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allan297
Posted January 6, 2012
Very Insightful
I would hope that everyone would read this essay and ask if we can put our country back on track. Very clearly written despite being written around 1850.
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sumit2661
Posted May 1, 2010
Law jobs
Hound is the best site due to the fact that the site shows only jobs from employer career pages. There are numerous advantages to finding jobs from employer career pages but the main ones are (1) these are not advertised and receive fewer applications and (2) there is no middleman (recruiter) forwarding your resume to the employer and (3) there are more jobs on employer career pages than job boards.
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If I compare it with Monster Jobs, Yahoo jobs or other Job site then it has maximum number of jobs shown and updated on hourly basis. The number of jobs shown is also quite big.
It also gives you career advice and job search advice Latest jobs are given on this site as soon they are available in a particular area or before any other site posts that as It shows the jobs from direct Recruiters and no third party is involved in between for making money. Latest job appear first on this site and no expired jobs are there. Jobs are included from most of the fortune 500 companies. -
Anonymous
Posted April 23, 2008
The Definitive Statement on the Purpose of Government
If I could get people to read only one book, this one would be it. Really.
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Anonymous
Posted November 4, 2007
When Ideas Don't Expire
This timely piece on libertarianism by Fredrick Bastiat is yet further evidence that the ideas of liberty do not have an expiration date. The copyright states that this essay was originally published in 1850, yet over 150 years later its message still resonates. Bastiat experienced the socialistic approach in the French government during the early 1800s and knew well of its perversion of law. Every man, woman, and child has the right to their life and property. The government was created to bring justice and defense to her people and their property, as it should retain. But when laws are put in place to legalize theft, whether it comes from man's personal greed or compassion, then the law ends up directly contradicting herself. This essay describes two ways the government legalizes theft 'or plunder'. One way is when a few people plunder many and the other is when everybody plunders everybody. The third option is when nobody plunders anybody, the third option is the option of freedom. Yet laws are often put into place for humanitarian reasons, whether it be to protect the markets, economy, or people. Though such laws directly contradict the main purpose of the law, to give justice and defense to the people. The government has nothing to give, it can only take from one man and give to another. She cannot better a marketplace or economy by placing tariffs or tweaking interest rates, as it is only the free market that can create the best economy. Yet the law, as the essay describes, is perverted. By whom? Its legislator. The legislator tends to think that they know better how to run the lives of individuals than the individuals themselves. So they put into place laws to steal from one group to supposedly help another. But what happens when the dissatisfied class gets into power of the legislator? They put laws into place to spite the other! As Bastiate describes it, '...legislation will be a battlefield for everybody's dreams and everybody's covetousness.' This essay is a must read for everyone capable of understanding its message and a must have for every libertarian's library.
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Anonymous
Posted June 6, 2009
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Anonymous
Posted March 15, 2010
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Anonymous
Posted August 1, 2010
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Anonymous
Posted February 12, 2009
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Anonymous
Posted September 23, 2009
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Anonymous
Posted October 31, 2008
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Anonymous
Posted October 14, 2009
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