| 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. |  |
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|  | The Declaration of Independence for Modern Readers A Satire by Matt Neuman (07/04/2000) Given the recent trend to modernize classic works of literature, it seemed logical to modernize one of the great works of American literature: the Declaration of Independence. Jefferson and Co.'s affirmation of freedom and democracy is a wonderful document, but it simply doesn't speak to the current generation of TV-addicted zombies who wouldn't know a remote power from a remote control. With its archaic language and references to an unfamiliar, non-digital world, the D of I is sorely in need of an update to take it into the 21st Century. Hopefully this new version will be taught in our grade schools and civics classes, and a paper copy of it will replace the aging original now decomposing in the National Archives. |  |
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