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  • Demonic by Ann Coulter
    October 17, 2011 | 10:37 pm

    I just recently finished Ann Coulter‘s “Demonic: How the Liberal Mob Is Endangering America” and highly recommend it. It’s amazingly ironic that it came out just prior to “Occupy Wall Street” because that movement more than anything that could be said affirms the content of the book. After reading Gustave Le Bon Ann realized how [...]

  • History, The Federalist and Progressive Expansion
    June 18, 2011 | 10:40 pm

    I believe your understanding of the founding documents and the history of this country is proportional to your despair, discontent and anger at what you see happening today. The Nation’s 2010 Report Card for Civics show only 12% of 12th graders are proficient at a 12th grade level. To give you an idea of how [...]

  • Primetime Propaganda: who’da thunk
    June 12, 2011 | 12:29 am

    He went to Harvard, he’s Jewish and he’s wearing a Harvard Law baseball cap. He must be a liberal, right? That’s what Hollywood execs thought when they sat down with Ben Shapiro. The inside story of how the most powerful medium of mass communication in human history has become a propaganda tool for the Left [...]

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The Road to Serfdom

The Road to Serfdom : F. A. Hayek
An unimpeachable classic work in political philosophy, intellectual and cultural history, and economics, The Road to Serfdom has inspired and infuriated politicians, scholars, and general readers for half a century. Originally published in 1944—when Eleanor Roosevelt supported the efforts of Stalin, and Albert Einstein subscribed lock, stock, and barrel to the socialist program—The Road to Serfdom was seen as heretical for its passionate warning against the dangers of state control over the means of production. For F. A. Hayek, the collectivist idea of empowering government with increasing economic control would lead not to a utopia but to the horrors of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy.

First published by the University of Chicago Press on September 18, 1944, The Road to Serfdom garnered immediate, widespread attention. The first printing of 2,000 copies was exhausted instantly, and within six months more than 30,000 books were sold. In April 1945, Reader’s Digest published a condensed version of the book, and soon thereafter the Book-of-the-Month Club distributed this edition to more than 600,000 readers. A perennial best seller, the book has sold 400,000 copies in the United States alone and has been translated into more than twenty languages, along the way becoming one of the most important and influential books of the century.

With this new edition, The Road to Serfdom takes its place in the series The Collected Works of F. A. Hayek.  The volume includes a foreword by series editor and leading Hayek scholar Bruce Caldwell explaining the book’s origins and publishing history and assessing common misinterpretations of Hayek’s thought.  Caldwell has also standardized and corrected Hayek’s references and added helpful new explanatory notes.  Supplemented with an appendix of related materials ranging from prepublication reports on the initial manuscript to forewords to earlier editions by John Chamberlain, Milton Friedman, and Hayek himself, this new edition of The Road to Serfdom will be the definitive version of Friedrich Hayek‘s enduring masterwork.

About the Author
F. A. Hayek (1899-1992), recipient of the Medal of Freedom in 1991 and co-winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics in 1974, was a pioneer in monetary theory and a leading proponent of classical liberalism  in the twentieth century. He taught at the University of London, the University of Chicago, and the University of Freiburg.

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