The Freeman: December 1992 Volume 42, 1992

This issue reflects on the moral meaning of money, the cultural and civilizational impact of Christianity, and the debate over whether markets in the post-Cold War world will be genuinely free or subtly controlled. Contributors question the constitutional limits of federal regulatory power, expose abuses in child-protective systems, and defend freedom of contract against monopolistic unionism. Additional essays explore linguistic order, Austrian critiques of welfare economics, supply-side complacency, and the distortions created by government involvement in credit markets.