Browsing All posts tagged under »civil liberties«

Political Reaction Returns to Topeka, Kansas

December 19, 2011

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by Eduardo Dijo It’s another typically overcast, wintry day here in Topeka, Kansas, a city lost in the fog of reactionary ideas hanging heavily in the air.  If American citizens wish to fathom the depth of the “Government” into which they have fallen, they have only to ask themselves: Who are they that flock ‘round […]

Protests in American Democracy, or How the Park Service mistook Nazism for Civil Rights

December 10, 2011

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by Mehmet Shalomovic Bruno Fournier and I recently had cause to visit the West Virginia town of Harper’s Ferry, located at the meeting point of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers.  It is most well known as the location of John Brown’s famous raid of 1859, where the radical abolitionist attempted to seize the federal arsenal […]

Life Plus Ten: Is Selecting Stones Self-Righteous or Ruthless?

November 19, 2011

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by Troy Clavileño As the great lumpenproletarian poet and gangster rapper Tupac Shakur used to do better than anyone else back in his vintage form, let’s go see what our enemies are talking about. Is Selecting Stones really science or is it just a lot of “bombastic, self-righteously hyperbolic, and profoundly disingenuous rhetoric”?  “This sounds […]

Struggle or Extinction? And Other Inexorable Questions

May 1, 2011

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by Phil Ingram It has been said that any thinker who is proceeding along the philosophical road must eventually cross the bridge known as the most basic question of philosophy – materialism or idealism: the relationship of being and consciousness – before he or she can seriously begin delving into those “general theoretical, world-view questions […]

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