Liu Xiaobo is a living profile in courage. Guy Sorman joins Jim Blasingame to discuss Guy's friend, Liu Xiaobo, the imprisoned Chinese dissident and now Nobel Peace Prize winner, and his struggles to bring democracy to China. Plus how this story impacts business relationships.
Should we be worried about the devaluation of the U.S. dollar? Guy Sorman joins Jim Blasingame to discuss the current low exchange rate of the U.S. dollar and whether it should be of concern. Plus whether the U.S. should return to the gold standard.
Is the U.S. trending toward the European social model? Guy Sorman joins Jim Blasingame to talk about the demonstrations in France and across Europe against diminished entitlements in the face of economic realities, and how the U.S. could be headed in that direction.
Liu Xiaobo is a living profile in courage. Guy Sorman joins Jim Blasingame to discuss Guy's friend, Liu Xiaobo, the imprisoned Chinese dissident and now Nobel Peace Prize winner, and his struggles to bring democracy to China. Plus how this story impacts business relationships.
Should we be worried about the devaluation of the U.S. dollar? Guy Sorman joins Jim Blasingame to discuss the current low exchange rate of the U.S. dollar and whether it should be of concern. Plus whether the U.S. should return to the gold standard.
What is the truth about rights and liberty in modern China? Guy Sorman joins Jim Blasingame to report on his recent trip to China where he found repression of free speech and other impingements on liberty, including the ability to start a small business.
Why would the French propose to make GDP obsolete as an economic metric? Guy Sorman joins Jim Blasingame to talk about the ridiculous plan by the French to make "well being" part of the measure of prosperity, rather than the production metric of gross domestic product.
The greatest enemies of economic progress are politicians. That's the message Guy Sorman delivers as he joins Jim Blasingame to talk about why the Euro Zone and the United States are having so much trouble with economic recovery. The problem is not the economy, it's the incessant need by politicians for power.
Just how strong is China's economy? Economist, Guy Sorman joins Jim Blasingame to report that China's economy is much more fundamentally fragile than many experts are saying and what that could mean over the next couple of years.
Is the free-market system and Reaganomics still valid in the 21st century? Guy Sorman says absolutely it is, and he defends these principles in this interview with Jim Blasingame, including making the case for lower taxes and encouraging entrepreneurship instead of growing the government.