Classified Ads
Three ads this week. We always have three ads.
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Letters to the Editor
from A.X. Perez
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Should I Write This Book?
Beautiful Dreamer: A Proposal in Synopsis, Part Two
by L. Neil Smith
AUTHOR' NOTE: in last week's THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE, we ran the
first half of the synopsis of a proposed new novel, part of the "Ngu Family Saga". This half
contains spoilers, but it will be some time before the book is written and published. I'm
willing to take the risk because I believe this story is uniquely suited both to graphic novel
and motion picture form, both of which take a long while to negotiate and produce.
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Rights Do Exist
by Ann Morgan
I would like to comment on something in the article by Matthew Sims.
("The Will of the Majority Sometimes Trumps the Will of the Individual?" last issue)
He mentions that he often encounters individuals who claim that 'rights' are non-existent,
due to a combination of their being intangible, and lengthy to describe in other language.
Both of these reasons are fallacious. When I studied biology in college, one of my professors
touched on the second issue, he said that people often complained about papers written by
scientists, and asked such things as 'why do scientists always have to use such long words'?.
By which they meant, words which they were not familiar with. What these people often failed
to realise, is that the 'long' (or unfamiliar words) actually are the simplest way of
describing a particular concept in science, the word is shorthand for something which
otherwise might take several sentences, or pages to describe, and the reason why the
layman fails to understand the term is because they haven't put in the requisite years
of education to understand the concepts behind the shorthand term.
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Atlantea The Beautiful No. 181
by L. Neil Smith and Rex May
Number 181 of a weekly cartoon series.
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Agenda 21: The United Nations Programme of Action
Planning for Your future, serf!
Read all about it!
www.baloocartoons.com
L. Neil Smith personally recommends Climate Depot as the best general source of infomation on the subject.
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More about L. Neil Smith
Even more about L. Neil Smith
The unabridged audio version of my 1983 novel The Nagasaki Vector,
brilliantly read by the great libertarian radio host Brian Wilson, is finally
available for purchase.
Many feel that this is the funniest book I've written so farat least
intentionallyand features our old friend Win Bear, G. Howell Nahuatl, a
sapient coyote, time traveler Bernie Gruenblum, and Georgie, the time machine
who loves him.
The price: $12.99.
The place: CD Baby.
I understand that it will soon be available in iTunes, as well.
L. Neil Smith
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The Last
Sonuvabitch
of Klepton
Archive
Roswell, Texas
by L. Neil Smith and Rex F. May
Illustrated by Scott Bieser
Colored by Jen Zach
Published by Bighead Press, 2008
Click cover to buy at Amazon.com
Click link to buy at Barnes & Noble
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The Probability Broach: The Graphic Novel
by L. Neil Smith
Illustrated by Scott Bieser
Published by Bighead Press, 2004
Click cover to buy at Amazon.com
Click link to buy at Barnes & Noble
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Get your very own Come Back with a Warrant doormat from
Amazon.com. Two styles to choose from! Just click on the one you
want: