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Bribing The Economy with Murray Sabrin

  • 6 days ago
  • 2 min read

Today on The Two Mikes, we were joined by Professor Murray Sabrin, who is senior member of

the splendid Mises Institute. Professor Sabrin explained that as the nation’s debt drift’s ever

closer to $40 trillion, both houses of Congress continue to be heavily controlled by their own

eagerness to take bribes from entities like Big Pharma and AIPAC. As the Congress deliberately

fails to protect and strengthen the operations of the Free Market. Indeed, the reach of this

problem goes far beyond the Congress, as the federal and state bureaucracies and many of the

Academy’s economics professors and departments are fully dedicated to promoting and

justifying government intervention in the U.S. economy. Since the New Deal, this economic

interventionism has distorted the Free Market has been just as successful as each president

since Roosevelt’s has sought and failed to prove that overseas military intervention should be

the core of U.S. foreign Policy. Both of these tacks have been notorious and utterly predictable

failures since 1945.

The ongoing disaster of economic interventionism by the federal government, however, can be

easily halted. Professor Sabrin explained, for example, that by simply allowing the factors of

supply and demand to determine the right prices would very quickly eliminate the need for the

federal government’s economic interventionism which, in turn, is the engine for driving prices

higher, as well as increasing the national debt. Sadly, for more than half century such a hands-

off policy has been anathema to the federal government and its seemingly unstoppable printing

presses at the Federal Reserve. In 2026, it seems evident to even those with only high-school

education in economic realities, as well as those blue-collar workers struggling to make ends

meet, must know one thing for sure; namely, that printing billions of new dollars whenever it

strikes the Fed’s fancy will never, ever produce prosperity and economic security for the

America’s working class.

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