Fidel Castro antes de tomar el poder: "yo no soy comunista o marxista, creo en la democracia".
Todos tienen el mismo disfraz, me hacen acordar al Kirchnerismo y a la izquierda, que acusan a Milei de dictador pero son ellos los que buscan por todos los medios tumbarlo, olvidando que él fue elegido democraticamente.
Llega Hugo Aguilar al Monumento a la Revolución
¿Qué hace el presidente de la Corte en un mitín político de la 4T?
Así la "autonomía" de la Corte del Acordeón
📹 @Radio_Formula
As a young socialist, Hayek read Ludwig von Mises’ 1920 paper “Economic Calculation in the Socialist Commonwealth.”
Mises showed that socialist central planning isn’t merely inefficient, it’s impossible.
Without private property and genuine market prices, planners lack any rational way to allocate scarce resources or determine real costs and needs.
Even Oskar Lange, a leading socialist in the calculation debate, effectively conceded the point.
While he promoted “market socialism” with trial-and-error pricing by a central board, real-world socialist planners in Eastern Europe quietly relied on world capitalist market prices as a guide.
Without external free-market price signals, pure socialism would be economically blind and coordination would collapse.
Mises went further, arguing that interventionism, the “middle way” of government meddling, is inherently unstable.
Each intervention creates problems that invite more interventions, eventually leading to full socialization.
Price controls cause shortages, subsidies distort production, and the cycle continues until the economy is fully planned.
The lesson is clear.
Rational economics requires genuine market prices emerging from voluntary exchange and private property.
Half-measures don’t stabilize the system. They accelerate the drift into central planning.
The Austrian School understood this decades before the collapse of the Soviet bloc proved it in practice.
@HernanGomezB Como dice la PresidentA:
Si no le alcanza para la Premium, compre Magna.
Si quiere a ahorrar Luz, no la prenda.
Si no quiere comprar café de 90 pesos, compre en el Oxxo, huevón.
@NancySinatra@maca_online Sorry to break it to you, Nancy, but this is just not true. There is no such thing as universal health care in Mexico. It's a big fat lie, a populist lie.