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BBCWebBlog [[ Beyond Borders Communities of direct democracies ]]

Build direct democracies [ as Jeffersonian Ward Republics http://tinyurl.com/onx4j http://tinyurl.com/ymcrzx ], for peace with multi-layer confederations. TAIWAN Daily News: http://tw.news.yahoo.com/ http://www.libertytimes.com.tw/ http://www.taiwandaily.net/ /// Quote: "" We are a serious movement. Our goal is nothing less than the victory of liberty over the Leviathan state, and we shall not be deflected, we shall not be diverted, we shall not be suborned, from achieving that goal. ""

Saturday, November 25, 2006

11.25=6 IC#2: map links; T23 K8; WR15 BB14. #1. Ideals/Practices: Murray N. Rothbard: "Enemy of State". #2.US "Banana Republic"? (2): Justice System.

FIC#2: http://fic.ic.org/: Communities map: http://directory.ic.org/maps/ US 1128, CA 165, WA 68, Ca 65, Me 8, UK 90, Ja 1, etc. California 165: http://tinyurl.com/useez Starland, Yucca Valley:: http://tinyurl.com/yknvtw Community Resources: http://www.ic.org/resources/ Related Links: http://www.ic.org/resources/links.php #329=US#475=06.11.25=6; 10.5:#55 0. Mininations > WR : Microfinance (3) Ward Republics: http://tinyurl.com/onx4j (15) > BBCWeb media: http://tinyurl.com/ymcrzx Eons media: http://tinyurl.com/gvfp6 (14) > Atist's BBCWeb: http://www.bbcweb.net TAIWAN 11.26 NEWS: http://tw.news.yahoo.com/ TAIWAN 11.26 NEWS: http://www.libertytimes.com.tw/ TAIWAN 11.25 NEWS: http://www.taiwandaily.net/ Rally#78: Crisis#23; Capital campaign #40 Chiang KMT Ma Crisis #8: http://tinyurl.com/sbsmf #1-1. All penetrating Post-war ideals/practices: Murray N. Rothbard: http://tinyurl.com/ygqxvu < 'Enemy of the State', by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr. "" Rothbard's principles were, of course, consistent from the time he first put pen to paper, and they made him a lightning rod for controversy and the standard by which all pro-liberty thought is measured to this day. But it was often the application of the principles, as much as the principles themselves, that earned him passionate detractors and defenders. His enemies were also driven crazy by his unfailing good humor: he was completely unflappable, always found joy in smashing evil, and somehow always won in the end. Rothbard was the architect of the body of thought known around the world as libertarianism. This radically anti-state political philosophy unites free-market economics, a no-exceptions attachment to private property rights, a profound concern for human liberty, and a love of peace with the conclusion that society should be completely free to develop absent any interference from the state, which can and should be eliminated. '' '' As Raimondo concludes: "Whether it is exercised upon the minds of this generation, or the next, the liberating force of Rothbard's ideas is gathering momentum. He built a monument to liberty, a mighty edifice that towers over the horizon and cannot be ignored – a challenge and a reproach to the guardians of the status quo, and an inspiration to the revolutionaries of tomorrow." November 25, 2006 Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr. is president of the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com, and author of Speaking of Liberty. Copyright © 2006 LewRockwell.com "" #1-2. "An Enemy of the State: The Life of Murray N. Rothbard", by Justin Raimondo: http://tinyurl.com/yhd8je < Amazon.com: "" From the Inside Flap Although libertarianism entered the American political vocabulary sometime in the 1970s, ... . This is the first biography of Murray N. Rothbard, the intellectual godfather of libertarianism and the author of twenty-eight books, hundreds of articles, and a social theorist whose writings encompass not only economics but philosophy, political economy, history, and virtually all the realms of social thought. As an economist, he not only carved out a place for the insights of the "Austrian" (or pure free market) school on American shores, but also expanded and elaborated on the innovations of his mentor and teacher, Ludwig von Mises, the dean of the Austrian school. As a political economist, he mapped out the contours of a truly free society, based on natural law and the concept of self-ownership. As a historian, he rescued the hidden history of liberty, and exposed the underbelly of the power elite. As a student of economic history, he traced the development of economic ideas and showed the way forward to a new way of looking at the evolution of thought - and of human society. As a teacher to a whole generation of libertarian scholars and activists, Rothbard was not only a source of ideas but of inspiration. He was an innovator who fought for his vision of the world, pioneering liberty at a time when they were neither popular nor understood. He dared to speak truth to power-- and never shied away from controversy. AN ENEMY OF THE STATE charts the intellectual odyssey of a man who went from the Old Right to the New Left, traveling through Ayn Rand's circle as well as William F. Buckley's before winding up at a position that transcends the traditional categories of Left and Right -- and point in an entirely new direction. His life was an intellectual adventure -- and an important chapter in the history of ideas. To anyone with an interest in the history of ideas in our time, AN ENEMY OF THE STATE is a must. "" #2. USA "Banana Republic"? (2): Justice System. 'Post-Modern Prosecutions', by William L. Anderson: http://tinyurl.com/yhu72f "" Over the past four years, I have written (or co-written with Candice E. Jackson) a number of articles dealing with the dishonesty of prosecutors in this country. The Duke Non-Rape case, as I see it, is a logical extension to a pattern that is so egregious that all we can do now is damage control. Justice pretty much is dead in the United States. The final blow in this death of a million blows has been the increasing use of conspiracy theories by the prosecution, something that the law forbids, but the courts let it go anyway. Like so many other trends, this one has its intellectual underpinnings in that academic refuse pile we call Post-Modernism. Four years ago, I called then-Attorney General John Ashcroft a "post-modern bureaucrat." Unfortunately, the post-modern application of law is not limited to Washington, D.C. and federal prosecutors, as bad as they are. State prosecutors are doing their best to match the outrages we see on the federal level, and they are encouraged by judges, politicians, and the gaggle of television talking heads that constitute a legal definition of air pollution. "" November 25, 2006 William L. Anderson, Ph.D. [send him mail], teaches economics at Frostburg State University in Maryland, and is an adjunct scholar of the Ludwig von Mises Institute. Copyright © 2006 LewRockwell.com

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