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  • ...aul.org with WIPO, a global governing body that is an agency of the United Nations. The complaint calls on the agency to expropriate the two domain names from {{Quotations|Ron Paul Calls on United Nations to Confiscate Domain Names of His Supporters|quotes=true}}
    8 KB (1,415 words) - 00:06, 11 February 2013
  • {{URL | url = http://gawker.com/united-nations-tells-ron-paul-to-shove-his-lawsuit-righ-509944619}} {{Quotations|United Nations Tells Ron Paul To Shove His Lawsuit Right Up His Ass|quotes=true}}
    3 KB (449 words) - 10:29, 27 May 2013
  • [[Category:United Nations]] {{DES | des = The convention that, among other things, regulates claims on nations on the sea, such as Territorial Limits and Exclusive Economic Zones. For a
    1 KB (171 words) - 19:42, 11 October 2019
  • ...a is that anarcho-capitalists are wishing for a smaller granularity. These nations have found that it is most cost-efficient to defend themselves territoriall ...rket of nations in a way they would accept being applied to markets within nations.
    82 KB (13,101 words) - 18:17, 12 July 2020
  • ...onsume it. They have been banned in Canada, but continue to be used in the United States after intense lobbying from food industry interests. ...de-containing wood products are illegal in the EU and most other developed nations.
    173 KB (29,471 words) - 22:50, 21 December 2017
  • ...n lifespan, the flame that seemed so dire sputtered. History tells of many nations and peoples going down with their creed, rather than admit its irrelevance, ...ow, for two centuries, we've managed to prevent a true ruling class in the United States... one able to enforce its will and whim without constraint by due p
    39 KB (6,424 words) - 19:19, 29 October 2013
  • ... is exactly the way numerous American leftists would also describe today's United States. In each case, the pictured demon is authority, imposing a rigid sys ...n that it has never been healthier than today. Look at so many new and old nations around the world whose constitutions were modeled on our own, which neverth
    18 KB (2,962 words) - 19:23, 29 October 2013
  • ... Marcos, Anastasio Somoza and Saddam Hussein, on the other hand, ran their nations as personal fiefdoms, enforcing programs of inherited family wealth and pow ...uch as Armed Revolutionary Nuclei (NAR) with slogans such as "Hitler & Mao united in struggle."
    24 KB (3,967 words) - 17:24, 16 December 2020
  • ...pared to accept the consequences.” Reader’s Digest excerpted it in the United States, and many of those who voted for Thomas Dewey in 1948 may have read ...lem and American Democracy and Asian Drama: An Inquiry into the Poverty of Nations. Hayek had written The Sensory Order, The Constitution of Liberty, and La
    16 KB (2,596 words) - 00:07, 6 December 2011
  • ...to public consciousness last year after the Supreme Court, in its Citizens United decision, effectively allowed unrestrained corporate influence in American ...uraged small-scale, local economic activity. Published in 1776, "Wealth of Nations" predates the rise of corporate power, and suggestions by corporate liberta
    11 KB (1,752 words) - 21:41, 30 December 2011
  • ...le that during the current economic crisis, the national government in the United States decided early on to turn its attentions away from employment and tow ... epidemics. The combination drove the crisis in the U.S. and several other nations.
    37 KB (5,956 words) - 09:58, 15 March 2013
  • ...But, strikingly, national identity overshadowed even local identity in the United States, Europe, India, China, and most other regions.
    6 KB (978 words) - 12:49, 14 February 2012
  • individuals and the fruits of their labor. Even within the United The Australian ballot system, introduced into the United States in the
    87 KB (12,718 words) - 13:36, 22 March 2021
  • ...onal and policy proposals that might be adopted by advanced industrialized nations. ...y of Justice, as well as the strong rightward turn in politics in both the United States and the UK in the 1980s, made it abundantly clear that the stringent
    71 KB (10,616 words) - 11:31, 4 June 2012
  • ...e Compact endures…. I confess, we find among the Jews, as well as other Nations, that Men did sell themselves; but, ’tis plain, this was only to Drudgery Gray, Lewis Cecil 1958. History of Agriculture in the Southern United States to 1860. Gloucester: Peter Smith.
    20 KB (3,150 words) - 12:51, 26 January 2020
  • ...te all their supposed Ron Paul love, they trust the “globalist” United Nations even more than they do the feds.
    13 KB (2,266 words) - 11:08, 7 August 2012
  • ...returned to liberalism in a pure and uncorrupted form. Some argue that the United States is a radiant monument to the liberal ideas of its Founders. Others r ...th and eighteenth centuries, of England and Scotland, the Netherlands, the United States, and France. Liberal principles were clearly expressed not just in t
    57 KB (8,804 words) - 22:01, 1 May 2015
  • ...ans in the form of medicines, communications that shrink the world and get united families and friends, create opportunities for open education and learning, ...ur contractors who make the dirty job of global lean production. ―In the United States, most modern slavery involves the coercion of recent trafficked immi
    91 KB (14,096 words) - 18:39, 23 August 2012
  • ..., the Nordic countries, Canada, and others—can be thought of as our peer nations. Here’s what we see when we look at these countries. To our great shame, ...m, homeland security, and intelligence in some 10,000 locations across the United States.
    66 KB (10,599 words) - 12:49, 21 October 2012
  • ...aul.org with WIPO, a global governing body that is an agency of the United Nations. The complaint calls on the agency to expropriate the two domain names from {{Quotations|Ron Paul Calls on United Nations to Confiscate Domain Names of His Supporters|quotes=true}}
    8 KB (1,415 words) - 00:06, 11 February 2013
  • {{DES | des = Developed nations around the world fund education centrally and equally. | show=}} ...at is essential for the good of the public. As the fate of individuals and nations is increasingly interdependent, the quest for access to an equitable, empow
    27 KB (4,007 words) - 13:44, 18 February 2013
  • ...or about 24 percent of all income — simply wouldn’t be possible if the United States weren’t organized as it is. Just about every aspect of America’s ...ld remain to be made that the sort of market-driven economy we have in the United States serves that interest. Indeed, this case would be especially difficul
    14 KB (2,442 words) - 11:00, 27 February 2013
  • ...o the success with which it harmonised diversified and warring schools and united all good things to a single end. Hume and Paley, Burke and Rousseau, Godwin ...I learn upon this subject, the more I feel convinced that the interests of nations, as well as those of individuals, so far from being opposed to each other,
    50 KB (8,357 words) - 10:20, 15 March 2013
  • .... That economics was concerned with the nature and causes of the wealth of nations, and with efficiency and equity: efficiency because it was wasteful not to Recognize that what Eberstadt fears is that he sees the United States at a tipping point, “a symbolic threshold”:
    21 KB (3,502 words) - 13:10, 19 March 2013
  • ...he real world system imposed a contractionary and deflationary bias on the nations that used it. ... money base (Triffin 1985: 153). Right down to the early 19th century most nations were on a bimetallic standard that was based not on gold but on silver (Bor
    8 KB (1,223 words) - 14:36, 19 March 2013
  • ...d of prices of such factors,” Mises then tells us that Britain and other nations after 1945 were in fact socialist but for different reasons: ...ow also socialist too! (Mises 1998: 856). Yet there is no doubt that these nations (like the UK) also had money prices for factors of production. So how can t
    11 KB (1,763 words) - 15:28, 4 April 2017
  • ...l et al. vs. James S. Brown, decided before the First Circuit Court of the United States in the October 1845 term, which is available various places on the w ...aw be adapted based on experiences and practices in other major innovating nations like Japan or Germany? What is the role of direct government subsidies for
    7 KB (1,140 words) - 21:47, 29 March 2013
  • I’m helping lead the fight to defeat this radical treaty in the United States Senate and I want your help. I’m helping lead the fight to defeat this radical treaty in the United States Senate and I want your help.
    10 KB (1,738 words) - 23:44, 12 May 2013
  • {{URL | url = http://gawker.com/united-nations-tells-ron-paul-to-shove-his-lawsuit-righ-509944619}} {{Quotations|United Nations Tells Ron Paul To Shove His Lawsuit Right Up His Ass|quotes=true}}
    3 KB (449 words) - 10:29, 27 May 2013
  • ...d the expression, ‘There is a mighty lot of real estate lying around the United States which does not know who owns it,’ referring to excessive mortgages ...egarding Smoot Hawley, while it undoubtedly hurt foreign export-led growth nations dependent on the US market, it was not a major factor in the US contraction
    8 KB (1,186 words) - 18:13, 17 July 2013
  • ...Parijs 1992) and some also, more speculatively, at the level of the United Nations (see e.g. Kooistra 1994, Frankman 1998, Barrez 1999). ...ir only way of getting food. In this respect, you English, like most other nations, remind me of these incompetent schoolmasters, who prefer caning their pupi
    110 KB (17,946 words) - 13:32, 2 August 2013
  • ...agnets”. As suggested by the observation of inter-state migration in the United States, differences in generosity may have less impact by persuading some p ...5) and Borjas (1999) for discussions of this phenomenon in the case of the United States. 7 See the essays collected in Van Parijs ed. (2003)
    63 KB (9,879 words) - 12:58, 2 August 2013
  • ...he late sixties and early seventies, it enjoyed a sudden popularity in the United States and was even put forward by a presidential candi- date, but it was s ...troduced a genuine basic income, as defined, is the state of Alaska in the United States (see e.g. Palmer 1997). A basic income can also conceivably be paid
    84 KB (13,091 words) - 13:31, 2 August 2013
  • ...“Phillips curve” the government should choose. For example, should the United States accept a higher inflation rate in order to achieve a lower unemploym At the time Friedman and Phelps propounded their ideas, the United States had little experience with sustained inflation. So this was truly a
    40 KB (6,536 words) - 14:27, 12 August 2013
  • ...“Phillips curve” the government should choose. For example, should the United States accept a higher inflation rate in order to achieve a lower unemploym At the time Friedman and Phelps propounded their ideas, the United States had little experience with sustained inflation. So this was truly a
    40 KB (6,569 words) - 14:29, 12 August 2013
  • ... evidenced by his influence on the position taken by the USA at the United Nations Conference on Population held in Mexico City.
    15 KB (2,459 words) - 01:06, 18 August 2013
  • Can we feed the world population, believed by the United Nations estimates to grow from eight to eleven billion in the next half-century? (W Timber prices stood at an all-time low in 1991... [The] eastern United States, which loggers and farmers in the 18th and 19th centuries had nearly
    102 KB (16,055 words) - 22:13, 26 March 2019
  • ...CIALISM, COMMUNISM, KARL MARX, HERITAGE FOUNDATION, CANADA, JAPAN, EUROPE, UNITED STATES, PHILOSOPHY, HONG KONG, SWITZERLAND, NEW ZEALAND, AUSTRALIA, GERMANY ...t with libertarianism. There are 193 sovereign state members of the United Nations—195, if you count the Vatican and Palestine, which have been granted obse
    9 KB (1,399 words) - 23:52, 2 December 2019
  • ...h have risen dramatically. It has, however, had a range of what the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime has referred to as 'unintended negative consequen
    7 KB (1,141 words) - 17:11, 31 August 2013
  • ...s top economic reformer in 2004, and one of the top 20 business-friendly nations in the world. ...tion, Bush declared, ‘This is the most important policy issue facing the United States today.’”
    10 KB (1,520 words) - 17:34, 31 August 2013
  • ...te all their supposed Ron Paul love, they trust the “globalist” United Nations even more than they do the feds.
    13 KB (2,273 words) - 18:02, 31 August 2013
  • ...an rights movement. This was officially enshrined in 1948, when the United Nations adopted a 30-point “Universal Declaration of Human Rights” putting labo ... pretense is the basis on which the ACLU currently supports the Citizens United decision, which effectively legalized the transformation of America into an
    19 KB (3,061 words) - 12:32, 11 February 2014
  • T IS commonplace to speak of the present regime in the United States as a neoconservative one, and to cast as a consolidated “neocon” ...ustain or deepen local poverty and the subordination of peripheral to core nations, but also because it is compatible with, and sometimes even productive of,
    62 KB (9,691 words) - 18:30, 31 August 2013
  • The United States of America has been the most exceptional thing ever to happen to hum ...ly committed a higher ratio of good deeds to crimes than any ten other top nations in the history of the world. Just look at how little-hated it is! But you f
    12 KB (1,969 words) - 11:07, 6 October 2013
  • ...mous US defense spending which created the [[Pax Americana]] allowed other nations to spend less on military and more on education and development. | show=}} ...e why the United States has spent so much more money than any twenty other nations on defense. He deems it a mark of shame, but it has been a burden that larg
    13 KB (2,205 words) - 11:22, 6 October 2013
  • ...ntury when a spate of lead-poisoning cases in children occurred across the United States. The symptoms—vomiting, convulsions, bleeding gums, palsied limbs, In 1922, the League of Nations proposed a worldwide lead paint ban, but at the time, the US was the larges
    27 KB (4,360 words) - 01:19, 24 April 2017
  • ...Warming |global warming denialism]], the [[Tea Party]] and the Citizen’s United ruling all are in the economic interests of (and have been influenced by) t ...t industry, digging up vast landscapes in Alberta Canada occupied by First Nations and turning them into toxic wastelands while churning out deadly emissions.
    97 KB (14,906 words) - 12:36, 7 February 2021
  • ...erican kids are not as serious about their studies as their peers in other nations, the schools must be to blame. At last we have the culprit on which we can ...t of children in Finland live in poverty, as compared to 20 percent in the United States. Those who insist that poverty doesn’t matter, that only teachers
    28 KB (4,541 words) - 13:44, 22 October 2013
  • ...ide scale. Much of that is due to the Pax Americana, especially the United Nations. Which is strongly opposed by libertarians because of their isolationist vi ...ay to those skeptical of your argument for the positive role of the United Nations in the Pax Americana?
    38 KB (6,266 words) - 17:12, 15 August 2018
  • For the first time in decades, the United States saw a steady dismantling of the laws, regulations, programs and prac ...ier to come after our other rights,” says Mike Mulgrew, president of the United Federation of Teachers. “Everything we care about is at stake, from the r
    7 KB (1,166 words) - 15:05, 10 November 2013
  • As the United States slides toward the twenty-first century, the major mass movements cha ... Adjutant General" of the armed militias that have formed cells across the United States. Operating out of the American Justice Federation of Indianapolis, T
    73 KB (11,186 words) - 17:45, 12 November 2013
  • In fact, of all Western nations ranked by the scale of GDP collapse from 1929 onwards during the contractio ... Amaral and MacGee (2002: 50, citing Amaral and MacGee 2001) show that the United States used public works programs much more heavily than Canada did. About
    12 KB (1,734 words) - 14:25, 8 December 2013
  • ...ent could not import more of the bank notes then in use, because of United Nations sanctions, so Mr. Hussein ordered the local printing of a new currency. In ...ainst the dollar. In fall 2002, as it became more and more likely that the United States would invade, the Swiss dinar became more and more valuable.
    27 KB (4,610 words) - 14:59, 31 December 2013

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