This issue ranges from monetary theory to 400-year-old roots of free-market scholarship, examining war ethics, constitutional federalism, and the modern push for politically correct consumption. Articles critique legislation-driven legal systems, defend mergers, expose the minimum-wage illusion, and make the case for privatizing unemployment insurance. Additional essays address property-rights conflicts, free trade, immigration, criminal justice, the welfare state, public finance, and the enduring relevance of H. L. Mencken’s defense of liberty.