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The digital fortress of Murray Rothbard, Ludwig von Mises, and Austrian School economics. A radical archive on libertarian ethics and rational action.
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Select an action from the console to start the Non-Aggression Principle (NAP) and moral value simulation.
Intellectual Foundation
Discover a radical manifesto built on the non-aggression principle and the moral and economic collapse of the state apparatus.
The state has never been the product of a social contract; it has always been the product of conquest and exploitation.
— Murray N. Rothbard
Radical Critique
A radical analysis of all systems, from socialism to minarchism, conservatism to fascism, through the lens of property rights.
Explore Critiques →"Without property, liberty is an illusion."
— The Ethics of Liberty
Libertarian Resources
A step-by-step roadmap for those who want to take their first step into libertarianism. Each resource is designed to take you to the next level.
→ See Full PathFrederic Bastiat
A magnificent work explaining the unseen destructive effects of state intervention. Every intervention has a cost and an 'unseen' cost.
Thomas Sowell
An accessible introduction connecting economic thinking with everyday life.
Murray N. Rothbard
A concise introduction to discovering the real causes of economic crises. How does the state create crises?
Murray N. Rothbard
The masterpiece that destroys the illusion of state legitimacy. What is the state, where does it come from, why is it unjust?
Walter Block
Explains what NAP is and why it is a universal moral rule.
Murray N. Rothbard
A short but powerful essay proving that taxation is slavery.
Henry Hazlitt
A classic that debunks economic fallacies and shows how the market really works.
Murray N. Rothbard
The monumental work establishing the absolute moral foundations of property rights. The philosophical basis of libertarianism.
Hans-Hermann Hoppe
Radical theses explaining the relationship between democracy, elections, and property rights.
Murray N. Rothbard
The anarcho-capitalist manifesto detailing how a stateless society functions.
Murray N. Rothbard
Radical theses on individual secession and the dismantling of the state.
Murray N. Rothbard
A systematic demolition of every type of state intervention in the market.
Online
The most comprehensive libertarian resource library. Thousands of articles, books, and videos. Free access.
Online
America's largest libertarian think tank. Policy analysis and research.
Online
Essential resources for libertarian thought. Educational videos and articles.
Austrian School Glossary
Praksiyoloji
The deductive science of human action. Economics is not a laboratory science or mathematical modeling; it is the study of rational choices individuals make using scarce means to achieve specific ends.
Zaman Tercihi
The extent to which people prefer present satisfaction over future satisfaction. Low time preference (saving and investing) builds civilization. Inflationary fiat money forces people into high time preference (immediate consumption).
İtibari Para
Paper money that has no physical backing (like gold) and is declared legal tender by state decree. Because it can be printed endlessly, it acts as a hidden tax (inflation) that steals purchasing power.
Ahbap-Çavuş Kapitalizmi
A corrupt system entirely distinct from free markets, where giant corporations collude with bureaucrats to crush competitors using state regulations, licenses, and subsidies. This is how true monopolies form.
Müştereklerin Trajedisi
A situation where a resource (like a forest or river) is 'public property' (unowned), leading everyone to exploit and pollute it without accountability. The only solution to pollution is private property rights.
Spontane Düzen
The magnificent order that emerges from the voluntary interactions of countless individuals pursuing their own goals, without any central planner. Language, money, and the free market are products of spontaneous order.
Marjinal Fayda
The economic discovery proving that the value of a good is not determined by the 'labor' put into it, but by the subjective satisfaction derived from its most recently consumed (marginal) unit. (Subjective Theory of Value).
Katallaksi
The branch of praxeology dealing specifically with market exchange and the price mechanism. The analytical study of free market phenomena where people create value through voluntary trades.
Saldırmazlık Prensibi
The moral axiom that no one has the right to initiate 'first force' (aggression) against another's life or property. It is the absolute foundation of Libertarian law and ethics.
Kısmi Rezerv Bankacılığı
A system where banks keep only a fraction of deposited funds in reserve, creating the rest out of thin air as credit. It is a form of legalized fraud and the root cause of the boom-bust business cycle.
Girişimci
The driving force of the market who bears uncertainty, forecasts future consumer needs, and organizes capital. They create value and are guided by the strict discipline of the profit and loss mechanism.
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"Roads were not invented by the state; the first modern highways were built by private companies. In a free market, highways, bridges, and streets are built and managed by private companies, neighborhood co-ops, or merchant associations. Even today, private toll roads in many countries are safer, better maintained, and higher quality than government roads. State roads remain broken due to inefficient bureaucracy, corruption, and crony contracting."
"State welfare programs do not cure poverty; they institutionalize it and create dependency. The US 'War on Poverty' has not changed poverty rates in 60 years. Before the welfare state, people relied on mutual aid societies, religious charities, guild systems, and family bonds for thousands of years. Voluntary charity is far more efficient than forced taxation because there is no bureaucratic overhead and aid reaches those who truly need it directly."
"Law does not have to be a state monopoly; history shows law existed before the state (pre-Roman trade law, Medieval merchant courts). People will use private arbitration courts and insurance agencies to resolve disputes. Polycentric law distributes justice faster, cheaper, and more impartially through competition. Even today, the majority of international trade disputes are resolved through private arbitration."
"Even today, private security guards outnumber state police 3 to 1 globally. In a free market, security is provided by competing Private Defense Agencies. Driven by customer satisfaction, they have zero tolerance for brutality or corruption. State police's lack of accountability, systemic violence, and corruption are institutional problems — because their 'customer' (the citizen) cannot choose an alternative."
"The biggest cause of pollution is the Tragedy of the Commons (unowned resources). Rivers, lakes, and forests are 'public' — meaning unowned — so everyone pollutes and nobody is held accountable. If they were privately owned, no one could poison another's property without facing severe liability. History's worst environmental disasters were caused by states (USSR's Aral Sea, China's air pollution), not private property owners."
"A corporation cannot force you to pay taxes, buy its products, or obey its laws — only the state can do that at gunpoint. Corporations only survive by serving you well; the moment they deliver bad service, you switch to a competitor. True exploitation always comes from the legal monopoly: the state. Every historically 'exploitative' corporation (like the British East India Company) was protected by state-granted monopoly privileges."
"Public schools focus on producing obedient citizens, not critical thinkers — they were designed on the Prussian model to produce soldiers for the army. In a free market, private schools, online platforms (like Khan Academy, Coursera), homeschooling, and skill co-ops would compete to offer much higher quality, personalized, and cheaper education. Competition raises quality; state monopoly only lowers standards."
"What makes healthcare expensive is state licensing quotas (organizations like the AMA that artificially reduce doctor supply), drug patents (20-year monopoly rights that eliminate competition), and insurance regulations. Before 1960, US healthcare was very affordable because state intervention was minimal. In a free market, insurance companies, health cooperatives, and direct primary care clinics would make care accessible to everyone."
"Money is not an invention of the state; it emerged spontaneously in the market. Throughout history, gold, silver, salt, shells, and today Bitcoin are examples of sound money chosen by the market. State fiat money only creates inflation, loss of purchasing power, and intergenerational theft. Under the gold standard, prices remained stable for centuries."
"Minimum wage doesn't protect workers — it prices the least skilled workers out of the labor market. If a worker's productivity is $10/hour and the state mandates $15/hour, that worker gets fired because employing them means a net loss. Minimum wage effectively says 'anyone below this productivity level is forbidden from working.' The real minimum wage is always zero: unemployment."
"'Equality of opportunity' sounds noble but in practice means forcibly confiscating others' property. People naturally have different talents, families, and circumstances; 'equalizing' this can only be done by punishing the successful, robbing them through taxes, and restricting freedom. The result is not equality but equal misery for all. True justice is respecting everyone's property rights."
"Democracy is the legitimization of the majority plundering the minority's rights. Two wolves and a sheep voting on dinner is democracy. As Hoppe demonstrated, democratic politicians manage the country like 'renters' — they don't think long-term, they borrow and inflate the money supply for short-term votes. No vote can legitimately deprive you of your property, liberty, or bodily autonomy."
"'Social justice' is, as Hayek argued, a meaningless term — because justice can only exist between individuals; 'society' cannot be just or unjust. In practice, 'social justice' always means: the state will forcibly take some people's property and redistribute it to others. This is not justice; it is organized theft. True justice is no one aggressing against anyone else's life or property (NAP)."
"There is not a single example in history of a permanent, exploitative monopoly that formed without state intervention. All known monopolies (including Standard Oil) were protected by state privileges, regulations, and licensing barriers. In a free market, no matter how big a company gets, competitors enter the moment it delivers poor service. Anti-trust laws are actually weapons used by big corporations to crush their smaller competitors."
"Conscription is slavery — no one can be forced to die for someone else's cause. In a free market, defense is provided by volunteer professional armies, private security companies, armed citizens, and defense cooperatives. The Swiss model (armed citizenry) and historical examples (American Revolution militia forces) prove alternatives exist. Moreover, the largest wars in history were started by states, not individuals."

1926 — 1995
1926
Murray N. Rothbard was born in NY. Seeds of an intellectual revolution were planted.
1962
His masterpiece, a complete synthesis of Austrian School economic theory, was published.
1973
'For a New Liberty' was published, outlining the political course of modern anarcho-capitalism.
1982
Helped found the Mises Institute, building the academic fortress of libertarian ideas.
1995
Passed away, leaving behind a massive corpus that continues to shake the state and authority.
— Murray N. Rothbard