Acton Line

A podcast by Acton Institute - Wednesdays

Wednesdays

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466 Episodes

  1. Rev. Robert A. Sirico on the reality of socialism; Interview with a Venezuelan dissident

    Published: 6/03/2019
  2. Is entrepreneurship declining? All jobs are on the A team

    Published: 27/02/2019
  3. P.J. O'Rourke on capitalism; Peter Jackson's 'They Shall Not Grow Old'

    Published: 20/02/2019
  4. Love and economics; Ending poverty and saving farms

    Published: 13/02/2019
  5. How churches lost the schools; Chinese censorship of American movies

    Published: 6/02/2019
  6. The life of Francis Schaeffer; Netflix's 'Watership Down'

    Published: 23/01/2019
  7. Ashanti Bryant explains AmplifyGR; What is a government shutdown?

    Published: 16/01/2019
  8. A first step towards criminal justice reform; The human cost of unemployment part II

    Published: 9/01/2019
  9. The legacy of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn; The human cost of unemployment part I

    Published: 2/01/2019
  10. RFA Redux: David LaRocca on Brunello Cucinelli's new philosophy of clothes

    Published: 19/12/2018
  11. The Church and the market; Who is Lord Acton?

    Published: 12/12/2018
  12. A.J. Jacobs on coffee and gratitude; The story of freedom in Estonia

    Published: 5/12/2018
  13. The legacy of C.S.Lewis; Marvel’s Daredevil

    Published: 28/11/2018
  14. Gratitude in a tight knit world

    Published: 21/11/2018
  15. Defining a human right; Understanding Brexit

    Published: 14/11/2018
  16. The need for Christian statesmanship; ‘Ideas have Consequences’

    Published: 7/11/2018
  17. The story of Arthur Vandenberg; Russell Kirk’s horror fiction

    Published: 31/10/2018
  18. Hot, dirty, noisy: Purposeful work at Kerkstra Precast; Media blackout on Gosnell movie

    Published: 24/10/2018
  19. Was Jesus a socialist? The importance of poetry

    Published: 17/10/2018
  20. The debasement of human rights; Econ quiz on USMCA

    Published: 10/10/2018

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Dedicated to the promotion of a free and virtuous society, Acton Line brings together writers, economists, religious leaders, and more to bridge the gap between good intentions and sound economics. 

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