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THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE Number 379, August 6, 2006 "Absolutely Shockingly Amazing"
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EDITORIAL MATTERS:
A Message from the Publisher Readers may wonder, from time to time, why I estimate the length of time that human civilization has existed as around 8,000 years, whereas Rose Wilder Lane (writing much earlier than yours truly) and others usually say 6,000. Here is the reason: http://nhmag.com/master.html?http://nhmag.com/0606/0606_feature.html Catalhoyuk is an absolutely shockingly amazing site, a small city that existed at least 8000 years ago, and possibly humankind's first experiment with this kind of living. There's even a map of the city painted on one of its walls! I look forward to seeing how much more we can learn from the ongoing arachaeological activity there. Two reservations: Jared Diamond once wrote an article for Discover (of which he later became the editor) in which he suggested that the development of agriculture (which made places like Catalhoyuk both necessary and possible), may have been our species' "greatest mistake". You can see what I have done with that idea in the novel that was inspired by it, Pallas. Prequel to the forthcoming Ares, Ceres, and Beautiful Dreamer. Second, humanity as we presently know it, has been around for at least 250,000 years. As I ask in my novel Forge of the Elders, do you imagine that people who were just as smart back then as they are now, actually just sat around on their thumbs for 242,000 years, doing nothing of any lasting importance? Not unless they were mostly neolibertarians, voting to erase all signs of human progress as quickly as the "radicals" among them made it. I won't be surprised if, in the future, sites vastly older than Catalhoyuk are discovered. In fact, it may represent a hillbilly backwater in its own time. What happened to the rest of prehistoric civilization? Well, I make one suggestion in Forge of the Elders. There may be many others. L. Neil Smith
Last week, one of our Readers responded for our desperate request for assistance by donating $2. In reply to my email of thanks, said Reader apologized for such a small sum. I replied that there was nothing to be apologetic about, and if each of our readers donated $2 every month, TLE and your hard-working and financially desperate editor would be on sound financial footing! Andyou knew it was coming, didn't you?you yourself can help this magazine keep going by clicking through to our affiliates and advertisers and buying yourself the things you want and need and are going to buy somewhere anyway, right? Or even throw a bit of spare change in the hat. This link right here lists the ways: http://www.ncc-1776.org/donate.html Our Adventures In Home Nursing continue. Hard work it is, but what ya gonna do? Who ya gonna call? Ya gotta do it yerself. And there it is, eh? And if you're looking for a good giggle, check out the video containing the song "FCC FU", which you can find at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fzaqXFcsH2U Big issue this time, so start reading, Readers! Ken Holder
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Tom Paine Maru by L. Neil Smith Cover by Scott Bieser First uncensored edition. Originally published by Del Rey Books, 1984. Adobe Acrobat PDF file, 1,845,243-bytes, 283 pages. Download for $5.00, Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover Card, eCheck, or PayPal DOWNLOAD FROM PAYLOADZ.COM (This link may not workwe're trying to get it fixed) |
The Probability Broach: The Graphic Novel by L. Neil Smith Illustrated by Scott Bieser Published by BigHead Press, 2004 Amazon.com |
Letters to the Editor
Inventing the .41 Special
A personal journey from Objectivist morality to political "anarchy"
by way of L. Neil Smith's Covenant of Unanimous Consent!
On the Encroaching National Slavery
Control-Freak News
Fun With Hitler
On the "Road" Again
Without a Net: Compromise versus calculation
Advertisements Are Usually Annoying
Tactical Reflections Revisited
Lebanon and Gaza: The Back Story
Lawsuit May Finally Hold Failing Child Welfare Agencies Accountable
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