Who Said This?

[cross-posted at Liberty & Power]

That idea of hardships being good for character and of talent always being able to break through is an old fallacy. Talent alone is helpless today. Any success requires both talent and luck. And the “luck” has to be helped along and provided by someone. … Talent does not survive all obstacles. In fact, in the face of hardships, talent is the first one to perish; the rarest plants are usually the most fragile. Our present-day struggle for existence is the coarsest and ugliest phenomenon that has ever appeared on earth. It takes a tough skin to face it, a very tough one. Are talented people born with tough skins? Hardly. In fact, the more talent one possesses the more sensitive one is, as a rule. And if there is a more tragic figure than a sensitive, worthwhile person facing life without money – I don’t know where it can be found. …

[H]elp for young talent …. not only provides human, decent living conditions which a poor beginner could not afford anywhere else, but it provides that other great necessity of life: understanding. It makes a beginner feel that he is not, after all, an intruder with all the world laughing at him and rejecting him at very step, but that there are people who consider it worthwhile to dedicate their work to helping and encouraging him. Isn’t such an organization worthy of everyone’s support? … So many gamble on roulette, and slot machines, and horses. Why not gamble for a change on human beings and human futures?

See the answer.


In Beigest Day, In Plaidest Night

Once upon a time there was kryptonite, and it was green, and it was good. (I mean, storywise good.)

Then they added red kryptonite, gold kryptonite, blue kryptonite, silver kryptonite, etc., etc., each one with a different effect. And it was … kinda dumb.

Once upon a time there was a Green Lantern Corps ….


Gil Guillory named Research Associate

Gil GuilloryFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Libertarian writer and entrepreneur Gil Guillory has been named Research Associate.

AUBURN, ALABAMA – April 27, 2009 – Libertarian writer and entrepreneur Gil Guillory has been named Research Associate of the Molinari Institute. In his role, Guillory will continue his research programme on a business model for private security, Subscription Patrol and Restitution.

Guillory has authored, co-authored, and presented papers on Subscription Patrol and Restitution since 2006. All of the work is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution, and is available on a web archive. Guillory has written for strike-the-root.com, anti-state.com, lewrockwell.com, and mises.org. His most recent publication was “The Role of Subscription Patrol and Restitution in the Future of Liberty,” co-authored with Patrick Tinsley, and published in Libertarian Papers.

Gil Guillory and his dinnerMolinari Institute President Roderick Long said of the move “Gil has demonstrated a commanding knowledge of private security, taking a hard-nosed business approach to market anarchism. We’re very pleased to announce Gil is joining the Institute.”

###

ORGANIZATIONAL SUMMARY

The mission of the Molinari Institute is to promote understanding of the philosophy of Market Anarchism as a sane, consensual alternative to the hypertrophic violence of the State. The Institute takes its name from Gustave de Molinari (1819-1912), originator of the theory of Market Anarchism.

CONTACT
Roderick T. Long
Molinari Institute
BerserkRL@yahoo.com
http://praxeology.net/molinari.htm


Go Read a Bunch of Stuff

Charles has a new post on W’a L’ma R’t. Stephan replies here, albeit to arguments different from those Charles actually gave. Also check out this long thread on Da Leftlib and related issues (wherein it transpires inter alia that William G. has doubts about “the Carson/Long project,” though I’m not entirely sure what that is).


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