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Antony Mueller, RIP

In Loving Memory ★ 22/02/1948 † 24/05/2026 Death Notice With deep sorrow we announce the passing of Anton Peter Müller. He was a beloved man who leaves behind memories that will remain forever in our hearts. May God grant strength and comfort to his family members and friends in this time of grief. The funeral service will take place on the 25th at 07:00 in the OSAF – R. Itaporanga, 436. The family thanks you for your participation and loving support.

We are saddened to announce the passing of our friend and fellow PFS member Antony Müller (Feb. 22, 1948–May 24, 2026), an economist from Germany and professor of economics at the Federal University of Sergipe (Brazil) (more detail at Rest in peace, Antony Mueller).

From Fiori Chiocca Fernando:

A German who settled in Brazil, Mueller participated in the first Austro-libertarian conference in Brazil in 2010 and lectured at PFS meetings.

Brazil has never had a great libertarian scholar, and the greatest of all we have ever had was imported from Germany and left us yesterday.

Antony’s presentations at PFS, and his contribution to my 2024 Liber Amicorum, are listed below.

Requiescet in pace.

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Antony P. Müller, “Should Political Parties be Abolished?”, in A Life in Liberty: Liber Amicorum in Honor of Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Jörg Guido Hülsmann and Stephan Kinsella, eds. (Houston, Texas: Papinian Press, 2024)

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Should Political Parties be Abolished?

Antony P. Mueller

Antony P. Mueller holds a doctorate in economics from the Friedrich-Alexander-University of Erlangen and Nürnberg (FAU) and teaches currently at the Mises Academy in São Paulo, Brazil.

 

The ruling model of the liberal democracy is in crisis. In the United States and many European countries, confidence in the political system is in decline. There have been many attempts to explain this disenchantment with politics and the state. Few, however, consider the role of political parties. For the public in general but also for most political theorists, a social order without politics and thus without political parties seems inconceivable. In this article, we investigate the proposition, eloquently put forth in the early 1940s by Simone Weil, that political parties should be banned. [continue reading…]

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Play

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 327.

Rothbard at 100 final cover May 13 2026AI-assisted audio narration of the main chapters of Rothbard at 100: A Tribute and Assessment (Papinian Press and The Saif House, 2026) is available at this PFS Youtube Playlist; the mp3 files may also be downloaded in this zip file.

The first two chapters—my “Preface” and Hans’s “Introduction”—were published the week of Rothbard’s birthday here on the Property and Freedom Podcast (PFP315 and PFP314). The other main chapters will be released sequentially weekly on Mondays. The next in the queue:

12. Fernando Fiori Chiocca, “The First Knight of Libertarianism

 

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Related

Tom, Hans’s comments here also remind me of other point he has made about it is typically those states with large economies and relatively liberal internal policies that tend to be more aggressive and imperialistic. From Hoppe on Liberal Economies and War:

One of my many favorite Hoppe quotes is from “Banking, Nation States and International Politics: A Sociological Reconstruction of the Present Economic Order,” Review of Austrian Economics 4 no. 1 (1990), also in Economics and Ethics of Private Property, ch. 3, which explains why the relatively rich, Western countries, which have relatively liberal internal economic policies, would tend to be militarily more powerful, and thus more aggressive, than developing states. [continue reading…]

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Hans’s comments about how “bad people” rise to the top in “large” democracies reminded me of the sentences following Lord Acton’s famous “power corrupts” quote.  The full quote is as follows:

Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.  Great men are almost always bad men, even when they exercise influence and not authority; still more when you superadd the tendency of the certainty of corruption by authority.

This was from an April 3, 1887 letter to Biship Mandell Creighton.  In that letter Lord Acton also wrote that “There is no worse heresy than that the office sanctifies the holder of it.”  I would argue that ever since Lincoln the office of American president has been “sanctified” by the state and its minions in the media, a politicized clergy, and popular culture in general.  That in turn led to a “sanctification” of the state in general.

Here is a source for this and other Lord Acton quotes.

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[Cross posted at StephanKinsella.com]

From The Editorial Board, “Old McDonald Had a Race Preference: A lawsuit settlement helps end discrimination at the USDA,” Wall Street Journal (May 22, 2026):

One of the worst sources of race preferences has been the federal government, so cheers to the news that some discriminatory programs have been sent out to pasture. The Agriculture Department recently settled a lawsuit and agreed to end race and sex preferences in federal farm programs.

Adam Faust is a Wisconsin dairy farmer who found his Holstein milking operation harmed by USDA programs that used race or sex preferences to allocate financial benefits. The Dairy Margin Coverage Program, which farmers use to cover fluctuations in milk prices, charged him a fee that wasn’t paid by farmers USDA designated as “socially disadvantaged.”

[continue reading…]

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From the Vault: Troy University, EconVersations w/ Doug French (episode 16) (May 15, 2012)

Grok: In this 2012 interview, Doug French, then-President of the Ludwig von Mises Institute, joins Scott B. to discuss the enduring relevance of Austrian economics. French explores the Institute’s mission, his studies under Murray Rothbard, and why the 2008 financial crisis validated the Austrian theory of business cycles. He warns of the massive bubble in U.S. government debt, explains why Wall Street listens while Washington doesn’t, and makes the case for gold and silver as protections against monetary expansion. French also highlights the Mises Institute’s educational programs and emphasizes that real change comes through long-term education in sound economics rather than politics. A compelling discussion on economic freedom, financial reality, and the power of ideas.

Dr. Scott Beaulier, of the Manuel Johnson Center for Political Economy, hosts EconVersation, a program that explores the role of free markets in promoting prosperity through conversations with Manuel Johnson Center faculty and guests. In this episode, Dr. Beaulier interviews the president of the Mises Institute, Doug French

[continue reading…]

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From HansHoppe.com:

Die Ökonomie und Ethik des Privateigentums: Studium der politischen Ökonomie und Philosophie, Zweite Ausgabe (2026), a translation of Hans-Hermann Hoppe, The Economics and Ethics of Private Property, Second Edition (Auburn, AL: Ludwig von Mises Institute, 2006) has been prepared. Text below and pdf here. Translated by Andreas Tank. The paper version will be available for purchase presently.

Read more>>

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The False Boom

Originally published at The Rude Awakening.

 The False Boom

The False Boom

The Rude Awakening (May 22, 2026)

By Sean Ring

Sean RingIn the summer of 2021, Lordstown Motors held a ceremony.

Cameras. Executives in hard hats. A gleaming electric pickup truck rolling off the line in rural Ohio. Politicians gave speeches about the future of American manufacturing. CNBC ran the footage on a loop.

Eighteen months later, Lordstown Motors filed for bankruptcy. [continue reading…]

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Originally published: Douglas E. French, “Sorkin’s Soapy Crash Story,” DouglasinVegas.com (Mar 25, 2026)

Book Review

Sorkin’s Soapy Crash Story

The current stock market volatility is testing investor meddle once again. The second Trump administration’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcement and the Iran invasion have produced selloffs that have punctuated what has been a constant bull market in stocks. The Great Financial Crisis seems like a long time ago. The crash of 1929 is largely forgotten, let alone previous panics.

Andrew Ross Sorkin has brought the great crash back to life with another bestseller,  1929: Inside the Greatest Crash in History—And How It Shattered a Nation. Sorkin’s telling of the financial debacle focuses on a few individual stories  As he writes, A Night to Remember about the sinking of the Titanic was his “narrative touchstone.”

[continue reading…]

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Related

Ralph Raico (1936-2016) presented this informal session at Mises University in Auburn, Alabama, on August 11, 2005.

Professor Raico (Mises.org/Raico) was Professor Emeritus in European history at Buffalo State College and a senior fellow of the Mises Institute. He was a specialist on the history of liberty, the liberal tradition in Europe, and the relationship between war and the rise of the state. [Mises media]

I was reminded of this in a recent tweet by David Beito:

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Who Ate the Seed Corn?

Originally published at The Rude Awakening.

Who Ate the Seed Corn?

Who Ate the Seed Corn?

The Rude Awakening (May 21, 2026)

By Sean Ring

Sean RingWe’ve named time preference and interventionism so far. Here’s the next important step on our map: capital consumption.

This is what Donald Trump is trying to prevent in the United States, in his own way… with mixed results so far.

Why?

Because he knows it’s the one thing most responsible for America’s manufacturing decline. It’s one thing for a better team to beat you. It’s another thing entirely for your team to give the game away to foreigners. [continue reading…]

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From the archives: Doug French: The Injustice System, Darrow’s Resist Not Evil, interviewed for Liberty.me by Kyle Platt (May 14, 2014). Doug’s Introduction to the Mises Institute’s 2011 reprint of Darrow’s Resist Not Evil is appended below.

Kyle Platt speaks with Doug French, Executive Editor or Agora Financial and former President of the Ludwig von Mises Institute, about Clarence Darrow‘s almost forgotten book, Resist Not Evil, and the the implications of this scathing critique of the American justice system.

[continue reading…]

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Kentucky Congressman Thomas Massie is the closest thing to a libertarian in the U.S. Congress.  He opposes the American-Israeli genocide in Gaza and the unprovoked invasion of Iran.  He voted against Trump’s explosive spending bill that he said will only spawn inflation and economic decline.  He authored legislation to make the Epstein Files public.  Perhaps his biggest “crime,” in the eyes of the Washington establishment, was to go on the Tucker Carlson podcast and reveal to the world that every member of the U.S. Congress except himself had an AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee) “handler” whose job was to assure that all members of Congress always vote in Israel’s interest even if it is against the interests of the average American.  The genocide in Gaza and the invasion of Iran would be two examples.  And oh yes, he offered a bill that would eliminate the Israeli exemption from U.S. foreign influence lobbying law.  In addition to being the closest thing to a libertarian in Congress, he is also the closest thing in Washington to an America First politician.

Well.  For that the Israeli First lobby got three left-wing Jewish billionaires (who are not from Kentucky) to “donate” tens of millions to defeat Massie in his primary election.  They picked an “Israel-First Neoconservative” nobody named “Ed Gallrein” who used to be a Democrat and who refused to debate Massie as his opponent.  Trump himself hurled his usual juvenile insults at Massie and his thousands of Kentucky voters.  Naturally, he lost.

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The Ratchet Turns

Originally published at The Rude Awakening.

The Ratchet Turns

The Ratchet Turns

The Rude Awakening (May 20, 2026)

By Sean Ring

Sean RingWelcome to the second article in this series of developing your economic map. Today, we’ll talk about the government’s interference in the markets. To start, I give you this priceless quote from none other than Ringo Starr:

Everything government touches turns to crap.

With that in mind, let us begin.

There’s a tool in every mechanic’s box called a ratchet.

It only turns one way. [continue reading…]

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