Editor's Desk
by Edward L. Hudgins
For this issue, I am wearing both the publisher’s and editor’s hat, while Robert Bidinotto works on some special projects for future issues of the magazine.
The current issue leads off with my own piece on the hot topic of immigration.
I argue that the moral thing for the poor people in economically restricted countries to do is flee to a land of opportunity like
Speaking of foreigners, this issue also features an interview with Jaroslav Romanchuk, an activist in the former Soviet
Robert Jones, TNI entertainment editor, offers reviews of two DVDs that are hitting a Blockbuster near you. The first is United 93. This is the story of the truly heroic passengers aboard the fourth plane hijacked by Islamist terrorists on September 11, 2001. By making cell phone calls to loved ones, the passengers learned what had happened at the
Jones also looks at The World’s Fastest Indian, the title of which refers not to a fleet-footed Native American or a speedy citizen of the Asian subcontinent but rather to an Indian Scout motorcycle. The film tells the true story of New Zealander Burt Munro (played by Anthony Hopkins), who, though pushing seventy, makes his way to America to fulfill his dream of breaking speed records with his beloved bike. It’s a moving profile of an unusual person, whose eye-on-the-prize efforts manifested the individualist ethos.
Anthony Mirvish offers us a review of Michael R. LeGault’s book Think!: Why Crucial Decisions Can’t Be Made in the Blink of an Eye. This book is an answer to Malcolm Gladwell’s bestseller Blink, which defends the practice of making major decisions quickly, based only on intuition, emotion, and other workings of the subconscious. Since we assume all our readers plan to use their own brains in the future, they can start by using them to read this article and learning how to employ those brains better.
Finally, on the Soliloquy page, I offer some closing thoughts on immigration, globalization, and the philosophy that informs them.







