The Glorious Experiment of Yellowstone Park

The Glorious Experiment of Yellowstone Park

  Americans are celebrating the Centennial of the U. S. Park Service. Its creation is one of the most successful experiments of Progressive Era reformers.   They created Yellowstone, the world’s first national park, in 1872. It stands out as a truly great and largely successful experiment in ecological and social management. Yellowstone Park was […]

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 Peace, Prosperity and Property Rights

Peace, Prosperity and Property Rights

Foreword by John Baden We can learn a great deal from the recent standoff in the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. Clear and agreed upon property rights are critical to civility and productivity. It is nearly impossible to have peace and prosperity when property rights are seriously contested. This is as true in Oregon as in […]

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 Buffalo Chips in the Policy Game

Buffalo Chips in the Policy Game

During the post-Civil War period, from 1865 to 1910, America resembled a rapidly developing Third World nation. Life expectancy was just over 40 years and average income was less than one twentieth of today’s. Corrupt big city machines and corporate cronyism marked our political economy. Plunder, pollution, and predation were common. Property rights to natural […]

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 Yellowstone and the Park Service Centennial

Yellowstone and the Park Service Centennial

The U. S. Park Service in the Department of Interior celebrates its centennial this year. It manages over 400 national parks and monument units. The creation of these protected areas is often labeled as “America’s best idea”.*  America’s first national park, Yellowstone, was established in 1872. It has become the world’s model for park management.** […]

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 Keeping Your New Year’s Resolution for Getting Fit in 2016

Keeping Your New Year’s Resolution for Getting Fit in 2016

Economics is not simply about money. Rather, economics helps explain personal decisions and social coordination.  It focuses on two things, information and incentives. Here is an economic perspective on the most common New Year’s resolution, to become fit and lose weight. There is overwhelming and ever increasing information that regular and moderately serious physical exercise, […]

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 Ash Falls on MSU

Ash Falls on MSU

Unfortunately, it is a true, empirical, universal, statistical generalization that organizations are run mainly for the benefit of those who head them. Those who lead them make decisions based on two things, information and incentives. This is true for EPA, Volkswagen, the U. S. Park Service, and Montana State University. Conflicts arise between the ideals […]

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Be Thankful For Our Founders

Americans  have excellent reasons to celebrate Thanksgiving.  We live in the world’s most successful large scale experiment in harmonizing liberty, ecology and prosperity.  Our founders understood the power of voluntary cooperation among free men and the constant dangers of threats to liberty and political predation.   The founders were, however, captives of their context. Hence not all men were […]

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 Pollution, Wealth and the Environmental Kuznets Curve

Pollution, Wealth and the Environmental Kuznets Curve

I enjoy sharing environmental insights. Here is a one by Professor Don Boudreaux of George Mason University. He gave permission to post his Cafe Hayek (http://cafehayek.com/) as a FREE Insight. Its elegant simplicity surprised me. I’m embarrassed not to have thought of it years ago! Here is Don’s key insight. Pollution comes from two types of sources. […]

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Respecting the Significance of Veterans Day

Next Wednesday is Veteran’s Day. Jim Drummond, President  of our region’s Stockman Bank found his dad’s diary from WWII.  Jim wrote a moving commentary to accompany selected entries he shared with colleagues and friends.  Jim kindly agreed to let us post his introduction to the diary as a FREE Insight.   James Drummond, Jim’s father, was an […]

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 How Entrepreneurs Help Ecology

How Entrepreneurs Help Ecology

Few environmentalists celebrate entrepreneurs’ contributions to conservation and environmental quality.  I do.  As one example, below are notes from my talk next week at Duke University, “How Entrepreneurs Harmonize Liberty, Ecology, and Prosperity”.  Entrepreneurs discover innovative ways to organize and mobilize people and other resources to produce things people value. They need not invent things, […]

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