The Stuggle for Liberty: A Libertarian History of Political Thought

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"The Struggle for Liberty: A Libertarian History of Political Thought" by Ralph Raico
From the Preface by T. Hunt Tooley:

The Struggle for Liberty gives us vintage Ralph Raico in his roles of lecturer and professor. In these lectures he weaves together the daily life of the past, competing intellectual traditions, the history of the modern state, and the international background to create a broad and compelling narrative. He pulls no intellectual punches. But in these erudite talks, he presents to students a complex story in such a way that his mastery of learned disputes from a hundred, or from five hundred, years ago reaches us as living, breathing history.

A History of Political Theory in the West
{Mises Media | 15 May 2025}

Radio Rothbard podcast

Political Scientist Joseph Solis-Mullen joins Ryan McMaken to review Ralph Raico’s newly published lectures on politics in the West. We recommend this book for all who want a pro-freedom history of political thought.

 
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Chapter 1 also goes into the hundreds of years of history that went into building a european concept and culture of liberty.

It basically says white people invented freedom.

Which is true :cool:
 
Chapter 1 also goes into the hundreds of years of history that went into building a european concept and culture of liberty.

It basically says white people invented freedom.

Which is true :cool:

White is a hue, not a people.
 
White is a hue, not a people.

Wrong. White still has a culture associated with it.

Maybe in a generation or two after the globalists have been successful in erasing white culture you'll be right, but not yet.
 
Wrong. White still has a culture associated with it.

Maybe in a generation or two after the globalists have been successful in erasing white culture you'll be right, but not yet.

What Im referring to is the cultural, ethnic and religious diversity which existed for centuries prior to when we became just "whites".
Who else became "white" ? They did. But they were never culturally, ethnically or religiously akin to us before.
 
What Im referring to is the cultural, ethnic and religious diversity which existed for centuries prior to when we became just "whites".

Yea whites used to have a rich and diverse set of cultures. But they still shared common values.

Who else became "white" ? They did. But they were never culturally, ethnically or religiously akin to us before.

I don't follow.
 
Yea whites used to have a rich and diverse set of cultures. But they still shared common values.



I don't follow.
I'm not 100% sure that I'm reading between the lines properly. But I think that there's an unnamed antecedent of the pronoun "they," which is unnamed for reasons, and once you decipher that, you'll be in hearty agreement with Snowball.
 
I'm not 100% sure that I'm reading between the lines properly. But I think that there's an unnamed antecedent of the pronoun "they," which is unnamed for reasons, and once you decipher that, you'll be in hearty agreement with Snowball.
Upon second reading you are right :up:
 
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Five Myths About the History of Political Thought
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RnaLXB9SP8s
{Mises Media | 15 August 2025}

In his important lectures on the history of political thought, historian Ralph Raico examined five myths that many still believe about classical liberalism and the origins of modern ideology.

Be sure to follow Radio Rothbard at https://mises.org/RadioRothbard



:up:

I have mentioned this before so consider it a reminder. I and others in my liberty group [extending to Ohio] buy and get for free books in the Mises Library. Once we are finished reading them, they don't get put on shelves only to collect dust. We 1. give them to others to read, and 2. donate them to Public Libraries.
 
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