Antipathy for the State Is Not Enough

This interview with Mises Institute President Jeff Deist is reprinted from the October 2014 issue of the Lara-Murphy Report.

Lara-Murphy Report: How did you become interested in Austrian economics?

Jeff Deist: I definitely discovered libertarianism first, which then led me to Austrian economics. I was a hardcore libertarian fairly early in life, going to see Ron Paul at a 1988 Libertarian Party campaign event when I was in college. A few years later my close friend Joe Becker enrolled at UNLV for the express purpose of studying under Professor Murray Rothbard in the graduate economics department, and I was able to sit in on a few of Murrays classes. I knew nothing about the Austrian School at the time, but it became clear I needed a more comprehensive intellectual foundation antipathy for the state and a belief that free markets worked better was not enough. Reading Rothbard was my start. This is how most young people today first hear about Mises, Rothbard, or Hayek they already have an interest in libertarian political theory.

They hear references to these great names from their friends, from libertarian think tanks or organizations, from a huge variety of libertarian websites, and from social media, and they begin the process of educating themselves.

The Ron Paul 2012 campaign was a great example of this: people instinctively knew they favored property rights, markets, and peace. They knew they opposed cronyism and the banking cartel. But when Ron mentioned Murray or Mises or Austrian economics or the Fed in a speech, people wanted to go out and find the original sources for themselves. Of course those of us from Generation X remember when vast amounts of free Austrian literature were not just a click away, to put it mildly. If you were lucky your local mall bookstore might have Milton Friedmans Free to Choose and maybe Hayeks Road to Serfdom right next to John Kenneth Galbraiths The Affluent Society. Mises and Rothbard certainly werent available at local libraries or university libraries. All that has changed today.

But obviously the Austrian School predates the modern libertarian movement. Thats why for much of the twentieth century many people read Austrian economics before arriving at philosophical or political libertarianism. The direction was reversed. Smart individuals were absorbing giants like Leonard Read, Henry Hazlitt, and Mises, but they saw themselves as liberals in the classical European tradition of the word. Murray Rothbard deserves much of the credit for building a modern libertarian framework using Austrian economics as the foundation, and creating a bridge for true liberals after the term was hijacked.

LMR: You worked for Ron Paul in his congressional office for several years. I suppose unlike most people in that type of a job, you didnt have to lie every day at work! Is there any story you can share to illustrate the culture of DC and how you were the oddballs?

JD: My favorite anecdote involves other members of Congress asking us to have Ron sign books, photos, etc., for their constituents. This no doubt galled them, because Ron was a celebrity of sorts while they were unknown. But trust me, the average member of Congress deserves to be forgotten. They are a venal, mean, petty, and self-important bunch, despite the fact that maybe 1 in 20 of their constituents knows their names.

Working for Dr. Paul was a great experience. We (as a staff) never had to worry about Ron being tempted to sell out or cast a safe vote due to political pressure. Rons office was far and away the most intellectual and philosophical office on Capitol Hill; the other members of Congress were purely political animals focused either on consolidation of power or self-preservation, depending.

By contrast, we were busy quoting Mises, Rothbard, Bastiat, Tom Woods, Lew Rockwell, Lysander Spooner, you name it, in Rons speeches, statements, press releases, and weekly columns. Virtually everyone on staff was at least familiar with Austrian thought, and we used mises.org as a frequent resource.

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Antipathy for the State Is Not Enough

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Mass evacuation in Philippines as the islands wait for Typhoon Hagupit to strike. – Video


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ESCAP, Kazakhstan Partner to Strengthen Renewable Energy in the Pacific Islands

Bangkok | December 4, 2014

Renewable energy for the Pacific Islands was bolstered this week with the signing of a new Trust Fund Agreement between the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) and the Republic of Kazakhstan, that included a voluntary contribution to ESCAP of US$ 200,000.

Speaking at the signing ceremony, the United Nations Under-Secretary-General and ESCAP Executive Secretary, Dr. Shamshad Akhtar acknowledged the strengthened partnership and welcomed the new trust fund agreement in support of renewable energy in the Pacific Islands.

The Capacity Development Trust Fund Agreement between ESCAP and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Kazakhstan will support development of biogas-based renewable energy solutions in the Pacific Islands, following initial discussions between ESCAP and the Government of Kazakhstan at the Third International Conference for Small Island Developing States, in Samoa, in September 2014.

Food, water and energy security are key priorities for the election campaign of Kazakhstan in the non-permanent members of the UN Security Council 2017-18 biennium, noted H.E. Mr. Marat Yessenbayev, Ambassador, Embassy of the Republic of Kazakhstan, Bangkok during the ceremony.

The project will focus on the installation and rollout of sanitation and energy systems in ten small island developing states (SIDS), which include: Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Timor-Leste and Tonga. This is based on successful experiences and lessons from existing biogas approaches in the Pacific.

The Republic of Kazakhstan is an important partner and emerging donor of ESCAP, providing its support to technical cooperation work in areas of environment, energy and financing for sustainable development, and through hosting ESCAPs Subregional Office for North and Central Asia in Almaty.

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ESCAP, Kazakhstan Partner to Strengthen Renewable Energy in the Pacific Islands

Philippines 10 deadliest storms

With more than 7,100 islands, the country is hit by an average of 20 typhoons or tropical storms each year.

MANILA: Typhoon Hagupit was on Sunday churning across the Philippines, the latest in a never-ending series of often-deadly storms that plague the Southeast Asian archipelago.

With more than 7,100 islands, the country is hit by an average of 20 typhoons or tropical storms each year.

The storms are created above the warmer waters of the Pacific Ocean near the equator, and the Philippines islands are often the first major landmass they hit as they move northwest.

The following are the 10 deadliest typhoons on record in the Philippines*.

1. Super Typhoon Haiyan, the strongest storm ever recorded on land, destroys entire towns across the central Philippines on November 8, 2013. When the government stopped its count months later, more than 7,350 people were listed as dead or missing.

2. Tropical Storm Thelma unleashes flash floods on the central city of Ormoc on Leyte island on November 15, 1991, killing more than 5,100.

3. Typhoon Bopha smashes into the main southern island of Mindanao on December 3, 2012. Rarely hit by major storms, the unprepared region suffers about 1,900 people dead or missing.

4. Typhoon Ike hits the central Philippines on August 31, 1984, killing 1,363 people.

5. Typhoon Washi hits the northern part of Mindanao island on December 16, 2011, killing at least 1,080 people.

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Philippines 10 deadliest storms

War on Illegal Fishing Begins

TAREMPA, RIAU ISLANDS: As the Indonesian Navy blew up three Vietnamese boats for illegally fishing in Indonesian waters on Friday, Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti said such drastic measures would not lead to conflict with other countries in the region.

This is not a war between countries. This is about people stealing our fish and these thieves are businesspeople, Susi told reporters on the sidelines of an anticorruption day celebration at her office.

Susi said the decision to sink illegal ships operated by foreign fishermen was worthy punishment for their crimes and that the Indonesian government had a legal foundation to take such measures.

Article 69 of Law No. 45/2009 on fisheries stipulates that the coast guard can sink foreign vessels operating illegally in the countrys territorial waters based on sufficient preliminary evidence.

Earlier on Friday, in Tanjung Pedas waters near Siantan Island in Anambas Islands regency, Riau Islands province, the Navy destroyed the three Vietnamese fishing boats.

The boats, which were seized by the Navy on Nov. 2, were fired at from a distance by Navy ships until they were sunk.

The Navys Frogmen Command (Kopaska) also attached explosives to the boats.

Dozens of high-ranking officers with the Navy, the Maritime Security Coordinating Board (Bakorkamla) and Anambas Islands regency administration witnessed the sinking of the boats, by the Navys fast patrol boats, KRI Todak and KRI Barakuda, and a Sigma-class Corvette, the KRI Sultan Hasanuddin.

We blew up the boats after the Ranai District Court declared that the ships were seized and were subject to being destroyed, said Rear Admiral Widodo, the commander of the Navys Western Fleet Command.

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War on Illegal Fishing Begins

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