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There Oughta be a Law?
(The Feature Article)

 L. Neil Smith's 
Simon Jester
Simon Jester
The Libertarian Enterprise
A Feature of NetPlanetNews.com
A Reader Supported Web Magazine

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Simon Jester

 

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Big Head Press

THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE
Number 412, April 8, 2007

"We are a part of the natural world"
TPM cover thumnail
Tom Paine Maru
by L. Neil Smith
Cover by Scott Bieser
First uncensored edition.
Originally published by Del Rey Books, 1984.
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EDITORIAL MATTERS:

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Editor

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ARTICLES

Letters to the Editor
from Ann Morgan, Joel Gehman, Steven Pilchman, Jim Davidson, Dennis Wilson, Rex May, and Bill Williams for The smokinglobby.com Team
FULL STORY

There Oughta be a Law?
by Ron Beatty
My Mom and I are about as far apart as it is possible for two people to be on moral and political issues. She is a die-hard Catholic fundamentalist/conservative. I am a very libertarian pagan. I believe that government has very little use. She believes "there oughta be a law." My Mom and my aunts and uncles get together twice a week in a kaffeeklatch to bitch about the world and how it's going to hell in a hand basket. I go every now and then, but not often. In addition to my Mom, one of my aunts and one of my uncles are super fundamentalist Pentecostal. As you can guess, this is not a good atmosphere for me to be in, especially since as one of the "young" ones, my opinion isn't really that sought after anyway. It doesn't really help matters that my mother, her family and I haven't had much contact with each other for the last 33 years, either.
FULL STORY

Iraq, Iran, and All That Jazz
by Jonathan David Morris
I wish the news would stop covering the Middle East. Let me rephrase that: I wish there were nothing about the Middle East for the news to cover. But since there is, I wish they wouldn't. I could be done with it.
FULL STORY

DDT Ban & Malaria: An Unnecessary Tragedy, INDEED!
by Dennis Lee Wilson
In the Feb 2007 issue of the Iowa Alumni Magazine, I read with interest Carol Harker's article "An Unnecessary Tragedy"[1]. The interesting part was the complete blackout of the role of DDT in eradicating malaria. DDT is not mentioned even once in the article and neither is the fact that politicians, not scientists, are the people who have banned its use.
FULL STORY

Nullification Re-visited, Part Two
by Robert F. Hawes Jr.
Those who reject doctrines such as nullification and secession often point to the "Supremacy Clause" in Article VI of the Constitution, where we read: "This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary not withstanding." Nationalists frequently use this clause to argue that the federal government is supreme over the states in every way; however, this is an error, one that can be corrected readily enough by reading the clause again without wearing authoritarian goggles. The clause states that the Constitution and all laws made pursuant to it, are supreme, not the federal government itself or any law it passes at whim.
FULL STORY

Hanging In There
by Lady Liberty
There are various and sundry political action groups for just about anything you'd care to imagine. There are pro-gun and anti-gun groups. There are pro-life and pro-choice groups. There are groups that fight for freedom of religion but from entirely different perspectives. There are economic development groups that find themselves pitted squarely against property rights groups. There are hunting groups and animal rights groups.
FULL STORY


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