Talk:Free to Choose

Plans for cleanup
I'd like to help improve this article. As the current templates note, it could use some expansion and it could use some cleanup.

Based upon the principle of WP:Bold, I could just go ahead an make some major changes. However, I intend to propose changes here first (except for routine cleanup). I note the article is not getting a lot of page views, nor does it have many people watching it, so I do not anticipate that proposals will get vigorous discussion - I hope I'm wrong.

Current observations:

Removed material

 * The Wealth of Nations: Representative Selection by Adam Smith
 * Capitalism and Freedom by Milton Friedman
 * The Declaration of Independence by Sam Fink
 * Democracy in America by Alexis de Tocqueville
 * Principles of Political Economy: and Chapters on Socialism by John Stuart Mill
 * Unsafe at Any Speed by Ralph Nader
 * Declaration of Independence by Second Continental Congress
 * The Federal Reserve System: Purposes and Functions by Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
 * Income from Independent Professional Practice by Milton Friedman
 * The Pursuit of Equality in American History by J.R. Pole
 * Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960 by Milton Friedman
 * Education and the State by E.G. West
 * Tyranny of the Status Quo by Milton Friedman
 * The Economic Consequences of the Peace by John Maynard Keynes
 * Studies in the Quantity Theory of Money by Milton Friedman
 * John Lewis Biography by Melvyn Dubofsky
 * Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell
 * The United States Bill of Rights by U.S Government
 * Government by Judiciary by Raoul Berger
 * Culture and the City: Cultural Philanthropy in Chicago from the 1880's to 1917 by Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz
 * I, Pencil by Leonard Read

Expansion
The article doesn't say much about the book or video series contents. The overview section is largely a discussion of the creation of the series and book, as well as the format. The overview section contains perhaps two sentences discussing the content. The position advocated section does have more coverage of the contents, but the entire section is only four sentences. I'd like to hold of major revamping of those two sections at the moments, as they are both summary sections, and concentrate of further discussion of the contents, following the ten chapter approach, then return to rewrite the summary and overview.

Technical Points
-- SPhilbrick  T  01:51, 15 August 2010 (UTC)
 * The book illustration is the 1990 version, rather than the original 1980 publication. I'd like to use the original version.
 * The lede contains the ISBN; I don't think this is standard.
 * The date in the lead is given as 1980, but the ISBN corresponds to the 1990 version.
 * The overview refers to the 1980 date, but the page count does not match the 1980 book.
 * The info box has a different page count than the main article.
 * The info box refers to the 1980 publication date, but shows the 1990 cover and the 1990 ISBN.
 * The infobox page count is right for the 1980 version, but it lists 1990 in parentheses.

Broadcast on public television
I'm sure my edit adding a prominent mention in the lead that Free to Choose was broadcast on public television will be considered vandalism by this article's more regular caretakers...so I thought that I should add a brief explanation:

When I picked up my copy of the book, I was floored when I read the tagline at the top saying (approximately) that it was "based on the smash PBS hit"; I immediately hit up the Wikipedia article to see the whole story -- how it was funded, how the Friedmans justified it, how PBS justified it (though that would be easier), how funders justified choosing PBS (or how they felt about it being the only place that would take it if that were the situation)...but unfortunately, none of this information was available.

So, I'm hoping that perhaps we can get a dialogue going that will eventually lead to this relevant and highly interesting information being added to the article.

Thanks, Justin 72.86.124.192 (talk) 23:29, 2 January 2011 (UTC)