The Bastiat Society – Delaware Chapter to Commemorate 1 year anniversary
Do you want to learn about a new, fast growing and unique organization that seeks unite the business community to many of the think tank organizations that are promoting the important topics of economic freedom within the views of Austrian Economics and classical liberal perspectives?
Then you might be interested in checking out the Bastiat Society.
The Bastiat Society – Delaware Chapter is a strictly a non-political and non-profit organization and they strongly emphasize this since often topics of economic theory are often incorrectly conflated as political party debates. They want to be upstream of the political barking points since we feel that they can accomplish much more in having business people and professionals understand that the real debate is in understanding philosophies of economics not politics. The Bastiat Society tends to focus on Austrian Economics since it does speak to the importance of free markets and how to critically think about how real free markets work and why we are so plagued with so many economic fallacies that we are bombarded with from many of the mainstream news outlets.
Next month, the Delaware chapter celebrates their one year year anniversary and they are holding a lecture event that features Tom G. Palmer, a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, and
director of Cato University, the Institute’s educational arm.
The event is on May 2nd, 2013 at the estate of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute in Greenville from 6-8 pm.
If you’d like to go, email your reservation to delaware@bastiatsociety.com or call 610-308-0993.
for more info about the Bastiat Society of Delaware go to www.bastiatsociety.org/delaware or check out the summary below:
Bastiat Society Details.
The Bastiat Society seeks to engage with the business community in a
positive, non-political, and academic Society – a society of principled
wealth creators. Our mission is to give those who create wealth and
jobs the tools they need to defend them. The Society’s views can be
simply stated:
• Trade is a fundamental and virtuous human activity
• Peaceful and profitable trade creates wealth
• Wealth makes the world better
• Those who create wealth through trade are not villains, but are moral agents driving humanity forward
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