
“‘Detroit developed best when it was bottom-up,’ says Harry Veryser, economist and professor at University of Detroit Mercy. ‘When small communities, small parishes, small schools were formed… that’s when Detroit prospered.’ Veryser, author of It Didn’t Have to Be this Way: Why The Boom and Bust is Unneccessary and How Austrian School of Economics Breaks the Cycle, sat down with Reason TV to talk about his experience growing up in Detroit, what went wrong, and how to fix it.”
Related posts:
IRS employee brought home ‘sensitive’ data on 20,000 individuals
Indian Food Inflation Is Getting Out Of Control
Critical crypto bug exposes Yahoo Mail, other passwords
Officer Claims Cops Sell LAPD Guns to Civilians and Dealers
Kansas Supreme Court Rules Passing Sobriety Test Is Meaningless
Your phone is a gateway for spying on you by anyone
Doug Casey on how to Hedge Against Political Risk in the Greater Depression
FATCA, Place of Birth in Passports & Second Class Citizenship
Patent stunner: Nation’s most notorious “troll” sues federal gov’t
Illinois Bill to Register Buyers of Gold and Silver Coins
US government: We can jail you indefinitely for not decrypting your data
Mirror, Mirror on the Wall, Which Country Has the Most Expensive Bureaucrats of All?
Google ordered to remove links to stories about Google removing links to stories
How I tracked FBI aerial surveillance
Men busted in Ukraine’s “fake murder” ruse turn out to be Ukrainian Intelligence