"Instead of pushing books like Ibram X. Kendi's How To Be an Antiracist, colleges should have students read Black Liberation Through the Marketplace. The authors make a compelling case that the path forward that will benefit blacks and everyone else is freedom, not coercive and divisive government 'equity' programs. Let's trumpet that message as loudly as possible."--George Leef for National Review
"Ferguson and Witcher make persuasive arguments in favor of the classical liberal narrative about black history, and they also provide valuable summaries of and introductions to the work of other important classical liberal and libertarian scholars on race. In fact, this might be the first book on black history I recommend to students from now on."--Jason Jewell, featured in Law & Liberty's review, "Market Solutions to Ancient Sins"
"Overall, Black Liberation Through the Marketplace is one of the most useful books on the economics of American race relations to appear for some time. If Americans were truly interested in improving their country, rather than engaging in mindless virtue signaling, it would be a bestseller and supplant the infamous Woke tomes currently degrading collegiate and military reading lists."--Robert E. Wright in "Marketplace Liberation"
"America is in desperate need of a new conversation about Black socio-economic mobility that takes the failures of American history and realities of Black excellence seriously in light of the civil society institutions that make it all possible. This book is the beginning of that conversation. Ferguson and Witcher provide us with the very principles of economic and political liberty that, if applied, would end cycles of poverty for so many living in disadvantaged communities. It's historically honest, wonderfully insightful, and immensely practical."--Anthony B. Bradley, author of The Political Economy of Liberation
"Amid the current fierce debate over how American children should be educated, this book should serve as a premier resource for educators seeking to share an honest account of U.S. history with their students. Of course, teachers should describe the barriers of systemic racism while waiting to tell the disturbing record of racial injustice to an age-appropriate audience. But celebrating black achievement is paramount."--Ian Rowe of the American Enterprise Institute
"Ferguson and Witcher provide a carefully reasoned and well documented narrative of Black exploitation in America. They integrate that history well with the classical liberal principles that are the best answer to our racial problems."--P.J. Hill, Professor Emeritus, Wheaton College