The natural law is, in essence, a profoundly 'radical' ethic, for it holds the existing status quo, which might grossly violate natural law, up to the unsparing and unyielding light of reason.

The fact that natural-law theorists derive from the very nature of man a fixed structure of law independent of time and place, or of habit or authority or group norms, makes that law a mighty force for radical change.

The contemporary political scientist believes that he can avoid the necessity of moral judgments and that he can help frame public policy without committing himself to any ethical position.

The avoidance of explicit ethical judgments leads political scientists to one overriding implicit value judgment - that in favor of the political status quo as it happens to prevail in any given society.

Economics has revealed a great truth about the natural law of human interaction: that not only is production essential to man's prosperity and survival, but so also is exchange.

'The General Theory' was not truly revolutionary at all but merely old and oft-refuted mercantilist and inflationist fallacies dressed up in shiny new garb, replete with newly constructed and largely incomprehensible jargon.

In order to conquer the world of economics with his new theory, it was critical for Keynes to destroy his rivals within Cambridge itself. In his mind, he who controlled Cambridge controlled the world.

Keynes was scarcely a 'revolutionary' in any real sense. He possessed the tactical wit to dress up ancient statist and inflationist fallacies with modern, pseudoscientific jargon, making them appear to be the latest findings of economic science.

Keynes eliminated economic theory's ancient role as spoilsport for inflationist and statist schemes, leading a new generation of economists on to academic power and to political pelf and privilege.

As Ludwig von Mises conclusively demonstrated in 1912, money does not and cannot originate by order of the State or by some sort of social contract agreed upon by all citizens; it must always originate in the processes of the free market.

There is no need for government to intervene in money and prices because of changing population or for any other reason. The 'problem' of the proper supply of money is not a problem at all.

The threat of gold redeemability imposes a constant check and limit on inflationary issues of government paper. If the government can remove the threat, it can expand and inflate without cease. And so it begins to emit propaganda, trying to persuade the public not to use gold coins in their daily lives.

An attempt by the Mongols to introduce paper money in Persia in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries flopped because no one would accept it. The public had no confidence in the paper money despite the awesomely coercive decrees that always marked Mongol rule.

In the United States, after World War II, it took about two decades for the message to slowly seep in that inflation was going to be a permanent fact of the American way of life.

One grave and fundamental Keynesian error is to persist in regarding the interest rate as a contract rate on loans instead of the price spreads between stages of production. The former, as we have seen, is only the reflection of the latter.

I want my hands in all the pots and not just one. I want to make the right moves that'll put me in the right place.

I'm into having a good time and showing people you can have fun. Because for a long time, the West Coast, it wasn't about having fun. It was about gang banging; it just wasn't fun no more. So now I'm bringing fun back.

Being the new guy, you're gonna dress your best every day. When you're the cool guy, you gonna be like, 'Ah, I'm the cool guy anyway. I don't need to dress like that.'

If I ever do meet John Mayer and we end up in the studio, hopefully he'll bring the guitar, and I'll make a beat to it or something.

I think that you're only going to get better if you take time to better yourself, not because someone says you should get better.

Everybody in the West Coast always like to hear YG, RJ, and Mustard together.

I'm big on simplicity. I'm not too much on all the extra instruments.

When I came in the game, it was just me making beats in Inglewood at YG's house; it wasn't nobody to help me.

10 Summers isn't just a label, it's a lifestyle.

I think it's good that producers are showing more ways to show their artistry and be more the artist, you know? Not just the producer in the back making the beats.

My uncle is just, like, always pushing me to be better, be a man, and showing me the ropes of the game.

I've been working hard to lose weight and become healthier overall. I even started putting the workouts on my Snapchat so my fans can see how dedicated I am to being better.

I wanna compete; I wanna be the best at whatever I do.

Skrillex is dope. He plays everything. It's amazing what he does.

Everybody likes good music, so when you're just playing good music and encouraging everybody to have fun, they'll have fun.

I feel like me and YG are the closest to Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg that people are gonna get.

I hear a lot of people saying my stuff sounds the same. When you're in my position, people come to you to give them the same sound in a different type of way.

I like working with new artists.

YG and I told each other when we was coming up that if we didn't feel like we was close to making it by 25, we was going to stop.

Don't let this music industry or any industry come between friendship. Just stay focused on your goals.

You can't stop what God wants to happen.

My real name is Dijon. My mom named me Dijon, so everybody used to call me Mustard.

Sam Smith is amazing.

You see so many musicians come and go. For me, it's really about the longevity in the music industry. It's not all about having a lot of hit records at one time.

I feel like having a son made me go harder and work harder. And now that I got a daughter, it's the same grind, staying focused on what I have to do for them.

There's male groupies - guys that wanna stand next to you to get to the girls. A male groupie is the worst.

I'm just doing all type of music that I like. I'm not so worried about the money like I used to be. I got money now. I don't have to worry about that.

You can't pick a fight with anyone doing something with your sound.

I can do every type of music, but hip-hop was my way into the game.

I know that everything comes to an end. Everything is a phase.

My uncle, he's a big DJ out here in L.A. His name is DJ Tee; he's got a bar in Westchester.

When I got my first check from 'Rack City,' I was like, 'Damn, I can make this much money making beats?'

With me and YG, he could rap a hook, and I could make a beat around it. Ten minutes, we done.

TeeFlii brought an edge to our camp. He's definitely going to be one of the greats.

Any man can take a sucker punch, but if you get slapped, it's other repercussions to that.