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TITLE: LIBERTY Magazine
[LIBERTY is a review of libertarian and classical liberal thought, culture and politics, published bi-monthly by Liberty Publishing. -- Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below!]
ISSUE DATE: March 1998; Volume 11, Number 4
CONDITION: Standard sized thin magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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FEATURES.
The Predatory Bureau John Baden Sr Douglas Noonan propose that preda- tors be introduced into the ecosystem known as the government of the United States.
The Coming War on the Automobile Randal O'Toole tells why you'd. better be worried if you drive to work, to market, or anywhere else.
The New Inquisitors J. Philippe Rushton finds that science can still lead to banned books and criminal investigations.
My Libertarian Adventure Indian radical Russell Means recalls his 1987 run for the Libertarian Party presidential nomination.
The 2000 Census: What Counts Is Legitimacy Durk Pearson & Sandy Shaw explain how the U.S. Census Bureau plans to "cook the books" on the next census.
The Revolution That Failed Aviezer Tucker shows that power corrupts, even the libertarian reformers of post-communist Central Europe.
Weakly, Standard Conservatism collapses into narrow partisanship, in full view of Clark Stooksbury and Harry Browne.
Equations of State Bart Kosko imparts mathematical precision to political theory.
An Other E.E. Cummings Richard Kostelanetz explains why E.E. Cummings is no lower-case author.
REVIEWS.
Speaking Truth to Clinton Most journalists recoil from actually investigating Bill Clinton -- but there are a few exceptions, as Alan Bock explains.
The Invisible Hand and Pure Research Ross Overbeek ponders the question: What would happen to scientific research if government grants disappeared?.
Alas Poor Marxism, I Knew It Well Socialism was the god that flailed. As Stephen Cox explains, it was also the god that got tenure.
Libertarians In Space Picking through the flotsam and jetsam of lìbertani- an science fiction, Martin Morse Wooster finds a few treasures.
Booknotes on right-wing bad-guys, narrow vision, the pure dope, and things medieval, trivial, cacophonous, and wordy.
The Iceberg Cometh Stephen Cox sat through Titanic, and wonders: when truth is more dramatic than fiction, why abandon truth?.
Filmnotes on race wars past and future, and the brig ht lights of the coming medical-industrial complex.
Classified Advertising A market regulated only by Liberty.
Notes on Contributors The ungarnished truth.
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Letters What goes around comes around.
Reflections Liberty's editors on the young and the benighted, the old hands and blighted lands, the quick-witted and the dead.


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