Big Brother’s Big Plans Jeff Minick - JANUARY 01, 2013 In the summer of 1998, Eric Rudolph, bomber of two abortion clinics, a lesbian bar, and the 1996 Atlanta Summer Olympics, was on the run from the law in the mountains of Western North Carolina. Read More
VIEWS Democracy: The Tower of Babel Claude Polin - JANUARY 01, 2013 Democracy was born as a protest against what was felt to be an oppression of man by man, a rebellion against some men having the nerve to behave as if they had a natural right to command their fellow men—whether to enslave them, to lead them, or... Read More
Interview Euro Irreversible? Alberto Carosa - JANUARY 01, 2013 The international media have for some time depicted Finland as the black sheep of the European Union because of her reluctance to pay for other member countries’ debt and thus help to save the eurozone from its present crisis. Read More
Correspondence Back to the Catacombs Eugene Girin - JANUARY 01, 2013 The small neo-Gothic chapel in the confines of St. John’s cemetery in the New York City borough of Queens was filling up quickly on that brisk autumn Sunday. Read More
Perspective Thoroughly Modern Millies Thomas Fleming - JANUARY 01, 2013 Big Bill Broonzy may have been intending only to satirize the cult of fashion, but his parable was a larger reflection of the times. Read More
NEWS The United States of Surveillance John Seiler, Jr. - JANUARY 01, 2013 Big Brother is watching you; he’s also listening, sniffing, recording, and analyzing. His private little brothers—everyone from major corporations to your doctor and your local grocer—are also snooping on you nonstop. Read More
BETWEEN THE LINES Death Becomes Him Justin Raimondo - JANUARY 01, 2013 When 20-year-old Adam Lanza walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School and murdered 26 people, most of them children, after killing his own mother at home, the nation went into one of its periodic orgies of recrimination. Read More