Letters to the Editor
from A.X. Perez and L. Neil Smith
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Toward an International Bill of Rights Union
by L. Neil Smith
The internet is an interesting thing. You can be communicating
with somebody across town today, somebody in another state tonight,
and somebody on the other side of the world tomorrow, all with equal
ease. In fact if their e-mail address doesn't show it, and you don't
know how to read that routing gobbledygook at the top of the message,
you can be doing one of those three things and not know which one it 
is.
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Should Christians Comply With Gun Confiscation?
by Doug Newman
Jim Z. writes: "If the government put down a law 
tomorrow that said we had to turn in all privately owned fire arms, as 
Christians, should we obey that law? I am a Christian and I believe that 
we should obey that government edict because they are NOT asking me to 
disobey God's word. . . what is your opinion on this?"
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The Stories You Won't Be Seeing
by Jonathan David Morris
This is going to be my last column ever. Well, maybe 
not ever, but at least a little while. Let me put it this way: Remember 
when ABC put Geena Davis's "Commander In Chief" on hiatus? Okay, me 
neither. But I understand it happened, and this will be similar.
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Of Rails and Liberty
by Daniel G. Jennings
Once upon a time, America had an efficient, cost 
effective transportation system technology that adequately served the 
needs of virtually all citizens. This transportation system utilized 
cutting edge high technology and didn't run on imported energy sources 
like oil. Best of all this transportation was almost entirely owned and 
operated by private enterprise and developed without government money.
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Thoughts About Money and Other Things
by L. Neil Smith
Permit me to begin this by confessing, as a 
libertarian writer and thinker, that economics is not my long suit. 
F. Paul Wilson observed many years ago that our movement seems to be
divided into two distinct groups: those he characterizes as "gnomes",
whose principal interest is the politics of money, and those he 
designates "Flinters" whose highest priority is the practical issue 
of self-defense. I call the latter "hooligan libertarians" and I'm 
proud to number myself among them.
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