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If you find this Special Feature page useful, why not help support it by
purchasing some of the merchandise listed on this page?
Dangerous Books,
by Susan Davis
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The Deadly Secrets of the Almanac
Forever, people in power have been afraid of fiction. Wild imaginings threaten to undermine
the view of the world as unchangeable, the easy idea that history is set in its course like
footprints in cement.
[more]
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1-shot killer,
by John G. Roos
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This 5.56mm round has all the stopping power you need but you can’t use it. Here’s why:
Ben Thomas and three colleagues were driving north out of Baghdad in an SUV on a clear
mid-September morning, headed down a dirt road into a rural village, when gunmen in several
surrounding buildings opened fire on them.
[more]
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Supreme Court to Decide Gun Ownership Rights of Foreign Felons,
by Join Together Online
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The U.S. Supreme Court will rule on whether people who are convicted of crime outside the
United States can own a gun here, the Associated Press reported March 29.
[more]
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Ashcroft’s (Un)Constitutional Benchmark,
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
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The April 2004 issue of The Atlantic magazine contains a puff piece on U.S. Attorney General
John Ashcroft by Jeffrey Rosen, a law professor at George Washington University and "legal
affairs editor" at The New Republic. One theme of the article is the conservative backlash
against Ashcroft’s trashing of the Constitution through the "U.S. Patriot Act" and other
"anti-terrorist" legislation he has had a hand in enforcing.
[more]
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Anti-Semitism Denial,
by Edward Alexander
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On September 20, 2002 Lawrence H. Summers, the president of Harvard University, delivered to
the Harvard community a speech deploring the upsurge of antisemitism in many parts of the globe:
he specified synagogue bombings, physical assaults on Jews, desecration of Jewish holy places,
and (this with special emphasis) denial of the right of "the Jewish state to exist." But his most
immediate concern was that "at Harvard and ...universities across the country" faculty-initiated
petitions were calling "for the University to single out Israel among all nations as the one
country where it is inappropriate for any part of the university's endowment to be invested."
[more]
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Syria's Gulag,
by Farid N. Ghadry and Nir T. Boms
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Close to a hundred Kurds were killed during a series of riots that started in the soccer game in
the city of Qamoshli last month. Over 1,200 Kurds were arrested for treason, espionage, incitement
and the disruption of the public order. This is the story of one of them, a 14 year old boy we
will call Ahmed, who happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.
[more]
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Fixing the Jury System,
by Thomas Sowell
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Now that the case against Tyco executives has ended in a mistrial, there is much outcry against
the juror whose holdout will cause a $12 million trial to have to be done all over again from
scratch. Whether that juror was principled or just pig-headed, this trial reveals something
more fundamentally wrong with our jury system -- and with the media.
[more]
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Fighting Terrorism and the Case for Pre-emption,
by Walter Williams
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Merriam-Webster's dictionary defines magician as "one who performs tricks of illusion and sleight
of hand" and "one skilled in magic," a "sorcerer." That's an apt description for the parade of
Democrats, leftists and peaceniks attacking President Bush on his efforts managing the war on
terrorism. Millions of Americans have bought into the illusions created by Bush's critics in
their attempt to unseat him in the fall election. Let's look at it.
[more]
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Gathering Indifference,
by Michael J. Hurd
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"If we learned anything on September 11th, 2001, it is that we cannot wait while dangers gather."
Condoleezza Rice's statement before the 9/11 Commission is right on target. However, most have
not yet learned this lesson.
[more]
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U.N. Plan for Internet Control Tiptoes Forward,
by Cheryl K. Chumley
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The phantom of government-controlled Internet has raised its menacing head again, this time on
the global level.
[more]
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No Child Left Unbrainwashed,
by Jodie Gilmore
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Despite the political backlash from several states, the federal government continues to push
its nationalized education agenda.
[more]
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The Saudi Fifth Column On Our Nation's Campuses,
by Lee Kaplan
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From Riyadh to Ramallah to the Ivy League, the Saudi Wahhabi lobby and money machine is funding
the goals of radical Islam and undermining America’s efforts to prosecute the War On Terror.
[more]
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Never Again!,
by a JPFO Supporter
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I'm an American of Irish-Catholic decent. As such I can appreciate the outrage of Jewish
people against totalitarian, racist regimes, but I can never truly "feel your pain" to borrow
a good quote from a bad man.
[more]
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When
John Kerry's Courage Went M.I.A., by Sydney H. Schanberg
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Sen. John Kerry, a decorated battle veteran, was courageous as a Navy lieutenant in the Vietnam
War. But he was not so courageous more than two decades later, when he covered up voluminous
evidence that a significant number of live American prisoners perhaps hundreds
were never acknowledged or returned after the war-ending treaty was signed in January 1973.
[more]
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ShockRounds(TM) -- Non-Lethal "Electric" Bullets -- Laboratory Demonstration,
by Market Wire
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MDM Group, Inc. has today released a short video clip of the ShockRounds(TM) bench test conducted
by EDO Electro-Ceramics, Utah,a division of NYSE listed EDO Corporation. EDO Corporation is a
US defense contractor and supplier of highly engineered products for governments and industries
internationally. EDO Ceramics is the leading and largest producer of piezoelectric materials in the USA.
[more]
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Raze Fallujah,
by Tammy Bruce
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The latest reminder of the type of brutality that has ruled Iraq under the thumb of Saddam
Hussein is in the action of his supporters, and their al-Qaeda mentors, in Fallujah.
[more]
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Why they Hate us at The Hague,
by Rabbi Dr. Nathan Lopes Cardozo
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The Jews
"Some people like the Jews, and some do not. But no thoughtful man can deny the fact that they
are, beyond any question, the most formidable and the most remarkable race which has appeared
in the world." Winston Churchill (1)
[more]
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Thar She Blows,
by Alan Cabal
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It will be perhaps a perfect day in June, under an empty blue sky. I'll be sitting on my
favorite park bench, idly tossing nuts to the squirrels, reading the Post. It will come without
warning and freeze everyone in their tracks: a sound like thunder, but longer. Not a clap, but
a roar like the Concorde taking off, but louder.
[more]
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U.N.'s 'Disgrace' Worsens: Investigation Shows Bureaucracy Disintegrating,
by Stewart Stogel [see also Gran'pa Jack #5 about how the UN is working to destroy our Bill of Rights. Death to evil!!!!]
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"There is no accountability. It is a disgrace," a senior U.N. official confided to NewsMax.com.
The official, a U.N. veteran of more than 25 years, insisted on confidentiality. NewsMax
verified that the official has one of the organization's highest level of clearances and is
permitted access to numerous "sensitive files."
[more]
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Minimum gasoline prices,
by Walter E. Williams
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A couple of weeks ago, heading down to George Mason University, I pulled into my favorite Wawa
gasoline station just off the Bel Air, Md., exit on I-95 South. At each of the 20 gasoline pumps,
there was a sign posted that Wawa would no longer dispense free coffee to its gasoline customers.
Why? The station was warned that dispensing free coffee put it in violation of Maryland’s
gasoline minimum-price law.
[more]
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Our Bill of Rights How It Came to Be,
by R. Carter Pittman
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(A story never before told)
THE FEDERAL AND THE STATE BILLS OF RIGHTS are memorials and milestones in the never ending
struggle of men to recapture and retain liberty and dignity. They are parchment shields against
the lash of tyrants and the effects of depravity in seats of power. They constitute a cluster of
little foxholes of liberty burrowed in the hard face of history. They are the result of distrust
of power and distrust of men in power. They are a recognition of the truth eternal, expressed
by Lord Acton, that "power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely."
[more]
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When Should We No Longer Support Israel?,
by Victor Davis Hanson
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The recent assassination of Sheik Saruman raises among some Americans the question at what
point should we reconsider our rather blanket support for the Israelis and show a more even-handed
attitude toward the Palestinians? The answer, it seems to me, should be assessed in cultural,
economic, political, and social terms.
[more]
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How Will They Confiscate Your Guns?,
by John A. Sutter
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For decades I have heard gun owners claim that the government would never be able to confiscate
our firearms because the government would lose too many men. The implication being, of course,
that gun owners would actively resist confiscation, even to the point of shooting back. But I
believe this thinking is outdated and doesn’t align very well with reality. But before you
tell me how big your honor guard in Hell will be when that day comes, let’s think about how the
government could really do it.
[more]
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Presidential Powers To Use the U.S. Armed Forces To Control Potential Civilian Disturbances,
by William J. Olson and Alan Woll
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This memorandum is fictional but accurately depicts the broad powers enjoyed by presidents to
utilize U.S. military forces to address domestic disturbances.
[more]
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Bush War On Terror vs. Anglo-American Freedoms,
by Paul Craig Roberts
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The Bush administration believes that habeas corpus is a luxury that the US cannot afford in
its war against terror. Habeas corpus is the legal principle that is the foundation of
Anglo-American freedom.
[more]
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Lather. Rinse. Repeat,
by Doug Giles
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The times in which we’re living are darker than Rob Zombie listening to the Insane Clown Posse
in Jimmy Page’s dungeon... or something like that. The fact that our current cruddy culture is
doing things that make demons blush takes no great insight for the honest person to perceive.
[more]
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IRS 'enforcers' target ex-agent,
by Ron Strom
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Former investigator now works for taxpayers, uncovers agency fraud.
A former IRS criminal-investigation special agent who left the agency and became a whistleblower
exposing government fraud and abuse says the agency, in its attempt to prevent him from serving
as an official representative of taxpayers, is illegally using "enforcers" to monitor his
political activities and build its case against him.
[more]
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Controversial Documentary Video Claims IRS Defrauding The Public:,
by USA Daily
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IRS Whistleblowers Say They Quit Because Of Government Fraud.
Two IRS agents say that they quit after discovering what they believed to be IRS fraud regarding
Section 861. Former IRS agent, Joseph R. Banister, who says he quit after discovering IRS fraud,
states, "I find it hard to fathom that such a lie was perpetrated." He continues, "The agency was
knowingly deceiving the American public."
[more]
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New York Times Reporter A Government Informant,
by Robert R. Raymond
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Imagine: an American journalist using his cover for the most prominent paper in the country to
inform on and demonize select political critics of the government! The Godfather had his
"newspaper friends" on the payroll, and the IRS has theirs: David Cay Johnston.
[more]
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Lost
in translation: Simple absolutes, by Marianne M. Jennings
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Teresa Heinz Kerry has Marge Schott potential. Granted, Heinz Kerry lacks the ballpark,
beer-swilling, Cincinnati je ne sais quoi, but, like Marge, she's an enigma when it comes to
thought and speech.
[more]
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The Strange Case Of Casey Nethercott,
by Carl F. Worden
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In what may be the first documented case of a non-terrorist, American citizen being held
without charges under terms of the so-called "Patriot Act", Arizona rancher Casey Nethercott
was arrested March 1, 2004 by exclusive and arbitrary order of Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano.
[more]
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Preparing for the Next 9/11,
by Barry Farber
[Also be sure to read the unanswered open letter to George Bush about this very subject.]
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Too many of us think of 9/11 as past tense. In a way that’s right, but at the same time it’s
also present tense AND future tense. We are going to get hit.
[more]
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Voting Paper Trail Advocate Dies In 'Tragic Accident',
by Bob Fitrakis
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The subject line on Tuesday's email read: "Another mysterious accident solves a Bush problem.
Athan Gibbs dead, Diebold lives." The attached news story briefly described the untimely Friday,
March 12, death of perhaps America's most influential advocate of a verified voting paper
trail in the era of touch screen computer voting.
[more]
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Sundown
at Coffin Rock, by Raymond K. Paden
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The old man walked slowly through
the dry, fallen leaves of autumn, his practiced eye automatically
choosing the bare and stony places in the trail for his feet. There
was scarcely a sound as he passed, though his left knee was stiff
with scar tissue. He grunted occasionally as the tight sinews pulled.
Damn chainsaw, he thought. [more]
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Sunrise
at Coffin Rock, by Raymond K. Paden
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Thomas sat alone upon the cold
stone, shivering slightly in the chilly pre-dawn air of this April
morning. The flashlight was turned off, resting beside him on the
bare granite of Coffin Rock, and involuntarily he strained his eyes
in the gray non-light of the false dawn, trying to make out the shapes
of the trees, and the mountains across the river. Below, he could
hear the chuckling of the water as it crossed the polished stones.
How many times had he fished there, his grandfather beside him? [more]
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An Indecent Attack on the First Amendment,
by Rep. Ron Paul
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We will soon debate the “Broadcast Indecency Act of 2004” on the House Floor. This atrocious
piece of legislation should be defeated. It cannot improve the moral behavior of U.S. citizens, but it can do irreparable harm to our cherished right to freedom of speech.
[more]
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How to Destroy America,
by Frosty Wooldridge
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In late October 2003, I attended an immigration-overpopulation conference in Washington, D.C.,
filled to capacity by many of America's finest minds and leaders.
[more]
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Thank Goodness That President Bush Trusts the People,
by Anthony Gregory
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We are so lucky to have a Republican as president. I hope that those of us who believe in
freedom, small government, and personal responsibility will help reelect President Bush, whose
recent fundraising e-mail lets us know he believes in "trusting people over government," and
whose recent speech at the Washington Convention Center presents the "clear choice" voters face
in November.
[more]
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Repeal every law enacted since 1912,
by Vin Suprynowicz
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The problem with proposing "pragmatic" solutions that might help the statists out of the hideous
swamps in which they have bemired themselves is that we're surrounded by proud government-school
graduates with little historical perspective, who therefore assume everything our government
now does is historically "normal," and who are equally likely to denounce as either a failed
comedian or a "nut" anyone who proposes anything radically different.
[more]
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Lethal Snipers Lead the Way,
by Combined Joint Task Force-7
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MOSUL, Iraq -- Lurking in the shadows of infantry patrols, security perimeters and raids, Army
snipers are becoming the worst enemy for terrorists in northern Iraq.
[more]
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President William H. Taft’s Message to Congress on June 16, 1909,
by President William H. Taft
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"....it is now proposed to make up the deficit by the imposition of a general income tax, in
the form and substance almost exactly the same character as that which, in the case of Pollock
v. Farmer's Loan and Trust Co., (157 US 420), was held by the Supreme Court to be a direct tax,
and therefore not within the power of the Federal Government to impose unless apportioned among
the several states according to population.
[more]
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The Sierra Club's Immigration Wars,
by Tom DeWeese
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From the Sierra Club's left - if such a thing is possible - comes another takeover effort by a
real extremist named Paul Watson. He was a co-founder of Greenpeace, who was later kicked out
for endorsing increasingly violent tactics. Watson founded the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society,
an eco-terror group that sails the seas, armed with AK-47s, in search of fishing boats to ram
and sink. He has openly claimed credit for sinking ten fishing ships.
[more]
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Military Increasing Domestic Law Enforcement Role With Help From "Conservatives",
by Chuck Baldwin
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In an article dated March 9, 2004, by Robert Block and Gary Fields, the Wall Street Journal
reported, "The [U.S.] military is edging toward a sensitive area that has been off-limits to
it historically: domestic intelligence gathering and law enforcement."
[more]
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How Hitler Became a Dictator,
by Jacob G. Hornberger
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Whenever U.S. officials wish to demonize someone, they inevitably compare him to Adolf Hitler.
The message immediately resonates with people because everyone knows that Hitler was a brutal
dictator. But how many people know how Hitler actually became a dictator?
[more]
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No Right to Social Security, High Court Says,
by Peter Ferrara
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Most people don’t know that in a landmark decision over 40 years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court
held that workers and retirees have no property rights or contractual rights to their Social
Security benefits.
[more]
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Remember the Alamo,
by Rod D. Martin
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The revisionists have it wrong: the Alamo was one of history's greatest turning points, and the
Texas Volunteers among the greatest heroes the world has ever known.
[more]
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The Circus Is Back in Town,
by Butler Shaffer
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When I was a child and the circus came to town there was a big parade. Clowns, wild animals,
and side show "freaks" teased our attentions, while jugglers, animal trainers, and trapeze
artists persuaded us to come out to the big tent with promises of stunts like we had never
seen. Traveling circuses are largely a thing of the past, but a similar spectacle is still
available to us on television, with various carnival acts soliciting our attention.
[more]
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What the Martha Stewart Case Means to You,
by Harry Browne
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The Martha Stewart guilty verdict is more than troubling. It is an outrage.
The very case itself typifies today's government an entity that is free to intrude in any
area of your life, free to make up the rules as it goes along, free to allow prosecutors to
make names for themselves in high-profile cases without facing any personal consequences, no matter what harm they do.
[more]
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America Is Not a Free Country,
by Fred Reed
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It is possible to become so inured to being told what to do, and how to do it, and who to do it
with to become so accustomed to being told what we can say, what we may publicly believe,
what we must seem to think, how we must manage our affairs that we cease to notice just how
regimented we are. We are there. We now accept that very nearly everything whatsoever is the
proper domain of government. Why?
[more]
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The real anti-Semitism,
by Benjamin Shapiro
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On Sunday, Jews the world over congregated to read the story of Purim from the Megillah (scroll).
For those who don't celebrate Purim, and those Jews who don't know what they're celebrating,
the story of Purim sounds like a fairy tale:
[more]
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The British Record on Partition,
Comments by Jared Israel
[The bastard British!!!]
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n 1948, the Left-wing Nation magazine exposed British support for and instigation of Arab
violence aimed at crushing Israel in cradle. This entirely contradicts the widespread belief
that Israel was the creation of European colonialism.
[more]
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Why Not Same-sex Marriage?,
by Carl Pearlston
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Last week, Massachusetts State Representative Elizabeth Malia, speaking on behalf of the
lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgendered community, stated that marriage has never been a
rigid, inflexible institution, but has continually evolved and changed with evolving social
needs. In her view, evolution now demands same-sex marriage.
[more]
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Homeland Security's New Truck For US,
by Richard Sauder, PhD
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FYI. Homeland Security's new armored truck, with a remote-controlled .50 cal machine gun on the roof.
[more]
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Is Military Creeping Into Domestic Law Enforcement?,
by Robert Block and Gary Fields
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In a little-noticed side effect of the war on terrorism, the military is edging toward a
sensitive area that has been off-limits to it historically: domestic intelligence gathering
and law enforcement.
[more]
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The Pentagon's Secret Scream,
by William M. Arkin
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Sonic devices that can inflict pain--or even permanent deafness--are being deployed.
SOUTH POMFRET, Vt. Marines arriving in Iraq this month as part of a massive troop
rotation will bring with them a high-tech weapon never before used in combat or in peacekeeping.
[more]
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Saddam's Heirs,
by David Codrea
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The Coalition Provisional Authority of Iraq has just signed what is being described as a
"landmark interim constitution." A quick scan of the document tells me all I need to know:
Meet the new boss -- same as the old boss.
[more]
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Rewind to Columbine,
by Doug Giles
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There’s a violent internal menace that has plagued our land since the close of the 20th century.
You know who I’m talking about that radical and now unpredictable enemy our kids!
[more]
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Ashcroft Gets His Pound of Flesh,
by William L. Anderson and Candice Jackson
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Since we began to write about federal criminal law about a year ago, we have come to realize
that the federal criminal justice system itself is a moral outrage. No barriers exist at all to
prevent criminal behavior on behalf of federal prosecutors and "law" enforcement officers.
[more]
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"Only the police should have guns",
by Sam Cohen
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On March 2, 2004, the U.S. Senate voted on attaching the Campbell amendment, S.AMDT.2623, to
S.1805, the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (the Senate version of H.R. 1036, passed
by the House last year by a vote of 285 to 140, to protect the firearms industry from dishonest lawsuits).
[more]
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Are Current Bill of Rights Erosions Unprecedented?,
by Anthony Gregory
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Critics of the Bush Administration’s domestic measures in the War on Terrorism often claim that
the erosions of the Bill of Rights we see today are unprecedented. Although President Bush and
Attorney General John Ashcroft are indeed stretching the envelope in many ways, to call their
policies unprecedented is to ignore history. For every civil liberty currently being violated
and for every amendment in the Bill of Rights currently being ignored, there is a long and rich
legacy of similar abuse.
[more]
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P.C. Media Ignores Racist Murder,
by Andrew Popper
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Approximately 10 days ago, Charles Bryant and Nayquan Miller, both 16 and of Queens, placed an
order for Chinese food from the Ming Garden restaurant on Guy Brewer Boulevard in South Jamaica.
Eighteen year-old Huang Chen who was working in his parent's restaurant so that his sister could
attend Stony Brook University, responded to the order but when he arrived at the apartment he
was greeted by an act of vicious racist brutality reminiscent of the antigay bias crime, which
victimized Matthew Shepherd in Wyoming.
[more]
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Moral Precepts for Modern Americans,
by Robert Higgs
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Mel Gibson's film The Passion of The Christ has provoked a unusual amount of religious
discussion of late, thereby revealing an abysmal lack of basic religious knowledge among the
populace. To repair this appalling ignorance, we had best start with the most basic precepts.
Of course, it won't do us much good to rely on antiquated statements; therefore, in the
interest of providing a practical guide to spiritual and moral uplift suited to modern
conditions, I offer here The Ten Commandments (updated and annotated for use in the welfare-warfare state)
[more]
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A Jew's Response to Mel Gibson's "Passion",
by Wm. J. Levy
| |
Did the Jews kill Jesus Christ? What a time immemorial question to ask. How many centuries of
hatred and persecution go behind that time asked and time answered question?
[more]
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Order
Without Law, by Paul Craig Roberts
| |
Law and order continues its rapid collapse in the United States, not only because of criminals but also because
of prosecutors and police. Those declining crime rates you have been hearing about might be nothing but public
relations propaganda.
[more]
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Open Letter to John Kerry,
by Don Bendell
| |
The old hurts are surfacing and the feelings of betrayal by fellow citizens, and their leader
stirring them up, are breaking my heart again. I am being cut in the same scar. How did we who
served in Vietnam suddenly become cold-blooded killers, torturers, and rapists, of the ilk of
the Nazi SS or the Taliban?
[more]
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Author Index
Search the Unpopular Speech Pages!
Join JPFO!
Nazi Death Camps - The Results
of "Gun Control" A new VHS or DVD video from JPFO
"I Will Live Free", JPFO's
new Audio CD. Music about the Bill of Rights!
Click on the cover for more information:
Gran'pa Jack!
"Is America Becoming a Police State?"
Is America becoming a police state? Friends of liberty need to know.
The Human Cost of Victim Disarmament
When politicans and Federal employees start to burn books, this will be among the first they grab.
The myth of police protection exposed. Endorsed by former Sheriff Richard Mack.
Detested by the Jewish "Leadership" of America.
Information you're not supposed to know about.
The fraud behind over 20 "Gun Control" myths exposed.
Only people who hate America support the UN.
When will the "Leadership" of the black community wake up?
What more can we say.
Judges don't want you to read this.
The title says it all!
Posters and Targets
Click on the pictures for more information:
NEVER Give Up Your Guns
United Nations Target
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