G R E A T T O P I C S – G R E A T I S S U E Srniv^^sssrnREBUILDING OUR SCHOOLS—Septemberrn1998—Thomas Fleming argues that it takes a villagernto educate a child, Joyce B. Haws documents thernjudicial takeover of public schools, Rep. Greg Kazarnexamines the Michigan model of school-funding,rnand Lisa Graham Keegan and Llewellyn H.rnRockwell, Jr., square off over school vouchers.rnPlus Douglas Wilson on why evangelical collegesrnaren’t.rnLIFE: THE SACRED AND PROFANE—Augustrn1998—Thomas Fleming on the measure of life’srnworth, Harold O.J. Brown on the (misplaced)rncivility of pro-lifers. Bill Murchison on the darkrnwood of suicide, and Ernest van den Haag on thernright to die. Plus Chilton Williamson, Jr, on thernsuicide of the West and Samuel Francis onrnmulticulturalism and assimilation.rnSOVEREIGNTY FOR SALE? THE FREErnTRADE DEBATE—July 1998—Thomas Flemingrnon trade and treason, Patrick J. Buchanan sketches arncourse of action, John O’Sullivan explains the limitsrnof Buchananism, and Alfred E. Eckes draws somernlessons from the Asian meltdown. Plus a debaternon Pat Buchanan’s The Great Betrayal.rnU.S. GLOBAL HEGEMONY—June 1998—DougrnBandow on the search for foes in the post-Cold Warrnera, James George Jatras on the demise of nationalrninterests, Justin Raimondo on the Clintonrnadministration’s attempt to “wag the dog,” andrnDenis Petrov on the real powerbrokers in Russiarnand America. Plus the lessons that Robert Taftrncould teach us today.rnWHO KILLED THE BOOK?—May 1998—TonyrnOuthwaite exposes the book industry as a hothouse ofrngoofiness, George Garrett and Clay Reynolds lamentrnthe decline of commercial publishing, GregoryrnMcNamee highlights the state of the universityrnpress, and Gene Edward Veith sees Christianrnpublishers in the thrall of Mammon. Plus threernpoems by Wendell Berry.rnEUROPEAN AMERICA—April 1998—ThomasrnFleming on the heart’s geography, Jean Raspail onrndefending civilization, Scott P. Richert on thernEuropean roots of American life, and SamuelrnFrancis on the other face of multiculturalism. PlusrnRoger L. Busbice on the Cajuns and Ben C.rnToledano on Creole culture.rnFASCISM/ANTI-FASCISM—March 1998—rnThomas Fleming on the triumph of nationalrnsocialism, Paul Gottfried on the politics of labels,rnDerek Turner on Jean-Marie Le Pen and thernNational Front, Tomislav Sunic on victimology asrnscholarship, and Peter Erickson on Ayn Randrnand the welfare/warfare state. Plus LlewellynrnH. Rockwell, Jr., on the criminal state.rnCAN THIS UNION BE SAVED?—Februaryrn1998—Thomas Fleming on fighting the federalrnbeast, Donald Livingston on secession and states’rnrights, William J. Quirk and Robert M. Wilcox onrnjudicial tyranny and constitutional change, andrnJohn R. Stoeffler on judicial taxation.rnPRIVATE JUSTICE—January 1998—ThomasrnFleming on the return of revenge, Michael Hillrnon justice in the Celtic world, Barry Baldwin onrnAlbanian blood-feuds, Jeremy Black onrngovernment’s monopoly on violence, and DavidrnKopel on why owning a gun makes everyonernsafer.rnNATION UNDER GOD—December 1997—rnThomas Fleming praises intolerance, D. GeorgernLeech outlines a Christian foreign policy,rnWilliam A. Donohue discusses anti-Catholicismrn(the last respectable bias), Llewellyn H. Rockwell,rnJr., shows why the Christian right needs Econ.rn101, and Harold O.J. Brown questions the ethicsrnof the clergy.rnIDENTITY POLITICS—November 1997—rnThomas Fleming on race as the Americanrnreligion, Samuel Francis on the witch hunts ofrnMorris Dees, Jacob Neusner on secular Judaism,rnand Joseph Fallon on the politics of Hispanicrnidentity. Plus Justin Raimondo on the black warrnon Asians in San Francisco, and Mark Tooley onrnthe church burning hoax.rnIMPERIAL PRESIDENCY—October 1997—rnPatrick J. Buchanan on Mr Lincoln’s War, SamuelrnFrancis on the detnise of checks and balances,rnLlewellyn Rockwell, Jn, on executive branch evils,rnand Donald Livingston and Thomas Naylor on thernreal meaning of the Pledge of Allegiance.rnPlus Thomas Fleming on how Presidents became ourrnmasters.rn-^^•fe^rn^ “‘«”ofl,,,””‘ ^AVin?rn”WlM-N^^^n’OGr ‘ “rnf-SSdr*’rnr ,’in I, ‘”‘P^’iisi’lrnBACK ISSUE ORDER FORMrnI I’.) 4 issues $7.00 each; 5 to 9 issues $5.00 each; 10 or more issues $4.50 each (postage and handling included)rnDate Qt>’. Cost Date Qty. CostrnSeptember 1998rn,ugiist 1998rnJulv 1998rnJime 1998rnMay 1998rnApril 1998rnMarch 1998rnFebruary’ 1998rnJanuar,’ 1998rnDecember 1997rnNovember 1997rnOctober 1997rnNatne _rnAddress _rnTotal Qty. TotalrnMAIL WITH CI iKCK TO: CHRONICLES – P.O. Box 800 • MT. MORRIS, II 61054. * OR to ORDER BY CREDIT C,«D,C,UL: 1-800-397-8160rnrnrn
January 1975April 21, 2022By The Archive
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