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Posted on 01.09.07 by Steve Kubby
To the returning and incoming members of the US House of Representatives and the US Senate: On January 3rd, our nation’s 110th Congress opened its first session, following an election in which America’s voters gave control of both bodies composing that institution to the Democratic Party for the first time in 12 years. Incoming Speaker Nancy Pelosi has announced that the “first 100 hours” of Congressional work time will be spent righting wrongs and pointing American government in a new direction. Change is in the air — but what kind of change? Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 01.05.07 by George Phillies
For three thousand Americans, their relatives, and their families, peace with Iraq is now too late. Those three thousand Americans made the ultimate sacrifice for their country: They died fighting a pointless war in a foreign land. We cannot undo the sacrifice that they made. We should seek to ensure that more Americans do not go forth, courageously, only to make the same sacrifice in the distant desert sands of Iraq. Our soldiers in Iraq face hazards unknown in past wars. They are under constant attack. No matter how often George Bush claims that we are winning, the number of effective attacks against us continues to climb, in the past year from 70 to 180 per day. Worse, that count of attacks does not include vastly more “violent acts” committed against us. Those violent acts apparently number more than one thousand a day. Over the course of a year, that’s two violent acts for each serviceman and each servicewoman in Iraq. No matter where our troops go, to Iraq’s teeming cities, to the remote wastes of Al Anbar province, or even to their bases and bunkers, Iraqi guerrillas continue their incessant war on our men and women. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 12.27.06 by George Phillies
Building a Better America … The American future is going to be very different from its past. Our children and grandchildren will live in a world in which originality, creativity, and meticulous workmanship are prized. Thoughtless assembly line tasks will be done by robots. People who adapt to new circumstances and tools will thrive. People who choose not to change may find life is more challenging. We all want a bright, happy life for future generations. How can we best help our children? To give our children and grandchildren the shining future of that sunlit city on the hill, we must give them the most effective education that we can. We must give them an education that prepares them for the American future. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Author: Steve Trinward Posted on 12.25.06 by Steve Trinward Note: This was supposed to show up at the ISIL Medical Freedom Channel, a week ago today. However, since that site is currently offline temporarily, it seemed appropriate to unveil it here at Rational Review, in order to maintain its timeliness. - SAT. A new national healthcare plan was revealed this week, sponsored by Sen. Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon. On first glance, it may appear to be just another variation on the Hillarycare model for socialized medicine, and in some ways it seems to be being promoted that way. However, this may be a case where marketing undercuts the reality, the way so many Hollywood films of recent vintage have done. (Who could have known how sensitive Adam Sandler’s characters in Spanglish or 50 First Dates could be … based on the same old slapstick shown in the previews?) Is it possible to craft a program that can blaze a path toward a true reform in healthcare? Let’s find out, by examining the major ideas being brought forth in the Wyden plan. To begin with, let’s summarize (details below): The Good News: (1) The program focuses strongly on wellness and prevention as a paradigm for healthcare; (2) It stresses self-responsibility, and offers a way out of the “employee benefit” box; and (3) It pushes for “portability” and individual ownership and control of that wellness. The Downside, at least for many libertarians, is: (a) how many mandates there are for government involvement in making this happen, requiring compliance from many segments of society, including those same individuals and their employers; (2) the fullscale trampling of the Tenth Amendment, mandating state creation of local coverage programs and monitoring of the results; and (3) perhaps most significantly, the lack of mention of Medical Savings Accounts, or other methods for funding self-responsible wellness, as part of its prescription. Aside from this, however, there’s a lot to recommend here. (more…) Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 12.21.06 by Jim Davidson
One of the difficulties of many existing space settlement advocacy groups is their insistence that the government play a leading role. Some groups are better than others, in that they suggest that current governmental policy is problematical, and they want less government interference with private space projects. The Space Frontier Foundation has been a class act in this respect, calling for less government and more private enterprise. But not all that much less government. Even those groups that want to see less government space activity are still focused on the government as the prime mover. I believe this idea is essentially mistaken. Government policy should not be the focus. After all, governments do not open frontiers. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
Posted on 12.18.06 by Rob Latham
News Item: U.S Mint bans melting pennies, nickels The motivation for the melting and export ban of U.S. pennies and nickels is the reality that the market value for the coins’ metal exceeds the faith-based denomination value stamped into them by the federal government. “In God We Trust,” indeed. Why is the federal government in the money business? (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 12.07.06 by George Phillies
American law and tradition make clear: The accused are entitled to speedy trials before a jury. The accused may not be tortured until they confess. Evidence obtained through torture is not admissible. The accused has the right to cross-examination of the witnesses against him. Older readers will recall the days before Miranda, when prisoners in American jails were likely to be abused until they confessed, especially if they were dark of skin or spoke with an accent. Fortunately, the Supreme Court brought those days to an end. The Military Commissions Act turns all American law and tradition on its head. The Military Commissions Act is un-American to its core. It should be repealed immediately. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Author: Steve Trinward Posted on 12.02.06 by Steve Trinward It’s not often I find something worth commenting on at World Net Daily. Since about the time of the September 11 attacks, and the subsequent “patrioter than thou” pro-neocon shift of Joseph Farah and his minions, that alleged news-site has gone off my daily rounds, probably for good. But every so often I find an article referenced elsewhere, one that stretches my disbelief even farther than usual. This was one of those days. I found a ludicrous story, quoting Colorado Congressthug (and wanna-be Emper … err, President) Tom Tancredo, in which the Wall Around America advocate actually took George W. Bush to task: for not being xenophobic enough! This in itself is not surprising, since even President Bush himself has supported some variations on open borders, even while he continues to bomb and invade other sovereign peoples, and contemplate his next attacks. But Tancredo’s most hilarious comment is the one quoted in the story’s headline: “Bush doesn’t think America should be an actual place.” Neither do I, Tom; it might be the first thing I’ve agreed with the current Fearless Leader poseur since … well the part of his alleged Socialist inSecurity reform plan that actually called for ending it! Of course, I don’t mean the same thing Dubya does, when I affirm (much to Tom T’s chagrin, I’m quite sure) that “America” should indeed be considered more than a mere geographical location, bounded by artificial lines on a map. Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 11.28.06 by David M. Brown
Just got this business opportunity by email. Can anyone tell me whether it’s legit?–me Dear Idiot, I am the son of a Nigerian multi-millionaire who was recently decapitated in a coup attempt in my war-torn country with lots of millionaires but not before hiding his wealth from his enemies in a secure bank account. PLEASE KEEP THIS INFORMATION TOP SECRET BETWEEN YOU AND ME. Scouring the Internet for someone avec whom I could communicate in strictest confidentiality I was given your name by a mutual friend who said you were trustworthy and would like to receive millions of dollars, if this is not you please to forgive. Trusting you to keep this matter in strictest confidence. Only you and the billion other people receiving this letter will be privy to this opportunity, which is occasioned by the desperacy of my circumstances here in the war-torn impoverished Nigeria, things suck here. Me and the other millions of tribally spat-upon sons of millionaires here are just frantic to get our money into the hands of Internet acquaintances like you so you can get the millions-of-dollars fee. Please help! Cuz there’s just no fucking way we Nigerian sons of millionaires have any idea of how to set up a bank account of our own outside of Nigeria without the help of a complete stranger I’m contacting off a spam email list. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Author: George Phillies Posted on 11.27.06 by George Phillies Recently, Congress took a radical step to protect our nation. Under the guise of protecting our country from terrorists trying to attack our harbors, it passed a ban on Internet poker games. Of course, it may be the case that someplace, somewhere, someone actually believes that Internet poker players are third-world terrorists out to destroy our way of life. Unfortunately, one of these people is a United States Senator. Real Americans know: Internet poker players are not terrorists. They are regular Americans, just like you and me. They have a hobby. They play cards. To meet more opponents, they play over the internet: On the internet, they can meet thousands of new opponents, from the safety of their own living rooms. Real Americans know: Poker is as American as apple pie. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 11.21.06 by Robert Milnes
I am, among several others, presently exploring and pursuing an interest in the Libertarian Party’s nomination for President of the UNITED STATES in 2008. Like most concerned Americans I have been following developments there over the years. Recent developments include the American midterm elections and the anticipation of a Memorandum opinion by the bipartisan Baker/Hamilton Iraq Study Group. Quite a while ago I formulated a proposal/plan for Iraq. It is on my campaign website and remains substantially little changed with perhaps some alterations/additions. Unfortunately I have seen little indication of any other proposal/plan similar to mine. Whenever the possibility of partition is brought up, it is associated with autonomy over sovereignty and presumed violent reactions and is quickly dismissed or discredited. I believe it is viable and I stand by it and I hereby attempt to publicize it further for the consideration of the American people. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 11.16.06 by George Phillies
We have glorious prospects before us. The Democratic and Republican parties shot themselves in the feet. With hand grenades. Our national debt increases a half a trillion dollars per year. Congress debates flag burning. Income of nonsupervisory workers is stagnant. Congress debates gay marriage. The trade deficit approaches eight hundred billion dollars a year. Congress renamed French fries. Twice! The cost of energy soars. Congress tried nationalizing the Schiavo family. The War On Iraq drags on. Congress banned internet gambling. It’s time for a change. The libertarian change. It’s time to elect grown-ups to Federal office. I urge you to consider two questions. First, how should we choose our next Presidential candidate? Second, who should you choose as that candidate? (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 11.16.06 by David M. Brown
Have a weird, impossible problem that only someone with a thimble of common sense could solve? Ask Dr. Know-It-All! EARTH VERSUS MARS, INABILITY TO ADMIT A DISABILITY, BILL CLINTON’S STUNNING ANNOUNCEMENT, TED HAGGARD’S STUNNING ANNOUNCEMENT, BUDGETARY TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS DEAR DR. KNOW-IT-ALL: Should I move to Mars? I heard that our own planet is doomed — global warming is going to dunk several continents under a mile of water soon — and that this will cause quite a big dent in the economy. I’ve seen a Green Peace press release confirming this. First one polar ice cap is going to melt, then the other. (I forget the order, sorry.) Also, some movie I saw showed how things would be getting so hot that there would be constant blizzards, and people would be forced to announce traumatic developments to each other in stentorian cliches as cars crash through the window. Should I get off this globe while the getting’s good? Seems you’re onto something, Frank. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 11.15.06 by Steve Kubby
Dear fellow Libertarians, Since I declared my candidacy for our party’s 2008 presidential nomination back in August, one of the most frequently asked questions of me has been “where do you stand on the war in Iraq?” Some of you have found my answers unsatisfactory. I apologize. I’ve been thinking through a problem and haven’t found an answer … so I’m just going to bring it to you. We need to talk about it. First, let me make my own position on the US war in Iraq crystal clear: I oppose it. I opposed it when it was proposed, I opposed it when it began, and I oppose it now. If the American people put me in the White House, I’ll end it immediately with a unilateral and unconditional withdrawal of US forces from that country. But that’s the easy part. The hard part is re-uniting a country and a party that’s been divided by this war, and that’s the part that has to start NOW. If you haven’t found my previous answers satisfactory, please understand that I’ve been giving a lot of thought to the hard part. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 11.09.06 by Thomas L. Knapp
Dear libertarian Republicans, It’s been some time since I’ve used the term “libertarian Republicans” without quote marks around “libertarian,” but Tuesday’s election results opened a window of opportunity for reconciliation between the libertarian movement and its errant Republican offshoot — a window that I hope both sides will hold open and use for the purpose of friendly communication and mutual support. For now, at least, I’m removing the quote marks, in the hope that libertarian Republicans will re-evaluate their priorities, place principle before party, and exploit the golden opportunity which the 2006 elections have placed before them. Most of you, I suspect, are less than happy with what transpired on Tuesday. You shouldn’t be. (more…) Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 11.08.06 by James Landrith
Well, it is all over but the crying — at least for the GOP and their sell-out neo-libertarian buddies. For my libertarian readers who still labor under the delusion that we owe the GOP our support, please read: Lew Rockwell on War Loses, Again:
Jacob G. Hornberger on They Deserved to Lose:
We are long past the time when thoughtful libertarians should be confused about our role in the political process. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Author: David Tomlin Posted on 11.07.06 by David Tomlin Books Cited or Mentioned in this Column: Gilbert, Martin. Israel: A History. William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1998. Morris, Benny. The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem, 1947-1949. Cambridge University Press, First paperback edition, 1989. Morris, Benny. Righteous Victims: A History of the Zionist-Arab Conflict, 1881-1999. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1999. Segev, Tom. One Palestine, Complete: Jews and Arabs Under the British Mandate. Henry Holt and Company, LLC, 2000. This is the second in a series of columns [first one here] commenting on Thomas Knapp’s “Context is everything: American libertarians and Israel, part 1.” Tom wrote the article as a response to “Is Applying Libertarian Principles to Israel Anti-Semitic?” by Carol Moore. One of the most important claims in Carol’s article is that “Israel holds just claim to only a small percentage of even Israel proper.” Carol links to a scholarly article, “The Alienation of a Homeland: How Palestine Became Israel,” by Stephen P. Halbrook, which estimates the amount of land owned by Jews in 1947 as less than 7% of Palestine, and less than 10% of the Jewish state proposed by United Nations General Assembly Resolution 181 (UNGAR 181) in that year. [Map] Tom doesn’t acknowledge the point, much less respond to it. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 11.02.06 by Elizabeth Price Foley
There is a growing tension in American law between individual liberty and public morality. Exit polling from the 2004 presidential election revealed that “moral values” is the most important issue among voters, surpassing the economy, war in Iraq, and terrorism. Little wonder, then, that Americans increasingly feel the need to codify majoritarian morality into law in a desperate attempt to stem the perceived moral decline. We must restrain the liberty of morally deficient individuals, the argument goes, to prevent their pestilence from spreading throughout society. But are such morality-based laws legitimate exercises of governmental power? In my new book published by Yale University Press titled, Liberty for All: Reclaiming Individual Privacy in a New Era of Public Morality, I answer this question “no.”
The problem with this logic, of course, is that it presupposes far too much about the proper scope of legislative power and far too little about the proper scope of judicial power. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Author: Pierre R. Beaumier Posted on 10.09.06 by Pierre B. We probably all remember stories our parents passed down when we were small of the “olden days” — some of them true, some of them legend. Often (when we got older, and in my case, after my father had passed on) we may only then realize the greater significance and value of the given story, and don’t we wish we’d paid a wee bit more attention to the details? Well, here’s one story where I wish I had. According to the history books, the British and the French fought a massive war over North America between 1755 and 1763, resulting in the loss of what is now Canada to the English. France abandoned some 70,000 French-speaking inhabitants, most of them living in farming communities that they had founded generations earlier, mainly along the St. Lawrence River. By the end of this conflict, these people suddenly became fearful of the unthinkable: that their entire culture — especially their language and religion — was now threatened, by a conqueror who had already exiled thousands of French-speaking Acadians in an “ethnic cleansing” move from Nova Scotia earlier in the course of the war. What would he do now? Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 10.09.06 by Ben Kalafut
From a certain perspective, it’s rare to receive solicitations for “libertarian solutions” in the mail. The ad circular, of course, is full of free-market solutions to problems such as bald tires and an empty pantry, but pitches no goods or services in competition with the government or overlapping with those which many reasonable people believe ought or must be provided by the State. From my credit card issuers, however, I receive at least one offer every other month — in the form of a $10 check! — for either medical discount and savings plans or, even more interestingly, a service which will postpone payments on my debts if I become unemployed or wipe them out totally if I am permanently disabled. Although (probably for legal reasons) they don’t call them such, these programs are social insurance. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 09.21.06 by Tibor R. Machan
There are small signs showing that many, many people even in this relatively free society are wedded to statism — the belief that the government is the head of society, which is itself a sort of organism. Those of us not part of the government are, in turn, its subjects, subservient to it. According to the political philosophy of the American founders and many of the framers, government is not the head of society. Instead it is instituted or established to perform a specific function, not very different from how other professional organizations, such as educators, scientists, doctors, and so forth are. In a complex, modern society all these have grown into nearly permanent agencies. But none of them is authorized to rule us, only to perform services for which we employ them. In other words, the relationship between citizens and government is akin to that between clients and professionals, fully voluntary and with both parties enjoying equal legal status. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 09.21.06 by Mike Renzulli
During July of this year, the Arizona Republic reported that a Scottsdale woman was indicted for trying to evade federal banking deposit rules. After Lucy Lu took over $300,000 from her massage business, she hid over half of the money in a safe in her house and then made small deposits with the rest into her mother’s bank account. Aside from the obvious question of: “who cares what this woman does with her money?” there’s a bigger issue here: When (not if) the economy here goes down the tubes, it may give Americans an incentive to look for jobs elsewhere. A number of government actions have accelerated this process: new passport requirements enacted by the State Department (for Americans traveling to Mexico, some Caribbean islands and Canada); the legalized monitoring and tracking of citizens resulting from the USA PATRIOT Act; and National Guard troops stationed at the U.S.-Mexico border and in our nation’s airports. As these things continue, the ability to leave the U.S. will be made even harder, and I’d dare to argue the stage is set for the time when the U.S. government can forcibly keep Americans in the United States. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 09.17.06 by Thomas L. Knapp
In a recent post on my personal blog , I shared my response to an inquiry from Paul Wakfer as to my views on gambling. Paul has since responded in kind. Due to my usual email difficulties (stuff disappears), it took me awhile to receive that response, but it’s also worth sharing, and I’ll do so with my own reply inline (killing two birds with one stone instead of first responding by email and then attempting to format it all for publication purposes). Convention: My original and Paul’s reply will appear in block quote format. My blogged reply will appear as regular text.
What is enjoyable to a person is completely a matter of individual taste. That doesn’t mean that it bears no relationship to reality, however. (more…) Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 09.01.06 by swainc55
Come with me, I wanna show you something. It’s just up the road from here, one of those large chain grocery stores — we call it Crackistan. As in, “Good God, these people are all smokin’ crack.” Pay close attention, there’s gonna be a test later. This is a huge parking lot, wouldn’t you say? About the only time it’s not crowded is at 4:00 in the morning, and then only during the week. Navigating one of these mega parking lots should be on all driving tests, don’t you think? Take note of the vehicles here; no shortage of glandular pickups with the obligatory huntin’ decals. Lotta SUVs, most of ‘em taking up two parking spots, due in large part to the fact that cities weren’t designed with these land whales in mind, and most of their operators are unable to negotiate the tight turns involved with steering these behemoths. Sleek oily-looking imports ooze alongside those slutty little domestic jobbies in a veritable palette of retina-searing colors — don’t look directly at them. Now note the bumper stickers on these vehicles. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 09.01.06 by Michelle L
kak·is·toc·ra·cy: Noun. Inflected forms: pl. kak·is·toc·ra·cies Government by the least qualified or most unprincipled citizens. In what can only be serendipity, I have finally found the perfect description of our government; all but the most rabid Bushites would recognize both “least qualified” and “unprincipled” in our administration. Where crony is a job prerequisite and blind allegiance always trumps knowledge, the current residents of Washington are a case study in reverse evolution — where the weak prey upon the strong. We citizens are strong, aren’t we? (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 08.04.06 by David M. Brown
It may be tough for a gal to find romance with the severe and avenging Batman of “Batman Begins.” But the Superman of “Superman Returns” is a different story. He’ll show up under the pretext of granting you an interview, but with the plan of sweeping you off your feet. (Not just a metaphor here: actual sweeping-off-feet is involved: he can fly. Something to do with the difference between the sun of his home solar system and our own sun, it’s all very technical.) Although a romantic relationship with Superman might start out easily enough, the road will not always be smooth, and there are many complexities to keep in mind. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 08.02.06 by Thomas L. Knapp
Dear readers, Yes, it’s that time. Over the last year and then some, we’ve tried to keep fundraising appeals for the support of Rational Review News Digest/Freedom News Daily to a minimum — quarterly, and then semi-annually, instead of daily, weekly or monthly. We don’t like asking for money, and we’ve been able to avoid doing so in part because of our association with ISIL, which generates some revenue for us. That revenue is not enough for us to come anywhere near meeting our modest goals, however, and our “contributing subscriber” base has eroded as credit cards have expired or supporters have decided, for whatever reason, to cease their contributions. As of now, our regular, recurring net revenue from subscribing contributors (i.e. exclusive of ‘one time donations’ stands at less than $150 per month. We deeply appreciate the continuing support of the readers who send us that money, but even with our other revenue streams, we just can’t make it on that. As we approach our 1,000th edition (this morning’s was our 952nd), we have a modest goal: To achieve regular, recurring monthly revenues, from reader contributions, of $1,000. One thousand issues, one thousand dollars. Symmetrical and catchy, eh? Please, consider becoming a contributing subscriber: An “RRND Daily Reader” ($2.50 per month), “RRND Subscriber” ($5.00 per month), “RRND Supporter” ($10 per month), or “RRND Patron” ($20 per month):
If you’d prefer to just make a one-time contribution, please see the sidebar on any page at Rational Review. In addition to PayPal, we’re set up to accept e-gold (for one-time payments); if you’d prefer to send checks, cash, bullion, American Liberty Dollars or other forms of support, please contact me and we’ll figure it out. I’m enormously proud of what we’ve accomplished here at RRND/FND. As we close in on four years and 1,000 issues of uninterrupted publication, I’m asking you, our valued readers, to return value for value, in whatever amount you think our publication is worth. Thanks to all of you who have supported us so far, and to those of you whom I believe will choose to do so now. Yours in liberty, Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 07.26.06 by Refused
[editor’s note: This article is by Donald Meinshausen and was posted on his behalf - TLK] As we all should know by now the state survives and grows by getting information through informants. It was estimated that East Germany had at least half the population informing on the other half. Turnabout is fair play. Let us create a hotline where IRS employees can call, anonymously if they wish, and give us information about their associates, bosses, and targets. This could be a website as well. To advertise in this service (yes, it is a service) to describe the bureaucrats we could leaflet IRS offices, conferences and any place they might hang out such as a nearby bar, which could be a good source of information in itself. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 07.17.06 by Christopher Awuku
As a libertarian, I often discuss my political views with family members, friends, acquaintances, co-workers and other people I interact with on a regular basis. On numerous occasions we would go back and forth on topics including the war on drugs, non-interventionist foreign policies, ending state-run education or ceasing the welfare state. Still, there is one question which even I, a hardened libertarian, admittedly struggle to answer in the course of my conversations. How shall a libertarian society cater for and successfully fund sports? I would acknowledge that it’s a worthy question in itself and certainly has given me plenty of food for thought. Sports are an aspect of life that many people enjoy. A lot of people take pleasure from observing and actively participating in them. Apart from the evident physical benefits, sports are also beneficial for emotional and mental health. Whenever the Olympics come around, we all desire our country to do well and win as many medals as possible. Sports are often central to a country’s sense of pride. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 07.12.06 by Christopher Awuku
As a libertarian, I like to keep abreast of happenings within the libertarian movements of countries around the world, since they are naturally seeking to create a freer society and freer world. Within these nations there are a number of think tanks, political parties and other organisations dedicated to promoting and disseminating ideas about liberty. This is all well and good, nonetheless how does the future path of liberty present itself? Let me focus on the libertarian movement in one specific country. The United Kingdom has a rich freedom-oriented tradition. A number of the greatest figures in the liberal (note I mean classical liberal) and libertarian tradition were from Britain, which include such people as Locke, MacCauley, J.S. Mill and Lord Acton. The primary libertarian organisation in Britain at present is the Libertarian Alliance, which was led for many years by Dr. Chris Tame. Sadly, Dr. Tame died of cancer in the spring of 2006. Nonetheless, his viewpoints provided the basis for the strategy and policies of the Libertarian Alliance. In essence there are four central pillars that Dr. Tame stressed were paramount for the Libertarian Alliance to follow. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 07.10.06 by Jeff Riggenbach
Books Cited or Discussed in This Essay: Eisler, Barry. The Last Assassin. New York: Putnam, 2006. (LA) Bourne, Randolph S. War and the Intellectuals: Collected Essays, 1915-1919, ed., Carl Resek. New York: Harper, 1964. Eisler, Barry. Rain Fall. New York: Putnam, 2002. (RF) —. Hard Rain. New York: Putnam, 2003. (HR) —. Rain Storm. New York: Putnam, 2004. (RS) —. Killing Rain. New York: Putnam, 2005. (KR) It’s truly a bummer when you find yourself wishing the best series character in contemporary crime fiction would get himself whacked. And there can be little doubt that hired assassin John Rain is the best series character in contemporary crime fiction. He’s intelligent, cosmopolitan, a man of considerable refinement, a man appreciative of the perks of civilization. Think a Japanese-American version of Sean Connery’s version of James Bond. Rain is a superb craftsman in his work, creating deaths that appear to have resulted from “natural causes,” expecting nothing less than perfection from himself and the few close associates with whom he sometimes works — and tolerating no excuses for “inferior” performance. His mind is subtle and complex; he is thoughtful, if not exactly intellectual; and he reflects often on the events of his past and thinks frequently about the moral implications of his actions then and now. A “contract killer with a conscience,” Entertainment Weekly calls him, but he is far more than that. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 07.05.06 by Michelle L
What’s the deal with this chick? In her latest rant, Dame Colter has the audacity to equate the New York Times‘ publishing revelations concerning the US government’s examination of international banking records with “treason” (her seemingly favorite word; at least when it comes to liberals and not the current residents of the White House). Okay, so Ann has a hard-on for the New York Times, certainly her prerogative — what I find odd is her obvious obsession with the word “treason.” Every time someone disagrees with you can’t possibly be an act of treason; at least not in the true meaning of the word. Maybe the word she is groping for is heresy. Is everyone who is not a fan of transparency of our elected government , by definiton, guilty of treason? I doubt Thomas Jefferson would agree with that position, after all one of his many enlightened statements was, “The basis of our governments being the opinion of the people, the very first object should be to keep that right; and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter. But I should mean that every man should receive those papers and be capable of reading them.” — Thomas Jefferson to Edward Carrington, 1787. Now let’s listen to what Ann Coulter had to say: Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Source: Rational Review Posted on 06.30.06 by Thomas L. Knapp Rational Review News Digest was preparing to begin its fourth month of publication when the US commenced its war on Iraq. At about that time, our editorial board settled unanimously (that’s the way we do everything here) on a policy of featuring, as the day’s “top news story,” casualties in America’s foreign military folly until such time as the war ended. Yesterday, the board (once again unanimously) changed that policy. As publisher, I believe that I owe our readers a full explanation of the matter. Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 06.28.06 by Ernest Hancock
During the Nixon years it became obvious neither of the major political parties would ever protect the principle of individual liberty against the Cult of the Omnipotent State. In the 1971 July/Aug issue of The Individualist, David Nolan and supporters openly called for the creation of the Libertarian Party to advance freedom. The idea: to use the structure of a political party as a nexus for activism, spreading the message of liberty and fighting the encroachments of politics primarily at the grassroots level. Thirty-five years later, Nolan spoke to the Ohio Libertarian Convention about his concerns then and now (May 6, 2006). Of the seven original objectives for the proposed LPUS, winning office was last on the list … “almost an afterthought.” From those beginnings, in which winning elections was considered a welcome (and highly unlikely) bonus due to effective activism, the Libertarian Party has come to emphasize winning office almost above all else. Why? From the beginning, freedom was the goal. Much thought and debate went into how best to achieve that. The evolution of the Libertarian Party documents has been remarkably stable and consistent in its clear support of liberty and prosperity. Alteration of the LPUS’s Statement of Principles (an enduring statement of our purpose) requires a 7/8 vote in convention to amend. This high standard was of course intentional. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Author: Bennett Kalafut Posted on 06.28.06 by Ben Kalafut Libertarian policy positions sure seem to be catching on, but I’m not feeling any freer. Drug legalization doesn’t raise eyebrows anymore. School choice, likewise, is old hat and even homeschooling is too mainstream to be called cutting edge. Gun control is stalled like a Third Way economy, privatization isn’t nearly the controversy it used to be, and megacorporations, not usually champions of the free market, are calling for carbon trading. It’s clear that libertarian think tanks and issue advocacy groups are getting our ideas taken seriously, but the result has mainly been statists adding free minds and free markets to their toolbox. Politicians without libertarian values are not going to set aside their agendas to advance ours. Nonlibertairans may borrow our ideas, but they will not set us free. To move policy in the libertarian direction, we must either elect libertarians to office or be enough of a threat at the polls to force nonlibertarians to make concessions to earn our votes. In short, we need a libertarian political party. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Author: David Tomlin Posted on 06.27.06 by David Tomlin Tom Knapp has graciously invited me to respond here to his article “Context is everything: American libertarians and Israel, part 1,” first published in 2004. Tom recently reposted it at his blog, where I added a brief comment. Tom wrote the article as a response to “Is Applying Libertarian Principles to Israel Anti-Semitic?,” by Carol Moore. Tom’s article contains so many inaccuracies that it’s impossible to properly rebut all of them in a post of reasonable length. In this post I will address what I believe is the most important issue. This is Tom’s apparent acceptance of the myth that, in the military operations of 1948, the Arab governments intended and attempted a Nazi-esque extermination of Israel’s Jewish population. Tom presents no evidence for this claim, so I will turn to a prominent Zionist advocate who purports to do so: Alan Dershowitz. “While the Arab armies tried to kill Jewish civilians and did in fact massacre many who tried to escape, the Israeli army allowed Arab civilians to flee to Arab-controlled areas. For example, when the Arab Legion’s Sixth Battalion conquered Kfar Etzion, they left no Jewish refugees. The villagers surrendered and walked, hands in the air, into the center of the compound. Morris reports that the Arab soldiers simply ‘proceeded to mow them down.’ The soldiers massacred 120 Jews; 21 of them were women. This was part of a general Arab policy: ‘Jews taken prisoner during convoy battles were generally put to death and often mutilated by their captors.’ It is precisely because the Israeli army, unlike the Arab armies, did not deliberately kill civilians that the refugee problem arose.” (Alan Dershowitz, The Case for Israel, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2003, p. 79) Dershowitz misrepresents his source. Both quotes are out of context. The first, a fragment of a sentence, is filled out with an indirect quote that is a flat lie. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Source: www.freedomainradio.com Author: Stefan Molyneux, MA Posted on 06.14.06 by stefbot The current controversy over immigration obscures — as most current controversies do — the depth and scale of the moral problem that is “immigration control.” Even the word “immigration” is specious, since what is merely being described is “moving.” Moving from New York to Houston requires no permission from the government — moving from Toronto to Buffalo does. The difference? Artificial boundaries, of course — the territory marked out by one gang of predatory politicians versus another. Can you imagine that, if you wanted to move from New York to Houston, you had to spend months or years on paperwork to wait for some official to give you the arbitrary thumbs-up or thumbs-down? Can you imagine having to spend thousands of dollars on “moving lawyers” and having to completely re-prove your profession credentials and not being allowed to work for the first few months or years in Houston? Wouldn’t that be strange, maddening, ridiculous and wasteful beyond words? Link: www.freedomainradio.com Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 06.12.06 by Michelle L
One of my favorite parts of the movie “A Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” is where the dolphins, being the more highly advanced species on the planet decide to boogie because the humans who, being underdeveloped can’t heed their wisdom or warnings concerning the imminent demise of Earth, have persisted in trashing and destroying their home. The dolphins were smart enough to know that the shit was about to hit the proverbial fan — we humans were too busy watching “Survivor” or “American Idol,” I suppose. Is life about to imitate art? The headlines are non-stop warnings against national hubris; every other month brings another country that isn’t toeing the line and needs to be “democratized.” We, and by “we” I mean the citizens of the United States, are regular bears about telling other countries what they can or can’t do, can or can’t possess or can or can’t develop. Are we as a country so unbelievably blind that we’re unable to see the supreme irony of our screeching against a particular country developing nuclear power when we possess more nukes than any other country in the world?! Talk about taking “Do as I say, not as I do” to a whole new level! As near as I can figure, the Powers That Be in the USGOV would love nothing more than to see everyone on the planet disarmed — except themselves, of course. And if I remember my history class correctly, one of the main issues that motivated our Founding Fathers was the threat from England to disarm the colonies. How can it be that we celebrate … no … that we lionize the right to bear arms but we see other’s desire to arm as a punishable threat? Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 05.14.06 by Jeff Riggenbach
Books Cited or Discussed in This Essay:
The late Samuel Edward Konkin III (SEK3) was in the habit of referring to the individualist anarchist movement in the United States of around a hundred years ago as “the first libertarian movement.” He often chided me, for example, about my enthusiasm for Max Stirner’s Der Einzige und sein Eigentum (1845) — known in English as The Ego and Its Own — reminding me that Benjamin R. Tucker’s promotion of that book and its ideas in the early years of the 20th Century in his magazine Liberty had sounded the death knell of the first libertarian movement. Beware, SEK3 admonished me more than once, lest I help engender the destruction of the second libertarian movement in the selfsame way. The first libertarian movement differed from our current one, to be sure. For one thing, at first glance, and somewhat paradoxically, it seems to have been much, much larger. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Author: Steve Trinward Posted on 04.26.06 by Steve Trinward “You’re either part of the solution or part of the problem.”- Eldridge Cleaver “People who say ‘You’re either part of the solution or part of the problem’ are part of the problem.“–Robert Anton Wilson “If you’re part of the solution, you’re no longer part of the problem … and should be acknowledged as such!” — Steve Trinward There has been discussion lately, on at least a couple of the Yahoo lists I frequent, over whether voucher systems and tax-credit programs share similar evils of social engineering and socialist thinking in general. I tend to think they don’t, and for several reasons. Foremost among them is the fact that, while a voucher system is a giveaway program, involving taking taxpayer money and handing it back to those who may or may not have paid the taxes from which it is obtained, tax credits are marked off against what those taxpayers are supposed to be paying into the system, and the money stays with the person who made it. This should be a more than subtle difference to libertarians, since it involves the variance between redistribution of wealth and permitting a person to keep more of what is already belonging to that person. But the larger complaint from some libertarians is that tax credits are often used for social engineering purposes, to reward behavior the society (or rather its government) wants to encourage. Conversely, those who engage in (what is societally considered) “inappropriate” (yet non-coercive) behavior (smoking, drinking, gambling, etc.) often end up getting taxed more heavily, in “sin taxes,” in order to make up the alleged “shortfall” in tax revenues that results from such credit programs. However, I think this misses a key factor in the equation, one that is demonstrated by my rewrite of Eldridge Cleaver’s oft-used slogan and Bob Wilson’s response to it. Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 03.30.06 by Thomas L. Knapp
Dear readers, Rational Review and Rational Review News Digest just did a server move. Today’s RRND went out only as email — if you’re accustomed to using the web edition, I apologize for the inconvenience, and today’s edition can be found here. So far so good, but there are usually unforeseen little details during server moves. We’ll try to have things fully operational by tomorrow. After that, please drop me a line if you experience site problems. Yours in liberty, Filed under: Feature Articles and RRND News | |
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Posted on 03.20.06 by Michelle L
“It is, in fact, nothing short of a miracle that the modern methods of instruction have not entirely strangled the holy curiosity of inquiry.” — Albert Einstein “Teach your children well … A recent blurb in the local paper caught my eye — it concerned a survey that showed that only 1 in 4 Americans surveyed could name the five freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment, but that over half could name all of the members of the Simpsons. (If you only knew the self-restraint it takes not to say “D’oh!”). The survey found more people could name the three “American Idol” judges than identify three First Amendment rights. They were also more likely to remember popular advertising slogans . It also showed that people misidentified First Amendment rights. About one in five people thought the right to own a pet was protected, and 38 percent said they believed the right against self-incrimination contained in the Fifth Amendment was a First Amendment right. The article goes on to say about 1 in 5 of our fellow citizens could name all 5 members of the Simpson clan but only 1 in 1,000 could name freedom of worship, speech, of the press, of assembly and freedom to petition to the government for redress of grievances. The telephone survey of 1,000 adults was conducted Jan. 20-22 by the research firm Synovate and had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points. Is this possible? Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 03.10.06 by Michelle L
No, really, that’s exactly what my response is to folks who ask me if I’ve listened to Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Neal Boortz, and all the other neocon pontificators. Obviously, I have listened to them, otherwise I’d have no idea how hateful their diatribes really are. But the odd thing is, there is truth to the adage “know thine enemies.” My husband listens to them while driving (personally, I think he considers it a kind of weird cardiac workout — it raises his blood pressure and gives him a chance to yell at the radio). I finally asked him why he bothers listening to them bloviate and he said that even the most evil people sometimes make a valid point. It puts me in mind of the old story of a fellow who walked upon a young boy shoveling massive piles of horseshit — and smiling. When asked how on earth he could smile while doing such an offensive chore the boy replied, “Well mister, there’s gotta be a pony in here somewhere!” Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 03.06.06 by J. Neil Schulman
I am not a Zionist. As a matter of fact, I have been fairly critical about the founding of the modern State of Israel in my writings. For one thing, I don’t subscribe to the idea of forming isolated communities around one’s values, no matter how good those values. I am not a Utopian. I have never liked ghetto-ization, whether it’s the physical ghettos of Jewish life in Russia and Poland, or the ghetto-ization of African American life in Harlem or South Los Angeles, or even the ghetto-ization in bookstores by which science fiction, mystery, or romance novels are shelved separately from “mainstream” fiction. The reason I consider the United States of America to be the greatest country in human history is that it was the first society founded on the principle of individual sovereignty, the first society whose founders considered that it was the individual human being — rather than the tribe or kingdom or even empire — from which the greatness of human existence sprang forth. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 03.02.06 by C. Swain
(Intercom buzzes) “Your 10:30 interview is here.” “Great, send him in please.” (Door opens, closes). “Come on in, have a seat. Let’s get started. I’m sure you know our company is looking to replace one of our upper-echelon members who will be taking a well-deserved retirement. I’ve scanned your resume and have some questions I’d like to ask.” ” ‘Kay.” “I see you weren’t asked to stay on at your last position. Why was that?” “Oh, well some people said I didn’t do too good; said I wasn’t smart enough, said I didn’t have leadership, whatever the hell that means! But my Daddy picked me hisself an’ my Daddy’s right smart.” Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 02.27.06 by J. Neil Schulman
Final Exit (Third Edition) : The Practicalities of Self-Deliverance and Assisted Suicide for the Dying His name was David. A father of eight, the youngest being eight years old, and one of his older children had given birth to his first grandchild three months ago. He and his wife had just celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary, and he would have celebrated his 50th birthday next month. He was a talented entertainment attorney who had run the music department for one of the largest movie studios. Before that, he had been an entertainment attorney at one of the largest Century City law firms. After that, David became a music manager of some of the biggest talents in the business. David was a talented musician, himself — an electric bass player in a rock band in his teenage years, later on a jazz stand-up bass player. He often played in jazz combos with two of his other brothers. There was nothing physically wrong with him. He had no terminal diseases. As far as we know, David didn’t even have a cold. But his largest music client, disappointed about a setback in his career, fired him. David told no one that he had lost this client, even his wife. This client loss started a cascade of financial reverses, about which he told told one. He didn’t have the money to pay the next month’s mortgage payment, and he decided against asking his brothers for money. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 02.27.06 by Michelle L
I have a relative, someone I have known my whole life, whom I grew up with. Beautiful, generous and amazingly intelligent,she was the envy of everyone, but lately she’s taken up with a dangerous crowd and is now in an abusive relationship. Her children are being neglected as well as her work and her reputation and family’s name are in tatters. She has been avoiding me and other family members and loved ones who tried to talk to her; with her abuser’s flunkies running interference and turning us away at the door. She has become secretive and paranoid; getting her to talk with me was going to be hard. But the time was far past to sit by … it was time to give her a call. A man with an accent answered the phone. “Is America there?” “Hold on, I’ll see if she wants to talk.” Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 02.22.06 by J. Neil Schulman
Here’s what I think is going on with the Dubai Ports World deal to operate five American ports. United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is in the Middle East right now, trying to get Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia to force the new Hamas-led government of the Palestinian authority to sign onto the “road map for peace” which would require Hamas to accept a two-state solution recognizing the legitimacy of Israel and renouncing terrorism. Israel has cut off millions of dollars in funding to the Palestinian Authority because of the Hamas election victory, and Hamas is now approaching Arab countries asking them to replace the funding. The United States doesn’t want the alternate funding from Arab states to come through and thereby allow Hamas to destroy the peace process. Moreover, the U.S. wants the United Arab Emirates, where we have U.S. military bases, and which has been a strategic ally of the United States since the 1970’s, to stick with us as we have a showdown with Iran over their clandestine nuclear weapons development, and since Israel is too small to mount a military operation to take out the multiple Iranian nuclear facilities, in effect the United States would have to do it for them. This would certainly involve U.S. airstrikes on Iran at the very least, and Iran is likely to retaliate by invading Iraq, causing the United States to defend Iraq from such an invasion with an influx of new American and Coalition troops and military materiel. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 02.10.06 by Michelle L
I think I’ve figured out George W. Bush’s problem: His mom obviously didn’t do a good job of teaching him manners. I’m serious. My mom would have never let my sister and brother or me get away with the stuff Dubya does. He would still be grounded and I would be sneaking past his bedroom door sticking out my tongue and laughing my head off! Every time we asked Momma for money, we knew we were going to get the 15-minute-minimum lecture about the Great Depression and How Hard It Was and How Damn Lucky You Kids Are, thus ensuring that we considered the expenditure worth the time spent listening. We took the time to weigh the guilt vs the pleasure or want. And it didn’t stop at money, Momma had a saying for virtually every possible bump or potential dangerous detour on the road of life. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 02.09.06 by James Landrith
I’ve been having some interesting exchanges with a few “libertarians” in one of the MySpace libertarian forums. Below are my own thoughts on the riots and violence related to the Danish editorials cartoons that have been exploited by a select group of opportunistic Imams for the purpose of inciting anger, hatred and chaos. Do I condemn the cartoon riots and attempts to squelch free speech? What about the despotic regimes in several Islamic dominated nations who trample on the rights of their citizens and commit horrible human rights and civil liberties abuses? Of course, I am an adherent to the Zero Aggression Principle. That goes without saying. However, some bigoted and narrow-minded individuals are seizing on the riots as an excuse to make sweeping generalizations about Muslims as a whole. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 01.16.06 by J. Neil Schulman
Steven Spielberg is one of America’s greatest filmmakers. He wasn’t always. Allow me to recap his career. This context-setting is important.
The Color Purple and Empire of the Sun started showing his serious ambitions but he didn’t quite pull it off. The Color Purple was a commercial success, while Empire of the Sun bombed, but neither film won him any Oscars and both received mixed critical acclaim. As a producer Spielberg added to his reputation for having as good a commercial sense as any impresario in history with popcorn blockbusters such as Poltergeist, the Back to the Future series, and Who Framed Roger Rabbit? Filed under: Feature Articles and Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 01.02.06 by Thomas L. Knapp
Remember the bad old days when nearly every issue of Rational Review News Digest and Freedom News Daily was accompanied by a fundraising plea? Those days are gone — but we still rely on reader support to continue publishing. Now, we come to you once per quarter, with a specified goal. We can do this for several reasons. One is that our association with The International Association for Individual Liberty produces a regular revenue stream (about 1/4th of what our business plan calls for). Another is that a few of our stalwart supporters regularly contribute about another 5% of the money we need to do this work, and we make another 5% or so from advertising. Thanks to ISIL and to those readers who’ve made a continuing or repeated commitment to the continued publication of our newsletters! Our goal this year has been to get total revenues up to about half of what our business plan says we need to be making. For the sake of simplicity, that goal is $3,000 per quarter. We haven’t made that goal in any quarter yet, but we’re hopeful. The graphic to the left illustrates our goal for the 4th quarter of 2005, and the progress we hope to make toward it. As soon as we hit the little gold dot at the top — representing $3,000 in contributions — this story will disappear from the top of every edition of RRND and FND. We work every day to bring you a valuable news and commentary roundup. Our fundraisers are our modest request that our readers return a bit of value for value received. So please, pony up the amount that you think the publication is worth! It’s easy: 1) Contributions received by PayPal or E-Gold (links in the sidebar of every page at Rational Review will be counted toward our goal (and we’ll update the “thermometer” graphic frequently to show the progress). 2) If you’d like tax deductibility, please contribute to ISIL’s Free-Market.Net project (about halfway down this page. These donations won’t show up in the fundraising stats, because we don’t receive daily fundraising reports from ISIL — but we still appreciate the support! 3) If you’d like to send cash, checks, money orders, fine gemstones, gold bullion, original Van Goghs or cases of Smack Ramen, email me for how to do so. Anything received during this fundraiser will be counted in our statistics. As always, THANK YOU for your continued support — and we’ll keep working hard to merit that support. Have a great Thanksgiving! Yours in liberty, Filed under: Feature Articles and RRND News | |
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Posted on 12.19.05 by Brad Spangler
In the first part of this series, I discussed such things as the nature of outcome based risk as the primary reason for public skepticism about prospects for future revolutions and also speculated a bit about strategy. Before revisiting the matter of revolutionary strategy, I want to discuss patriotism. Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 12.09.05 by Thomas L. Knapp
The following message was forwarded from a source I trust (Jeff Riggenbach) to a list I subscribe to earlier this evening: Dear friends, I am grieved to tell you that R.W. Bradford, founder of “Liberty,” died Bill was surrounded by friends and family, and by the good wishes of his An upcoming issue of “Liberty” will feature a commemoration of Bill’s Stephen Cox R.W. (”Bill”) Bradford was a friend of — and fighter for — freedom, and a personal friend of several of Rational Review’s editors. We extend our condolences to Bill’s family and to the staff of Liberty. Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 11.11.05 by David M. Brown
Here we go again. A little more than a year ago I published a piece at the Mises Institute site on the notion of “price gouging,” noting the injury to the production and distribution of goods that must be entailed by any coercive attempts to curb prices during a large-scale natural disaster. Not counting the criticism of persons determined not to understand any aspect of the function of prices in market process, there were two main objections to the article. Since in the wake of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita we saw all the same harassment of persons trying to make a living “by exploiting the tragedy of others,” most recently oil executives being basted and grilled on Capitol Hill, that we saw in the wake of Hurricanes Charley, Frances, Ivan, and Jeanne in 2004, now seems as good a time as any to take up these objections. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 10.18.05 by J. Neil Schulman
Recently my participation in an IMDb message-board discussion of an article Brad Linaweaver and I wrote regarding the movie Flightplan — a recent feature film we were identifying as anti-war propaganda — expanded to general discussions of terrorism, bigotry, and war. As a libertarian who has spent most of his career attacking collectivism of all sorts, I found myself in the odd position of having to explain why it’s not bigotry to blame Muslims for 9/11, why a global jihad against the West is several orders of magnitude more of a national threat than Timothy McVeigh’s 1995 bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, and — most surprisingly — why even though the enemy doesn’t wear uniforms or display a home base, this is a real war. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Author: Steve Trinward Posted on 10.03.05 by Steve Trinward I came to Claire Wolfe’s work a little late, finally reading “Don’t Shoot The Bastards … Yet” and then going back to “101 Things To Do Before the Revolution.” Then I devoured all her essays and commentaries I could find, from her old website(s) to the current one at Backwoods Home Magazine to her blog. Clearly, I thought, this mysterious lady in the brimmed hat and veil is a seminal force in the movement for Liberty — alongside L. Neil Smith and only a handful of others. With “How to Kill the Job Culture Before It Kills You” Claire may have crossed over into the mainstream — not by selling out, in any sense of the word, but by creating something accessible even to the most hidebound sheeple-person … who’s looking to carve out a little progress toward personal autonomy, even in the midst of the most soul-numbing of job situations. Yes, even for that person there is something to be learned. As the subtitle proclaims, this book is a welcome guide to “Living a Life of Autonomy in a Wage-Slave Society.” (more…) Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 09.22.05 by Thomas L. Knapp
Rational Review News Digest is running a sale on its BlogAds — and our advertisers get more exposure than ever before! Through October, our rates are reduced by more than 80% — $30 for a one-week ad instead of $200, $200 for a three-month ad instead of $1500. RRND advertisements appear on all Rational Review web pages as well as in the email editions of Rational Review News Digest and Freedom News Daily. We’re libertarians, but we’ll be “conservative” in estimating that your RRND BlogAd will received 40,000 web and email views per week. Click here, or on the “advertise here” link in our BlogAds strip in the sidebar, to place your order. Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 09.18.05 by Thomas L. Knapp
Dear Readers, For the last several months, we’ve done our best to keep fundraising to a minimum here at RRND. Due to a grant procured by ISIL for production of our sister newsletter, Freedom News Daily, we’ve managed to establish a revenue “floor” of about 25% of what we believe our average should be — and, quite frankly, that’s better than we usually did during our first two years of publication. However, there’s a big gap between 25% and 100%, and sooner or later we need to start making up the difference. Our revenue base has been, and will continue to be, primarily composed of voluntary contributions from the thousands of readers who enjoy RRND and find it useful. After 730 consecutive editions without interruption, I trust that our readers know we deliver. For September, I’d very much like to get revenues above 50% of our goal. That means raising $1,000. And I’d like to do it this week. Of course, it’s always nice to be able to offer some “premiums” to our contributors, and this week we have an interesting little package — a cool t-shirt and a piece of movement history to our next ten $100 contributors. The Gold Casino t-shirt These t-shirts are very nice — Fruit of the Loom heavy cotton, in dark green, with The Gold Casino’s logo on front, and logos for The Gold Casino, RingMaster, and Phat Hash on the back. We have them in two sizes — Small and 2XL. If you indicate a size preference in the PayPal contribution form, we’ll do our best to send the size you want (but we can’t guarantee it — what we have is what we have). The shirts were provided by James M. Ray. Strange premium, I know — but pretty cool. Remember, “your” government is doing its best to suppress Internet gambling, or at least make it illegal. They can’t stop you from wearing a t-shirt, though … at least not yet. I’m a bit of a gambler myself, mostly offline. The Gold Casino is the only place I gamble online — they use e-gold, and offer instant payouts, so you never have to wonder whether or not the operation on the other end of the connection is legit. Thanks to James M. Ray for these t-shirts! Question Earthority! This is a weird little piece of movement history, contributed by Zek Kolyma of the shadowy “DAGGER Cadre” (it stands for “Direct Action Group for Guerilla Extropian Revolution”). It’s a flier, issued on Earth Day, 2001 and distributed, so far as I know, only at Earth Day events in the midwest. I have about 20 of these, in reasonably good condition (they are printed on green stock, folded like letters, and appear to have been produced on an ink-jet printer). These are (once again, so far as I know) the only remaining copies in existence except for individual copies received by Earth Day attendees. The flier is labeled, optimistically, Volume I, Issue I. I am unaware of any subsequent “DAGGER Cadre” fliers. It is topped by a logo of Planet Earth with the anarchist “A” superimposed. The flier text — front and back, with some graphics and large text included — is a manifesto to “A real third way” — libertarian anarchism. It’s obviously aimed at greens and environmentalists, and holds that the entity from which the planet must be “saved” is … government. Pretty inspiring stuff: “The DIRECT ACTION GROUP FOR GUERILLA EXTROPIAN REVOLUTION [DAGGER] has no terms to offer the forces of the state except unconditional surrender. We propose to move immediately upon their works.” And such-like. Couldn’t have written it better myself. Fliers contributed by Zek Kolyma. Are they worth anything? I don’t know if they have monetary value to collectors or not, but they’re pretty cool — and they’re history. If nothing else, they prove that there was libertarian outreach to the green left going back at least as far as 2001. Nifty! So — the next ten $100 contributors (via the link on this page only!) get the t-shirt and flier. We’ll try to accomodate t-shirt size requests of Small and 2XL, but no promises. Here’s the link: Thank you for your support — and remember, if you don’t care to make the $100 contribution for the premium, you can contribute in any amount from the links in the Rational Review site sidebar. Yours in liberty, Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 09.15.05 by Stephen Gordon
According to the Washington Post, Pentagon planners have drafted a revised policy doctrine which allows for pre-emptive nuclear strikes against non-nuclear states or terrorist groups as an integral part of its global military strategy. While clearly opposed to the war in Iraq, I am not a pacifist. I’ve never supported unilateral nuclear disarmament, as I believe there may be some (albeit unlikely) scenarios when nuclear weapons might be required for valid self-defense measures. However, this policy proposal scares me, and I’ll tell you why. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 09.13.05 by Brad Spangler
I find theories of revolution interesting because so much often goes so wrong with even “successful” revolutions. There is much room for refinement. It’s wide open territory, so to speak. Since any government is, ethically speaking, only a group of bandits with delusions of legitimacy, no revolution per se is ever “unjustified” — at least, not in terms of lacking sufficient cause. Yet the populace of any given locale is seldom overcome with revolutionary fervor. I believe this is because of a widespread, nigh instinctual grasp of one thing Jefferson wrote in the US Declaration of Independence — that:
Jefferson’s statement above, and the pre-existing wisdom it distilled, has apparently been an influential yardstick. Up until now, at least within the realm of my own experience, people have generally spoken in terms of “how bad things have to get” before a revolutionary situation might develop (if they ever talk about revolution at all). The unspoken understanding is that it has to get really bad in order for the populace to overcome their natural prudence and embrace the risk inherent in revolution. (more…) Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 09.11.05 by bakerboy
By Terry Baker “John Marshall has made his decision, now let him enforce it.” There is some question as to whether or not Andrew Jackson ever really said the famous quote attributed to him after the Court ruled in 1832 that the state of Georgia had no authority over the Cherokee Indians, whose laws the state had declared null and void. To complicate the issue, the Marshall Court had ruled the previous year that the Cherokees were not a sovereign nation. Marshall was at least consistent in his opinion that only the federal government had the power to deal wickedly with the native tribes. Jackson had sponsored the Indian Removal Act of 1830, and he turned a blind eye to Georgia’s efforts to evict them. Jackson’s refusal to enforce Worster v. Georgia, the Supreme Court decision that would have the effect of stopping Georgia in its tracks, led ultimately, once Jackson was out of office, to the Trail of Tears in 1838-39. While still in office, Jackson was also struggling, at the very same time, with nullification and threats of secession by the state of South Carolina. He truly was caught between a rock and a hard place. (more…) Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 08.23.05 by Steve Trinward
About two months ago now, I started telling people about a book a good friend of mine wrote, which had finally found its way to widescale publication. Pierre R. Beaumier’s Scars of the Square Needle is a true roman a clef, a novelized account of reality about a time and place many of us would like to pretend never happened. Whether one is a quasi-neocon warmonger who favored the U.S. invasion of Iraq; a street-protesting, hardcore-antiwar activist; or just somehow middle-of-the-road on the issue … echoes of the Viet Nam War are hard to hear and harder to accept. But that War did happen, and examinations of what it all meant are clearly in order in today’s arena of conflict. Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Posted on 02.14.05 by Jeff Riggenbach
Books Cited or Discussed in This Essay: Adams, Henry. The Education of Henry Adams. New York: Modern Library, 1931. Branden, Barbara. The Passion of Ayn Rand. New York: Doubleday, 1986. Cox, Stephen. The Woman & the Dynamo: Isabel Paterson & the Idea of America. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, 2004. Flynn, John T. The Roosevelt Myth. Garden City, NY: Garden City Publishing, 1948. —. The Decline of the American Republic. New York: Devin-Adair, 1955. Garrett, Garet. The People’s Pottage. Caldwell, ID: Caxton, 1953. Johnson, Paul. “Introduction to the Fifth Edition,” in Murray N. Rothbard, America’s Great Depression. Auburn, AL: Mises Institute, 2000. Manchester, William. The Glory & the Dream: A Narrative History of America, 1932-1972. Boston: Little, Brown, 1974. Paterson, Isabel. The God of the Machine. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction, 1993. Postrel, Virginia. The Future & Its Enemies. New York: Free Press, 1998. What a treat it must have been to be an American libertarian in the last weeks of 1932. The federal government was a tiny, toothless thing then, at least by present-day standards. Its capital city of Washington, according to William Manchester, “was a slumbering village in summer, largely forgotten the rest of the year. In size it ranked fourteenth among American cities,” which made it about as big and important, relatively speaking, as Columbus or Jacksonville in the America of today. “Most big national problems,” Manchester recalls, “were decided in New York, where the money was; when federal action was required, Manhattan’s big corporation lawyers — men like Charles Evans Hughes, Henry L. Stimson, and Elihu Root — came down to guide their Republican protégés. President Coolidge had usually finished his official day by lunchtime.” His successor, Herbert Hoover, “created a stir by becoming the the first Chief Executive to have a telephone on his desk. He also employed five secretaries — no previous President had required more than one — and summoned them by an elaborate buzzer system.” (3) Still, even the Hoover administration was remarkably compact. As Manchester notes, Moreover, “[t]here was little pomp. […] If you called on the Secretary of State, he sometimes met you at the door.” (4) This was a much leaner U.S. government than the one we view with horror today. In 1932 there were no federal “subsidies to farmers, […] handouts to the indigent, [or] support [for] schools.” The federal government did not “build hospitals [or] provide medical care.” (Flynn, Decline 113) And though it did undertake national defense, it did so much more cheaply than libertarians of today are accustomed to seeing. “The U.S. had the sixteenth largest army in the world” in 1932, Manchester reports, “putting it behind, among others, Czechoslovakia, Turkey, Spain, Romania, and Poland.” And most of those in uniform “were committed to desk work, patrolling the Mexican border, and protecting U.S. possessions overseas.” What remained to defend the United States from anyone other than Mexico was “30,000 troops — fewer than the force King George sent to tame his rebellious American colonies in 1776.” (5) In constant dollars, this army cost about one-eighth of one percent of what today’s military costs the U.S. taxpayer. In 1932, the federal government was seizing less than five percent of our national income, so it had to be a good deal more frugal than the federal government of 2005, which claims roughly half our national income. The Great Depression was underway in 1932, of course; around a quarter of the workforce was out of work, banks were failing, times were hard. And President Hoover had only made matters worse, “first pumping more credit into an already overheated economy and, then, when the bubble burst, doing everything in his power to organize government rescue operations.” (Johnson xv) These “rescue operations,” to the despair of any libertarian who watched them unfold and take shape, amounted to an effort to virtually nationalize the U.S. economy, an effort “to organize every profession, every trade, every craft under [government] supervision and to deal directly with such details as the volume of production, the prices, the means and methods of distribution of every conceivable product.” (Flynn, Myth 38) Fortunately, however, President Hoover, the “born planner, meddler, orderer, and exhorter,” (Johnson xv) had been voted out of office after a single term in the White House. The American electorate had repudiated his planning, meddling, ordering, and exhorting and had elected the Democratic candidate, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, a man who stood for small government and fiscal responsibility. This was evident from the platform on which Roosevelt had run — a platform that called for “2. Maintenance of the national credit by a Federal budget annually balanced …. “3. A sound currency to be maintained at all hazards.” Nor was this platform meant to be taken as mere empty rhetoric of the sort modern-day libertarians associate with the political campaigns of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush. As Garet Garrett pointed out in 1938, “Mr. Roosevelt pledged himself to be bound by this platform as no President had ever before been bound by a party document. All during the campaign he supported it with words that could not possibly be misunderstood.” He said, for example, Roosevelt was particularly adamant on the subject of government borrowing. True, Roosevelt’s political track record was somewhat worrisome. After all “as governor he took New York State from the hands of Al Smith with a surplus of $15,000,000 and left it with a deficit of $90,000,000.” (37) Still, “[t]here was nothing revolutionary in” what he was now telling the voters. By contrast, since the time of Lincoln, the Republican party had always stood for strong central government, top-heavy bureaucracy, and hefty handouts to big business. The fact that the voters had evicted a Republican from the White House and elected a Democrat surely meant that American public opinion was leaning libertarian and on the side of the angels. Even more important, nearly all the major intellectual journalists and opinion leaders in the American public prints of the time were libertarian in their thinking. Only six years earlier, in 1926, not long after the publication of the sensational popular bestseller Notes on Democracy, Walter Lippmann had called its author, the nationally syndicated newspaper columnist H. L. Mencken, who was also the founder and editor of the monthly American Mercury, “the most powerful influence on this whole generation of educated people.” In December of 1932, Mencken was still at the helm of the Mercury, though he would step down only a few months later and turn the magazine over to the literary editor of The Nation, Henry Hazlitt. Hazlitt would hold the job for only a year or so, however, before defecting to The New York Times, where he would write editorials on economic topics and review books on business and economics for the paper’s Sunday book pages. The American Mercury was among the most influential magazines being published at that time — as was The Nation — but it was far from the most widely circulated or read. That honor went to the Saturday Evening Post, whose economics editor and chief editorial writer was Garet Garrett. In the same year that Henry Hazlitt took over the reins of The American Mercury, 1933, Felix Morley took over the reins of the Washington Post; within three years, he was awarded a Pulitzer prize for distinguished editorial writing. Meanwhile, the Saturday Evening Post, the American Mercury, The Nation, the New Republic, the Atlantic Monthly, Harper’s, and the other popular and influential magazines of the day — to say nothing of the period’s newspapers — were filled with articles by writers like Albert Jay Nock, John T. Flynn, and Rose Wilder Lane — as the nation’s bookstores were filled with these same writers’ books. And for those who haunted the bookstores and tried to keep up with the latest in books, the weekly book review of choice was the one published by the New York Herald Tribune. As Stephen Cox reminds us, The deputy editor and feared weekly columnist at Herald Tribune “Books” (John O’Hara, Cox tells us, “writing on the day of publication of his first novel,” confessed that he was “very much afraid” of her) was Isabel Paterson. Surely, to the American libertarian looking around him or her in December of 1932 the prospects for the future must have seemed rosy. But of course, as it turned out, what that libertarian was observing was the last brilliant flowering of a plant that would die all too soon. Safely elected, FDR reversed his campaign promises entirely, rejected the legacy of his party, and proceeded to prove that he could do strong central government, meddlesome economic regulation, and political favors in return for votes and donations better than any Republican who’d ever come down the pike. And though all the journalists I’ve just named went right on writing through the ’30s and into the ’40s (and, in some cases, even into the ’50s and ’60s), though several of them wrote passionately polemical books on the deteriorating political situation in America and kept up their agitation for small government and personal freedom as long as they could go on placing their manuscripts with publishers, there was nothing they could do to reverse the growing tide of public opinion against them and their cause. Today we look at biographies of these writers and marvel at the thought of an American intellectual scene in which they were the acknowledged leaders. The problem is, there have been too few such biographies. There have been many, many books on Mencken, to be sure — some of them biographies, some of them studies of his work. There have been at least two books on Nock, at least two on Flynn, one on Lane, one on Hazlitt, none so far on Felix Morley or Garet Garrett — and, until now, none on Isabel Paterson. With the publication of Cox’s splendid new biography, The Woman & the Dynamo: Isabel Paterson & the Idea of America, it is now Paterson’s turn in the historical limelight. As Cox tells it, Paterson was born Mary Isabel Bowler on an island in the Canadian portion of Lake Huron in January 1886. She grew up poor in small towns and on farms in Ontario, Michigan, and points west — in both Western Canada and the Pacific Northwest of the United States. She taught herself to read at the age of three and was homeschooled thereafter, except for about two and a half years of formal education, all of it completed by the time she was twelve. The truth is that Isabel Paterson seems to have been one of the great autodidacts of the last two centuries, with a voracious appetite for reading. As a teenager, Isabel went to work serving food in a hotel dining room, then studied typing and shorthand and began taking secretarial positions. She drifted into journalism when, having taken a job as secretary to a newspaper publisher, she made such a nuisance of herself criticizing the writing in his paper that, in exasperation, he offered her a job as an editorial writer. “Let’s see if she can do any better than the people she criticizes!” one can almost hear him saying to himself. She did. One newspaper job led to another, taking her from Calgary to Spokane to Vancouver to Seattle to San Francisco to New York. In Calgary she spent a few weeks in the throes of holy matrimony, thereby transforming herself from Isabel Bowler to Isabel Paterson. And in New York, in her off hours and when she was between jobs, she began writing novels. The first of these to see print was published just as Europe was exploding into the madness of World War I. Occasionally she found herself between jobs and unable to immediately locate another position as a writer; when that happened, she cheerfully went back to stenography. It was in this way that she met Burton Rascoe. Rascoe was one of the most important intellectual journalists of the period between the wars, whether as the irreverent literary editor of the Chicago Tribune (1918-1920), the New York Sun (1931-1933), or Esquire (1932-1938) or as an iconoclastic nationally syndicated columnist appearing daily in more than 350 newspapers. In April of 1922, Rascoe was beginning a two-year stint as literary editor of the New York Tribune (by the time he moved on, in August 1924, it had become the New York Herald Tribune). He found that the volume of correspondence he had to deal with in his new post was such that he needed a secretary. Enter Isabel Paterson. But it was not long before Rascoe discovered that there was a good deal more to Paterson than mere secretary material. “He had been looking for a secretary,” Cox writes, “but he had found an assistant and a fellow-critic. The moment at which he recognized her integrity and intelligence was the turning point of Paterson’s career.” (61) In 1924, she began writing an 1800-word weekly column, “Turns With a Bookworm.” She continued writing it through the rest of the ’20s, all of the ’30s, and almost all of the ’40s, along with hundreds of articles and reviews, “a compendium of the literary life of her period, perhaps its largest compendium.” Cox quotes one contemporary observer as saying that Paterson had “more to say than any other critic in New York today as to which books shall be popular.” (81) “The column started,” according to Cox, “as an outlet for literary news and respectable literary gossip,” but Paterson, who signed her weekly piece “I.M.P.” (for Isabel Mary Paterson), quickly expanded her bailiwick, One of Paterson’s deepest enthusiasms was for politics. “In 1936,” Cox tells us, “‘a truly amiable correspondent’ wrote to the Herald Tribune to ask why Isabel Paterson did not ‘write on politics.’ ‘This is a refreshing novelty,’ she replied. ‘Others have asked us why don’t we shut up about politics.’” (71-72) Before long, even more of her readers were posing this second question, for as the Great Depression wore on and on, prolonged and even deepened by the wrongheaded policies of the New Deal, Paterson devoted herself more and more frequently to issues of political economy in her column, until she had transformed “Turns With a Bookworm” into a “glorious soapbox for her political ideas.” (72) And, during these same years, she wrote the one non-fiction book of her career, The God of the Machine, an attempt at a systematic presentation of her political views and the bases for her belief that America had taken a disastrously wrong turn in 1932. The God of the Machine was much admired by Ayn Rand, an acolyte of Paterson’s during the long years when her own writing had not yet brought her much success; and such fame as Paterson’s book now enjoys within the libertarian movement is largely owing to Rand’s ongoing efforts on its behalf during the 1960s, in the pages of The Objectivist and The Objectivist Newsletter. Still, it is questionable just how far Rand’s efforts enjoyed any measurable success; that is, it is questionable just how extensive is the fame that The God of the Machine does enjoy in the libertarian movement of today. One wonders. When former Reason editor Virginia Postrel published her first book, The Future & Its Enemies, nearly seven years ago, she built the book’s central argument around a distinction between “static” and “dynamic” systems and the “stasists” and “dynamists” who advocate them. Well, as Stephen Cox pointed out in his valuable “Introduction” to the 50th Anniversary Edition of The God of the Machine, published (with considerable publicity in such movement periodicals as Liberty and the then-monthly book review and catalogue of Laissez Faire Books) in 1993, five years before The Future & Its Enemies, “Some of her columns at the end of the decade [of the 1930s] look like abstracts for The God of the Machine. The main connections between her idea of history and her idea of government are set forth, for instance, in her 16 July, 1939, column, which contains a long discussion of ‘dynamic’ and ’static’ systems […].” (xxvii) Nor is this all. Postrel wrote in 1998 that the essential difference between stasis and dynamism was the difference between “a regulated, engineered world” and “a world of constant creation, discovery, and competition.” (xiv) When we look at a dynamic system, Postrel wrote, what we see is something that is “inherently unstable” — not “disorder, but […] an order that is unpredictable, spontaneous, and ever shifting […].” (xv) According to Postrel, stasists reject the market, while dynamists embrace it. “Stasists generally portray the market either as an impersonal machine crushing personal values or, quite the opposite, as a small cabal of powerful and greedy men who manipulate the rest of us for their own gain. Dynamists, by contrast, see the market as a process, a decentralized system for discovering and sharing knowledge, for trading and expressing value […].” (35) In no sense, however, are dynamists utopians. For “utopia is by definition static, an unchanging state of perfection.” (58) Stasists attempt to achieve utopia “by stopping experimentation.” (199) Paterson’s thinking was remarkably similar. Writing in 1943, she declared that “Russia, Germany, and other planned economies are static.” (289) In fact, any Such is the payoff for stopping experimentation. By contrast, “the dynamic economy” — as typified by the relatively untrammeled and freely experimental market economy of the United States — “creates unprecedented means of mobility and a fair prospect of finding a livelihood almost anywhere.” (157, 285) No acknowledgment of Paterson is to be found in The Future & Its Enemies. Her name doesn’t even appear in the index. Nor, so far as I have been able to discover, did even a single one of the many reviewers who discussed Postrel’s notably successful book back in 1999 take note of any of its striking resemblances to The God of the Machine. What does this tell us, except that very few people read Isabel Paterson any longer? Contrast this, for example, with Cox’s decision to devote a few paragraphs of his biography of Paterson to discussion of Henry Adams. Clearly, he said to himself, “At least some of my readers are going to see my title — The Woman & the Dynamo — and recall the famous chapter in The Education of Henry Adams called ‘The Virgin & the Dynamo.’ And they’re going to wonder if there’s some connection.” There is, of course. Cox acknowledges that Adams’s conception of history “bears a superficial resemblance to Paterson’s” and that, like Paterson, “Adams uses the language of engineering (’energy,’ ’sequence,’ ‘resistance’). He describes the immense increase in energy or ‘force’ during the nineteenth century and marvels at the industrial ‘dynamo’ which radiated that force.” (259-260) Paterson herself discussed Adams briefly in The God of the Machine, writing that Or, as Cox puts the matter, “Adams’ failure […] was his inability to see that the dynamo was the complement and product of the virgin, not its opposite.” (275) In point of fact, if Paterson’s work is as infrequently read these days as it seems to be, much of the reason is implicit in the paragraph just quoted. For her own attempt to explain the emergence of the dynamo is muddied and made unnecessarily difficult for the reader by her insistence on using an elaborate metaphor drawn from the world of engineering. Consider, for example, her explanation of the decline of Spain. By the middle of the 15th Century, she writes, “Spain controlled the richest part of Europe, what with the Spanish and Austrian mines, the industrial towns of the Netherlands, and the diversity of other resources embraced in such extensive territory. The dominant position in respect of the Mediterranean also meant something. And then the wealth of America poured into Spain.” So what went wrong? “Spain was electrocuted, burned out, by receiving a high voltage of energy into a political structure and mechanism without proper transmission lines, outlets, and insulation.” (58) “Huh?” you might ask. And well might you ask. But it gets worse. Here is Paterson’s “explanation”: Except, of course, that it’s not. The God of the Machine was not a big commercial success on its first publication, and it seems unlikely (to this reader, anyway) that the then-declining fortunes of individualism was the only cause of this failure. Another radically individualist book published in the same year (1943), Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead, did enjoy an enormous commercial success, despite its supposed clash with the zeitgeist. One can only speculate as to how many readers, eager to learn what all the buzz is about, begin The God of the Machine, only to give up within the first sixty-five or so pages because of this willfully created impediment to their understanding. Whatever their number, that such readers exist at all is too bad, because there is much of value in Paterson’s book. There are extended historical analyses of considerable power, such as her discussion, in Chapter 16, “The Corporations and Status Law,” of the origins and consequences of U.S. government “regulation” of business, including both subsidy programs and anti-trust prosecutions. Paterson’s analysis in this brilliant chapter will be of particular interest to admirers of such revisionist works of the 1960s and early ’70s as Gabriel Kolko’s The Triumph of Conservatism (1963) and Railroads & Regulation (1965) and Roy Childs’s “Big Business & the Rise of American Statism” (1971). The God of the Machine also offers much quotable epigrammatic wit and wisdom.
Cox shows that this flair for concision, for the pithy and succinct, was regularly on display in Paterson’s weekly columns for the New York Herald Tribune as well. “She was not exactly the embodiment of the Jazz Age,” he writes. “The hedonists of the era amused her, from a distance, but she had no sympathy for the ‘lost generation’ — naifs who ‘felt themselves persecuted by “The Saturday Evening Post.”‘ ‘We wish they’d stay lost,’ she said. ‘Nobody would go to look for them.’” (89) Notified that Gertrude Stein, “author of ‘The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas,’ [was] “coming over soon for a lecture tour,” she quipped: “One of her lecture topics will be ‘The History of English Literature as I Understand It.’ That should be a very brief lecture.” (73) But Paterson’s newspaper columns are not easily accessible to most readers, apart from the bits and pieces quoted in Cox’s book. And few readers are likely to stick with The God of the Machine long enough to find the gems lying in wait within its pages. Paterson is likely doomed to continue in the obscurity into which she almost instantly fell after being fired for political incorrectness by the Herald Tribune in 1949. She never worked full time again. Some of the novels she had written “on the side” during the Teens, Twenties, and early Thirties had enjoyed a certain commercial success. One of them, Never Ask the End, had even been a modest bestseller. Paterson had invested much of the money she earned from these books in real estate, so, when she suddenly found retirement thrust upon her, she withdrew from Manhattan, took up residence in one of her country houses, and began living on her Herald Tribune pension and the proceeds of her investments. She refused to file for the Social Security benefits she could have collected, because she regarded the program as a “swindle.” (325) She did some magazine work from time to time, mostly for William F. Buckley’s National Review, but this amounted to very little in the end, because Paterson had no talent for getting along with anyone who disagreed with her about anything — including editors. Her life up to this time, Cox tells us, had included “few close friends.” (183) And not a few of the people she could count as friends chose to keep their distance. “The door of her house was always unlocked; friends were warmly encouraged to come and stay. But mostly they didn’t come.” (187) Her dealings with most of her fellow writers, and particularly with those of them who were in any sense fashionable, were openly contemptuous. She “appeared to be working night and day to sever her ties to them.” Nor, when they reached out to her, did she “politely demur. She was aggressive, obnoxious, offensive.” (244-245) Ayn Rand’s niece by marriage, Mimi Sutton, told Barbara Branden that Isabel Paterson had “no charm whatever.” (Passion 166) William Buckley found her “full of acid and ill humor” and “maddeningly ill mannered.” (Cox 350-351) And Paterson herself seems to have agreed. “[S]ocially,” she said of herself in a letter in 1958, she was “just a queer, frequently disagreeable, old woman; which is to say, I am in a category of quite tiresome people, unattractive, and best out of the way.” (338) “At my age, in the course of nature,” Cox quotes her as saying in another letter a little earlier in that same year, “one cannot expect to have many friends; and the world being what it is, and me being what I am, perhaps I really can’t expect to have any.” (333) Yet she did have a few. One of them once told her that “[p]eople who can stand you at all get rather fond of you.” (121) And so it was that in early January of 1960, Isabel Paterson died quietly at the home of some devoted friends, with whom she was staying until one of her own houses was made ready for her to inhabit again. Cox tells this story with flair and zest. His biography is, for anyone interested in American intellectual history in the 20th Century, both indispensable and compulsively readable. —– Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 03.09.04 by Jeff Riggenbach
Make no mistake about it: we have lost a great libertarian, and we will probably not see his like again. Samuel Edward Konkin III was born in Saskatchewan on July 8, 1947. His family moved to neighboring Alberta while he was still a boy, and he grew up in and around Edmonton, finishing high school there and entering the University of Alberta, where he graduated, cum laude, in 1968. By the time he reached the University of Wisconsin later that same year to begin graduate studies in chemistry, he was a confirmed science fiction fan and was particularly enamored of the works of Robert A. Heinlein. One of Heinlein’s novels in particular had impressed him — The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress (1966) — in which a group of rebellious colonists on the Moon, under the leadership of a renegade computer and a white-haired political philosopher named Bernardo de la Paz, who advocates something he calls “Rational Anarchy,” foment a successful revolution. Sam was already involved in politics by this time, but not libertarian politics — populist politics, rather. At the University of Alberta he had served as head of the Young Social Credit League, a student group allied with the politics of the Social Credit Party, a minor Canadian political party founded in Alberta in the mid-1930s and based on the theories of the British economist Clifford Douglas. As the online edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica puts it,
In 1935 the newly established Social Credit Party “won 56 of 63 contested seats in the Alberta Assembly,” the Britannica article continues, “thus forming the world’s first Social Credit government, which remained in power for 36 years.” Later, “it governed British Columbia from 1952, except for the years 1972–75; and it held seats in the Parliament at Ottawa from 1935 to 1980, when it lost all six of its seats.” In one of the last things he wrote, a message posted to his Left Libertarian e-mail discussion list on Thursday February 5, 2004, Sam offered the following comment on the Social Credit movement:
“Oddly enough,” Sam continued, “the first provincial government of Alberta, 1905-1919, was Georgist (running the Liberal Party then); the second was the United Farmers of Alberta, 1919-1935, whose federal wing was considered the ‘ginger group’ of the Progressive Party of Canada; and the third was Social Credit (1935-1971).” In Madison, it didn’t take the young Social Crediter from Alberta long to begin broadening his political horizons. First his new roommate, chemistry Ph.D. candidate and former Ayn Rand devotee Tony Warnock, introduced him to the Wisconsin Conservative Club, where he met people who told him the name of the real political philosopher and teacher upon whom Heinlein had based de la Paz — Robert LeFevre. Before too many more months had passed, Sam had joined Wisconsin YAF and been selected as a delegate to the YAF national convention in St. Louis in August 1969. St. Louis was a watershed for Sam’s development as a libertarian. He came to the convention still thinking of himself as a young conservative, though what he’d read and learned in the past year from and about Rand, LeFevre, Ludwig von Mises, and Murray Rothbard had brought him to the edge of a major change in his thinking. “The final step,” Sam told an interviewer in 2002,
If the St. Louis YAF convention was a watershed in Sam’s personal development as a libertarian, it was also a watershed for the libertarian movement. As Sam put it in that same interview,
There are movement historians who would differ with this account in one or more particulars. For example, Sam neglects to mention the crucial role of Objectivists set adrift by the Rand-Branden split of 1968 in the founding of the Libertarian Party. It is certain that Ayn Rand has converted far more people to libertarianism than Murray Rothbard and Robert LeFevre combined (depending, of course, on how you define “libertarianism”) — and this was as true in 1969 as it is today. Also, Sam writes as though SIL, the Society for Individual Liberty, already existed at the time of the St. Louis YAF convention. Its predecessor organization, the Objectivist-oriented Society for Rational Individualism, had existed for about a year at that time. Still, this is somewhat misleading. SIL was founded in St. Louis in 1969, while the YAF convention was underway across town. These quibbles are ultimately of little importance, however. In its main outlines, and with respect to most of its details, Sam’s account of the movement’s origins and early growth is quite accurate — particularly when judged by the standards appropriate to journalism. And it is as a libertarian journalist that I believe Samuel Edward Konkin III is best remembered and best understood. After the YAF convention, he went back to Madison for a year, then moved on to New York. (After all, Mises and Rothbard were both there.) He transferred his graduate studies to N.Y.U. and finished up his M.S. in Theoretical Chemistry, then began working on a Ph.D. In Manhattan he met Rothbard and became a regular in that famous living room, he attended Ludwig von Mises’s famous seminar in Austrian economics at N.Y.U., and he became involved with the nascent Libertarian Party. As a delegate from New York City in 1973 and 1974, to the Cleveland and Dallas conventions respectively, Sam organized the original “radical caucus” within the party. Like its successor “radical caucus,” founded in the late ’70s by Murray Rothbard, Bill Evers, Eric Garris, and Justin Raimondo, it was designed to keep the party properly adherent to libertarian principle. But by late in 1974, Sam had given up on the idea that any such goal could be achieved. He publicly walked out of the party, taking a sizable chunk of its membership with him. Thereafter, he liked to think of himself as “the Libertarian Party’s worst living enemy.” Of more lasting importance was Sam’s decision, once he had been in Manhattan for a few hours, to begin publishing. Almost upon his arrival at his new graduate school he assumed the editorship of the NYU Libertarian Notes, a campus newsletter, quickly renaming it New Libertarian Notes and aiming it at a broader readership. His mission, as he saw it, was to “cover” the infant libertarian movement — to report on its issues and events, and to offer commentary aimed at steering the new movement in what Sam took to be the proper direction. There was much going on in Manhattan in the early ’70s, much movement ferment and growth. And it was not all in Murray Rothbard’s living room. Over on Mercer Street in the Village, Laissez Faire Books, the nation’s first libertarian bookstore (unless you count Benjamin R. Tucker’s Bookstore at 225 Fourth Avenue, which closed in 1908), was being established by Sharon Presley and John Muller. The Free Libertarian Party was polarizing libertarian strategic thought between those who believed political action could be used to achieve a free society and those who believed political action was a betrayal of libertarian principle. There were talks, parties, gatherings of every kind. It was a scene that cried out for a journalist with the imagination and (given the still very small market for news of this subculture) the sheer guts to make it his chief subject. “In 1975,” Sam wrote in a short autobiography he prepared for Jeanie Kennedy’s Free Exchange in San Francisco late in the ’90s, “Sam left New York without turning in his thesis [actually his Ph.D. dissertation] in Quantum Mechanics in order to work full-time in the Libertarian Movement and the great Counter-Economy, proving by example for over a quarter century that one can live a state-free, moral and activist life.” Sam moved first to Long Beach, California (the fifth largest city in California, ca. half a million people, about twenty-five miles from downtown Los Angeles). From there he moved to Culver City, an L.A. suburb. Then, after a couple of years in Las Vegas as the new century dawned, he returned to Los Angeles. New Libertarian Notes morphed into New Libertarian Weekly and finally into New Libertarian, a ‘monthly’ that actually appeared on a monthly basis only in fits and starts and finally fizzled out altogether in the ’90s. In one or another of its various incarnations, however, New Libertarian was Sam’s chief object of attention for more than twenty years. And it was magnificent. At a time when, as Jesse Walker puts it, “the libertarian milieu lacked well-funded think tanks and slick-paper magazines, and when offering a low-budget alternative was not a simple matter of launching a blog,” Sam Konkin published consistently and regularly on a shoestring — less than a shoestring. And what he published was some of the most entertaining, provocative, and stimulating stuff to be had anywhere at the time. Many of the best writers in the movement were contributing editors, regular columnists, or frequent contributors to his pages — Robert Anton Wilson, James J. Martin, Wendy McElroy, Murray Rothbard, Jeffrey Rogers Hummel, Sharon Presley, Robert LeFevre, Eric Scott Royce, George H. Smith — and, of course, he himself was also there, issue after issue, with his often quirky but almost always insightful and incisive commentary on the issues and events of the day and the latest developments in the libertarian movement. One of Sam’s principal mentors, Ludwig von Mises, argued in his seminal work Theory and History that history is impossible in the absence of certain assumptions — assumptions about what kinds of events are important and what kinds are not, assumptions about the ways in which causality functions in matters of human action. In the absence of such assumptions, the historian would have no basis for deciding what to write about. Precisely the same might be said about journalism. The journalist is, after all, in a manner of speaking, an historian in a hurry. As longtime Washington Post publisher Phillip Graham famously put it, journalism provides “a first rough draft of … history.” Indeed, newspapers from a period are regarded by historians as “primary sources” for information about the history of that period. And what it means to describe The New York Times, for example, as the “newspaper of record” for a certain period of the 20th Century is that The New York Times may be relied upon for information about the history of that period, as it unfolded day by day. Sam said on more than one occasion that he considered New Libertarian the publication of record for the libertarian movement, the publication future historians of the movement would turn to for information about the history of the movement, as it unfolded day by day. Sam knew that all journalism, like all history, is based on certain assumptions about the human condition and about which things in human experience are more and less important. He knew also that there are two, and only two kinds of journalism — the kind in which these assumptions are consciously held and explicitly identified, and the kind in which they are never identified, even by the journalists whose work they invisibly shape and direct. Sam was always the first sort of journalist: no one reading any of his publications was ever in the slightest doubt about the point of view held by its editor. At the same time, Sam never required that his contributors, even his columnists and contributing editors, agree with him about everything. On the contrary: the masthead of New Libertarian proclaimed that “Everyone appearing in this publication disagrees!” At a time (the ’70s and ’80s) when factionalism within the movement was, if anything, even more virulent than it is today (reminiscent at times of the infighting among the various competing Palestinian groups in Monty Python’s Life of Brian), Sam pursued a firm policy of publishing every faction. At a time when he was bitterly attacking the network of organizations and institutions then funded by the Kansas oil billionaire Charles Koch (the Cato Institute, Inquiry magazine, The Libertarian Review, the original Students for a Libertarian Society), he had no qualms about letting me keep my spot on his masthead and my regular column, despite the fact that I was a full time employee of what Sam called “the Kochtopus,” working for Cato, Inquiry, and LR, speaking on behalf of SLS — and despite the fact that I disagreed with at least some of his criticisms of the Kochtopus. He made no secret of his own views, of course; in fact, if he published an article by anyone who disagreed with him about anything, he felt free to annotate the article with parenthetical comments in square brackets to make clear what he felt the “plumb line” position was on the topic at hand. And what was the “plumb line?” What was the set of assumptions that guided Samuel Edward Konkin III in his practice of libertarian journalism? In a word, Rothbardianism. If memory serves me rightly (and, of course, it seldom does), on the day in 1975 when I first met Sam, I also met another libertarian luminary of the time, Williamson M. “Bill” Evers. One autumn day in Los Angeles I had stopped by George Smith’s apartment on my way home from a bookbuying trip and found that he had two guests whom I had never met before. George introduced me to both of them, and, later, when they had left and I was still around, he commented: “You know how some people are strict Randians? Well, Bill is perhaps the best example you could find of a strict Rothbardian.” There is ample irony in this memory, for, of the two, it was Sam, not Bill, who proved to be the true Rothbardian. Sam faithfully followed Rothbard in his insistence on a non-interventionist foreign policy. He faithfully followed Rothbard in his denunciation of “public” education. Evers is now a salaried employee of the U.S. Department of Defense, charged with rebuilding the public schools in Baghdad; he calls himself a “libertarian conservative” in print. Rothbard is doubtless spinning in his tomb. Sam went on to publish a number of other periodicals, in addition to New Libertarian. There was New Isolationist, Strategy of the New Libertarian Alliance, the Smart Set Libertarian Notes & Calendar, The Agorist Quarterly, and several others. In the late 1980s, flush with the funding his frenzied and not infrequently inspired publishing had attracted, Sam opened a suite of offices for his Agorist Institute (founded in 1984) in a downtown Long Beach office building and proceeded to host a series of classes, conferences, and lectures in addition to his publishing. Earlier in the same decade he completed and published his major strategic statement, the New Libertarian Manifesto. Sam had long envied libertarians who had spouses and children; he longed, he said, to breed new libertarians as well as winning them over by persuasion. In 1991 he got his chance. A brief marriage to Sheila Wymer produced a son, Samuel Edward Konkin IV, who is now, longtime family friend J. Neil Schulman informs me, thirteen years old, being homeschooled by his mother, and precociously displaying both “his father’s dislike of taxes and [his] fondness for punk rock.” Unfortunately, his marriage also derailed Sam’s ambitious publishing program. And though it ended soon enough (the marriage, that is), Sam never really recovered. Up to the time of his death, he announced the impending resurrection of New Libertarian and the impending new era in which his websites — http://www.agorist.org, http://www.newlibertarian.com — would be made current and then continuously updated. But it never happened. Something had gone out of Sam, something that had fueled his seemingly limitless energy of the ’70s and ’80s, and it never came back. What he leaves behind is his legacy as the premier libertarian journalist of his era. Sam was a leading-edge babyboomer, and, as such, a member of the second generation of leadership in the “modern” libertarian movement — that is, the movement that came into existence in the 1940s with the publication of Ayn Rand’s The Fountainhead, Isabel Paterson’s The God of the Machine, Rose Wilder Lane’s The Discovery of Freedom, Friedrich Hayek’s The Road to Serfdom, and Ludwig von Mises’s Human Action, and with the founding in 1946 of the Foundation for Economic Education. The first generation of this modern movement’s leadership was made up of intellectuals who grew up in the first three decades of the 20th Century — Rand, Rothbard, LeFevre, Nathaniel and Barbara Branden, Read. The second generation was made up of intellectuals born in the 1930s, ’40s and ’50s. Out of this second generation there were to come two great libertarian journalists — Roy A. Childs, Jr. (1949-1992) and Samuel Edward Konkin III (1947-2004). Both were to die too young. Childs has been suitably memorialized in print with a fine collection of his magazine and newsletter essays and reviews, Liberty Against Power (San Francisco: Fox & Wilkes, 1994). It is to be hoped that a similar posthumous collection will be made of the writings of Samuel Edward Konkin III, who died on February 23, 2004, the better to extend his legacy to the next generation of libertarians, and the next. Filed under: Guest Columns | |
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Posted on 02.21.04 by Thomas L. Knapp
Libertarians are by nature a contrarian lot, and I’ve yet to see a real-world issue that we can’t mangle beyond recognition with a little debate. Nonetheless, the question of the Arab-Israeli conflict holds pride of place among vexatious issues that divide the freedom movement. In a recent article, published in Liberty For All, Carol Moore makes a valiant attempt to frame the Arab-Israeli conflict — and, more importantly, the implications of that conflict for the United States and for the freedom movement in the United States — in terms of universally applicable libertarian principles. My intention with this article is not to argue the validity of those principles. I stipulate to them. Instead, I intend to attempt to place the Arab-Israeli conflict in context, both with regard to the principles themselves (part one of this series) and to the practical application of those principles by an American freedom movement and, more specifically, the Libertarian Party (coming soon). Filed under: Feature Articles | |
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Wrap-up, 01/01/06 – Happy New Year! It’s Sunday morning, and between our last update and midnight on the 31st, $160 came in (thanks, JJ, EA and MC!). That brings our total to $2,730 … better than 90% of our $3,000 goal! Given money en route via snail mail, and money contributed to ISIL to support publication of Freedom News Daily, I have little doubt that we exceeded our goal. Thanks again to all of you, and here’s to another year of RRND and FND!



