Books tagged: economic freedom

The adult filter is active; content marked as adults-only by the author is not listed.

Full Search
Found: 5 results

Desperate Times    by Nicholas Antinozzi
Price: $2.99 USD. 112880 words. Published on April 4, 2010. .

Jimmy Logan wakes up to find that the dollar has crashed. There is a run on the banks and they quickly close their doors. People panic as other businesses follow suit. Fortunately, Jimmy has friends who have built their "house of bricks" and have invited him to stay with them. They soon learn that the woods is full of wolves; desperate people, prepared to do anything to feed their families.
When to Quit Your Day Job    by Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Price: $4.99 USD. 9290 words. Published by WMG Publishing  on July 13, 2010. .

A Freelancer's Survival Guide Short Book. The biggest dream all freelancers have is to work for themselves. They want to ditch the day job. Many freelancers quit their day job too early. Some wait too long. Some never do quit. A step-by-step survival guide to the decisions you need to make to become and stay a freelancer in any business.
What the Immigrant Saw    by JP Floru
Price: $9.99 USD. 74970 words. Published by Bretwalda Books  on September 29, 2011. .

Britain as seen through the eyes of an immigrant from Belgium. Amusing, serious, incisive, but always affectionate, JP Floru brings an outsider’s eye to look at Britain.
The Tamarack Conspiracy    by Pat Slattery
Price: $3.99 USD. 42790 words. Published on January 18, 2012. .

The government is coming down hard on businesses, vilifying them for all of the problems caused by policies enacted by the government elites themselves. The economy is crashing. The choice is to become a government crony, give up... or defy them. A group of entrepreneurs conspires to find a way to save economic freedom, but they have to defeat government thugs to do it.
Beyond Distributism    by Thomas E Woods, Jr.
Price: $2.99 USD. 23400 words. Published by Acton Institute on May 11, 2012. .

Troubled by rampant injustice and inequality, many conscientious Christians advocate radical economic reforms. Distributism, a program that traces its popularity to Catholic writers Hilaire Belloc and G.K. Chesterton, promotes the widespread ownership of property by tempering the market with guilds or similar associations.