The weekend podcast on video:
Author: Editor
Victoria Woodhull
On May 10, 1872, Victoria Woodhull became the first woman nominated for President of the United States.
In a landmark Supreme Court decision on May 10, 1893, the tomato was ruled a vegetable, not a fruit.
Paul covers the week’s big stories:
John Brown
On May 9, 1800, abolitionist revolutionary (and, technically, insurrectionist, possibly a terrorist) John Brown was born.
In 1883 on this date, Spanish philosopher José Ortega y Gasset was born.
Mill and Hayek … and bang!
On May 8, 1899, Austrian-English economist and philosopher Friedrich August von Hayek was born. He signed the bulk of his books written in the English language as “F.A. Hayek,” and is best known for The Road to Serfdom, The Constitution of Liberty, The Fatal Conceit, and many essays, several of them widely cited, including “Individualism, True and False” and “The Use of Knowledge in Society.”
Years earlier, on the same date in 1873, English philosopher and economist John Stuart Mill died. Now best known for On Liberty (1859) and Utilitarianism (1861), he was and is considered one of the most important economists and philosophers of the Victorian age, with other classics including A System of Logic (1843) and Principles of Political Economy (1848). Mill’s letters to his wife were edited into book form by Hayek.
On May 8, 1946, two Estonian school girls (Aili Jõgi and Ageeda Paavel) blew up the Soviet memorial which stood in front of the Bronze Soldier in Tallinn.
L’homme est libre au moment qu’il veut l’être.
Man is free at the instant he wants to be.
Voltaire (François-Marie Arouet, 1694 – 1778), Brutus, act II, scene I (1730).