Stefan Molyneux, host of Freedomain Radio - http://www.freedomainradio.com - and AVTM Contributor, Jake Diliberto join Adam to discuss the recent deaths of 5 U.S. soldiers in Iraq, the ongoing war in Afghanistan and the continue unrest across the Middle East.
Powerful ideas for all lovers of personal and political freedom.
Wednesday, June 08, 2011
Sunday, May 22, 2011
The First Casualty of War
A listener remix of a speech I gave in 2008, for Memorial Day. From Freedomain Radio - http://www.freedomainradio.com
Monday, May 16, 2011
Death By Drug War - Freedomain Radio Interviews Dr Jeffrey Miron of Harvard
Jeffrey Alan Miron is an American economist. He served as the chairman of the Department of Economics at Boston University from 1992 to 1998, and currently teaches at Harvard University, serving as a Senior Lecturer and Director of Undergraduate Studies in Harvard's Economics Department.
Miron is an outspoken consequentialist libertarian. He was one of the 166 economists to sign a letter to congressional leaders in opposition to the bailout plan put forth by the U.S. federal government in response to the global financial crisis of September--October 2008. He advocated that those companies that floundered during the crisis should be bankrupt instead of receiving government help. He has proposed three policy reforms to help the US economy recover from the financial crisis: cutting entitlements, freezing regulation, and replacing the existing tax code with a flat tax on consumption. Miron has also spoken out against the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, arguing that it is economically unfeasible and will increase the US deficit; instead, he suggests limiting government intervention is the best way to lower overall health care costs and make health care accessible to the most amount of people. He has studied the effects of drug criminalization for fifteen years, and argues that all drugs should be legalized.
Friday, May 13, 2011
'Inflated: How Money and Debt Built the American Dream' - Freedomain Rad...
Podcast: http://www.fdrurl.com/FDR1908
http://www.rcwhalen.com
Christopher Whalen is co-founder of Institutional Risk Analytics, a unit of Lord, Whalen LLC, the Los Angeles based provider of bank ratings, risk management tools and consulting services for auditors, regulators and financial professionals.
He leads IRA's risk advisory practice and consults for global companies on a variety of financial and regulatory issues.
Christopher is the author of the new book, "Inflated: How Money and Debt Built the American Dream."
Christopher currently edits The Institutional Risk Analyst, a weekly news report and commentary on significant developments in and around the global financial markets.
He also contributes articles on the Reuters and Zero Hedge web sites. Christopher has testified before the Congress and the Securities and Exchange Commission on a range of financial and other issues.
Christopher is a Fellow of the Networks Financial Institute at Indiana State University. He is a member of Professional Risk Managers International Association and volunteers as a member of the steering committee for PRMIA's Washington D.C. chapter. He was regional director of PRMIA's Washington D.C. chapter from 2006 through January 2010.
Christopher is a member of the Economic Advisory Committee of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and the Global Interdependence Center in Philadelphia.
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Capitalism, Materialism, Freedom and Death
Podcast: http://www.fdrurl.com/FDR1907
http://www.youtube.com/professoranton
The Freedomain Radio interview with Dr Corey Anton. Dr. Anton has presented numerous competitively selected papers at national and international conferences and has published dozens of scholarly articles in journals such as Communication Theory, Philosophy and Rhetoric, Human Studies, Semiotica, ETC, Bulletin of General Semantics, The Atlantic Journal of Communication, afterimage, Communication Studies, and The American Journal of Semiotics. He is a Past Chair and Program Planner for the Semiotics and Communication Division of NCA. Highly active in the Media Ecology Association, Anton is a trustee on the Board of Directors for the MEA and serves as the Editor for the journal Explorations in Media Ecology. Most recently Anton was named a Fellow of the International Communicology Institute, and a member of the Board of Trustees for the Institute of General Semantics
Friday, May 06, 2011
o dear god in heaven there's going to be another election, yawnnnnn :o
Stefan Molyneux, host of of Freedomain Radio and Jeffrey Tucker, editorial vice president of the Ludwig von Mises Institute, a think tank that espouses the Austrian School of economics, discuss current events. The anemic economic recovery, modern policing, the boredom of elections, and the hope of the internet.
Monday, May 02, 2011
The Truth About bin Laden
His death will not bring your freedoms back to life. From Freedomain Radio, the largest and most popular philosophy show on the web. http://www.freedomainradio.com
Sources: http://www.fdrurl.com/binladen
So bin Laden has apparently been killed, and this is cause for mass celebrations, perhaps because people believe that the cycle of evil will end with this murder.
But governments don't solve the problem of evil, because governments always need an enemy to scare you with -- the Kaiser, Mussolini, Hitler, Stalin, Mao, drug dealers, terrorists, and so on and on.
But who is the enemy?
The death toll from American imperialism: more than 27,000,000 million people slaughtered worldwide.
Well, I guess 27,000,000 and one will make everything better now.
Even if we say that bin Laden needed to be captured or killed -- just look at the facts:
It took the US government 10 years, 2 wars, almost a million deaths, and over $1.1 trillion (interest and inflation not included) to kill one person.
This is the same person that the US trained, funded and armed to fight the Soviets in the 1980s. The same person that the Taliban offered to hand over almost a year before 9/11, as long as the US government provided objective evidence linking him to terrorism -- which the US failed to do, even after the Taliban warned Washington that bin Laden was going to strike the US.
After 9/11, the Taliban again offered to turn over bin Laden to a neutral country or the Court of Justice in The Hague, even without evidence. This offer was rejected.
And proof? Colin Powell promised it would be provided. It never was. The British government put together a 21-page dossier on bin Laden, but admitted that it would not amount to a prosecutable case in a court of law.
Remember when Saddam Hussein was captured? That was cause for celebration as well.
And what changed?
If killing bin Laden is a great victory, then wonderful, good job, give us our freedoms back. Cut the defense budget in half. Bring the troops home, because we're done.
What? That's not going to happen?
Then stop celebrating and wake up!
Friday, April 29, 2011
'Single Dad Laughing' - The Freedomain Radio Interview
Dan, one of the most popular fathers on the Internet, talks to Stefan Molyneux of Freedomain Radio about peaceful parenting, raising children without aggression, and how many dads tragically break their own children.
http://www.danoah.com
http://www.danoah.com
Friday, April 22, 2011
Guns, Gods and Goodness - The Use and Abuse of Ethics
Why be good? Until we have an answer, all we will have is abuse. From Freedomain Radio -- http://www.freedomainradio.com
There's this very tragic continuum in human thought wherein - in general - if somebody tends to be less religious, they tend to be more statist - like Communists are atheists, most socialists are agnostics and so on - whereas if somebody tends to be anti-state, then there is a tendency to be more religious.
I think this arises from the fundamental problem that society has which is: why should we obey those in authority? Why should we obey moral rules?
'The Lord, the Lord Jehovah, has given unto you these 15 -- oy -- 10, 10 Commandments for all to obey...'
Those who are more religious have the magic pixie dust called 'God' to sprinkle on their Commandments, to raise them from mere mortal rules to divine absolutes. Whereas those who don't believe in the magic dust of religion have to turn to the state and to physical aggression, to incarceration, to kidnapping, to imprisonment, in order to turn mere human rules into moral 'absolutes.'
So you kind of have to hold your nose; like if you're an atheist, you pretty much have to hang out with people who are very pro-state, and if you're anti-state then you have to hang out with people who are very religious - but neither of these approaches solves the basic problem of human morality.
Threatening somebody with supernatural punishment is merely verbal abuse, and it doesn't raise the truth status of any of the moral rules proposed. Whereas threatening people with kidnapping and incarceration is mere physical abuse - and also does not make any moral rules that are supported by such attacks any more valid.
It is really only philosophy that will solve this problem for us, and will give us reasonable and consistent and empirical arguments from first principles that will allow us to convince people to be virtuous rather than threatening them with random and destructive punishments if they fail to conform to fairly arbitrary rules. So the first thing we need to do is to understand that we don't have a good rational basis for social rules at the moment - that's real tragedy, something we all need to work to sort out, to figure out, to solve.
I've made my efforts in this direction with a free book called "Universally Preferable Behavior: A Rational Proof of Secular Ethics." But until we recognize that we don't have a rational and philosophical basis for morality at the moment, we're forever going to be swinging between these two awful poles of the verbal abuse of religion and the physical abuse of statism.
But we don't have to - we can find a third rational peaceful way to have social rules without abuses - and I hope that you will continue to explore this incredibly fertile area in the realm of philosophy.
There's this very tragic continuum in human thought wherein - in general - if somebody tends to be less religious, they tend to be more statist - like Communists are atheists, most socialists are agnostics and so on - whereas if somebody tends to be anti-state, then there is a tendency to be more religious.
I think this arises from the fundamental problem that society has which is: why should we obey those in authority? Why should we obey moral rules?
'The Lord, the Lord Jehovah, has given unto you these 15 -- oy -- 10, 10 Commandments for all to obey...'
Those who are more religious have the magic pixie dust called 'God' to sprinkle on their Commandments, to raise them from mere mortal rules to divine absolutes. Whereas those who don't believe in the magic dust of religion have to turn to the state and to physical aggression, to incarceration, to kidnapping, to imprisonment, in order to turn mere human rules into moral 'absolutes.'
So you kind of have to hold your nose; like if you're an atheist, you pretty much have to hang out with people who are very pro-state, and if you're anti-state then you have to hang out with people who are very religious - but neither of these approaches solves the basic problem of human morality.
Threatening somebody with supernatural punishment is merely verbal abuse, and it doesn't raise the truth status of any of the moral rules proposed. Whereas threatening people with kidnapping and incarceration is mere physical abuse - and also does not make any moral rules that are supported by such attacks any more valid.
It is really only philosophy that will solve this problem for us, and will give us reasonable and consistent and empirical arguments from first principles that will allow us to convince people to be virtuous rather than threatening them with random and destructive punishments if they fail to conform to fairly arbitrary rules. So the first thing we need to do is to understand that we don't have a good rational basis for social rules at the moment - that's real tragedy, something we all need to work to sort out, to figure out, to solve.
I've made my efforts in this direction with a free book called "Universally Preferable Behavior: A Rational Proof of Secular Ethics." But until we recognize that we don't have a rational and philosophical basis for morality at the moment, we're forever going to be swinging between these two awful poles of the verbal abuse of religion and the physical abuse of statism.
But we don't have to - we can find a third rational peaceful way to have social rules without abuses - and I hope that you will continue to explore this incredibly fertile area in the realm of philosophy.
Monday, April 18, 2011
Adam vs the Man: Episode 6 with Stefan Molyneux!
Stefan Molyneux shows up as a complete ham at 8:50
Tonight on Adam vs. the Man with Adam Kokesh: HAPPY TAX DAY! Or, is it Merry tax day? Time to take stock America - we made it until 1913 without the modern income tax - could we do without it? Tom Woods joins Adam to compare what the founders envisioned for funding the government to the monstrosity we have today. Adam also covers how the income tax, well, pretty much makes you a slave. If you get up early, work hard all day, and pay your taxes, you'll make it big in this country - right after you win the lottery. This, by the way, is just another tax for people who are bad at math.
Tonight on Adam vs. the Man with Adam Kokesh: HAPPY TAX DAY! Or, is it Merry tax day? Time to take stock America - we made it until 1913 without the modern income tax - could we do without it? Tom Woods joins Adam to compare what the founders envisioned for funding the government to the monstrosity we have today. Adam also covers how the income tax, well, pretty much makes you a slave. If you get up early, work hard all day, and pay your taxes, you'll make it big in this country - right after you win the lottery. This, by the way, is just another tax for people who are bad at math.
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Stefan Molyneux of Freedomain Radio on New TV Show "Adam Versus the Man"
RT America Launches New Show, Hosted by Former US Marine, Adam Kokesh!
Starts April 11, 2011, 7pm EST, every night.
http://www.adamvstheman.com/
In the US, RT is available on cable in the metro areas of Washington DC, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego as well as in North Carolina and South Carolina.
For more information go to http://rt.com/usa/where-to-watch/
Starts April 11, 2011, 7pm EST, every night.
http://www.adamvstheman.com/
In the US, RT is available on cable in the metro areas of Washington DC, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego as well as in North Carolina and South Carolina.
For more information go to http://rt.com/usa/where-to-watch/
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Atlas Shrugged: The Freedomain Radio Movie Interview
Stefan Molyneux interviews Harmon Kaslow, a producer of the new movie 'Atlas Shrugged' Part 1 - http://www.atlasshruggedpart1.com From Freedomain Radio, the largest and most popular philosophy show on the web: http://www.freedomainradio.com
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Free Money from the Banksters! An Interview with Dr. George Selgin
Professor George Selgin explodes the myths of economic stability through central banking, races through the history of money, war and death in the 20th century, and flatly refuses to predict the future! :) From Freedomain Radio -- http://www.freedomainradio.com Sources: http://www.fdrurl.com/selgin
Thursday, February 10, 2011
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