Ari Armstrong's Articles
Philosophy
As Some Filipinos Try to Die, One Tries to Live
Ari Armstrong March 30, 2013
Easter properly is a celebration of life. The holiday takes place in Spring, the season of budding leaves and flowers, of hatching eggs, and of newborn deer and other animals. Some think “Easter” derives from the name of a Germanic fertility goddess. But some Christians celebrate death instead. In the…
Philosophy
What’s Wrong with Stomping on “Jesus”?
Ari Armstrong March 28, 2013
When a professor at Florida Atlantic University asked students to stomp on the name of “Jesus” written on a piece of paper, a Mormon student objected. Although the university first threatened to sanction the student, in the face of widespread criticism the university relented and apologized for the exercise. (For…
Politics & Rights
Contra Michael Tanner, Government’s Size is Not the Proper Focus for Advocates of Liberty
Ari Armstrong March 25, 2013
Writing for National Review Online, the Cato Institute’s Michael Tanner argues that “much of the debate over future policy boils down to a question of the size of government.” However, as Eric Daniels points out in his most recent TOS article “Why ‘Big Government’ is Not the Problem,” size is…
Politics & Rights
With Budget Plan, Senate Would Increase Rights Violations, Economic Destruction
Ari Armstrong March 23, 2013
Yes, the national debt is a huge problem. But the proper way to address it is to cut federal spending, not increase taxes. As CBS reports, the senate instead passed a budget plan asking for $975 billion in net tax increases over the coming decade. The plan also includes more…
Politics & Rights
With Abortion Ban Proposal, Rand Paul Assaults Rights and Aids Democrats
Ari Armstrong March 22, 2013
Which party will gain ground next year? Robert Borosage argues for Reuters, “The 2014 midterm election is more likely to be a debacle for Democrats than Republicans. It will take a true political miracle for Democrats to take back the House.” But Rand Paul and his congressional allies are giving…
Economics
The Real Purpose of Central Banks
Ari Armstrong March 22, 2013
Why were central banks established? As Richard Salsman summarizes in his latest TOS article, “The End of Central Banking, Part I”: As government grows and spends more, politicians seek to avoid the electoral consequences of raising taxes and try to rely more on borrowing and printing money, policies that central…
Politics & Rights
Cyprus Rejects One Form of Theft, Leaves Others Intact
Ari Armstrong March 20, 2013
Just days ago the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund pressured the government of Cyprus to blatantly steal up to ten percent of the savings accounts of everyone with money in the country. Reuters reports the results: “People rushed to banks and queued at cash machines that refused to release…
Science & Technology
Thomas Friedman Embraces Keystone Extortion
Ari Armstrong March 16, 2013
In his article “No to Keystone, Yes to Crazy,” New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman damns the Keystone oil pipeline but says he’s willing to accept its existence in exchange for “systemic responses to climate change.” How might environmentalists facilitate such a deal? Friedman encourages the likes of “Bill McKibben…
Politics & Rights
Legislation Should be Based on Individual Rights, not Group Averages
Ari Armstrong March 12, 2013
As a slew of intrusive gun bills wind their way through the Colorado legislature, some of the discussion about those bills raises fundamental questions about the proper function of government. Last week, a woman who was the victim of a rape testified against a bill banning the concealed carry of…
Politics & Rights
Judge Properly Tosses New York City Soda Ban
Ari Armstrong March 11, 2013
Today New York Supreme Court Judge Milton Tingling blocked the New York City soda ban, pointing out that it is “arbitrary and capricious.” The ruling significantly restricted the ability of Mayor Michael Bloomberg, acting through the city’s Board of Health, to regulate people’s consumption of foods. Kudos to Judge Tingling…
Education & Parenting
More Evidence of the Failure of Government Schools (and the Solution)
Ari Armstrong March 8, 2013
In his TOS article “The New Abolitionism: Why Education Emancipation is the Moral Imperative of our Time,” C. Bradley Thompson argues that the “‘public’ [i.e., government] school system is the most immoral and corrupt institution in the United States of America today, and it should be abolished.” Those not yet…
Politics & Rights
Minimum Wage Laws: Economically Harmful Because Immoral
Ari Armstrong March 7, 2013
Free market economists and conservative activists point out that minimum wage laws harm the very people they are supposedly intended to help: unskilled workers. A recent article from the conservative Heritage Foundation, for example, makes this point. The economics is straightforward: Employers are not willing to pay people more than…
Politics & Rights
The Fruits of Capitalism Are All Around Us
Ari Armstrong March 3, 2013
These are shocking statistics: Among Americans ages 18–29, people tend to have a negative view of capitalism and a positive view of socialism. As Pew reported in 2011, people in this age group saw capitalism negatively by a margin of 47 to 46 percent, and they saw socialism positively by…
Politics & Rights
Don’t Expand Sales Taxes, Abolish Them
Ari Armstrong March 1, 2013
Conservatives are against new taxes—unless they are for them. The unprincipled conservative approach is most recently illustrated by a February 14 release from the American Conservative Union (ACU) urging Congress to sanction Internet sales taxes. In the release, ACU president Al Cardenas says the federal government should allow states to…
Economics
Before There Was Amazon, There Was the Sears Catalog
Ari Armstrong February 28, 2013
Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, is a modern American hero. He has put millions of products ranging from books to movies to clothing to groceries within easy reach of millions of customers. But long before there was Amazon, before there was an internet or even computers, there was the…