised combat operations that began six months before the Pearl Harbor attack.

Human Action: A Treatise on Economics
By Ludwig von Mises
Why is Human Action so important? Why has it been revered and honored ever since it was first published? Why is it regarded both as an historic classic and a contemporary masterpiece, by virtually every friend of liberty who has read it? To answer these questions is to understand the special place in history of Ludwig von Mises, and the special place in the body of his works of this truly magnificent achievement.

Theory and History
By Ludwig von Mises

Nullifying Tyranny: Creating Moral Communities in an Immoral Society
By James Ronald Kennedy and Walter Donald Kennedy
Nullifying Tyranny is a call to action that cogently asserts James Ronald Kennedy and Walter Donald Kennedy's conservative beliefs and takes aim at the ever-expanding U.S. government, holding it accountable for the corruption of American society, which they believe is under the control of an anti-Christian secular humanist element.

The Purpose-driven Life: What on Earth Am I Here For?
By Rick Warren
The spiritual premise in The Purpose-Driven Life is that there are no accidents---God planned everything and everyone. Therefore, every human has a divine purpose, according to God's master plan.

The Mainspring of Human Progress
By Henry Grady Weaver
A great give-away book. Purchase from Foundation for Economic Education, Inc., 30 South Broadway, Irvington on Hudson, NY 10533. www.fee.org

What Goes Up : The Uncensored History of Modern Wall Street as Told by the Bankers, Brokers, CEOs, a
By Eric Weiner
Traces the rise and fall of modern Wall Street from the perspectives of billionaires and back-room figures from both sides of the law who were direct contributors, in an oral history that cites the involvement of such individuals as David Rockefeller, Charles Schwab, and Peter Lynch.

The Demise of the Dollar... and Why It's Great For Your Investments
By Addison Wiggin
Along with investment advice, Wiggin provides a brief history of government and consumer spending habits and how they have changed over the past 200 years. Written for lay readers, The Demise of the Dollar offers a practical analysis of what the "twilight of the Great Dollar Standard Era" may bring.

The Prayer of Jabez: Breaking Through to the Blessed Life
By Bruce Wilkerson
Even well-versed Biblical scholars might be perplexed if asked about Jabez, a little-known man listed in 1 Chronicles, chapter 4. Yet his simple petition is the cornerstone of The Prayer of Jabez and has become a call to live a more "blessed life" for countless readers.

Financial Reckoning Day Fallout
By Addison Wiggin and William Bonner
In Financial Reckoning Day an international bestseller published early in this decade maverick financial writers Addison Wiggin and William Bonner made some bold predictions about the economic difficulties the United States was about to encounter. Unfortunately, much of what they warned about has come true. Now, in Financial Reckoning Day Fallout, Wiggin and Bonner return to reveal exactly how these events have unfolded high unemployment rates, record setting foreclosures and bankruptcies, as well as the near global collapse of the financial institutions once thought to be so secure and what you can do to protect yourself from today's growing global depression. Filled with in-depth insights and practical advice, Financial Reckoning Day Fallout warns that depressions are not necessarily a thing of the past. That's why it's essential to have a wide-angle resource like this on hand to get you through the current crunch and help you prosper in the uncertain economic times ahead.

The State Against Blacks
By Walter E. Williams

YOU ARE EXTRAORDINARY
By Roger J. Williams

Meltdown
By Thomas E. Woods Jr.
We can probably expect an avalanche of books in the coming months that purport to tell us what happened to the economy and what we should do about it. They'll be dead wrong, and most of the advice they provide will be dreadful. You can count on that. That's why Meltdown is different. This book actually gets things right. It correctly identifies our problems, their causes, and what we should do about them. It treats the architects of this debacle not with the undeserved reverence they receive in Washington and on television, but with the critical eye that is so conspicuously missing from our supposedly independent thinkers in academia and the media. Tom Woods reserves his admiration for those few who, unlike the quacks who would instruct us now, actually saw the crisis coming, have a theory to explain it, and can show us the way out.

Nullification: How to Resist Federal Tyranny in the 21st Century
By Thomas E. Woods Jr.
"In clear and well-documented arguments, Tom Woods gives hope to those who wish to tame the federal monster as the Framers intended - by using the utterly lawful and historically accepted principle of Nullification. You must read this book." - The Honorable Andrew P. Napolitano, Senior Judicial Analyst, Fox News Channel

The Politically Incorrect Guide to American History
By Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
Claiming that most textbooks and popular history books were written by biased left-wing writers and scholars, historian Thomas Woods offers this guide as an alternative to "the stale and predictable platitudes of mainstream texts." Covering the colonial era through the Clinton administration, Woods seeks to debunk some persistent myths about American history.

33 Questions about American History You're Not Supposed to Ask
By Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
Guess what? The Indians didn't save the Pilgrims from starvation by teaching them to grow corn. Thomas Jefferson thought states' rights—an idea reviled today—were even more important than the Constitution's checks and balances. The “Wild” West was more peaceful and a lot safer than most modern cities. And the biggest scandal of the Clinton years didn't involve an intern in a blue dress. Surprised? Don't be. In America, where history is riddled with misrepresentations, misunderstandings, and flat-out lies about the people and events that have shaped the nation, there's the history you know and then there's the truth.

Life Insurance - Will it pay when I die?
By Thomas Young
This book is intended to help you, the insurance buying public, move through the maze of protecting your family with the proper life insurance. Money is one of the most important things in life. In our society, we have to work to earn money to survive. Surveys show time and time again that most people hold wealth as one of the top three priorities in life. As people who must use money to survive, our finances are very precious to us. So, if this is true, why do so many people base the majority of their financial decisions on rumor, hearsay and opinion? You might believe you have been given sound financial advice. But in all likelihood, you have made the majority of your decisions based on advertisements, friends and family. Sometimes this works out well, but if the people you receive financial advice from are not fully informed about what they have invested in (which is often the case), you are almost completely blind as to what is happening with your money!

 

 

 
 

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