Murray Rothbard Quotes

Powerful Murray Rothbard for Daily Growth

The very essence of political philosophy is the carving out of an ethical system - strictly, a subset of ethics dealing with political ethics. Ethics is the one rational discipline that demands the establishment of a rational set of value judgments; political ethics is that subset applying to matters of State.

- Murray Rothbard

Very, Set, Applying, Carving

We have gotten to the point where everything the government does is counterproductive; the conclusion, of course, is that the government should do nothing at all, that is, should retire quickly from the monetary and economic scene and allow freedom and free markets to work.

- Murray Rothbard

Allow, Monetary, Gotten, Counterproductive

Apart from medieval China, which invented both paper and printing centuries before the West, the world had never seen government paper money until the colonial government of Massachusetts emitted a fiat paper issue in 1690.

- Murray Rothbard

Before, Seen, Had, Centuries

Now judicial review, beloved by conservatives, can, of course, fulfill the excellent function of declaring government interventions and tyrannies unconstitutional. But it can also validate and legitimize the government in the eyes of the people by declaring these actions valid and constitutional.

- Murray Rothbard

Excellent, Fulfill, Judicial

The contemporary political scientist believes that he can avoid the necessity of moral judgments and that he can help frame public policy without committing himself to any ethical position.

- Murray Rothbard

Scientist, Committing, Public Policy

In the panic of 1819, the protectionists stressed the lack of consumer markets abroad and the necessity for building up a market at home. The inflationists, on the other hand, stressed the shortage of money capital available to manufacturers as a cause of the crisis.

- Murray Rothbard

Other, Abroad, Capital, Manufacturers

The successful entrepreneurs on the free market will be the ones most adept at anticipating future business conditions. Yet, the forecasting can never be perfect, and entrepreneurs will continue to differ in the success of their judgments. If this were not so, no profits or losses would ever be made in business.

- Murray Rothbard

Perfect, Entrepreneurs, Adept

In the market, the fittest are those most able to serve the consumers; in government, the fittest are those most adept at wielding coercion and/or those most adroit at making demagogic appeals to the voting public.

- Murray Rothbard

Making, Fittest, Coercion, Adept

The picture of the free market is necessarily one of harmony and mutual benefit; the picture of State intervention is one of caste conflict, coercion, and exploitation.

- Murray Rothbard

Harmony, Free Market, Caste, Coercion

The majority is not society, is not everyone. Majority coercion over the minority is still coercion.

- Murray Rothbard

Society, Over, Still, Coercion

The State provides a legal, orderly, systematic channel for the predation of private property; it renders certain, secure, and relatively 'peaceful' the lifeline of the parasitic caste in society.

- Murray Rothbard

Private, Channel, Systematic, Caste

A robber who justified his theft by saying that he really helped his victims, by his spending giving a boost to retail trade, would find few converts; but when this theory is clothed in Keynesian equations and impressive references to the 'multiplier effect,' it unfortunately carries more conviction.

- Murray Rothbard

References, Justified, Converts

It is in war that the State really comes into its own: swelling in power, in number, in pride, in absolute dominion over the economy and the society.

- Murray Rothbard

War, Own, Over, Dominion

If you wish to know how libertarians regard the State and any of its acts, simply think of the State as a criminal band, and all of the libertarian attitudes will logically fall into place.

- Murray Rothbard

Think, Will, Libertarians, Logically

As 'Austrian' business cycle theory has pointed out, any bank credit inflation sets up conditions for boom-and-bust; there is no need for prices actually to rise.

- Murray Rothbard

Business, Need, Sets, Pointed

'The General Theory' was not truly revolutionary at all but merely old and oft-refuted mercantilist and inflationist fallacies dressed up in shiny new garb, replete with newly constructed and largely incomprehensible jargon.

- Murray Rothbard

New, Old, Constructed, Newly

The underconsumptionist of 1819 believed that consumption would be stimulated by tariffs, while the underconsumptionist of a later day urged monetary expansion as the remedy. On the other hand, the remedy proposed for the shortage of money capital was monetary inflation in 1819, encouragement of savings and thrift in the 1930s.

- Murray Rothbard

Other, 1930s, Capital, Remedy

Famine emerges from a lack of interlocal trade; when one locality's food crop fails, since there is virtually no trade with other localities, the bulk of the people starve. It is precisely the permeation of the free market throughout the world that has virtually ended this scourge of famine by permitting trade between areas.

- Murray Rothbard

Free Market, Other, Starve, Famine

Declines in specific industries can never ignite a general depression. Shifts in data will cause increases in activity in one field, declines in another.

- Murray Rothbard

Data, Will, Activity, Ignite

I think one of the most important directions to be pursued in the 'sciences of human action' is to develop a natural-law ethics based on nature rather than, or at least to supplement, ethics based on theological revelation.

- Murray Rothbard

Think, I Think, Based, Theological

It is human nature that when you see something work well, you do more of it. If, in its ceaseless quest for revenue, government sees a seemingly harmless method of raising funds without causing much inflation, it will grab on to it.

- Murray Rothbard

Quest, Inflation, Without, Funds

The Jacksonians were libertarians, plain and simple. Their program and ideology were libertarian; they strongly favored free enterprise and free markets, but they just as strongly opposed special subsidies and monopoly privileges conveyed by government to business or to any other group.

- Murray Rothbard

Other, Ideology, Privileges, Conveyed

Commercial banks - that is, fractional reserve banks - create money out of thin air. Essentially, they do it in the same way as counterfeiters.

- Murray Rothbard

Commercial, Air, Banks, Reserve

Fractional reserve banks are sitting ducks and are always subject to contraction. When the banks' state of inherent bankruptcy is discovered, for example, people will tend to cash in their deposits, and the contractionary, deflationary pressure could be severe.

- Murray Rothbard

Example, Discovered, Subject, Reserve

Out of the bitter experiences of the panic of 1819 emerged the beginnings of the Jacksonian movement, dedicated to hard money, the eradication of fractional reserve banking in general, and of the Bank of the United States in particular.

- Murray Rothbard

United States, Dedicated, Reserve

It should be clear that modern fractional reserve banking is a shell game, a Ponzi scheme, a fraud in which fake warehouse receipts are issued and circulate as equivalent to the cash supposedly represented by those receipts.

- Murray Rothbard

Game, Which, Equivalent, Reserve

The natural law is, in essence, a profoundly 'radical' ethic, for it holds the existing status quo, which might grossly violate natural law, up to the unsparing and unyielding light of reason.

- Murray Rothbard

Law, Reason, Which, Ethic

The most famous and one of the most thoroughgoing opponents of bank credit was Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson reacted to the panic of 1819 as a confirmation of his pessimistic views on banks.

- Murray Rothbard

Famous, Banks, Opponents, Confirmation

There is no need for government to intervene in money and prices because of changing population or for any other reason. The 'problem' of the proper supply of money is not a problem at all.

- Murray Rothbard

Reason, Need, Other, Intervene

Leading the boom of 1838 were state governments, who, finding themselves with the unexpected windfall of a distributed surplus from the federal government, proceeded to spend the money wildly and borrow even more extravagantly on public works and other uneconomic forms of 'investment.'

- Murray Rothbard

Other, Boom, Works, Distributed

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