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Property and Freedom Podcast

Property and Freedom Podcast

313 episodes — Page 1 of 7

PFP325 | Saifedean Ammous, “Murray Rothbard: An Ode to an Intellectual Hero” (Rothbard at 100)

May 11, 202624 min

PFP324 | Jeffrey A. Tucker, “The Murray Rothbard I Knew” (Rothbard at 100)

May 4, 202626 min

PFP323 | Stephan Kinsella, “Mises, Rothbard, Hoppe: An Indispensable Framework” (Rothbard at 100)

Apr 27, 202638 min

PFP322 | Thomas Jacob, “Murray Rothbard, Mises University 1990, and the Power of Living Institutions” (Rothbard at 100)

Apr 20, 202613 min

PFP321 | Lee I. Iglody, “The Man Across the Hall: My Time with Professor Rothbard” (Rothbard at 100)

Apr 13, 202620 min

PFP320 | Jörg Guido Hülsmann, “Three Channels of Asset Inflation” (Rothbard at 100)

Apr 6, 20261h 7m

PFP319 | Douglas E. French, “Remembering Murray Rothbard: Teacher, Friend, and Inspiration” (Rothbard at 100)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 319. AI-assisted audio narration of the main chapters of Rothbard at 100: A Tribute and Assessment (Papinian Press and The Saif House, 2026) is available at this PFS Youtube Playlist; the mp3 files may also be downloaded in this zip file. The first two chapters—my “Preface” and Hans’s “Introduction”—were published the week of Rothbard’s birthday here on the Property and Freedom Podcast (PFP315 and PFP314). The other main chapters will be released sequentially weekly on Mondays. The next in the queue: 4. Douglas E. French, “Remembering Murray Rothbard: Teacher, Friend, and Inspiration”  

Mar 30, 202613 min

PFP318 | Thomas J. DiLorenzo, “The Inspiring and Courageous Intellect of Murray Rothbard” (Rothbard at 100)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 318. AI-assisted audio narration of the main chapters of Rothbard at 100: A Tribute and Assessment (Papinian Press and The Saif House, 2026) is available at this PFS Youtube Playlist; the mp3 files may also be downloaded in this zip file. The first two chapters—my “Preface” and Hans’s “Introduction”—were published the week of Rothbard’s birthday here on the Property and Freedom Podcast (PFP315 and PFP314). The other main chapters will be released sequentially weekly on Mondays. The next in the queue: 3. Thomas J. DiLorenzo, “The Inspiring and Courageous Intellect of Murray Rothbard”

Mar 23, 202613 min

PFP317 | Jeffrey F. Barr, “The Last Lecture” (Rothbard at 100)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 317. AI-assisted audio narration of the main chapters of Rothbard at 100: A Tribute and Assessment (Papinian Press and The Saif House, 2026) is available at this PFS Youtube Playlist; the mp3 files may also be downloaded in this zip file. The first two chapters—my “Preface” and Hans’s “Introduction”—were published the week of Rothbard’s birthday here on the Property and Freedom Podcast (PFP315 and PFP314). The other main chapters will be released sequentially weekly on Mondays. The next in the queue: 2. Jeffrey F. Barr, “The Last Lecture”

Mar 16, 20268 min

PFP316 | Hans-Hermann Hoppe, “Coming of Age with Murray” (Rothbard at 100)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 316. AI-assisted audio narration of the main chapters of Rothbard at 100: A Tribute and Assessment (Papinian Press and The Saif House, 2026) is available at this PFS Youtube Playlist; the mp3 files may also be downloaded in this zip file. The first two chapters—my “Preface” and Hans’s “Introduction”—were published the week of Rothbard’s birthday here on the Property and Freedom Podcast (PFP315 and PFP314). The other main chapters will be released sequentially weekly on Mondays, starting with the one: 1. Hans-Hermann Hoppe, “Coming of Age with Murray”

Mar 9, 202639 min

PFP315 | Hans-Hermann Hoppe, “Introduction” (Rothbard at 100)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 315. AI-assisted audio narration of the main chapters of Rothbard at 100: A Tribute and Assessment (Papinian Press and The Saif House, 2026) is available at this PFS Youtube Playlist; the mp3 files may also be downloaded in this zip file. The first two chapters—my Preface and Hans’s “Introduction”—are released today here on the Property and Freedom Podcast, with the other main chapters to be released sequentially weekly on Mondays. Second “front matter” chapter: Hans-Hermann Hoppe, “Introduction.”  

Mar 6, 202627 min

PFP314 | Stephan Kinsella, “Preface” (Rothbard at 100)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 314. Thanks to volunteer efforts from Jorge Besada, AI-assisted audio narration of the main chapters of Rothbard at 100: A Tribute and Assessment (Papinian Press and The Saif House, 2026) is available at this PFS Youtube Playlist; the mp3 files may also be downloaded in this zip file. The first two chapters—my Preface and Hans’s “Introduction”—are released today here on the Property and Freedom Podcast, with the other main chapters to be released sequentially weekly on Mondays. First up: Stephan Kinsella, “Preface.”

Mar 6, 20268 min

PFP313 | Thomas Jacob: Oboxplanet Presentation (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 313. This bonus presentation is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Thomas Jacob (Switzerland): Oboxplanet Presentation. Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist.

Mar 2, 2026

PFP312 | Alessandro Fusillo et al.: Open Discussion, Q&A (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 312. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Alessandro Fusillo (Italy), Saifedean Ammous (Palestine/Jordan), Hans-Hermann Hoppe (Germany/Turkey), Sean Gabb (England), Thomas J. DiLorenzo (USA), Open Discussion, Q&A Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist.

Feb 23, 2026

PFP311 | Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Moderator of Speaker Roundtable Discussion: Of Frauds, Fakes, Crooks, Creeps and Clowns (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 311. This roundtable is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Moderator of Speaker Roundtable Discussion: Of Frauds, Fakes, Crooks, Creeps and Clowns: with Alessandro Fusillo (Italy), Saifedean Ammous (Palestine/Jordan), Hans-Hermann Hoppe (Germany/Turkey), Sean Gabb (England), Thomas J. DiLorenzo (USA).

Feb 16, 2026

PFP310 | Thomas J. DiLorenzo: “Virtuous” War Crimes: The American and Israeli Traditions (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 310. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Thomas J. DiLorenzo (USA): “Virtuous” War Crimes: The American and Israeli Traditions [Sebastian Wang, “Tom DiLorenzo on “Virtuous” War Crimes – The American and Israeli Traditions (PFS Bodrum 2025),” Libertarian Alliance [UK] Blog (Sep. 21, 2025)]

Feb 9, 2026

PFP308 | Hoppe, Taghizadegan, Hülsmann, Deist, Hansen, Polleit: Discussion, Q&A (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 308. This panel discussion is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Hans-Hermann Hoppe (Germany/Turkey), Rahim Taghizadegan (Austria/Switzerland), Guido Hülsmann (Germany/France), Jeff Deist (USA), Kristoffer Mousten Hansen (Denmark/Germany), Thorsten Polleit (Germany), Discussion, Q&A

Jan 26, 2026

PFP307 | Hans-Hermann Hoppe: Democratic Peace and Re-Education: The German Experience (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 307. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Hans-Hermann Hoppe (Germany/Turkey): Democratic Peace and Re-Education: The German Experience [based on: On War, Democratic Peace, and Reeducation: The “German Experience” in Reactionary Perspective“; see Sebastian Wang, “Hans-Hermann Hoppe on Democratic Peace and Re-Education – PFS Bodrum 2025,” Libertarian Alliance [UK] Blog (Sep. 20, 2025)]

Jan 19, 2026

PFP306 | Kristoffer Mousten Hansen: Mileinomics (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 306. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Kristoffer Mousten Hansen (Denmark/Germany): Mileinomics [Sebastian Wang, “Javier Milei and the Austrian School – A Critique from Bodrum 2025,” Libertarian Alliance [UK] Blog (Sep. 21, 2025); Kristoffer Mousten Hansen, “Javier Milei and the Austrian School,” Instituto Rothbard (Sep. 26, 2025); idem, “Javier Milei and the Austrian School,” Mises Portugal (Sep. 29, 2025)]

Jan 12, 2026

PFP305 | Rahim Taghizadegan: Bitcoin from the Viewpoint of the Austrian School (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 305. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Rahim Taghizadegan (Austria/Switzerland): Bitcoin from the Viewpoint of the Austrian School. Note: For those who complain that some Austrian groups do not give enough attention to, are or even hostile to, bitcoin (see Robert P. Murphy, Bitcoin and the Theory of Money, Mises Wire (04/29/2020); Kinsella, KOL401 | Sazmining Twitter Space: Bitcoin & Property Rights; Bitcoin Confiscation vs. Gold Confiscation; On Coinbase, Bitcoin, Fractional-Reserve Banking, and Irregular Deposits; LIBERTARIAN ANSWER MAN: Smart Contracts), keep in mind that for many years PFS has accepted donations by Bitcoin; we have featured Saifedean Ammous many times, often touching on bitcoin [PFP222 | Saifedean Ammous: Hard Money and Time Preference (PFS 2021)]; years ago Roman Skaskiw was here and gave an informal lecture and handed out cards with $5 worth of bitcoin, as I recall, to attendees (which would be worth $4200 or so today, June 28, 2025; see PFS 2013 Annual Meeting—Speakers and Presentations); Professor Hoppe has never spoken out against it, unlike other Austrians (in fact, see his comments at PFP251 | Van Dun, Hoppe, Dürr, Discussion, Q&A (PFS 2022) and Hoppe on Germany, East and West, Russia/Ukraine, and US-NATO (PFS 2022)]; I spoke on it [KOL274 | Nobody Owns Bitcoin (PFS 2019)]; Šimašius’s comments in [Interview] Libertarian Mayor of Vilnius Speaks!; and so on.

Jan 5, 2026

PFP304 | Guido Hülsmann: The Universities and the State (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 304. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Guido Hülsmann (Germany/France): The Universities and the State [Sebastian Wang, “Guido Hülsmann on Universities and the State – PFS Bodrum 2025,” Libertarian Alliance [UK] Blog (Sep. 20, 2025)]

Dec 29, 2025

PFP303 | Jeff Deist: Understanding Post-Persuasion America (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 303. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Jeff Deist (USA): Understanding Post-Persuasion America [Sebastian Wang, “Jeff Deist on Post-Persuasion America – PFS Bodrum 2025,” Libertarian Alliance [UK] Blog (Sep. 20, 2025)]

Dec 22, 2025

PFP302 | Thorsten Polleit: Stanislav Andreski’s Social Sciences as Sorcery (1972): Known Errors, Deceptions and Intellectual Corruption That Endure (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 302. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Thorsten Polleit (Germany): Stanislav Andreski’s Social Sciences as Sorcery (1972): Known Errors, Deceptions and Intellectual Corruption That Endure [Polleit, “Stanislav Andreski’s Social Sciences as Sorcery: Enduring Errors and Academic Corruption – Thorsten Polleit, PFS Bodrum 2025,” Libertarian Alliance [UK] Blog (Sep. 20, 2025)] Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist.

Dec 15, 2025

PFP301 | Fusillo, Daniels, Dürr, Gabb, Kinsella, Discussion, Q&A (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 301. This panel discussion is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Alessandro Fusillo (Italy), Anthony Daniels (Dalrymple) (England), David Dürr (Switzerland), Sean Gabb (England), Stephan Kinsella (USA), Discussion, Q&A. Shownotes and transcript below. Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Grok shownotes PFP301 | Fusillo, Daniels, Dürr, Gabb, Kinsella Discussion & Q&A (PFS 2025) In this lively Q&A session from the Property and Freedom Society 2025 conference, panelists Alessandro Fusillo, Anthony Daniels (Theodore Dalrymple), David Dürr, Sean Gabb, and Stephan Kinsella field audience questions on Swiss anarchism, ancient and modern slavery, voluntary contracts, gun culture, immigration in a stateless society, and the libertarian implications of pirate governance. Key Topics & Highlights: [0:02] The Röstigraben & Swiss Anarchism David Dürr explains the “Röstigraben” — the cultural and linguistic divide between German-speaking and French-speaking Switzerland — as a symbolic fault line reflecting resistance to centralization in Bern. He suggests that Swiss federalism’s horizontal structure may naturally evolve into anarchic coexistence, especially under external pressure from larger blocs. [4:40] Slave Manumission in Ancient Rome Sean Gabb discusses the high turnover of slaves in elite Roman households, driven by moral obligation, commercial incentives, and legal loopholes (e.g., freeing slaves to avoid torture-based testimony). While urban and domestic slaves often gained freedom, rural and mining slaves had near-zero prospects — fueling revolts like Spartacus. [9:32] Switzerland 2048: A Path to Anarcho-Capitalism? Dürr presents his speculative book imagining Switzerland stateless by 2048. Triggered by financial collapse — rating agencies downgrading federal bonds amid tax resistance — he views the state as a 5,000-year evolutionary mismatch with human nature, destined to fail. [14:31] Panel Debate: Is Voluntary Slavery Libertarian? Kinsella: Firmly rejects Walter Block’s defense of voluntary slavery contracts. Following Rothbard, he argues that the human will is inalienable and forms the foundational basis of self-ownership — not homesteading or external acquisition. Thus, no verbal or written declaration can alienate one’s body or future liberty. He dismisses Block’s extreme hypothetical (a father selling himself to fund his son’s cancer treatment) as far-fetched and unconvincing. Kinsella acknowledges historical uses of slavery contracts in Rome as pragmatic workarounds (e.g., to bypass citizenship restrictions), but insists these were artifacts of a statist legal order — not justifications for permitting such contracts in a free society. As a hypothetical libertarian judge, he would void any slavery contract ab initio on public policy grounds, equating it to enforcing a murder-for-hire agreement. Dürr: Allows limited, time-bound voluntary membership in restrictive organizations — but never enforceable on non-signers. Gabb: Observes many prefer unfreedom (e.g., prisoners recidivating for structure). Fusillo: Calls state citizenship the true modern “voluntary” slavery — an invalid contract enabling conscription and human sacrifice. [24:54] Ancient vs. Modern Slavery Gabb contrasts race-based, hereditary New World slavery with the ancient world’s fluid, meritocratic version. Freed Roman slaves blended in; freed American slaves remained visibly marked. Roman law offered more humane provisions than English common law. [28:18] Swiss Gun Culture & Decentralization Dürr links Switzerland’s militia tradition (guns kept at home) to its decentralized ethos. Recent regulations reflect growing statism, but in anarchy, private defense services would emerge via market demand — not top-down control. [34:32] Immigration Without a State Dürr argues welfare magnetism, not open borders, drives mass migration. In a stateless society, competing charities and communities would fund aid selectively, reducing abuse and scale compared to monopolized state programs. [37:26] Pirates, Property, and the American Revolution Fusillo reveals his talk’s inspiration: pirate ships as proto-anarchist societies with democratic constitutions. Drawing on Peter Leeson’s The Invisible Hook, he ties pirate loot markets in colonial America to anti-elite sentiment. Were slave plantations “legitimate” property? Pirate theft, like early industrial displacement, raises Rothbardian questions about just title — challenging Marxist and mainstream histories alike. A wide-ranging, provocative discussion blending history, law, psychology, and radical political theory — essential listening for libertarians and anarcho-curious alike. Grok/youtube transcript Röstigraben and Swiss Cultural Divide [0:02] Unidentified S

Dec 8, 2025

PFP300 | David Dürr, A Brief History of Swiss Anarchism (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 300. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). David Dürr (Switzerland): A Brief History of Swiss Anarchism [Sebastian Wang, “David Dürr on Swiss Anarchism – Property and Freedom Society Bodrum 2025,” Libertarian Alliance [UK] Blog (Sep. 21, 2025)] Shownotes and transcript below. Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Grok shownotes PFP300 Show Notes: David Dürr – A Brief History of Swiss Anarchism (PFS 2025) Overview In his 10th PFS appearance (coinciding with the conference’s 20th anniversary), Swiss lawyer and anarchist thinker David Dürr traces Switzerland’s history through the lens of external and internal anarchism: no vertical integration into larger empires (external) and no centralized monopoly of power within (internal). Far from chaos, anarchism here means voluntary, horizontal structures and resistance to coercion. Key Historical Arc Ancient Roots: Helvetii tribes resist Roman yoke (100 BC); early fragmentation hints at anarchist tendencies. Medieval Emergence: Switzerland forms in the 13th century as Habsburgs expand—small valleys and towns band together in defense pacts (Rütli Oath, William Tell myths). Holy Roman Empire Era: Switzerland remains a loose, recognized entity among larger blocks; internally a patchwork of cantons, towns, and languages. 1515 Marignano Debacle: Attempt to conquer northern Italy fails spectacularly—Swiss lack of centralized command proves both weakness and strength; retreat preserves autonomy. Westphalia (1648): Formal external recognition; internal diversity intact. Napoleonic Interruption: Helvetic Republic (1798–1803) briefly centralizes; Napoleon admits he cannot coordinate the quarrelsome Swiss. Vienna Congress (1815): Restores loose confederation of 22 sovereign cantons—peak of dual anarchy. The Turning Point: Sonderbund War (1847–48) Liberal Protestant cantons illegally force Catholic conservative cantons into a unified federal state via majority vote (no required unanimity). Dürr calls this an illegal coup d’état that ends internal anarchism and creates the modern Swiss Confederation. Modern External Anarchism Switzerland stays out of NATO and EU; rejects EEA in 1992 by razor-thin margin. Ongoing EU pressure via new bilateral treaties—resistance weakening. Why the Center Cannot Hold Switzerland lacks unifying glue: Two main religions (Protestant north/west, Catholic center/south). Urban/rural cultural divide. 26 cantons competing on taxes. 4 national languages (German, French, Italian, Romansh). Dürr predicts breakup by 2048 (Schlussbericht 2048—a satirical “final report” from a dissolved Confederation). Philosophical Coda Rejects “nation of will” (Willsnation) as Hobbesian fiction: Leviathan’s composite body has many people but one head. Real unity comes from diverse individual wills, not a mythical collective one. Teases his pet topic: even strong individual wills are not truly “free”… but that’s another story. Books Mentioned Schlussbericht 2048 (German; fictional dissolution narrative). Staat oder Oper (the state as grand theatrical illusion). A witty, map-rich romp through 2,000 years—proving Switzerland is less a nation than a stubborn anarchist experiment still running. Grok/Youtube transcript PFP300 | David Dürr: A Brief History of Swiss Anarchism (PFS 2025) Introduction and Anniversary Reflections [0:00] Don’t applaud too early. You have to endure me now for the 10th time already. This is my 10th anniversary as a speaker at PFS, which coincides with the 20th anniversary of your conference. So that’s a big honor for me, of course, and many thanks again for the invitation to Guido and Hans. Topic Selection and the Cradle of Anarchism [0:28] As usual, since about two or three years, I made a proposition to Hans: what about the topic of free will, which is not free but it’s very useful that we think it’s free? And he always says, “Oh, David, that’s another story. Why won’t you speak about Javier Milei?” That was last year. Or, “Why won’t you speak about a brief history of Swiss anarchism?” That’s a fine idea, that’s a suggestion. I think it’s a good one and not that other story with the free will. [1:20] Now, a brief history of Swiss anarchism. This is really something interesting. One could even say that a brief history of Switzerland is anarchism. Maybe this is a fairly good example of anarchism. However you define it, one can say some people say that in 1976 there was a football club Bakunin, and they said—this is what I found on the internet—in 1976 they said Switzerland is the cradle of anarchism. This is a football game of young people; at that time this was about like Hans looked like as a young leftist revolutionary. Maybe he did not play football, I do not know. But when they

Dec 1, 2025

PFP299 | Alessandro Fusillo, The Pirates of the Caribbean as Forebears of the Libertarians and of the American Revolution (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 299. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Alessandro Fusillo (Italy): The Pirates of the Caribbean as Forebears of the Libertarians and of the American Revolution [Sebastian Wang, “Pirates, Liberty, and Revolution: Alessandro Fusillo in Bodrum,” Libertarian Alliance [UK] Blog (Sep. 19, 2025)] Shownotes and transcript below. Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Grok shownotes PFS Conference Talk: “Pirates of the Caribbean – A Libertarian Perspective” Hans Gillshin opens with humor about his non-piratical attire and thanks the audience at the Property and Freedom Society (PFS) conference. He frames the talk with St. Augustine’s famous quote (via Cicero) equating kingdoms without justice to large-scale robbery, as recounted in the story of Alexander the Great and a captured pirate. Historical Context (17th Century) The 1648 Treaty of Westphalia births the modern state, ending medieval liberties. The Thirty Years’ War introduces mass destruction, secret services, and centralized legislation. England’s 1640s Civil War (often overshadowed by later revolutions) features Levellers, religious freedom advocates, and figures like John Lilburne (“Freeborn John”). The 1688 Glorious Revolution establishes the Bank of England—model for all future central banks—enabling unlimited war financing via fiat money. Enclosure Acts expropriate medieval common lands, creating a rural proletariat, urban migration, and forced impressment into the Royal Navy. Displaced English, Scottish, and Irish peasants become the first chattel slaves in the West Indies (7-year terms), predating African slavery. The Golden Age of Piracy (ca. 1713–1726) Post-War of Spanish Succession, mutinies on brutal navy and merchant ships spawn pirate crews. Pirates fly the Jolly Roger; merchant crews often force captains to surrender and voluntarily join. Pirate justice: captains tried by crew; tyrants executed, fair ones (e.g., Captain Snellgrave) spared. Non-pirates set adrift with provisions; violence targeted oppressors, not random cruelty. Pirates attack slave ships to free captives—leading to significant Black crew members and even captains. British pardon laws and mock “forced enlistment” defenses briefly reduce piracy, but by 1726 most pirates are hanged. Pirate Governance & Libertalia Primary source: A General History of the Pyrates (Captain Charles Johnson, likely Daniel Defoe). Notable pirates: Henry Every (romantic treasure legend) and Blackbeard (terror via flaming beard). Highlight: French pirate Olivier Misson (possibly fictional) and ex-priest Caraccioli found Libertalia in Madagascar—a libertarian anarchist society based on John Locke’s principles. Universal pirate practice: every ship had a signed charter—egalitarian shares (captain 1.5–2×), revocable leadership, and a quartermaster as crew tribune. Many crews issued formal declarations of war against all states. Conclusion Pirates were not mere criminals but rebels against tyranny, slavery, and state power—early fighters for individual liberty. Gillshin closes to applause, suggesting the talk may reframe popular views of piracy. Grok/Youtube transcript Introduction and Thanks [0:01] Hans Gillshin, as usual I will start with thanking you for the invitation here at the PFS conference. It’s a great pleasure to be here year after year and a great honor to be invited as a speaker. Hans previously drew my attention to the fact that my attire today is not in line with my topic. I should have sported at least an eye patch or a peg leg or hired a local parrot to have him on my shoulder. But okay, we will do without. Topic Announcement: Pirates of the Caribbean [0:37] Today’s topics are the Pirates of the Caribbean and piracy in general. St. Augustine’s Quote on Piracy and Empire [0:45] I will start with a quote from St. Augustine, a very famous quote that he got from Cicero. It’s a story of Alexander the Great’s fleet navigating through the Mediterranean. They caught a pirate ship and as he was about to execute the pirate as a criminal, the pirate said to Alexander, “What have you in mind? What do you think, trying to rob all people and to seize the other ships? This is completely illegal.” And the pirate answered, “What thou meanest by seizing the whole earth, but because I do it with a petty ship, I am called a robber, whilst thou dost it with a great fleet, art styled an emperor.” The legend goes—maybe it’s not so much a legend—that Alexander the Great had two possible finales for this story. The first one, the nicer one, is that Alexander the Great was so pleased by the answer that he spared the pirate’s life. The other one is that he executed him nonetheless after having a good laugh at his response. In

Nov 24, 2025

PFP298 | Anthony Daniels, The Worldly Adventures of a Skeptical Doctor (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 298. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Anthony Daniels (Dalrymple) (England): The Worldly Adventures of a Skeptical Doctor. Shownotes and transcript below. Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Grok shownotes Theodore Dalrymple – Snapshots of a Life (20th Anniversary Conference Talk) In this reflective lecture, Theodore Dalrymple (pen name of psychiatrist Anthony Daniels) shares personal anecdotes instead of a formal intellectual biography, emphasizing how formative experiences shaped his worldview. Key Themes & Stories: Childhood & Resilience: A close friend paralyzed by polio thrived despite disability, thanks to family focus on capability—not victimhood—prompting Dalrymple’s lifelong rejection of the “cult of the victim.” Early Encounters with Cruelty & Cowardice: At age 11, witnessing youths mock a blind street musician revealed both human malice and his own failure to intervene due to fear. Death of a Friend & Bureaucratic Inertia: A brilliant 15-year-old classmate died from an asthma attack delayed by ambulance red tape; his mother’s bitter wish (“Why not the other one?”) exposed the complexity of grief and the peril of overreach in seeking “cosmic justice.” Rhodesia (Zimbabwe): Working as a young doctor, he observed efficiency born of necessity under sanctions, stark income disparities due to tribal obligations, and the predictable collapse into corruption post-independence. Tanzania: Julius Nyerere’s admired socialist experiment in collectivized agriculture failed despite massive Scandinavian/Dutch aid, confirming Peter Bauer’s quip: foreign aid transfers from poor people in rich countries to rich people in poor ones. Trans-African Journey (1986): Traveling overland from Zanzibar to Timbuktu, he met only kindness—contrasting spontaneous vs. indoctrinated hostility—and viewed bribery as informal taxation in unpaid bureaucracies. Liberia (Monrovia): Amid civil war, he witnessed deliberate, hate-fueled destruction of civilization (e.g., sawn-off hospital trolleys, a defiled Steinway piano), symbolizing fragility journalists dismissed as trivial. Nauru: Sudden phosphate wealth turned a subsistence island into the world’s richest per capita—then into obesity, diabetes, and collapse, proving unearned prosperity is no blessing. Guatemala & Peru: Communist guerrillas were led not by peasants but by frustrated, over-educated elites denied expected status—echoed in Sendero Luminoso’s origins at a revived provincial university. North Korea: A clandestine whisper from a language student—“Reading Dickens and Shakespeare is the only joy of my life”—revealed literature’s power to preserve individual voice under totalitarianism. British Prisons & Slums: Decades as a prison psychiatrist exposed a deeper poverty: not economic, but of soul, intellect, and meaning—where false ideas about addiction became institutional orthodoxy via sentimentality and self-interest. Closing Reflection: Citing Dr. Johnson’s Rasselas (“The Conclusion in Which Nothing Is Concluded”), Dalrymple offers no life prescriptions—only that reading and lived experience must dialectically inform each other to avoid pedantry or shallowness. A candid, contrarian meditation on human nature, civilization’s fragility, and the unintended consequences of ideology. Grok transcript Opening Thanks and Personal Authority 0:00 [Applause] Well, ladies and gentlemen, first as ever I should like to thank Hans and Gulchin for their very gracious hospitality, and second I should like to congratulate them on the 20th anniversary of this conference. I have never organized anything in my life and so I admire organizers, especially people who organize something that is as pleasant as this conference. But I have a third reason to thank Hans this year, because I think I have been to maybe 10 or 12 of these conferences—I do not remember how many—because he has at last asked me to speak on a subject on which I am a world authority, namely myself. Limits of Truth in Autobiography 0:58 This does not mean of course that I will tell you the whole truth about myself for two reasons. First, no one knows everything about himself, and secondly everyone has something to hide. But as a Victorian English novelist, Anthony Trollope, said in the introduction to his autobiography, I shall not tell the whole truth, but everything that I say shall be true. Snapshots of Influential Events 1:28 I thought that instead of presenting what might rather grandiosely be called my intellectual development—assuming that there has been any—I would give you a few snapshots of events and processes that have been important to me. The effect of some of these events takes years to develop because the mind can be like a frying pan or it can be like a slow cooker o

Nov 17, 2025

PFP297 | Stephan Kinsella, Where The Common Law Goes Wrong (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 297. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Stephan Kinsella (USA): “Where The Common Law Goes Wrong.” Also podcast at KOL474 | Where The Common Law Goes Wrong (PFS 2025), which contains the transcript and shownotes. See also Sebastian Wang, “Stephan Kinsella on the Common Law: Lessons from Bodrum 2025,” Libertarian Alliance [UK] Blog (Sep. 19, 2025). Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist.

Nov 10, 2025

PFP296 | Sean Gabb, Roman Law and Contractual Slavery (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 296. This talk is from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Sean Gabb (England): Roman Law and Contractual Slavery [Sebastian Wang, “Roman Slavery: Horror and Paradox – Sean Gabb in Bodrum,” Libertarian Alliance [UK] Blog (Sep. 20, 2025)] Transcript and shownotes below. Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Grok shownotes Show Notes: “Ancient Slavery: A Very Peculiar Institution” Speaker: Unnamed (invited by Hans and Gulchin) Source: YouTube lecture (Nov 2025 transcript) TL;DR Ancient slavery was overwhelmingly brutal—most died young under the lash—but a significant minority repurposed the institution for social mobility: voluntary enslavement, manumission after 7 years, and instant Roman citizenship upon freedom. Evidence: thousands of 2nd–3rd century AD gravestones of ex-slaves who married their former owners or rose to elite status. Key Sections & Takeaways Intro & Framing [0:01] Thanks to hosts; title borrows from Jefferson’s “peculiar institution.” History = “nightmare” (Jefferson) or “catalog of vices” (Voltaire). Modern Lens [1:13] Since 1970s, slavery overshadows classical studies; some can’t enjoy Livy, Tacitus, or Roman architecture. Default Experience [2:12] Most slaves: chain-gang labor in fields/quarries → death by late 20s/early 30s. Universal but Uncomfortable [3:20] Slavery existed in every pre-modern society. Greeks & Romans knew it was “unnatural” yet justified it (“some are born for slavery”). Horror Highlights [4:51] Vedius Pollio (1st c. BC): fed slaves to lampreys; Augustus intervened. Galen (2nd c. AD): boasted never striking slaves with his hand—used rods/whips instead. Brothels, gladiators, casual violence. Counter-Image [8:50] Alma-Tadema painting: boredom & despair more typical than melodrama. Manumission as Control [9:56] Household slaves: promise freedom after 5–10 yrs → incentive for obedience. Roman twist: freed slave of a citizen → full citizen (minus Senate/office unless dispensation). Children 100 % free-born citizens. Social Mobility Evidence [12:39] Horace’s father: ex-slave. Multiple emperors had slave grandfathers. Gravestone Gallery (British Museum & others) [13:23] Dasumius (2nd c.): freed & married his slave; heartbroken when she died first. Pattern: hundreds–thousands of stones across Mediterranean: Master frees female slave → marriage. Often the master himself was ex-slave. Even humble sailors & priests did it. Where Did Peace-Time Greek Slaves Come From? [19:42] War captives explain 2nd–1st c. BC glut (Carthage 60 k, Marius 140 k, Pompey+Caesar >1 M). But 2nd–3rd c. AD Greek ex-slaves = no wars in Greece. Answer: contractual/voluntary slavery. Contractual Slavery = Ancient Student Loan [20:44] Certain lucrative jobs (vilicus, dispensator, accountant) legally restricted to slaves. Free poor sold themselves → master paid training/transport → 7-yr service → freedom + citizenship. Roman jurists confirm legality; concern was only fraud/coercion. Citizenship Hack [28:18] Pre-212 AD, citizenship rare. Sell yourself to a citizen → instant manumission → citizen. Cicero called it “disreputable” but common. Star Example: Antonius Felix [26:11] Greek slave → freed by Claudius → knight, senator, procurator of Judea, married Herod’s granddaughter. Family still elite 300 yrs later. Conclusion [29:42] Don’t blanket-judge the past. Slavery horrific for 90 %+, but a subset turned it into a ladder: “Voluntary enslavement = vehicle of social advancement.” Like winning the lottery for Felix. Slides / Visuals Mentioned 19th-c. French slave-market paintings (sensational). Alma-Tadema: mundane despair. British Museum gravestones (Dasumius + others). Statistics: war-captive numbers. Roman slave-market scene (voluntary bidders). Acts of the Apostles illustration (Paul before Felix). Speaker offers slides via email. Further Reading Galen, On the Passions and Errors of the Soul Roman law digests on self-sale into slavery British Museum / Louvre epitaph collections Moses Finley, Ancient Slavery and Modern Ideology (1970s pivot) Final Quote “The past is a strange place and the more you look at it the stranger it is.” Grok/youtube transcript Introduction and Thanks [0:01] Good morning everybody and it’s good to look around the room and see so many old friends and new friends as well. But I’d like to begin by thanking Hans and Gulchin for their great goodness in having invited me back here again and again. Do we have a little feedback from the microphone? No. All well, very well. Title and Historical Views on Slavery [0:25] Today I’d like to talk about ancient slavery and I’ve called it a very peculiar institution. I think it was Thomas Jefferson who said that history is a nightmare from which we are continually trying to wake up, or Voltaire who said that history i

Nov 3, 2025

PFP295 | Gülçin Imre Hoppe & Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Welcome and Introductions (PFS 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 295. These introductory remarks are from the recently-concluded 19th annual PFS 2025 Annual Meeting (Sep. 18–23, 2025, Bodrum, Turkey). Gülçin Imre Hoppe (Turkey) & Hans-Hermann Hoppe (Germany/Turkey): Welcome and Introductions. Transcript and shownotes below. Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2025 Youtube Playlist. Grok shownotes Show Notes: PFS 20th Anniversary Opening Remarks Video: Property and Freedom Society 20th Anniversary – Opening Speakers: Gülçin Imre Hoppe & Hans-Hermann Hoppe Location: Bodrum, Turkey [0:00 – Introduction and Sound Check] Brief audio/video test before the session begins. Music plays as the audience settles. [0:22 – Welcoming the Audience] Gülçin Imre Hoppe warmly greets attendees: Acknowledges long-distance travelers from Thailand, Guatemala, Japan, and beyond. Apologizes in advance for any logistical mishaps (e.g., kitchen oversights). Jokes: “Be glad you’re not eating onions instead of aubergines.” Expresses gratitude for guests enduring travel challenges to attend the second stop on their journey. [1:44 – Celebrating 20 Years of PFS] Marks 20 years of the Property and Freedom Society (PFS). Playful comparison: Gülçin shows a photo of Hans-Hermann from the first conference. Grandkids’ reaction: “That’s not my opa!” Audience laughter and applause. [2:50 – PFS as a Labor of Love] Hans-Hermann Hoppe reflects: PFS has become an institution and a brand — but with no institute, no offices, no employees. Entirely a shoestring operation and labor of love. Organizers receive no compensation; supported only by a few volunteer helpers. [3:49 – Hotel Operations During the Conference] The venue normally functions as a small bed-and-breakfast. For PFS, extra staff are hired from outside — a rare annual event. Normal hotel service is far more modest than the conference experience. [4:37 – Practical Announcements] Enjoy your week in Bodrum. Boat Tour Sign-Up (Monday): Write your name + number of participants on the list ASAP. Needed to charter the correct number of boats. Delays in sign-up can cause complications. [5:25 – Reception Correction and First Speaker] Program error: Reception is tonight at the pool area, not Saturday. Introduces Sean Gabb as the first speaker. Session closes with applause. Key Takeaway: The Property and Freedom Society’s 20th conference is a grassroots, volunteer-driven tradition — sustained by passion, not profit — bringing together a global community in Bodrum for ideas, fellowship, and (hopefully) no onion-aubergine mix-ups. Next: Sean Gabb’s opening lecture. Grok transcript [0:00 – Introduction and Sound Check] Gülçin Imre Hoppe: Are you seeing us? Some more test, test. Gülçin Imre Hoppe: Can you look at us? Can you hear us? Gülçin Imre Hoppe: Quiet, please. [Music] [0:22 – Welcoming the Audience] Gülçin Imre Hoppe: So, who first? Gülçin Imre Hoppe: Oh, okay. So dear old friends, dear new friends, we have here people who come from very far places. They have to travel very long hours. We have you from Thailand. We have some very young couple from Guatemala. We have— Where are those? Okay, that kind of thing can happen. So you have to forgive me. I also have to overlook the kitchen and so on. So mistakes can happen. So be happy that you don’t eat onions instead of aubergines—it could also happen. So welcome. We are very happy to host you this year as well. And also some far traveler from Japan. I forgot you and everybody. It is always difficult to travel and here this is your second stop. So thank you for going through all the difficulties and arriving in Bodrum at our conference. [1:44 – Celebrating 20 Years of PFS] Gülçin Imre Hoppe: We are doing this since 20 years [Music] [Applause] and you can see I stayed beautiful and energetic and everything as usual. Women tend to stay always beautiful. But when we started, this was my husband. [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [2:27 – Handover and Grandkids’ Reaction] Gülçin Imre Hoppe: So I leave you with my— I should mention that when we showed that to my grandkids, they said, “That’s not my opa.” So you can continue. [2:50 – PFS as a Labor of Love] Hans-Hermann Hoppe: I wanted to mention that in these 20 years of course the PFS has become some sort of institution. And we have acquired a brand name I would think, but we have no institute behind us. We have no offices. We have no employees. This is not a money-making operation for us. We don’t get any compensation for this. This has been just a labor of love as far as we are concerned. We just had a few little helpers help out here and there, but as I said, this is a shoestring operation. [3:49 – Hotel Operations During the Conference] Hans-Hermann Hoppe: You should also be made aware of the fact, for instance, that the hotel operates normally more as a bed-and-breakfast hotel with a small kitchen staff. For a conference such as this, we have to hire a substantial

Nov 1, 2025

PFP294 | Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Concluding Remarks, Tributes, and Announcements (PFS 2012)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 294. Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Concluding Remarks, Tributes, and Announcements. This lecture is from the 2012 meeting of the Property and Freedom Society. PFS 2012 Playlist. It was not included previously in the podcast since the video had been lost and I had assumed the audio had also been lost. However, I recently discovered the audio files for two of the speeches as well as Professor Hoppe’s Introductory and Concluding remarks had been preserved, namely those listed below. They are podcast here for the first time. Hans-Hermann Hoppe (Germany/Turkey), Welcome and Introductions Karl-Peter Schwarz (Austria), Between Restitution and Re-Expropriation: Desocialization in Eastern Europe Benjamin Marks (Australia), On H.L. Mencken as a Libertarian Model Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Concluding Remarks, Tributes, and Announcements  

May 26, 20257 min

PFP293 | Benjamin Marks, On H.L. Mencken as a Libertarian Model (PFS 2012)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 293. Benjamin Marks (Australia), On H.L. Mencken as a Libertarian Model. This lecture is from the 2012 meeting of the Property and Freedom Society. PFS 2012 Playlist. Text of article on which the speech was based is below; docx; pdf. Speech. Transcript also below. Grok summary of article: H.L. Mencken’s conservatism, as explored in Benjamin Marks’ essay, is a defining trait that sets him apart as a libertarian thinker who held low expectations for societal reform. Unlike typical conservatism, Mencken’s brand is rooted in a deep skepticism of government and religion, viewing them as historically optimistic overreaches that clash with true conservative doubt. He saw many societal problems as insoluble or unlikely to be addressed due to human folly, yet found entertainment in the pretentiousness of events and the futility of reform efforts. His libertarianism was not driven by a desire to convert others but by a commitment to truth, expressed through sharp, clear prose that prioritized self-expression over activism. Mencken’s approach was neither nihilistic nor despairing; he embraced the world’s flaws with a light-hearted cynicism, finding joy in critiquing its absurdities without expecting change. He believed people’s gullibility and resistance to reason made libertarian ideals unattainable in the near term, a view reinforced by his observations of failed revolutions and reforms that often worsened conditions. Marks argues that Mencken’s consistent, principled stance—free of moral indignation—offers libertarians a radical perspective: not as a competing utopianism, but as a clear-eyed rejection of romantic solutions. His influence, though significant in literature and culture, never popularized libertarianism, underscoring his realism about human nature and societal inertia. Grok summary of transcript: Two-Paragraph Summary for Show Notes 0:00–9:00: The speaker begins by expressing gratitude for being invited to the Property and Freedom Society conference, acknowledging the late Neville Kennard, a fervent supporter who passed away in June. Kennard, despite his frail condition, remained passionate about libertarianism, wearing a Rothbard “Enemy of the State” shirt during the speaker’s visit. The speaker introduces the topic, “H.L. Mencken as a Libertarian Model,” contrasting Mencken’s approach with Murray Rothbard’s. Mencken, unlike Rothbard, had no expectations of influencing society, viewing politics as entertainment and government as pathetic yet amusing. His pessimism, rooted in reason, led him to describe himself as a “specialist in human depravity,” focusing on diagnosing societal flaws rather than proposing solutions. This perspective, the speaker argues, is more realistic than Rothbard’s optimistic belief in a long-term libertarian revolution, as outlined in Rothbard’s 1965 essay, which the speaker dismisses as clichéd romanticism. 9:01–19:38: The speaker critiques libertarian optimism by addressing common arguments, such as the internet’s role in spreading libertarian ideas or the belief that economic crises will awaken people to libertarianism. Mencken’s responses, as interpreted by the speaker, highlight counterpoints: easy access to statist propaganda negates the internet’s benefits, and crises often lead to more government intervention. The speaker also challenges the romanticism of Albert J. Nock’s concept of the “remnant,” quoting Nock to show his own pessimism about societal change. Marcus Aurelius is cited to underscore the futility of expecting posthumous recognition. The speaker concludes by suggesting that libertarians can still find joy in critiquing government absurdities, as evidenced by the lively PFS speakers. For optimists, the speaker humorously recommends following Gina Rinehart, a wealthy Australian secessionist, as a potential catalyst for libertarian progress, while emphasizing Mencken’s view that libertarianism is about personal enjoyment, not necessarily societal change. It was not included previously in the podcast since the video had been lost and I had assumed the audio had also been lost. However, I recently discovered the audio files for two of the speeches as well as Professor Hoppe’s Introductory and Concluding remarks had been preserved, namely those listed below. They are podcast here for the first time. Hans-Hermann Hoppe (Germany/Turkey), Welcome and Introductions Karl-Peter Schwarz (Austria), Between Restitution and Re-Expropriation: Desocialization in Eastern Europe Benjamin Marks (Australia), On H.L. Mencken as a Libertarian Model Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Concluding Remarks, Tributes, and Announcements Grok summary of transcript: Detailed Segment-by-Segment Summary for Show Notes Segment 1: Introduction and Tribute to Neville Kennard (0:00–3:00) Description: The speaker opens with gratitude for speaking at the Property and Freedom Society conference, noting their unfamiliarity among the distinguished lineup. They

May 26, 202519 min

PFP292 | Karl-Peter Schwarz, Between Restitution and Re-Expropriation: Desocialization in Eastern Europe (PFS 2012)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 292. Karl-Peter Schwarz (Austria), Between Restitution and Re-Expropriation: Desocialization in Eastern Europe. This lecture is from the 2012 meeting of the Property and Freedom Society. PFS 2012 Playlist. Transcript and Grok shownotes/summary below. Two-Paragraph Summary for Show Notes 0:01–15:00: The speaker, invited by Professor Hoppe to the Property and Freedom Society, opens with a reflection on speaking in a “temple of knowledge and liberty,” humorously referencing Roman customs of covering one’s head in temples, except for Kronos, the god of time, who reveals all truths. The talk focuses on historical crimes of expropriation and restitution in post-communist Eastern Europe, challenging the misconception that nationalization was exclusive to communism. The speaker outlines three forms of governmental theft—inflation, taxation, and mass expropriation—emphasizing the latter’s violence and prevalence across the 20th century, from the Balkan Wars to post-World War II population transfers. Specific examples include the expulsion of 3 million Germans from Czechoslovakia under President Beneš’s decrees, which nationalized 80% of the economy by 1948, and the broader displacement of millions across Europe, highlighting that democratic and totalitarian regimes alike engaged in these practices. 15:01–37:12: The speaker critiques the flawed restitution processes in post-communist states, particularly the Czech Republic and Slovenia, where arbitrary time limits (e.g., February 25, 1948, in Czechoslovakia) excluded many legitimate claims. Quoting Murray Rothbard’s Ethics of Liberty, the speaker argues that only restitution to original owners or their heirs upholds justice, yet privatization often benefited former communist elites, fostering oligarchic power structures. Cases like Elisa Fabriova and Prince Kinsky illustrate systemic barriers, with Czech courts and government manipulating legal processes to block aristocratic claims. In Slovenia, Luboš Šeš’s 20-year struggle for restitution yielded minimal recovery, hampered by retroactive laws and biased courts. The speaker concludes that these failures undermine the rule of law, perpetuate corruption, and pose security risks, urging moral clarity despite the unlikelihood of full redress, as time (Kronos) may not deliver justice. It was not included previously in the podcast since the video had been lost and I had assumed the audio had also been lost. However, I recently discovered the audio files for two of the speeches as well as Professor Hoppe’s Introductory and Concluding remarks had been preserved, namely those listed below. They are podcast here for the first time. Hans-Hermann Hoppe (Germany/Turkey), Welcome and Introductions Karl-Peter Schwarz (Austria), Between Restitution and Re-Expropriation: Desocialization in Eastern Europe Benjamin Marks (Australia), On H.L. Mencken as a Libertarian Model Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Concluding Remarks, Tributes, and Announcements Grok: Detailed Segment-by-Segment Summary for Show Notes Segment 1: Introduction and Context of Expropriation (0:01–6:00) Description: The speaker expresses honor and unease at speaking at the Property and Freedom Society, likening it to a “temple of knowledge.” They reference Roman customs of covering heads in temples, except for Kronos, symbolizing time’s revelation of truth. The talk’s theme is introduced: historical crimes of expropriation and their redress. The speaker, a journalist in post-communist countries since 1990, initially believed nationalization was communism’s hallmark but learned it was one of three governmental theft methods: inflation, taxation, and mass expropriation. The latter, often violent, occurred during revolutions or wars, not exclusively under communism. Summary: This opening sets a philosophical tone, framing expropriation as a timeless issue revealed by history. It broadens the scope beyond communism, preparing the audience for a critical examination of 20th-century property theft. Segment 2: Historical Examples of Expropriation and Population Transfers (6:01–12:00) Description: The speaker details 20th-century expropriations, starting with the Balkan Wars (1912–1913) and treaties like Neuilly and Lausanne, which displaced 3 million people. Post-World War I, 4–5 million lost property in new Wilsonian states. World War II and its aftermath saw 12 million Germans and others displaced, with 2 million deaths. In Czechoslovakia, President Beneš’s decrees expelled 3 million Germans, nationalizing 80% of the economy by 1948. The speaker emphasizes that democrats, not just communists, drove these policies, with confiscated lands redistributed or collectivized. Summary: This segment provides a historical overview, illustrating the scale and bipartisan nature of expropriations. It underscores the violent, systemic nature of property theft across regimes, setting up the restitution discussion. Segment 3: Flawed Restitution in Post-Commu

May 26, 202537 min

PFP291 | Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Welcome and Introductions (PFS 2012)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 291. Hans-Hermann Hoppe (Germany/Turkey), Welcome and Introductions. This lecture is from the 2012 meeting of the Property and Freedom Society. PFS 2012 Playlist. It was not included previously in the podcast since the video had been lost and I had assumed the audio had also been lost. However, I recently discovered the audio files for two of the speeches as well as Professor Hoppe’s Introductory and Concluding remarks had been preserved, namely those listed below. They are podcast here for the first time. Hans-Hermann Hoppe (Germany/Turkey), Welcome and Introductions Karl-Peter Schwarz (Austria), Between Restitution and Re-Expropriation: Desocialization in Eastern Europe Benjamin Marks (Australia), On H.L. Mencken as a Libertarian Model Hans-Hermann Hoppe, Concluding Remarks, Tributes, and Announcements

May 26, 20256 min

PFP290 | Hoppe: Considerations and Reflections of a Veteran Reactionary Libertarian (AERC 2025)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 290. Bonus podcast episode: Professor Hoppe’s speech, The Ludwig von Mises Memorial Lecture presented at the Mises Institute’s Austrian Economics Research Conference (Fri., March 21, 2025; see Considerations and Reflections of a Veteran Reactionary Libertarian). The transcript is available at Hoppe, Considerations and Reflections of a Veteran Reactionary Libertarian (AERC 2025). In this speech, Professor Hoppe also talked a bit about what he was planning to do in in his PFS 2025 talk later in the year, “Democratic Peace and Re-Education: the German Experience,” 2025 Annual Meeting, Property and Freedom Society, Bodrum, Turkey (Sep. 20, 2025). Note Professor Hoppe extensively comments on the reaction to his previous criticism of Milei; see Hans-Hermann Hoppe, “Javier Milei” (PFS 2024); Hoppe, “What To Make of Milei,” LewRockwell.com (Oct. 3, 2024); and Kristoffer Mousten Hansen, “Hoppe versus Milei on Central Banking: Breaking Down the Differences,” Mises Wire (Feb. 6, 2025). He also discusses various other matters, such as the funding of the Frankfurt School by Felix Weil and its influence on Western Europe and on America (and its connection to “wokeism”); US worldwide hegemony since WWII and NATO provocations of Russia after the fall of the USSR, and its role in provoking the Russia-Ukraine conflict; the US role in the Israel-Hamas conflict and the influence of Israel over US policy and the dangerous alliance of the US and American “exceptionalism” paired with Israel’s “Chosen People” image.  

Mar 23, 2025

PFP289 | Ammous, Polleit, Hoppe, Kinsella, Hülsmann, Discussion, Q&A (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 289. This panel discussion is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Ammous, Polleit, Hoppe, Kinsella, Hülsmann, Discussion, Q&A. See also Ammous, Polleit, Hoppe, Kinsella, Hülsmann, Discussion, Q&A. Other talks appear on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.

Feb 24, 2025

PFP288 | Hans-Hermann Hoppe: “About Natural Order and its Destruction” (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 288. This talk is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Hans-Hermann Hoppe (Germany/Turkey): “About Natural Order and its Destruction”. See also “About Natural Order and its Destruction” Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.

Feb 17, 2025

PFP287 | Thorsten Polleit: “Immanuel Kant’s ‘Enlightenment’—One of the Sharpest Weapons for the Libertarian Fight” (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 287. This talk is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Thorsten Polleit (Germany): “Immanuel Kant’s ‘Enlightenment’—One of the Sharpest Weapons for the Libertarian Fight”. See also “Immanuel Kant’s ‘Enlightenment’—One of the Sharpest Weapons for the Libertarian Fight”. Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.

Feb 10, 2025

PFP286 | Jörg Guido Hülsmann: “Coercive Democracy: A Critique” (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 286. This talk is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Jörg Guido Hülsmann (Germany/France): “Coercive Democracy: A Critique”. See also Jörg Guido Hülsmann (Germany/France): “Coercive Democracy: A Critique”. Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.

Feb 3, 2025

PFP285 | Stephan Kinsella: “Abortion: A Radically Decentralist Approach” (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 285. This talk is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Stephan Kinsella (USA): “Abortion: A Radically Decentralist Approach” Also podcast as KOL443 | Abortion: A Radically Decentralist Approach (PFS 2024), with additional commentary. Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist. Panel discussion:    

Jan 27, 2025

PFP284 | Saifedean Ammous: “Can the Real Interest Rate Fall to Zero? What would that Imply?” (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 284. This talk is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Saifedean Ammous (Palestine/Jordan): “Can the Real Interest Rate Fall to Zero? What would that Imply?” See also Saifedean Ammous (Palestine/Jordan): “Can the Real Interest Rate Fall to Zero? What would that Imply?” Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.  

Jan 20, 2025

PFP283 | Müller, Dürr, Deist, Gabb, Hoppe, Discussion, Q&A (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 283. This talk is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Müller, Dürr, Deist, Gabb, Hoppe, Discussion, Q&A See also Müller, Dürr, Deist, Gabb, Hoppe, Discussion, Q&A Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.  

Jan 13, 2025

PFP282 | Jeff Deist: “A New Approach to Hoppe’s ‘Open Border Critics'” (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 282. This talk is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Jeff Deist (USA): “A New Approach to Hoppe’s ‘Open Border Critics'” See also A New Approach to Hoppe’s ‘Open Border Critics’ Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.  

Jan 6, 2025

PFP281 | Alan Bickley: “What is Happening in Britain?” (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 281. This talk is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Alan Bickley (England): “What is Happening in Britain?” Doug French (USA): “The Entrepreneurial Studies Racket” --> See also What is Happening in Britain? Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.  

Dec 30, 2024

PFP280 | Special: Hans-Hermann Hoppe, “Javier Milei” (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 280. This talk is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Special: Hans-Hermann Hoppe, “Javier Milei” (PFS 2024). This is an excerpt of Professor Hans-Hermann Hoppe‘s remarks on Javier Milei, excerpted from the panel discussion “Dürr, Müller, Fusillo, Bagus, Hoppe, Roundtable: What to Make of Milei” (PFP279). See also Hans-Hermann Hoppe, “Javier Milei” (PFS 2024); “Who is Hans-Hermann Hoppe, the former inspiration of Javier Milei whom he has now called a ‘libertacrazy liberal,’” La Nacion [Argentina] (12 Dec. 2024). Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.

Dec 23, 2024

PFP279 | Dürr, Müller, Fusillo, Bagus, Hoppe, Roundtable: What to Make of Milei (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 279. This talk is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Dürr, Müller, Fusillo, Bagus, Hoppe, Roundtable: What to Make of Milei. See also Roundtable: What to Make of Milei; “Who is Hans-Hermann Hoppe, the former inspiration of Javier Milei whom he has now called a ‘libertacrazy liberal,’” La Nacion [Argentina] (12 Dec. 2024). Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.

Dec 16, 2024

PFP278 | Antony Müller: “Milei after Nine Months: A Critical Update” (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 278. This talk is from the 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Antony Müller (Germany/Brazil): “Milei after Nine Months: A Critical Update” See also “Milei after Nine Months: A Critical Update” and Antony P. Mueller, “Nine Months of Javier Milei as President of Argentina: A Critical Assessment,” Mises Wire (Oct. 29, 2024). Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.

Dec 9, 2024

PFP277 | David Dürr, “If I woke up and found myself president elect of Argentina …” (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 277. This talk is from the recently-concluded 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). David Dürr (Switzerland): “If I woke up and found myself president elect of Argentina …” See also David Dürr, “If I woke up and found myself president elect of Argentina …” (PFS 2024) Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.

Dec 2, 2024

PFP276 | Bhandari, Fusillo, Taghizadegan, Gabb, Bagus: Discussion, Q&A (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 276. This panel discussion is from Day 1 of the recently-concluded 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Jayant Bhandari (Canada), Alessandro Fusillo (Italy), Rahim Taghizadegan (Austria), Sean Gabb (England), Philipp Bagus (Spain): Discussion, Q&A. See also Bhandari, Fusillo, Taghizadegan, Gabb, Bagus, Discussion, Q&A (PFS 2024) Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.

Nov 25, 2024

PFP275 | Philipp Bagus: “The Crime of the Corona Lockdowns” (PFS 2024)

Property and Freedom Podcast, Episode 275. This talk is from the recently-concluded 18th annual 2024 Annual Meeting of the PFS (Sept. 19–24, 2024, Bodrum, Turkey). Philipp Bagus (Spain): “The Crime of the Corona Lockdowns” See also Philipp Bagus, “The Crime of the Corona Lockdowns” (PFS 2024) Other talks to follow in due course here on the Property and Freedom Podcast. Other videos may also be found at the PFS 2024 Youtube Playlist.

Nov 18, 2024