by Greg Stuessel | Oct 26, 2025 | The Deep Dive
When Money Destroys Nations by Philip Haslam and Russell Lamberti delivers a gripping, firsthand account of Zimbabwe’s catastrophic hyperinflation from 2000 to 2009, where annual inflation peaked at an incomprehensible 89.7 sextillion percent in November 2008....
by Greg Stuessel | Oct 25, 2025 | The Deep Dive
When Money Dies is Adam Ferguson’s harrowing 1975 account of the Weimar Republic’s hyperinflation (1919–1923), one of history’s most catastrophic monetary collapses. Starting from a stable pre-war mark, Germany’s currency was destroyed by wartime borrowing, Versailles...
by Greg Stuessel | Oct 24, 2025 | The Deep Dive
Affirmative Action Around the World presents Thomas Sowell’s eye-opening empirical study of government-mandated group preferences across countries, cutting through intentions and moral claims to examine real-world outcomes. Despite every nation insisting its policy is...
by Greg Stuessel | Oct 23, 2025 | The Deep Dive
The Letters of Junius (1769–1772) showcases the anonymous writer’s fearless, razor-sharp attacks on Prime Minister Duke of Grafton, Lord North, Lord Mansfield, and even implicitly King George III—letters that terrified the government while galvanizing public opinion...
by Greg Stuessel | Oct 22, 2025 | The Deep Dive
A Treatise Concerning Political Enquiry (1800) by Tunis Wortman delivers one of the earliest and most forceful American defenses of press freedom—not as a government-granted privilege, but as a natural right and moral duty for every citizen. Written in just four...
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