The George Buchanan Forum
The George Buchanan Forum
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Tim Nadreau: Fascism By Any Other Name
Monetary and fiscal policy have undergone dramatic changes since Covid-19, and movement towards Modern Monetary Theory has accelerated in the U.S.. Economics as a profession still views the theory as heterodox and has largely left it alone to “die on the vine” as it were. Because MMT is a bit of an intellectual curiosity and is politically advantageous to both the democrats and the republicans, it is gaining momentum in an applied context. Because conservatives and libertarians want to be left alone and to leave others alone, they have too often been apathetic to the weeds growing in their gardens.
I argue that the inflation we have seen over the past few years will not be anomalous in the next two decades. It is the result of MMT slowly taking hold. This talk is designed to provide an overview of the primary assumptions of MMT and untangle the Gordian knot of truth and lies it so carefully weaves together. Finally, we will outline the ultimate consequences, intended or unintended, by such a philosophy of employment, money, and prices.
George Buchanan was a late 16th-century Scottish Reformed thinker who used Scripture, history, and the natural law to argue for the restraint of civil rulers, the resistance to tyranny, and the freedom of Christian citizens. Like its namesake, the George Buchanan Forum is a community of liberty-minded Christians seeking to integrate theology, political theory, economics, and history.
Learn more at...
www.tgbf.org TheGeorgeBuchananForum
มุมมอง: 122

วีดีโอ

Jeremy Bunch: Burning The Land Slowly
มุมมอง 98หลายเดือนก่อน
This talk will help define the increasingly popular term 'regenerative agriculture,' and will explore how it intersects with critical elements of food production sustainability, which is foundational to civilization itself. The systems we have built to produce and distribute food, and just about anything else for that manner, extract and consume finite resources, while at the same time our agri...
George Harrell: Peter Zeihan & The Myth of the Pax Americana
มุมมอง 6Kหลายเดือนก่อน
Contrary to the post-Cold War, triumphalist narrative, after WWII the United States did not altruistically transcend power politics and become the world’s stabilizing umpire. Geopolitics was never turned off as Peter Zeihan claimed, nor did history end as Francis Fukuyama predicted. Instead, it was a period of brutal business as usual, and we are just now becoming aware of the cost. George Buch...
Jonathan McIntosh: Why We Need To Get Serious About Natural Rights
มุมมอง 56หลายเดือนก่อน
Cherished by some while deplored by others, the concept of natural rights has had a deeply ambivalent legacy among conservative Christians. This presentation will give a definition and short history of the concept of natural rights, review some of the main objections to the idea, and conclude with a defense of the coherence and, indeed, inevitability of the doctrine of natural rights. George Bu...
Jordan Dorney: Xenophon and Socratic Libertarianism
มุมมอง 132ปีที่แล้ว
Why does it seem so difficult for people to acquire, exercise, and establish political rule over others? Why can't human rulers get their human "herds" to obey them willingly like shepherds can with sheep? Why is everyone always revolting against the regime? Xenophon's Education of Cyrus begins with reflection on these questions apparently connected to the anthropological case for libertarianis...
Jonathan McIntosh: More Mere Than Mere Christendom
มุมมอง 291ปีที่แล้ว
For over a decade Pr. Douglas Wilson has been introducing the highly suggestive term Mere Christendom into contemporary Christian discourse as a way of describing what it is that Christians ought to be striving for politically. With the recent publication of his book by the same title, this is as opportune a time as any to ask: Just what is “Mere Christendom”? What appear to be its essential af...
George Harrell: A Conservative Rethinking of the French Revolution, Part 2
มุมมอง 96ปีที่แล้ว
The French Revolution has entered the popular imagination as a class conflict arising from Rousseau’s Enlightenment philosophy. However, if we analyze the French revolutions of 1789 and 1792 with a proper historical approach that appreciates the true nature of human action, we discover that the motivations behind these events were far more complex, and even conservative, than have been popularl...
Brian Points: The Quibbling Rabble: The History and Future of US Housing Policy
มุมมอง 107ปีที่แล้ว
Believe it or not, land use policy and its array of offshoots form one of the most hotly contested political issues in the USA today. Topics such as comprehensive plans, conditional use permits, re-zoning, and variances are keeping some of your neighbors up at night. With materials and development costs skyrocketing, state and local elected officials are desperately looking for answers that can...
George Harrell: A Conservative Rethinking of the French Revolution
มุมมอง 236ปีที่แล้ว
The French Revolution has entered the popular imagination as a class conflict arising from Rousseau’s Enlightenment philosophy. However, if we analyze the French revolutions of 1789 and 1792 with a proper historical approach that appreciates the true nature of human action, we discover that the motivations behind these events were far more complex, and even conservative, than have been popularl...
Isaac Madsen: Antidote to Anecdote - Statistics as Crucial to Tertiary Christian Education
มุมมอง 31ปีที่แล้ว
The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted an issue in tertiary Christian education. Many Christians are deficient in their understanding of statistics. Whereas a lack of understanding in specialized fields (e.g. soil science) results in an excusable knowledge gap, an inadequate understanding of statistics bars access to a great deal of knowledge which relies on data. Data is used to make inferences in ...
Jeremy Bunch: Frédéric Bastiat - Economic Harmonies & Discord
มุมมอง 47ปีที่แล้ว
Frédéric Bastiat's (1801-1850) project of critically explaining the glories of free and voluntary markets from an economic perspective went left unfinished due to disease that took him at a relatively young age. However, many of his key thoughts are contained in his book Economic Harmonies. For Bastiat, economic harmony is naturally a result of men living according to God's design. But when men...
Jonathan McIntosh: "I didn't agree to that!" - Consent and Other Theories of Political Obligation
มุมมอง 117ปีที่แล้ว
Does government derive its legitimacy from the consent of the governed? In the modern era, the doctrine of consent has become so popular as to be commonplace, yet it is far from clear what it would actually mean for government to be truly based on consent, or how such a theory is to be reconciled with other Christian convictions on authority, custom, tradition, and submission. This presentation...
Jeremy Bunch: A Libertarian View of Christian Nationalism
มุมมอง 347ปีที่แล้ว
Christian Nationalism has specifically come into its own in the last year as an ideological movement. One of the core driving forces of this movement is the insistence on recognizing objective truth about the world, not giving into ideologically progressive lies about the nature of creation, and therefore recognizing that dictionaries are important to any meaningful discourse in society. Libert...
George Harrell: These Un-United States: National Myth and Political Reality in the American Founding
มุมมอง 180ปีที่แล้ว
Calls for a resurgence of American nationalism are often defended by a supposed historical American national identity that emerged either with the Declaration of Independence in 1776 or with the adoption of the U.S. Constitution in 1789. And indeed, throughout the 1770s, 80s and 90s, American politicians often argued for separation from Britain, and American union, due to their claims of a nati...
Chris Walker: The Last Chain: Building Economic Networks
มุมมอง 94ปีที่แล้ว
A dive into a critical analysis of monetary premia held by current currencies, and a proposal to support local human flourishing through digital currencies targeting local price stability via algorithmic central banks. George Buchanan was a late 16th-century Scottish Reformed thinker who used Scripture, history, and the natural law to argue for the restraint of civil rulers, the resistance to t...
Jonathan McIntosh: What Should We Think About The Social Contract?
มุมมอง 75ปีที่แล้ว
Jonathan McIntosh: What Should We Think About The Social Contract?
Jonathan McIntosh: Common Grace vs. Political Presuppositionalism
มุมมอง 1442 ปีที่แล้ว
Jonathan McIntosh: Common Grace vs. Political Presuppositionalism
George Harrell: How to Create a Coup - How the 1953 Overthrow of Iran Became a CIA Blueprint
มุมมอง 1582 ปีที่แล้ว
George Harrell: How to Create a Coup - How the 1953 Overthrow of Iran Became a CIA Blueprint
Jeremy Bunch: Rothbard - Enemy of the Egalitarians
มุมมอง 812 ปีที่แล้ว
Jeremy Bunch: Rothbard - Enemy of the Egalitarians
Jonathon McIntosh: Pre-fall Civil Government? Why There Wasn’t, and Why It Matters
มุมมอง 1162 ปีที่แล้ว
Jonathon McIntosh: Pre-fall Civil Government? Why There Wasn’t, and Why It Matters
Timothy Nadreau: Ag Subsidies - the World's (Other) Oldest Profession
มุมมอง 2022 ปีที่แล้ว
Timothy Nadreau: Ag Subsidies - the World's (Other) Oldest Profession
George Harrell: The French Road to Vietnam
มุมมอง 542 ปีที่แล้ว
George Harrell: The French Road to Vietnam
Jeremy Bunch: Hard Hearts & Monarchs - Deuteronomy and 1 Samuel
มุมมอง 592 ปีที่แล้ว
Jeremy Bunch: Hard Hearts & Monarchs - Deuteronomy and 1 Samuel
Luke Mason: Cyberpunks for Jesus: A Theology of and Praxeology for Christian Hacktivism
มุมมอง 682 ปีที่แล้ว
Luke Mason: Cyberpunks for Jesus: A Theology of and Praxeology for Christian Hacktivism
Jonathan McIntosh: Theonomy, Westminster, and Libertarianism
มุมมอง 3172 ปีที่แล้ว
Jonathan McIntosh: Theonomy, Westminster, and Libertarianism
George Harrell: The Munich Myth: Reexamining the Lead-up to WWII and Appeasement
มุมมอง 872 ปีที่แล้ว
George Harrell: The Munich Myth: Reexamining the Lead-up to WWII and Appeasement
Jeremy Bunch: George Buchanan & Scots Reformed Resistance Theory
มุมมอง 2013 ปีที่แล้ว
Jeremy Bunch: George Buchanan & Scots Reformed Resistance Theory
Chris Walker - Taking from Caesar: Cryptocurrency as a Better Game of Money
มุมมอง 493 ปีที่แล้ว
Chris Walker - Taking from Caesar: Cryptocurrency as a Better Game of Money
George Harrell - Southern Slavery & Confederate Socialism
มุมมอง 2.5K3 ปีที่แล้ว
George Harrell - Southern Slavery & Confederate Socialism
Jonathan McIntosh - Evaluating Calvin: A Critique of On Civil Government
มุมมอง 1883 ปีที่แล้ว
Jonathan McIntosh - Evaluating Calvin: A Critique of On Civil Government

ความคิดเห็น

  • @adurpandya2742
    @adurpandya2742 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

    The entire premise of your arguement is wrong because the US was not a hegemon during the cold war. The last 30 years of US-secured globalization have been an extremely useful post-colonial evener. Rich powerful countries had to struggle to maintain wealth and relevance, while poor countries built relevance and power to keep others out.

    • @adurpandya2742
      @adurpandya2742 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      That said, the usefulness of US hegemony is over and its time for it to end.

  • @gibsons7057
    @gibsons7057 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I am a direct descendant of GB.. I am a Gibson/Lundy

  • @user-jd9kg3pd9z
    @user-jd9kg3pd9z 17 วันที่ผ่านมา

    What makes Zeihan’s essays valuable is that he’s able to look forward, to predict coming events. Both in terms of chaos & conflict AND in terms of future opportunities. If you are an investor and have money on the table this material is highly valuable. Not only does he base his analysis on economic data, geography, politics but he has eye opening information on demographics. Your arguments are honest but you are not telling us something we don’t already know. Where is the value? Why would I want more of this? There are no AH HAW moments in your talk. No insightful break throughs. You are mucking about listing the sins of past US governments. Looking backwards. There are a million other historians doing the same thing. You simply don’t understand your opponent. KNOW YOUR OPPONENT before you step into the ring.

  • @Kenneth_James
    @Kenneth_James 29 วันที่ผ่านมา

    This clickbait bullshit. A one man show, an epic tale of omission. A circle jerk exercise in confirmation bias.

  • @vwrenn8016
    @vwrenn8016 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I’m sorry, but this also misses Zeihan’s greater point all together. This guy wants to point out understood truths of history and say that Zeihan is wrong because he doesn’t celebrate these facts. This is just a speech about the speaker not getting it. I encourage anyone reading this and the speaker himself to read “end of the world..” and then watch some of Zeihan’s forums in the interest of understanding what is being spelled out.

  • @vwrenn8016
    @vwrenn8016 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I get building your case but 14min of a 30 min presentation? He says nothing of substance, until min 15. And nothing new. Yes, CIA and the US made poor choices siding w/ and supporting thugs but none of this is breaking news! It was a mess. We know that. What’s your point? It’s so familiar that I feel like I’m listening to a geo politics discussion I had in a thousand times with fellow college students in 1996. And at No time does he actually dispel Zeihan’s foundational premise. Read “the end of the world is just the big inning” it’s 500 pg’s, each of which is more entertaining than this presentation. This is nothing more than “coattails criticism”

  • @coffman1809
    @coffman1809 หลายเดือนก่อน

    So, what's your point? The US government acted on behalf of US political and economic interests. If long term planning was involved rather than post war opportunism, all the better. Communism was the sworn enemy to western capitalism and were also engaged in covert operations to gain power and influence throughout the world. Zeihans interpretations on the development of the post-war Bretton Woods arrangement are accurate and that arrangement raised that standard of living through (mostly) peaceful means for much of the world up to this very day. You make a lot of statements, but don't indicate what YOU would have done if you were at the helm of US foreign economic and military policy. Your next video (I did subscribe) should include your global policy strategy that would have made the US economy more robust than it is, in that same time frame. I would also enjoy hearing your political and economic policy recommendations for reindustrializing North America to produce the things we need for our standard of living if China and other non-western producers go into decline, as Zeihan suggests. I look forward to your future work.

  • @user-wb4cp7se7f
    @user-wb4cp7se7f หลายเดือนก่อน

    The incel platform is strange

  • @Robau1
    @Robau1 หลายเดือนก่อน

    We’ve gone from the “ugly Americans “ to the “ungrateful Americans”.

  • @Robau1
    @Robau1 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The gentleman represents a generation of males SAVED from a world were they are drafted into service, thanks pax America.

  • @Robau1
    @Robau1 หลายเดือนก่อน

    All this guy did was cherry pick post World War II history. Did this guy support his pax America criticism?

  • @Barklord
    @Barklord หลายเดือนก่อน

    When liberal Market Ideology is the source of authority, it results in hierarchies and bureaucracy that subordinate workers and their families to the logic of profit and property accumulation. This is why Christians are caught in a contradiction of trying to serve two masters. Capitalism is a source of both government and corporate bureaucracy. Jesus was not a propertarian style libertarian capitalist.

  • @paulmurray8922
    @paulmurray8922 หลายเดือนก่อน

    All true but it doesn't prove that Pax Americana is a myth. In fact, this reinforces it. The US grew more powerful, even as there were numerous wars, as had always been the case throughout history, but no repeat of those two 20th century global convulsions.

    • @dabrack9350
      @dabrack9350 หลายเดือนก่อน

      You are correct. The Pax Americana worked to win the Cold War and the small wars, though many, only broke out when America did not choose to stop them. Vietnam was our biggest mistake; the Arab/Israeli wars snuck by when we were too focused on Vietnam; Korea was imposed before we realized the extent of our obligations.

    • @robertlewis2542
      @robertlewis2542 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@dabrack9350 ya I get what your saying but I am not so sure I would call Vietnam a mistake? My take on that would be more along the lines; after accidently building stronger Asian allies during the Korean Conflict the US did not miss a chance to do it on purpose using Vietnam.

    • @dabrack9350
      @dabrack9350 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@robertlewis2542 The communism containment policy was valid, even the Domino Theory proved correct when Laos and Cambodia fell to communists within months of the fall of Saigon. I say Vietnam was a mistake because Hoe Chi Mien helped us fight the Japanese expecting support for independence. When we listened to the French whine and cry to get their colonies back we should have helped Hoe get his country's freedom. If we had we could have done the right thing, insisted he drop the communist thing, and would not have been fighting for the wrong side.

    • @robertlewis2542
      @robertlewis2542 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@dabrack9350 I am going to have to agree with everything you said. I wasn't thinking that far back... but yes and much the same can be said for China if you go back that far.

    • @dabrack9350
      @dabrack9350 20 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@robertlewis2542 It's been good thinking through these things with you.

  • @Nukelover
    @Nukelover หลายเดือนก่อน

    It didn't seem to be the purpose of the talk, but it would be nice if such things ended with a crack at a reasonable solution. We often hear people bemone one state of affairs or another (e.g. mideast conflict), or give an excellent history lesson, as shown here, but then often we hear nothing about a path forward that the parties involved can take seriously.

  • @steverocicr2369
    @steverocicr2369 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This theology major is using Zeihan's name to get clicks. He cherry picks a few exceptions to the rules based order to say PZ is wrong, but does nothing to disprove the general accuracy of his argument. Horseshit video.

  • @arandmorgan
    @arandmorgan หลายเดือนก่อน

    These views are mine and mine alone, I don't want the universities associated with my moral scruples. 😂 Class

  • @joecincotta5805
    @joecincotta5805 หลายเดือนก่อน

    An alternate universe where Louis CK gets into economics... And theology?

  • @bonkersblock
    @bonkersblock หลายเดือนก่อน

    This dude read the book of Zeihan, I thought he’s making a valid rebuttal of his book? 😂

  • @gyorgygajdos1657
    @gyorgygajdos1657 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Where's the myth??? I can find out myself what Zeihan says. Where's your argument what is what YOU have to say?

    • @georgebadey8071
      @georgebadey8071 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Came here to say this. Get to the point guy 🤦‍♂️ - yes we did all that crazy shit, and you could say we shouldn't have, but that doesn't mean it wasn't all attempts to secure global trade and resource markets away from the Soviets

  • @kaltwies
    @kaltwies หลายเดือนก่อน

    The USA entangling ourselves into foreign alliances is a violation of the fundamental principles our beautiful Country was founded upon. Peter gives excellent lessons in geography and demographics. He confesses he’s an internationalist, Atlanticist and a huge fan of the Bretton Woods order and bemoans its collapse.

  • @xxchuangtzu6186
    @xxchuangtzu6186 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A standard, pedestrian overview of US global policy. One waits in vain for any non-trivial discussion of Zeihan's work. Freaking bait and switch!

  • @colgategilbert8067
    @colgategilbert8067 หลายเดือนก่อน

    A miss read on Bretton Woods and the US role in Globalization. 1, by 1944-46, the US had been dragged, kicking and screaming, into sorting out 2 European Messes and saw a 3rd on the Horizon. The redacted sections of Bretton Woods came up with a plan to deal with this. 2, the USN guaranteed Global Maritime Shipping, Not world peace. Talk of World Peace was all a cover to make the US costs for Globalization politically palatable. Rather, Globalization was a bribe to join the US as allies vs the Soviet Union. This worked because the European States had had to rely on reaching out of Europe for resources for the previous 500 years in order to survive in the Ultra competitive European theater. Without Navies to protect shipping, they were doomed. 3, after the Soviet Union fell, the US fished around for an alternative strategic purpose for Globalization all the while retooling its Navy for policing, but not Maritime Security. 4, the US sacrificed about 1/3 of its business, capital and jobs over 70 years to keep Globalization going. The US voters and industry are now tired of the expense. 5, so now, Globalization is coming to an end because a lack of tools to protect shipping, with unsurprising consequences.

  • @Frederiknshansen
    @Frederiknshansen หลายเดือนก่อน

    Christians...

  • @joffrethegiant
    @joffrethegiant หลายเดือนก่อน

    The CFA is a great outrage.

    • @Robau1
      @Robau1 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Almost as outrageous as an adult making an inflammatory statement without any evidence backing his supposed “outrage”.

  • @joffrethegiant
    @joffrethegiant หลายเดือนก่อน

    I'm here for any mention of the OSS.

  • @PaulVanderKlay
    @PaulVanderKlay 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Not enough views and no comments on this. I'm doing my part. :)

    • @danielhoward7310
      @danielhoward7310 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Definitely worth listening to. Really tied in and clarified what you were talking about on the Peterson/Shellenberger video, the invitational aspect.

  • @thomascarpenter6492
    @thomascarpenter6492 ปีที่แล้ว

    Let's go! Our guy

  • @libertycoffeehouse3944
    @libertycoffeehouse3944 ปีที่แล้ว

    I think your analysis is wrong on this. The key to World War II is understanding who financed it. The German Air Force was dependent on synthetic oil from the US which we provided. US and European banks were financing both sides yet these corporations were not prosecuted for treason. Hitler never rose to power he was brought to power by US and European corporations. GE provided money to the NAZI party. Look at all the American corporations that were involved with IG Farben. It was the Rothschild's, Rockefeller's, Warburgs, Schiff's and Baring's family that were behind WWII. They wanted to centralize the state in the US and around the world. The Rockefeller War and Peace Studies planned World War II. It was the international banking families who planned WWI and WWII.

  • @libertycoffeehouse3944
    @libertycoffeehouse3944 ปีที่แล้ว

    Good presentation!

  • @libertycoffeehouse3944
    @libertycoffeehouse3944 ปีที่แล้ว

    I agree with everything you said but the united States was a Federation under the Articles and it remained a Federation when they formed a more perfect union though it provided for specifically enumerated powers. As soon as the ink was dry, it was usuped with a national bank which was understood by all was not authorized, a carriage tax, and whiskey tax. Love George Washington the General but not George the president.