Make immigrants ineligible for welfare (and voting) --> problem solved.
...incidentally, Friedman was a Keynesian who thought the government should respond to recessions with money printing.
...not someone with great libertarian credentials, just FYI.
standard bs reply. Ending birthright citizenship is crucial. Some poor woman swims across a river drops a kid and it qualifies for welfare. It is insanity. Open border clowns are destroying the country.
Friedman was not a Keynesian; the Chicago school is not Keynesianism. By this standard, every modern non-Austrian school of economics is Keynesian.Make immigrants ineligible for welfare (and voting) --> problem solved.
...incidentally, Friedman was a Keynesian who thought the government should respond to recessions with money printing.
...not someone with great libertarian credentials, just FYI.
Friedman was not a Keynesian; the Chicago school is not Keynesianism. By this standard, every modern non-Austrian school of economics is Keynesian.
THE IMPACT OF FRIEDMAN
And so, as we examine Milton Friedman's credentials to be the leader of free-market economics, we arrive at the chilling conclusion that it is difficult to consider him a free-market economist at all. Even in the micro sphere, Friedman's theoretical concessions to the egregious ideal of "perfect competition" would permit a great deal of governmental trust-busting, and his neighborhood-effect concession to a government intervention could permit a virtual totalitarian state, even though Friedman illogically confines its application to a few areas. But even here, Friedman uses this argument to justify the State's provision of mass education to everyone.
But it is in the macro sphere, unwisely hived off from the micro by economists who remain after sixty years ignorant of Ludwig von Mises's achievement in integrating them, it is here that Friedman's influence has been at its most baleful. For we find Friedman bearing heavy responsibility both for the withholding tax system and for the disastrous guaranteed annual income looming on the horizon. At the same time, we find Friedman calling for absolute control by the State over the supply of money – a crucial part of the market economy. Whenever the government has, fitfully and almost by accident, stopped increasing the money supply (as Nixon did for several months in the latter half of 1969), Milton Friedman has been there to raise the banner of inflation once again. And wherever we turn, we find Milton Friedman, proposing not measures on behalf of liberty, not programs to whittle away the Leviathan State, but measures to make the power of that State more efficient, and hence, at bottom, more terrible.
The libertarian movement has coasted far too long on the intellectually lazy path of failing to make distinctions, or failing to discriminate, of failing to make a rigorous search to distinguish truth from error in the views of those who claim to be its members or allies. It is almost as if any passing joker who mumbles a few words about "freedom" is automatically clasped to our bosom as a member of the one, big, libertarian family. As our movement grows in influence, we can no longer afford the luxury of this intellectual sloth. It is high time to identify Milton Friedman for what he really is. It is high time to call a spade a spade, and a statist a statist.
Friedman was not a Keynesian; the Chicago school is not Keynesianism. By this standard, every modern non-Austrian school of economics is Keynesian.
Ending welfare is a standard BS reply? I'd say look in the mirror for BS- especially if you go by Friedman.
standard bs reply. Ending birthright citizenship is crucial. Some poor woman swims across a river drops a kid and it qualifies for welfare. It is insanity. Open border clowns are destroying the country.
Kid you have no reply. Nothing Zilch
That's not what defines Keynesianism, and not all Chicago schoolers believe that. Milton's son David is Chicago schooler and an anarcho-capitalist, so he obviously doesn't believe in the Federal Reserv. Chicago has a multiplicity of views. So does the Austrian school; there are Austrians outside the Mises bubble.He was, it is, and they are.
Like other branches of Keynesianism, Monetarism is unable to explain the bust, and assumes sticky prices (which leads to the policy prescription of inflation).
I'm well aware of Rothbard's opinion on Freidman, and it's always confused me. Rothbard made temporary pragmatic alliances with the New Left, Pat Buchanan and the paleoconservative movement along with David Duke, and eventually implored libertarians to vote for Bush Sr. I don't necessarily have a problem with all that (I like Pat Buchanan and paleocon Sam Francis was an amazing thinker), but his repeated rebukes of Friedman in light of those alliances he deemed acceptable is just bizarre.
Ending welfare is a standard BS reply? I'd say look in the mirror for BS- especially if you go by Friedman.
He was, it is, and they are.
Like other branches of Keynesianism, Monetarism is unable to explain the bust, and assumes sticky prices (which leads to the policy prescription of inflation).
Some poor woman swims across a river drops a kid and it qualifies for welfare. It is insanity.
Of course that's insanity. But it's not any more insane than letting someone whose ancestors have lived here for centuries qualify for welfare. 100% of the problem is the welfare. 0% of the problem is immigration.
That's not what defines Keynesianism
Milton Friedman himself focused on money supply, Keynesians tend to focus on aggregate demand. Also, while he didn't believe in the ABCT, Friedman said on multiple occasions that his prescriptions for the money supply were only in the context of what exists; IE a central bank. He was a consummate pragmatist. He never said the Fed was optimal. He wanted to actually help craft economic policy, so he tailored his prescriptions into a workable form that could actually be implemented (wholly or partially).
I'm well aware of Rothbard's opinion on Freidman, and it's always confused me. Rothbard made temporary pragmatic alliances with the New Left, Pat Buchanan and the paleoconservative movement along with David Duke, and eventually implored libertarians to vote for Bush Sr. I don't necessarily have a problem with all that (I like Pat Buchanan and paleocon Sam Francis was an amazing thinker), but his repeated rebukes of Friedman in light of those alliances he deemed acceptable is just bizarre.