Tomorrow night we're
hosting a murder mystery dinner party at our home for supporters of the Tom Woods Show.
I'm Hal Sapone.
We realized today that we may not have enough steak knives for the two dozen guests.
So my wife ordered a bunch at the last minute and we are hopeful that they will arrive before the party.
But if they don't, I told her that as a last resort I could get some very cheap ones at the dollar store, and then tell attendees who complain: if you don't want to use that
knife to cut your steak, how'd you like it in your skull?
Don't cross Hal Sapone, my friends.
The dinner party is set in Chicago during Prohibition. Ol' Hal was just supplying the masses with what they wanted, with a few murders on the
side.
And isn't that what the market economy is all about? Finding what people want and giving it to them?
That can be easier said than done. During Prohibition it was obvious that everybody wanted alcohol. But today it can be trickier
to figure out exactly what kind of business you should be in.
That's why I urge you to take a look at what Paul Counts and Shreya Banerjee, who do the marketing for the Ron Paul Curriculum, have to offer to people who are considering exactly that question.
There are multiple online models that are tried and true, and Paul and Shreya can teach you the ropes of all of them.
Their marketing curriculum is taught in 140 high schools, so they're good at explaining things to beginners, but they've also taken on massive companies as clients, so they're great for everybody.
Check them out for yourself, and here's hoping that tomorrow night if I have to buy cheap steak knives, we wind up using them only to cut steak.
The link:
https://www.tomwoods.com/insider
Tom Woods
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