Archive for the ‘Free Market - Right to Work’ Category

NO HARM – An Ethical Defense of the Free Market

Friday, February 5th, 2010

Wynnewood Institute’s Executive Director Dr. Patrick Burke’s No Harm makes the ethical case for the Free Market. Dr. Burke offers Continuing Legal Education credits in a most interesting class.  Most economists defend the Free Market as the most effective way to allocate scarce resources, that is, through the Free Market pricing ...

The Big Government Statist Solution

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

Big Government Socialism is sold because it is “ free money”to a constituency that seems willing to be dependent on government and another constituency who gets rich from government. The Forgotten Taxpayer, the tax producer, has close to one third of what he or she earns by work or investment, ...

Winning Principle of the Next Election

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

 The trend is toward limiting government. I think the concept of Constitutional Limited Government, Economic Freedom, Individual Autonomy and Accountability is making a comeback. VOTER CONTACT VOTER CONTACT VOTER CONTACT is what is necessary to win elections. Communication builds Community. Ideas and Ideals Unite and Energize. The country is in ...

Traditional Justice and Social Justice

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Traditional Justice versus Social Justice; individual responsibility derived from ideas of free will versus collectivist, scientific and materialistic determines causes beyond individual control.   Dr. Patrick Burke, Executive Director  of the Wynnewood Institute, Wynnewood, Pennsylvania,  makes a concise distinction between traditional, personal justice and collectivist scientific materialist causes. Notes from Wynnewood              October ...

Government Owned GMAC Asks For Money From The Government

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

Controlling the means of financing the means of production is controlling the means of production. When government controls, and, in this case, actually owns, the means of production. What is that called? “The U.S. government's current 35.4% stake in GMAC is the result of a 2009 restructuring of GM.”