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The New Individualist, April 2008

Volume 3: No. 4 

“The purpose of this new isolationism is to play on the American people’s legitimate weariness, confusion, and anger over [the war] in the hope of making the U.S. government afraid to become involved in another foreign war of any kind.”

          —Ayn Rand, “The Lessons of Vietnam”

              The Voice of Reason


OUR COVER:

The anti-American left is not the only political faction that wishes to shackle U.S. power.  So does the isolationist right. To demonstrate this hostility toward American power, art director David Sims conjures the image of a caged bald eagle, the soaring symbol of our national strength.

Contributors       

Editor’s Desk:  by Robert James Bidinotto

Speak for Yourself: Letters


PRIVATE I 

The War Over Libertarian Foreign Policy

By Roger Donway


CRISS ON BUSINESS 

Mississippi Antitrust Blues

By Jack Criss


.:SELF EXPRESSIONS:. 

“Waterboarding” Businessmen

By Roger Donway

Talk about “torture”! Anti-capitalist prosecutors are extorting confessions from innocent businessmen by threatening to drown their companies.


The Forbidden O-Word

By Amanda Hall

“Fat Activists” claim that the word “obese” is “hate speech.” Should we pay attention? Fat chance!


.:FREE SPIRIT:.

The Artist’s I: Thus Spoke Zarathustra

By Michael Newberry

An accomplished contemporary artist launches a new TNI column with an appreciation of a magnificent modern sculpture.


.:MAVERICKS:.

Touched By Its Rays by Walter Donway

Reviewed by John Enright

An exciting collection of poetry, written by Walter Donway and newly published by The Atlas Society, leaves poet John Enright absolutely dazzled.


Von Braun: Dreamer of Space, Engineer of War by Michael J. Neufeld

Reviewed by Taylor Dinerman

The visionary father of the U.S. space program was also the pragmatic architect of the deadly Nazi missile program.


Montessori, Dewey, and Capitalism by Jerry Kirkpatrick

Reviewed by Marsha Enright

What kind of education is consonant with a free, capitalist society? A new book offers a cornucopia of ideas and an exciting new theory about how we learn.


Gluttony: The Seven Deadly Sins by Francine Prose

Reviewed by Bradley Doucet

Our reviewer sinks his teeth into the second book in a series about “the seven deadly sins.” But does he find the author’s approach palatable?


.:REEL INDIVIDUALISM:.

I Am Legend

Film Review by Robert L. Jones

This apocalyptic tale has been brought to the Big Screen twice before. Now, it’s Will Smith trying to survive mindless zombies—and screenwriters.


Juno

Film Review by Robert L. Jones

A movie about an unplanned pregnancy mercifully resists the temptation to sacrifice the personal for the political, with charming results.


.:SOLILOQUY:.

  Libertarians, Objectivists, and “Package Deals”

By Eugene C. Holloway

This month, we feature a guest editorial from The Atlas Society’s director of operations, who addresses recent controversy here by clarifying our unique perspective.


 

Like what you see? But tired of trying to read the whole magazine on your computer screen? Then why not subscribe to The New Individualist and enjoy each issue from the leisure and comfort of your armchair?


To receive your own copy of TNI, delivered quarterly, join The Atlas Society or subscribe.

 





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