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Students For Liberty
@sfliberty

Ludwig von Mises was 57 years old when the Nazis seized his life's work. They confiscated his library, his manuscripts, his home, everything. He fled to America with nothing but the clothes on his back and couldn't speak English. Most people would have given up. Mises started over. 🧵

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Students For Liberty
@sfliberty

When Mises arrived in America, he couldn't order coffee without struggling with the language. He was already a renowned economist in Europe, but in New York, he was just another refugee starting from zero. Instead of dwelling on what he'd lost, he threw himself into learning English from scratch with the same intensity he'd once applied to economic theory.

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Students For Liberty
@sfliberty

By 59, Mises was rebuilding his intellectual career in a foreign country. By 60, he wasn't just speaking English—he was rewriting his life's work in it. "Human Action," his masterpiece on economic theory, became even more comprehensive in English than it had been in German. He didn't just translate his ideas; he expanded them, refined them, made them better. At an age when most people are winding down, Mises was hitting his intellectual peak.

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Students For Liberty
@sfliberty

At 87, Mises was still teaching weekly seminars at New York University. Students would travel from across the country to sit in his living room and debate economic theory with the man who would teach the next generation of liberty advocates. They came not just for his ideas, but for his example: how to maintain intellectual curiosity and rigorous thinking no matter what life throws at you.

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Students For Liberty
@sfliberty

Mises understood something most people miss: the best way to defend liberty isn't through politics or protests. It's by continuously becoming a better person and a better thinker. Every book you read, every skill you develop, every principle you live by makes you a more effective advocate for freedom.

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Students For Liberty
@sfliberty

Today, Mises' intellectual descendants are economists, entrepreneurs, writers, and teachers around the world. They didn't just learn his theories—they learned his approach: never stop improving, never stop questioning, never stop growing. That mindset spreads liberty more effectively than any campaign or movement.

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Students For Liberty
@sfliberty

The question isn't whether you agree with everything Mises wrote. The question is whether you'll follow his example: using every setback as motivation to become more knowledgeable, more skilled, and more principled. That's how you build a movement that can't be stopped—one person at a time.

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Students For Liberty
@sfliberty

Ready to follow Mises' example and become a more effective advocate for liberty? The Local Coordinator Program trains passionate individuals to advance freedom in their communities through education, events, and building lasting networks. Applications are open for those ready to grow while making a real impact. 👉 Apply now: <a target="_blank" href="https://studentsforliberty.org/start/" color="blue">studentsforliberty.org/start/</a>

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