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TITLE: LIBERTY Magazine
[LIBERTY is a review of libertarian and classical liberal thought, culture and politics, published bi-monthly by Liberty Publishing. -- Exclusive MORE MAGAZINES detailed content description, below!]
ISSUE DATE: February 2000 Volume 14, Number 2
CONDITION: Standard sized thin magazine, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
[Use 'Control F' to search this page. MORE MAGAZINES' exclusive detailed content description is GUARANTEED accurate for THIS magazine. Editions are not always the same, even with the same title, cover and issue date.] This description copyright MOREMAGAZINES. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17

THE WTO WARS.
The Streets of Seattle Protesters waged war on private property and free trade, while police waged war on innocent bystanders, reports R. W. Bradford.
Inside the WTO The protesters didn't have a clue what they were protesting against, explains Bruce Ramsey.
FEATURES.
Is It True What They Say About Hillsdale? The headline-grabbing incest-suicide scandal is not the only problem at America's most famous conservative college, reports our Anonymous correspondent.
Your PC as Big Brother A new campaign to spy on you via the Internet has some surprising allies, reports Declan McCullagh.
Strongarm Suits Unable to get Congress to pass new gun laws, Clinton tries something new, reports Dave Kopel.
Let's Teach Creationism! Bart Kosko agrees with Fundamentalist Christians that creationism should be taught in the schools. But he thinks they won't like the results.
Two Cheers for the Fourteenth Amendment Roger Pilon responds to Gene Healy's attack on the amendment.
Roger & Me Roger Pion is still wrong, retorts Gene Healy. The Fourteenth Amendment was born in sin, and has gone downhill since.
REVIEWS.
Kids, These Days! Jane Shaw finds much of value in an argument against allowing the next generation to raise itself.
It Once Began with Ayn Rand The fun of reading Jerome Tuccille has ended, observes Martin Morse Wooster.
Break On Through to the Other Side A famous economist crosses the sexual border. Janice Presser comes along for the trip.
Everyday Nationalism Sometimes, nationalism is so prosaic that you can't recognize it. Thankfully, it is in decline, says Martin Tyrrell.
High Hopes Lawrence Kudlow's writing recalls the style and opti- mism of the late Buckminster Fuller, according to Richard Kostelanetz.
Booknotes The Fountainhead revised; baseball law reviled.
Notes on Contributors Who we are.
Terra Incognita Roadmap to unreality.
Letters Mightier than the sword.
Reflections Liberty's editors come to praise Alexander Cockburn, lambaste the Libertarian Party, proclaim amnesty for truants, celebrate GOP diversity, and explore the red planet.


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