Archive for June, 2016

Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis | Mises …

Ludwig von Misess Socialism is the most important critical examination of socialism ever written.

Socialism is most famous for Misess penetrating economic calculation argument. The book contains much more however. Mises not only shows the impossibility of socialism: he defends capitalism against the main arguments socialists and other critics have raised against it. A centrally planned system cannot substitute some other form of economic calculation for market prices, because no such alternative exists. Capitalism is true economic democracy.

Socialism addresses the contemporary issues of economic inequality and argues that wealth can exist for long periods only to the extent that wealthy producers succeed in satisfying the consumers. Mises shows that there is no tendency to monopoly in a free market system.

Mises analyzes reform measures, such as social security and labor legislation, which in fact serve to impede the efforts of the capitalist system to serve the masses.

Socialism is a veritable encyclopedia of vital topics in the social sciences, all analyzed with Misess unique combination of historical erudition and penetrating insight.

German original 1922. English, 1951, Yale university Press. Indianapolis: LibertyPress/LibertyClassics, 1981.Full textfromYale University edition.

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Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis | Mises ...

Tea Party Movement – The New York Times

Latest Articles

While Mr. Cruz has moved to consolidate support among evangelical and Tea Party voters, Mr. Kasich has made a play for party moderates.

By MATT FLEGENHEIMER and THOMAS KAPLAN

Mr. Cruz turned the solicitors office into a defender of the right wing and he made crucial friends in Texas though he once angered Bush family allies.

By JONATHAN MAHLER

The House Republican leaderships coalition with divisive elements in the Tea Party movement may have set up the current conflict with Donald Trump.

By JENNIFER STEINHAUER

Looking beyond the White House to turn statehouses blue.

By SUZY KHIMM

Once upon a time, the American political structure was ruled by a set group of elite individuals. Then along came this election season, and being an insider became a kiss of death.

By MARK LEIBOVICH

How the Florida senators campaign is hoping to make the best of a likely third-place showing in the states caucus.

By ROBERT DRAPER

The candidates strategy to win the White House depends on turning out millions of new religious voters.

By ROBERT DRAPER

Sarah Palin maintains a community of millions of Facebook fans, and while some cheered her endorsement of Donald J. Trump this week, others called her a sellout of conservatism who was only seeking another moment in the political spotlight.

By ALAN RAPPEPORT

The backing of Mrs. Palin, the former Alaska governor and 2008 vice-presidential nominee, provides Mr. Trump with a potential boost less than two weeks before the Iowa caucuses.

By ALAN RAPPEPORT and MAGGIE HABERMAN

It has been almost a week since Ms. Haley of South Carolina suggested in a State of the Union response that her fellow Republicans dial down their anger. For Tea Party activists in her state, the advice has served only to frustrate them further.

By ALAN RAPPEPORT

The increasingly personal lines of attack against Mr. Cruz in a public setting mark a shift in the race for the Republican presidential nomination that started during Thursdays debate and spilled onto the campaign trail on Saturday.

By ALAN RAPPEPORT

Sworn in this holiday season, Governor Bevin quickly undid his predecessors executive order that granted 140,000 Kentuckians the right to vote.

Senator Ted Cruz is pursuing support and credibility as a candidate in the Republican presidential primary that is unusual for a far-right conservative candidate.

By MATT FLEGENHEIMER and NICK CORASANITI

Four Republican-sponsored riders in the omnibus spending bill would further erode controls over the flow of campaign cash.

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Its a season of false political fronts. His is especially bogus.

By FRANK BRUNI

During his 2010 race for the Senate, Mr. Paul appealed to Kentuckians who believed in shutting down the government to advance their goals.

By KATE ZERNIKE

A New York Times/CBS News poll published last week revealed deep divisions in the Republican Party not only over potential presidential nominees but over the federal budget, immigration and whether Republicans in Congress should compromise to get things done.

By JOHN M. BRODER and MEGAN THEE-BRENAN

Groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce are vowing to regain a place of influence partly usurped by hard-right Republican conservatives.

By CARL HULSE

The conservatives must decide whether they will give the new speaker a chance to make good on his promises or continue their rebellious ways and possibly get crushed.

By EMMARIE HUETTEMAN

Just 17 percent of Americans support the Tea Party, down from a high of 32 percent.

By THE EDITORS

While Mr. Cruz has moved to consolidate support among evangelical and Tea Party voters, Mr. Kasich has made a play for party moderates.

By MATT FLEGENHEIMER and THOMAS KAPLAN

Mr. Cruz turned the solicitors office into a defender of the right wing and he made crucial friends in Texas though he once angered Bush family allies.

By JONATHAN MAHLER

The House Republican leaderships coalition with divisive elements in the Tea Party movement may have set up the current conflict with Donald Trump.

By JENNIFER STEINHAUER

Looking beyond the White House to turn statehouses blue.

By SUZY KHIMM

Once upon a time, the American political structure was ruled by a set group of elite individuals. Then along came this election season, and being an insider became a kiss of death.

By MARK LEIBOVICH

How the Florida senators campaign is hoping to make the best of a likely third-place showing in the states caucus.

By ROBERT DRAPER

The candidates strategy to win the White House depends on turning out millions of new religious voters.

By ROBERT DRAPER

Sarah Palin maintains a community of millions of Facebook fans, and while some cheered her endorsement of Donald J. Trump this week, others called her a sellout of conservatism who was only seeking another moment in the political spotlight.

By ALAN RAPPEPORT

The backing of Mrs. Palin, the former Alaska governor and 2008 vice-presidential nominee, provides Mr. Trump with a potential boost less than two weeks before the Iowa caucuses.

By ALAN RAPPEPORT and MAGGIE HABERMAN

It has been almost a week since Ms. Haley of South Carolina suggested in a State of the Union response that her fellow Republicans dial down their anger. For Tea Party activists in her state, the advice has served only to frustrate them further.

By ALAN RAPPEPORT

The increasingly personal lines of attack against Mr. Cruz in a public setting mark a shift in the race for the Republican presidential nomination that started during Thursdays debate and spilled onto the campaign trail on Saturday.

By ALAN RAPPEPORT

Sworn in this holiday season, Governor Bevin quickly undid his predecessors executive order that granted 140,000 Kentuckians the right to vote.

Senator Ted Cruz is pursuing support and credibility as a candidate in the Republican presidential primary that is unusual for a far-right conservative candidate.

By MATT FLEGENHEIMER and NICK CORASANITI

Four Republican-sponsored riders in the omnibus spending bill would further erode controls over the flow of campaign cash.

By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Its a season of false political fronts. His is especially bogus.

By FRANK BRUNI

During his 2010 race for the Senate, Mr. Paul appealed to Kentuckians who believed in shutting down the government to advance their goals.

By KATE ZERNIKE

A New York Times/CBS News poll published last week revealed deep divisions in the Republican Party not only over potential presidential nominees but over the federal budget, immigration and whether Republicans in Congress should compromise to get things done.

By JOHN M. BRODER and MEGAN THEE-BRENAN

Groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce are vowing to regain a place of influence partly usurped by hard-right Republican conservatives.

By CARL HULSE

The conservatives must decide whether they will give the new speaker a chance to make good on his promises or continue their rebellious ways and possibly get crushed.

By EMMARIE HUETTEMAN

Just 17 percent of Americans support the Tea Party, down from a high of 32 percent.

By THE EDITORS

See original here:
Tea Party Movement - The New York Times

Donald Trump’s campaign threatens to steal tea party thunder …

Always a bit of a rebel, Debbie Dooley was so frustrated in 2009 over bank bailouts and stimulus packages that she threw herself into organizing Atlantas first tea party rally.

Today, the daughter of a Southern preacher has shifted her energy and passion into electing Donald Trump as the latest Washington outsider to shake up the status quo.

No matter that many of Trumps policies stray from the tea partys original small-government ideals. The tough-talking billionaire ignites that same anti-establishment fervor that fired up many tea party foot soldiers like Dooley.

In the process, Trump has recast their earlier championsnamely tea party darling Sen. Ted Cruz as disappointing outsiders-turned-insiders who cater to corporate donors and fail to deliver on big promises.

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The support for Trump is not only a screw-you to the Republican establishment, its a screw-you to the conservative establishment, said Dooley, 57, an energy consultant. [People] are sick and tired of the same old, same old just money corrupting the political process. They work hard, they vote for elected officials and they expect them to keep their promises.

Trumps candidacy has not only fractured the Republican Party, its threatening to break apart the tea party movement and erode a once-powerful voting block that has driven conservative politics and elections for the past seven years.

In addition to grass-root defections by activists like Dooley, tea party leadership has split over Trumps presidential bid. Some conservative activists met this week to try to stop him, while others have joined his campaign.

Meanwhile, major financial backers, including groups funded by the billionaire Koch brothers, have been sidelined from publicly backing GOP primary candidates, partly out of fear they might alienate their divided base.

The soured relationship should come as no surprise. The tea party was always somewhat of a marriage of convenience between Washingtons free-market powerhouses and frustrated ordinary Americans who showed up at rallies with their tri-cornered hats and Dont Tread on Me flags.

Fighting President Obama provided an easy alliance that Republicans at first leveraged to their advantage. But it also was a relationship built on what now looks like a rickety foundation less about think-tank-driven policies and more about voter outrage against perceived elitism.

From an ideological standpoint, the tea partys natural candidate should be Cruz, the Texas senator who was swept into office in the tea party revolt and wears his unpopularity in Washington as an outsider badge of honor.

But in Trumps long shadow, Cruz and rival Sen. Marco Rubio, before he left the campaign, suddenly looked to many rank-and-file activists as part of the problem.

I dont see Ted Cruz being a job creator,Dooley said.

Trumps positions against free trade and his reluctance to slash entitlement spending have led policy purists to call Trump a RINO Republican in Name Only.

David McIntosh, the president of the free-market Club for Growth, which is running anti-Trump TV ads in early voting states, noted that the businessman often portrays himself as outside of the GOP establishment.

Trump is a huge wake up to the senior Republican leadership of the party, McIntosh said, adding that the GOP should do more to embrace conservatives if it wants to prevent further tea party defections to Trumps campaign.

We have to make the tea party a part of the Republican coalition, he said. We cant take them for granted."

But at Trump rallies, a growing number of former tea party activists see him as their new hope, noting that Republicans have failed to repeal Obamacare, stop illegal immigration or scale back Obamas domestic spending programs.

Weve given the Republican Party a chance, said Amy Kremer, a founding tea party leader who now backs Trump. They would have never taken the House without the tea party. We gave them the Senate. What have they accomplished? They havent accomplished a damn thing.

The most high-profile splits are between original tea party leaders like Kremer and Jenny Beth Martin, who were part of that first tea party in Atlanta and who went on to help form Tea Party Patriots.

Martin, who now runs the group, is backing Cruz.For our organization, it hasnt just been about anger, its a set of principles,Martin said.

Also aligned with Cruz is Christine ODonnell, an early Sarah Palin-backed Senate candidate in 2010 perhaps best known for a TV ad declaring she was not a witch.

Palin, however, has endorsed Trump, as has Kremer, who previously helped elect Cruz but now is working at a pro-Trump super PAC with Jesse Benton, a former top aide to another tea party favorite, Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky.

Trumps national spokesman, Katrina Pierson, shows the elasticity of tea party loyalties with one of the most circuitous routes to her new boss. She was a Democrat who voted for Obama before becoming a Dallas tea party leader backing Cruz. Then she switched to Trump after the senator introduced her to the billionaire, according to reports.

The shifting alliances leave the impression the tea party is no longer a coalition joined by a common refrain Taxed Enough Already but silos of think-tank wonks, big-business conservatives and angry white voters who dont speak the same language.

Adam Brandon, president of FreedomWorks, a libertarian advocacy group formed by leaders of an earlier Koch-backed enterprise, said the split doesnt signal the end of the tea party as much as an evolution of it.

Regardless of who wins the presidency, he said, the rise of Trump and Cruz the two most outsider candidates of the primary cycle shows the tea partys influence on the GOP.

The one thing that comes out of this: The Republican Party is a smoking crater on the ground, said Brandon, who in his spare time is a Revolutionary War reenacter. The tea party has won. Now the bifurcation is: Do you want a burn-it-down with Donald Trump or do you want a battler like Ted Cruz.

Added Martin: It shows, this movement, seven years and three weeks old, is picking the presidential nominee on the right. Thats a big deal.

But FreedomWorks and other big conservative players Tea Party Express, the Koch-backed Americans for Prosperity and Heritage Action are all sitting out the presidential primary.

Virtually none of them attended a meeting of conservatives last week in Washington trying to plot an anti-Trump effort. Some prefer to focus on congressional races or state issues. But they also risk losing influence among their members if they back the wrong candidate.

The high-dollar donors at the Koch organizations winter meeting preferred Rubio, while activists voting in a straw poll at FreedomWorks conference in Ohio this month overwhelmingly backed Cruz.

We just dont dive into a primary of this magnitude and try to dictate, said a person within the Koch network granted anonymity to discuss. It would harm the willingness of a lot of people to work with us. ... It would harm our long-term effectiveness.

Thats fine with Dooley, who said shes fed up with both the GOP establishment and big-dollar Washington donors telling people what to think.

They look down their noses on average people in the grass roots, she said. They think theyre the only ones who can define conservatism.

Twitter:@lisamascaro

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Continued here:
Donald Trump's campaign threatens to steal tea party thunder ...

How to throw an afternoon tea party | BBC Good Food

Enjoying afternoon tea while perched on a gilded hotel armchair is a fine British tradition, but hardly sustainable as a regular pursuit. Throwing your own afternoon tea party means you can stick to your own budget, plus you can select your favourite finger food. We have some suggestions for throwing a soiree in style. The basic kit

If you own a tiered cake stand, dust it off and use it as the centerpiece of your table. Otherwise, use your best crockery and make it a little more special with lace-like doilies, folded napkins and name place signs.

If you want to go all out, charity shops are a good source for reasonable floral Chinaware - don't worry if the patterns are mismatched. Don't forget your teapot, teacups, cutlery and cake slices for serving.

Extend your table and throw on a table cloth - if you don't have one handy, fabric shops sell cheap spotted, floral and striped material by the metre. String up some bunting or, if you're feeling ambitious, bake up some edible bunting biscuits.

While you're at it, you could make some place-name cookies and ice them with your guests' names. Pop them in paper bags so your guests have a little present to take away - or just snaffle them as an entre. Coconut & cinnamon place-name cookies Edible name place biscuits

Make sure the sugar and milk is set on the table ready to pour your guests a cuppa as they sit down. Try to provide a variety of tea - Earl Grey, peppermint, camomile, fruit, herbal and, of course, English Breakfast.

Iced teamakes for a more refreshing tipple in warmer weather, and adding a touch of Pimm'swill really break the ice. You could also crack open the fizz and serve up asloe gin royaleor orange juice-basedmimosa- all the better if you have time for a nap before dinnertime.

There aren't any rules when it comes to the food, but a standard afternoon tea comprises a layer of sandwiches, a layer of cakes and a layer of scones or teacakes. However, you could also throw in pastries, petits fours or biscuits.

Don't wear yourself out by taking on too many ambitious bites, but if you feel like a challenge make sure you get your timings right.

These require minimal effort, but get ahead by preparing your fillings in advance and assembling just before proceedings begin to avoid the dreaded soggy sarnie.

Selection of summer sandwiches Carrot & raisin sandwiches Salmon club sandwich Best-ever crab sandwiches Smoked salmon & avocado open sandwich on rye bread

Scones are best eaten on the day and don't take long to whip up but if you want to get ahead, freeze a batch and defrost them in a low oven. Serve warm with lashings of jam - decant a pot of homemade preserve into a pretty bowl.

Scones:

Classic scones with jam and clotted cream Lemon drizzle scones Walnut scones Cherry scones

Jam:

Keep it simple:

A little effort:

Sugared flower shortbreads Carrot cake cookeis Ginger cookie sandwiches with lemon mascarpone Coconut nice Strawberry & cream roly polys

Just the mere mention of Parisian-standard pastry is enough to send shivers down the spine of your average home cook. If you're willing to take them on, prepare the pastry or biscuits the night before.

Raspberry millefeuilles Mini eclairs Chinon apple tarts Salted caramel & popcorn crumble choux buns Creme brulee tartlets

Individual portions are the key here, so avoid making a large cake and bake up something dinky.

Coffee & walnut flapjacks Blood orange & poppy drizzle muffins Little pistachio cakes Coconut chai traybake Strawberry & polenta cupcakes

Pull out all the stops and serve up something really special.

Blood orange & dark chocolate madeleines Star anise meringues with mango coulis Apple rose tart Raspberry, lemon and frangipane tart Iced vanilla & caramel profiteroles

Lemon bars Doughnut muffins Gypsy tart with lemon cream Lingonberry & ginger cheesecake pots Seville meringue pie with pomegranate Quick & easy tiramisu Bourbon, black cherry & bacon brownies

Have you thrown your own afternoon tea party? Share your tips with us below. Or if you still need inspiration, take a look through our afternoon tea recipe collection.

Read more from the original source:
How to throw an afternoon tea party | BBC Good Food

Tea Party: 20 Themed Tea Parties with Recipes for Every …

Enjoy life. Drink tea. Celebrate often. Tracy Stern is passionate about tea. She has created wildly popular lines of teas and tea-based beauty products and has hosted hundreds of stylish tea parties to celebrate all sorts of occasions. She has introduced a new generation to the pleasures of tea without any of its traditional stuffiness. In Tea Party, she encourages everyone to make their next gathering that much more special by incorporating tea into the menu.

Starting with tips on choosing and brewing teasfrom white and green teas to herbal rooibos and different black teasTea Party then shares more than seventy-five recipes, both savory and sweet, as part of twenty themed tea parties. Stern features classic tea accompaniments such as Scones with Clotted Cream and Cucumber-Mint Tea Sandwiches as well as novel recipes that use flavorful and healthful tea as an ingredient, including Homemade Potato Fries with Ceylon Tea Salt and Tea-Scented Chocolate Truffles. Above all, the focus is on fun, not fuss.

The party suggestions are perfect for afternoons with friends, bridal and baby showers, cocktail and dinner parties, picnics, and brunches. A Mad Hatters Tea Partyfor a birthday or an unbirthdaywill delight kids and adults alike with tea sandwiches made with edible flowers followed by Eat Me! Cupcakes. Chai Breakfast Tea reveals a fantastic recipe for the sweetly spiced irresistible drink along with recipes for chai-scented pancakes and candied almonds. Ideas and inspirations abound for fabulous, easy, and affordable invitations, decorations, table settings, and charming party favors that tie into each partys theme.

Featuring beautiful color photography throughout, Tea Party is a hip, up-to-date slant on a beloved tradition, inspiring everyone to drink a little more tea, celebrate a little more often, and enjoy life a whole lot more.

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Tea Party: 20 Themed Tea Parties with Recipes for Every ...