So, economics:
I had to take a break from
Man, Economy, and State for a while. I really liked the first four chapters. It was slow reading, but I understood it. The fifth chapter starts talking about all that ERE crap and it started to lose me. I made it through the fifth chapter, barely, but then I hit chapter six and I had to stop. I'll come back to it in the near future, but I wasn't learning anything at that point and knew that my time would be best spent reading something else.
I read Robert Murphy's
Lessons for the Young Economist and
really enjoyed it. I learned so much, especially the last section about interventionism. I even told Bob Murphy on his Facebook how much I liked it and he even responded! Now I'm about half-way through
Economics in One Lesson and it's even better than Murphy's book. Planning on reading all of the introductory material on
Tom Wood's list before going back to MES (probably read Gary North's
Mises on Money, too).
So basically, things are going really well and I find the more I read the more I love economics.
One last thing. I plan on attending a community college this fall and my parents, aware of my new found interest in economics, are encouraging me to take an economics class. I told them no because of the required math classes (I absolutely suck at math) and I'm just gonna assume the teacher is gonna be some extreme left-wing Marxist. Not that I have a problem hearing all sides, but I doubt such a person would give the free market a fair shot. I saw Gary North and Walter Block's debate on taking economics classes and North has some very good points. I have no plans to have a career related to economics at all, but I wondered what you guys thought.