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Free to Choose Chapter 4: Cradle to Grave - The Rise of the Welfare State

Imagine you sign up for a retirement plan. Your employer tells you the money goes into a trust fund. Every paycheck, a chunk disappears under the label “contribution.” You believe that somewhere, in some account with your name on it, your savings are growing. Then one day you find out there is no account. There is no fund. The money you paid in was handed directly to someone who retired before you. And your retirement depends entirely on whether people who come after you are willing to do the same for you. That is Social Security. And it is just one piece of a much larger story.

Free to Choose Chapter 3: The Anatomy of Crisis

The Great Depression was not what you think it was. Most people believe it was the ultimate proof that capitalism is dangerous and unstable. That free markets, left alone, will eventually destroy themselves. Friedman says this story is almost exactly backwards. The Depression was not a failure of the free market. It was a failure of government – specifically, a small group of people at the Federal Reserve who had the power to prevent the disaster and chose not to use it.

Free to Choose Chapter 2: The Tyranny of Controls

Every country says it wants to protect its workers. Every government says tariffs and controls are there to help ordinary people. Friedman says: look at the results, not the speeches. In almost every case, the people these controls claim to protect are the ones who pay the highest price.

Free to Choose Chapter 1: The Power of the Market

Nobody on this planet knows how to make a pencil. Not one single person. That is not a joke. It is the opening argument of Chapter 1 of Free to Choose, and once you understand it, you will never look at the economy the same way again.

Free to Choose Introduction: How America Became the Land of Opportunity

Two documents changed the world in 1776. One told a king to back off. The other explained why free people, left alone, build prosperity almost by accident. Milton Friedman opens Free to Choose by connecting these two ideas and showing how they built the richest nation in history. He also warns that America has been slowly walking away from both.

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