After 40+ years of reporting, I now understand the importance of limited government and personal freedom.
Libertarian journalist John Stossel is a zealous advocate of free markets, a syndicated columnist and Fox News contributor. Prior to joining Fox, John co-anchored ABC’s primetime newsmagazine show, 20/20.
John Stossel’s economic programs have been adapted into teaching kits by a non-profit organization, “Stossel in the Classroom.” High school teachers in American public schools now use the videos to help educate their students on economics and economic freedom. They are seen by more than 12 million students every year.
John Stossel has received 19 Emmy Awards and has been honored five times for excellence in consumer reporting by the National Press Club. Other honors include the George Polk Award for Outstanding Local Reporting and the George Foster Peabody Award. Visit his website: www.johnstossel.com
The White Pill: Big Government Can Be Defeated (Just Ask the Soviet Union)
Ep. 27 Lenore Skenazy: on Free Range Parenting and Raising Independent Kids
Why Government Can’t Build Broadband or Charging Stations… Or Anything!
America’s Stone Age Ports: How Unions Block Progress
Ep. 26 Tim Pool: on Independent Reporting, Media Bias, Joe Rogan, Covington & Protests
States Ban Lab-Grown Meat: How that limits our freedom and harms animals.
Green Energy Needs Minerals, Yet America Blocks New Mines
Ep. 25 Tulsi Gabbard: on Endless Wars, Healthcare, Justice and More
Free-Range Parenting: A Mom’s Guide to Raising Independent Kids
Ep. 24 Aella: On Sex Work, “Camming," OnlyFans, Liberty & Gathering Research
The Crisis Industry: How Activists Profit from Panic
Why Letting Your Kid Walk Home Alone Could Land You in Jail
Ep. 23 Ezra Levant: Defending Free Speech in a Polarized World
Popular But Wrong: Harris and Trump’s Economic Blunders, From “No Tax On Tips” to Rent Control
Classic Stossel: Get Out The Vote
Free Money? What a UBI Would Really Do to People ... and Our National Debt
Ep. 22 Jordan Peterson: On Free Speech, Responsibility, and the Radical Left