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|  | Albert Jay Nock, Forgotten Man of the Right by Jeffrey A. Tucker (08/22/2002) | | | Here it is in one package, an illustration of the level of learning that had been lost with mass education, a picture of the way a true political dissident from our collectivist period thinks about the modern world, and a comprehensive argument for the very meaning of freedom and civility – all from a man who helped shape the Right's intellectual response to the triumph of the FDR's welfare-warfare State. | |  |
|  | Article II by The AWARE Group (02/01/2002) | | | Article II of the US Consitution with explanations, history, and intent for each section. Executive branch powers and limitations. | |  |
|  | Article IV by The AWARE Group (02/01/2002) | | | Article IV of the US Consitution with explanations, history, and intent for each section. | |  |
|  | Conservative Liberal or Liberal Conservative? by Eric Schaub (04/16/2004) | | | | |  |
|  | Coup d'etat by Paul Craig Roberts (07/17/2013) | | | | |  |
|  | Democracy in America by Alexis de Tocqueville (06/12/2000) | | | In 1831, the French political writer Alexis de Tocqueville visited the
United States of America, a nation in which the citizenry had rejected such
things as income taxation, welfare, Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid,
public schooling, drug wars, economic regulations, gun control, and
immigration controls. | |  |
|  | Does the FBI Consider you a Terrorist? by (06/08/2003) | | | Phoenix Federal Bureau of Investigation created this flyer during Clinton's Presidency, asking the recipients to help them fight domestic terrorism. It has been confirmed by many phone calls to the FBI and Phoenix local law enforcement that such publications were being given, by the FBI, to local law enforcement. It was not intended for the general public to know such FBI domestic terrorist definitions. "Defenders of the Constitution" are listed as potential terrorists. Do you fit the domestic terrorist profile? | |  |
|  | From Their Vaults to Your Desktop by Russ Kick (06/17/2000) | | | Finding Documents the Man Wants to Hide | |  |
|  | George Washington's Farewell Address by George Washington (09/17/1796) | | | George Washington's Farewell Address was written to .."The People of the United States" near the end of his second term as President of the United States. Originally published in David Claypoole's American Daily Advertiser on September 19, 1796 under the title "The Address of General Washington To The People of America On His Declining The Presidency Of The United States," the letter was almost immediately reprinted in newspapers across the country and later in a pamphlet form. | |  |
|  | Judge Sturges' Speech by New York Times (09/16/1875) | | | Speech at the New York Democratic Convention, September 16, 1875 given by Judge Sturges:
"Then what is our duty? Our duty is to put men at the helm of the National and State Governments who will curtail these expenses and lop off all that are unnecessary until their promises are up to par, [great applause,] and then repeal your legal-tender act. That is resumption, and not by legislative enactment." | |  |
|  | Mankind's Most Brutal Institution by Walter E. Williams (08/03/1995) | | | Generically, what's the most brutal institution on the face of the earth? If you said governments, go to the head of
the class. | |  |
|  | Model Nullification Resolutions for State Legislatures by Publius Huldah (03/14/2012) | | | These proposed Resolutions are patterned on the relevant portions of The Kentucky Resolutions of 1798, written by Thomas Jefferson, and focus on administrative “rules” made by a Department within the Executive Branch of the federal government. This Model may be easily adapted to address acts of Congress which are outside the scope of its enumerated powers; Executive Orders which are outside the scope of the President’s enumerated powers; and supreme Court opinions which exceed their enumerated powers and disregard the federal Constitution, such as their lawless rulings banning public expressions of the Faith of Our Fathers and misapplying Sec. 1 of the 14th Amendment in order to undermine the morals of the People and to destroy the residuary sovereignity of The States. | |  |
|  | Our Enemy, the State by Albert Jay Nock (10/01/1935) | | | Originally published in 1935, this elegant essay on the nature of the state shows the important distinction between state power and social power. "Every assumption of power, whether by gift or seizure," Nock writes, "leaves society with so much less power; there is never, nor can be, any strengthening of State power without a corresponding and roughly equivalent depletion of social power." | |  |
|  | Ron Paul's Farewell Address to Congress by Ron Paul (11/14/2012) | | | "I have come to one firm conviction after these many years of trying to figure out 'the plain truth of things.' The best chance for achieving peace and prosperity, for the maximum number of people world-wide, is to pursue the cause of LIBERTY. " | |  |
|  | Sorry, Mr. Franklin, “We’re All Democrats Now” by Ron Paul (01/29/2003) | | | At the close of the Constitutional Conventional in 1787, Benjamin Franklin told an inquisitive citizen that the delegates to the Constitutional Convention gave the people “a Republic, if you can keep it.” We should apologize to Mr. Franklin. It is obvious that the Republic is gone, for we are wallowing in a pure democracy against which the Founders had strongly warned... (Speech before House of Representatives, Jan 29, 2003) | |  |
|  | Thanksgiving Proclamation 1777 By the Continental Congress by Continental Congress (11/01/1777) | | | In the First National Thanksgiving Proclamation, the Continental Congress of the United States, in 1777, with the country still engaged in the war for independence, not only enjoined Americans to publicly offer acts of thanks to almighty God, but exhorted all to “consecrate themselves to the Service of their Divine Benefactor,” to make “the penitent confession of their manifold sins,” and to offer “their humble and earnest supplication that it may please GOD through the Merits of JESUS CHRIST, mercifully to forgive and blot them out of Remembrance, that it may please him graciously to afford his Blessing on the Governments of these States respectively.” | |  |