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Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Special Section - America's Wars: Who Won and Who Lost? with articles America Won, Americans Lost ("Robert Higgs wonders: when freedom always loses, how can anyone truly win?"); Shooting Elephants ("Bruce Ramsey finds that being American means dealing with expectations other countries never have to face"); Winning the Moral War ("Aeon Skoble asks: is the idea of a just war still a winning concept?"); Wins, Losses, and Libertarian Ideas ("Stephen Cox examines war's unintended consequences - both good and bad"). Other features include: The Fight for Freedom at AHA [American Historical Association] ("David T. Beito chronicles a more than merely academic battle among academics"); Can Trains Be Saved? ("Randall O'Toole presents a vision of Amtrak operated as if its passengers mattered"). Small mailing label to front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 48 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Health Care - Three Fantasies ("Thanks to genetic research, humans may soon be living dramatically longer, healthier, and more productive lives. But Ross Overbeek warns that caution could get the best of us"); Charity? Humbug! ("What could be better than using one's fortune to help the poor and struggling? Doug Casey has a few ideas"); Why Libertarians Should Call Themselves Socialists ("First the nationalists called themselves 'federalists,' then the statists dubbed themselves 'liberals.' David G. Danielson strikes back against the label thieves"); The Crimes of War ("Jon Harrison surveys the modern battlefield and mulls over the vexed issue of atrocities"); The Catechism of the Revolution (on Jonathan Mayhew: "Well before the American Revolution, the message of liberty rang forth from the pulpit. David Kopel introduces the preacher who coined the phrase 'no taxation without representation"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 64 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Special Section - A Life in Liberty: Bill Bradford Remembered with articles The Conscience of a Libertarian ("Ross Overbeek recounts a friendship that began with Goldwater and ended with Liberty"); Ayn Rand and Coney Island ("Chris Matthew Sciabarra recalls a whirlwind intellectual tour"); Adios, Spike ("Paul Rako says goodbye as a fellow motorcyclist takes his last ride"); It Couldn't Have Been Anyone Else ("Stephen Cox explains why Bill Bradford will never truly die"); with other tributes by Liberty's editors and contributors. Other features include: Debating the War on Drugs ("Bruce Ramsey shows that drug legislation is more complex than many Drug War critics think"); Guns, Rum. & Loot ("When governments license men to steal, Jo Ann Skousen finds, it's no surprise that many turn to outright piracy"); Kalmykia on My Mind ("Kirsan Ilyumzhinov is a Buddhist, a multi-millionaire, and president of the World Chess Federation - and leader of a unique post-Soviet state. Doug Casey tours Ilyumzhinov's HQ"). Small mailing label to front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 48 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Special Section - Liberty Around the World ("Individual rights are universal, but they are not universally recognized. Four of Liberty's foreign agents investigate the progress of liberty abroad") with four articles: The Real India, Behind the Fog ("Jayant Bhandari notes that things are improving in India, but not as fast as people think"); The End of Soviet Poland ("While helping Poland through its transition to a market economy, Michael Christian found it easier to sidestep the remnants of communism than to get rid of them altogether"); A Bet on China ("Bruce Ramsey wagered against China once. He explains why he won't repeat that mistake"); The Danger in Spain ("Luis A. Balcarce wonders what sickness lurks behind the eternal smile of Spain's prime minister"). Other features include: Rethinking Vouchers ("It's time for voucher supporters to get past their failures. Alan Ebenstein plans for success at the polls"); Shadyside Fugue ("As ghosts flit around his hospital bed, Ralph R. Reiland ponders the single certainty in life"). Small mailing label to front cover; staples lightly rusted; lower edge area of front cover lightly sunned.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Special Section - Immigration: Yes, No, and Maybe ("Three of Liberty's writers come in with three very different takes on what is perhaps the most contentious issue facing American libertarians today") with the following articles: The Land of Opportunity ("Once it was King George who 'endeavored to prevent the Population of these States.' Richard Fields wonders why so many free-marketeers are so eager to join him"); The Fallacy of Open Immigration ("Stephen Cox warns that if some libertarians get what they say they want, they aren't going to be happy with the results"); To Filter the People ("For those who wish to enter the U.S., Bruce Ramsey is willing to keep the door open - but only halfway"). Other features include: Roman Virtues ("Whether they were building bridges or assembling books, Michael Christian finds, the Romans meant their creations to last"); Paving the 50 States ("President Eisenhower's signature brought the interstate highway system into being, and 50 years later, it's still not complete. Randal O'Toole surveys the history of a government program that's a little better than most"); Objectivism, Alive and Well ("How does one build community spirit in a community notorious for bitter disputation? Lance Lamberton reports from the summer conference [The Objectivist Center] of big-tent Objectivism"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 48 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: I Vote Against Liberty ("Just what can one freedom-loving individual accomplish as a member of a small-town planning board? Jane S. Shaw finds out firsthand"); The Roots of Liberty ("Dave Kopel discovers the bright roots of liberty, in the Dark Ages"); Pearl Harbor: Japan's Gift to FDR ("What did the president know about the Pearl Harbor attack, and when did he know it? Bettina Bien Greaves assesses the evidence"); The Anti-Semitism of My Youth ("Colleges, golf courses, government agencies: it wasn't that long ago that their gates were open only to a select many. Richard Kostelanetz grows up in mid-century America"). Small mailing label to front cover; staples lightly rusted; front cover lightly sunned.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Winning the Battle for Freedom and Prosperity ("John Mackey outlines a plan for selling freedom in an unfree world"); They're STILL Coming for Your Land ("What happens when politicians respond to the people's outrage over invasions of property rights? Not much, as Timothy Sandefur reports"); Centennial of an Unnatural Disaster ("Dale Gieringer recounts the first shots fired in the War on Drugs"); The Notion that Caused the Great Depression ("Richard Timberlake lifts the lid on the single, subtle idea that brought down the financial house"). Small mailing label to front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: The Books of Summer ("Summer is the time to hang a hammock, mix a mai tai, and spend a long afternoon stretched out with a good book. Our editors and contributors offer a stack of suggestions"); My Life As a Legislator ("The Hon. R. Kenneth Lindell takes us to a place where libertarians have never trod before"); The TIF [tax-increment financing] That is Eating Portland ("Americans may be catching on to eminent domain, but Randall O'Toole finds that central planners and urban renewers have a more sophisticated weapon to use"); Down in Egypt Land ("Doug Casey looks past the pharaohs and the pyramids, and sees a land perched on the edge of destruction"); Freedom to Speak ("Why would tens of thousands of people surrender their lunch breaks to make speeches to one another? Jane S. Shaw examines the thoroughly American world of Toastmasters"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: A Way Out of Iraq ("Progress in the Middle East, Jon Harrison argues, requires a new perspective"); The French Occupation of America ("David G. Danielson tells what American history would have been like if the French had been thinking like George W. Bush"); The Empty Breadbasket (on Zimbabwe: "Doug Casey sees how to destroy a country in less than a decade"); Twenty Observations on Liberty and Society ("Jayant Bhandari warns that totalitarian government is only a symptom of the real enemy: totalitarian culture"); The Art of Letting Go (on Lin Yutang: "Mark Skousen lauds a Chinese philosopher who drove away a third of the students in a class at Columbia Business School"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted; front cover shows a few narrow scuffs and two short closed edge tears.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 48 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: From the Soviet Union to the European Union ("Bulgaria has broken free of one empire, but now it's in an awful rush to join another. Doug Casey shows Bulgarians a better way forward"); Why Do Houses Cost So Much? ("Randal O'Toole examines the staggering price tag on the little place with the picket fence, and finds a danger to the world economy"); Development by Democracy ("Between fruit trees for the homeless and tunnels for toads, Davis, California, has it all - except votes for affordable housing. Richard Fields digs at the roots of green-friendly housing"); The Opiate of Almost Everyone ("Strict separation of church and state has become impossible, argues Robert H. Nelson, because the state has become a church"); The Politics of Hatred ("The Left harps on the persistence of hate in society, using it to justify speech codes and hate-crime legislation. But, as Stephen Paul Foster discovers, hate is too useful for the Left to abandon"). Small mailing label to front cover; staples lightly rusted; corner chip to first inside page (to blank margin only); right edge area of front cover lightly sunned.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 48 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: George [W.] Bush: Darling of the Liberals ("Why won't the Left lay off President Bush? After all, Jon Harrison finds, he's giving them everything they want"); Remembrance of Things Past ("John Hospers looks back on his friendship with Ayn Rand, and a wealth of fascinating ideas and debates"); Of Meat and Myth ("Upton Sinclair's libels on American industry have become 'facts.' Lawrence W. Reed sets the record straight"); Blue Jeans and Belarus ("Jayant Bhandari hops a plane to the ex-Soviet satellite and wonders why the people are so eager to reelect their dictator [Alexander Lukashenka]"); Portland Derailed ("The city's 'light-rail Mafia' plunges off the tracks. Randal O'Toole surveys the wreckage"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Ten Great Books of Liberty ("The 20th century was a bad era for liberty but a great era for libertarian thought. Liberty's editors and contributors celebrate ten intellectual achievements that helped to produce the modern libertarian movement"); Germany Invites the World ("Italy may have taken home the trophy, but the World Cup was about more than the results of a few games of soccer. Andrew Ferguson takes in the biggest spectacle on earth"); A Party in Search of Itself ("How can a small, ideological party hope to affect U.S. politics? Patrick Quealy and Mark Rand report from the national convention of the Libertarian Party"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2006
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Our Allies, the Conservatives ("On his way to the polls, Bruce Ramsey refuses to abandon the 'leave us alone' coalition"); The End in Iraq ("As President Bush sneaks in and out of the Middle East, Jon Harrison wonders what happened to the hero's welcome that the neocons predicted"); The New Civic Religion ("On the first anniversary of his death, we revisit R.W. Bradford's timeless commentary on the modern-day sacrament of voting. Bruce Ramsey shares his memories of Bill Bradford as a colleague and as a friend"); Franklin and His Critics ("Mark Skousen pores over Benjamin Franklin's papers, and finds in him one of America's greatest champions of liberty - despite what many libertarians think"); I Take the Bar ("Three days of questions and a 61% rate of failure: Bart Kosko sits down to one of the most intimidating exams in the world"); lengthy review by Garin K. Hovannisian of "H.L. Mencken on Religion" (edited by S.T. Joshi and published by Prometheus Books). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted; short closed tear to upper edge of front cover.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 48 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Special Section - Remembering Milton Friedman - with three articles: The Rational, The Relentless ("To the world, Milton Friedman was a Nobel laureate and adviser of presidents and potentates. To libertarians, he was One of Ours. Bruce Ramsey assesses his place in the story of human liberty"); A Most Civil Adversary ("When you came to know Milton Friedman, as Tibor Machan discovered, you learned something new about intellectual controversy. You also learned something new about intellectual decency"); Friendly Fights With Dr. Friedman ("What happens when you take a twenty-dollar bill from a great economist, and tear it up? Mark Skousen found out"). Other features include: The California Crack-up ("Since the Kelo decision [Kelo v. New London] enraged the nation, state after state has enacted restrictions on eminent domain. How did California manage to bungle its chance? Timothy Sandefur shows how"); A Libertarian Heaven on Earth ("Richard Kostelanetz invites you to ignore the petty rules and regulations - after all, the natives do - and see New York City as it really is"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 64 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Election 2006 - The Blue Tide ("Sound and fury, signifying - something. Bruce Ramsey, assisted by Liberty's editors and contributors, reports on our national sport"); Fight Terrorism: Legalize Heroin ("Poppy fields mean big profits for enemies of the United States. Scott McPherson wants to know why we shouldn't be the ones to benefit from Afghanistan's most lucrative crop"); Tattered Groves of Academe ("Jane Shaw finds the problem with colleges in the United States isn't their lack of success - it's the fact that they've altogether forgotten what success really means"); Nukes and NIMBY ["Not In My Back Yard"] ("Nuclear reactors are safe, green, and more than capable of keeping our economy running. Trouble is, nobody wants one next door. Gary Jason knows how to change their minds"); Digital Welfare ("Incompetence, greed, and Mafia schemes: Vince Vasquez examines the strange history of your telephone"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Why the Surge Will Fail ("Jon Harrison scrutinizes the president's plan to see if it's anything more than sand and mirrors"); Waiting for Fidel ("When Castro took Cuba, the struggle for human dignity began. Robert H. Miller remembers"); To Your Tents, O Israel ("David Kopel finds biblical roots for the right to keep and bear arms"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Special Section - Is There a God? And Does It Matter? with two articles: Reverence for Skeptics ("We cannot explain the universe, Leland B. Yeager argues, but the idea of God is no answer either to the spiritual or to the political questions") and Skepticism, and Beyond ("Although we cannot explain the universe, Stephen Cox asserts, the fingerprints of the Author of Liberty can still be found"). Other features include: Nine Days in July by Jon Harrison ("Iraq is a quagmire. Staying to fight and retreating are both fraught with problems. No one has a clue about what to do next - and at midsummer, the clock was heard ticking loudly"); The Market for Body Parts ("What used to be science fiction is now just common sense. Gary Jason reveals the practical benefits - and provides a practical proposal"); Fifty Really Stupid Ways to Save the Earth ("If you're full of good intentions but are running short on brains, Karl Hess has the solution to all your problems"); Why I Don't Like Europeans ("Jacques Delacroix sees what 40 years of social democracy have done for - or, rather, to - Europe"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 48 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Tiebreaker ("Bruce Ramsey offers a guide to the wonderland of assignment-by-race in American public schools"); The Wreckage of Truth (two articles, one on Home of Truth Colony, Utah and the other on Rajneeshpuram, Oregon: "The quest for truth can leave a lot of devastation behind it. R.W. Bradford visits the ruins of two failed utopias, one of which died a natural death, the other of which was murdered"); Getting Serious About Diversity ("Jonathan Slow reveals the employment practices of a vitally important university"); The House of Ninety Keys (on home security: "Is safety really our most important business? Bill Merritt reports from abroad"); Bruce Ramsey reviews "The Wages of Destruction: The Making and Breaking of the Nazi Economy" ("Could Hitler have won? Bruce Ramsey reassesses a classic libertarian theory"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Endangered Species - Where Have All the Techies Gone? by Gary Jason ("It isn't 'America' that produces the world's goods; it's American workers, and especially the combination of workers and thinkers known as technicians. But where will these workers and thinkers come from?"); Panama: The Western Hemisphere's Dubai ("Doug Casey visits Panama, meets with its president, and admires up-and-coming Panama City"); L'Eclisse: [Ingmar] Bergman and [Michelangelo] Antonioni Die on the Same Day by Dana Peterson; The Half-Open Door ("The real question of immigration, writes Bruce Ramsey, is not about principles. It's about numbers"); The Cookie Monster Beats the Cops by Rycke Brown ("The continuing story of what happened when Rycke Anne Brown was arrested for passing out marijuana cookies as a protest against the drug laws"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Cartman Shrugged ("The Founding Fathers, Adam Smith, Friedrich Hayek, Ludwig von Mises, and the creators of 'South Park': Paul A. Cantor traces a distinguished intellectual tradition"); Somalia: The Rubble and the Blossom ("What works when the government doesn't? Vince Vasquez provides the answer"); Live Earth: Dead Show ("Chris Rock said he prayed that Live Earth would end global warming, 'the same way Live Aid ended world hunger.' He'll get his wish, reports Tim Slagle"); one-page Me and the Eiger ("There are two types of people in this world, and Murray Rothbard was never afraid to say what type he was"); short story Love Song by Alec Mouhibian. Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: A Freewheeling Debate ("Bookstores across the nation are featuring Brian Doherty's history of the libertarian movement. Bruce Ramsey and Lanny Ebenstein study the phenomenon; Doherty provides his own account"); Borking Up the Wrong Tree: Conservatives and Judicial Activism by Timothy Sandefur ("The judicial philosophies of Robert Bork and Stephen Breyer aren't that far apart"); The Founding of the [Libertarian] Party ("John Hospers, one of the select group of Americans who have ever received a vote in the Electoral College, tells how it's done"); A Generation of Slackers by Michael Christian ("Growing older and growing up don't go together anymore"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples rusted; a few small, light yellow stains to lower portion of front cover.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Our Next President ("Bruce Ramsey casts an eye over the unappealing list of would-be presidents, and an early vote for 'None of the Above'"); Global Warming, Global Stifling ("Most scientists now agree the earth is warming - but few dare disagree with the popular opinion on the extent and danger of that phenomenon. Gary Jason speaks out, at the risk of being labeled a 'denier'"); Smokey and His Bandits ("Despite its failures, the Forest Service enjoys a steady income of taxpayer funds. Randal O'Toole pokes through the ashes of a fiscal flame-out"); An Open Letter to My Fellow Christians ("Laurence A. Vance appeals to his brethren: seek to change hearts, not to make laws"); short story Sundown by Garin K. Hovannisian. Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Virginia Tech's Failed Playwright ("Did Seung-Hui Cho's writings really mark him as a murderous psychopath? Scott Stein investigates"); The YouTube Wars ("Why all the fuss over low-resolution video clips? James Walsh runs down the fight between Viacom and Google"); The Books of Summer ("Our editors and contributors offer their picks for the season's must-have accessory"); Diamonds, In the Rough by Nelson Hultberg ("Baseball owners and players may have agreed on another labor deal, but the sport will remain at risk until the playing field is leveled"); Liberte and Egalite Against Fraternite ("If we are to keep our republic, Alex Binz argues, we must understand the ideas that would destroy it"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples rusted; wear along right edge of front cover.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2007
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Very Good. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: special section Liberty at Twenty by R.W. Bradford, Bruce Ramsey, and Stephen Cox (with articles A Constant Feast - Where we've been; At Liberty - What we do; Confessions of a Liberty Editor - How we do it; Liberty Poll - Who you are); Ron Paul in the Spotlight ("Bruce Ramsey investigates the libertarian who is making waves in the Republican Party"); I Have Seen the Future, And It Has the Clap by Bill Merritt ("In The Villages, Florida, the turtles may be sexually frustrated, but the residents have all the action they can handle"); $2.3 Trillion, and Not a Penny More! ("For decades we've been pouring 'foreign aid' into impoverished nations. Peter Allen follows the money to see where it's gone"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples lightly rusted; lengthy closed tear along outer narrow spine fold.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2008
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 56 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: The Surge, Revisited ("Is it really true, Jon Harrison asks, that the surge in Iraq will work?"); The Right to Make a Buck (on Liberty Dollar: "Bruce Ramsey reports on the war between the U.S. government and the producer of a private currency"); College and the State ("There's a lot wrong with American higher education, but should the state guarantee that all is well? Jane Shaw provides an answer"); When the Lights Stayed Out (also entitled Storm Bound by Jim Walsh: "A week off the grid [in Aberdeen, Washington] reveals much about the nature of society and the people who try to live in it"); The Two Libertarianisms ("As R.W. Bradford shows, libertarian beliefs come in two forms, and both need to be examined carefully"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples rusted.
Published by Liberty Foundation, Port Townsend, WA, 2008
Seller: Bloomsbury Books, Las Vegas, NV, U.S.A.
Magazine / Periodical First Edition
Magazine. Condition: Near Fine. 1st Edition. A left-stapled libertarian journal measuring 8-3/8" by 10-3/4" and containing 72 pages including front and rear covers. Contents include: Tet [Offensive] in Retrospect ("War, as Jon Harrison shows, is fought with thoughts and impressions, as well as planes and tanks"); "Laissez Faire [Books]," R.I.P.? ("The essential libertarian book club carried a range of writers from H.L. Mencken to P.J. O'Rourke. Will changing markets and internet search engines prove its undoing? Bruce Ramsey tells the story"); A Question of Meaning ("When people argue about the existence of God, John Hospers suggests, they tend to overlook some basic issues"); Learning from Interlingua ("How can languages that evolved over many centuries be regarded as dialects of a language only recently 'distilled'? Leland B. Yeager explains"); Uh Oh, Grandpa's Back (on Howard Zinn's one-man play "Marx in Soho" - "Ghosts, Matthew Bandyk discovers, can be unduly garrulous"); Decisive Moments: The Camera and the Individual ("The history of photography, Joseph Ho has found, is a very seductive thing"); My Home Was Invaded by Drug Thugs ("Peter McWilliams reports from the front line of the drug war - his living room"). Subscriber name and mailing address printed to lower front cover; staples rusted.