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Walter Block - Libertarian |
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Block went on to earn a Ph.D. in economics at Columbia University in 1972. His dissertation was "The Economics of Rent Control," written under future Nobel laureate Gary Becker. Since then, Block has taught at several colleges and universities, including the College of the Holy Cross and Rutgers University, and is currently Economics Department Chair at the University of Central Arkansas. He has also worked at private think tanks, including several years as the Senior Economist and Director of The Centre for the Study of Economics and Religion at The Fraser Institute in Vancouver. Block's vita runs to 20 pages, and includes articles on such subjects as labor markets, the relationship between religion and economics, housing, employment, discrimination, taxation, zoning, immigration, and many others. He is recognized as an authority on the issue of free-market roads, having written more than a dozen articles on the subject. He has also served as an editor on many journals, including the Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics, the Review of Austrian Economics, The Journal of Libertarian Studies, Cultural Dynamics, and The Journal of Labor Economics. No discussion of Block's work is complete without at least mentioning
his most famous publication: Defending The Undefendable. Of course, any
book that is subtitled "The Pimp, Prostitute, Scab, Slumlord,
Libeler, Moneylender, and Other Scapegoats in the Rogue's Gallery of
American Society," is going to offend many people. Yet, as Murray
Rothbard states in the book's Foreword, "By taking the most extreme
examples and showing how the [free-market] principles work even in these
cases, the book does far more to demonstrate the workability and
morality of the free market than a dozen sober tomes on more respectable
industries and activities." Of course, as Block points out, his
defense of these activities is limited to the claim that these sorts of
individuals do not necessarily initiate physical violence against
others; he makes no claim that engaging in such activities is in any
sense moral. |
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Quotable "Libertarianism does not imply pacifism; it does not forbid the use of violence in defense or even in retaliation against violence. Libertarian philosophy condemns only the initiation of violence -- the use of violence against a non-violent person or his property." -- from the Introduction to Defending the Undefendable. |
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