From the March 2007 issue
“The whole idea of ‘guiding’ private industry by announcing
beforehand what quantities of different goods firms ought to
produce over a long period of the future is a muddle from beginning
to end.”
—F.A. Hayek, “‘Planning’ Our Way to Serfdom”
“A district court judge in Boston declared unconstitutional the
Massachusetts law banning the use of cocaine. Judge Elwood McKinney
stated that the law violates the 5th and 14th Amendments, in
dismissing a case against a Roxbury man. The judge pointed out in
passing that cocaine is far less dangerous than cigarettes or
alcohol.”
—“Easing Drug Laws”
“OPEC never would have gotten off the ground without the
diligent efforts of the Federal Power Commission.…[It] has
controlled the wellhead price of natural gas sold to interstate
pipelines since 1954, and domestic crude oil has been under some
sort of price controls since even before 1971. The inevitable
result was that demand outran supply at the controlled prices,
leaving a gap that could only be filled by larger and larger
imports.”
—Alan Reynolds, “Energy Crisis: Made in Washington”
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