Jefferson Review

"Your Liberty is Our Interest"

July 22, 2002

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We All Want A Beautiful, Prosperous Community With Well-Educated People - But How Do We Get It?     by Theresa Fritz Camoriano     Most of us want many of the same things.  We want clean air and water, beautiful natural scenery, comfortable homes, good medical care, prosperity, and security against people who would injure us or steal from us.  And we want to live among happy, healthy, well-educated people.  The question is, how do we get what we want?

Another blatant lie     by Henry Lamb     There are two schools of thought about lying. One school teaches that if you get caught in a lie, you lose credibility and no one will believe you in the future. The other school teaches that if your lie is big enough, and repeated often enough, sooner or later, people will begin to believe you.

American Constitutional Research Service Is there a Shyster in the House?     John William Kurowski      Perhaps it is wrong, but the evidence seems to be quickly mounting that one of America’s most formidable contemporary groups which can be defined as a domestic enemy [those who work to subvert our constitutional system], are an identifiable group of practicing attorneys at law who argue constitutional issues, not from a point of view defending its “legislative intent’, but from a viewpoint either supporting or acquiescing to stare decisis [precedent setting decisions of the Court] which are not in compliance with the “legislative intent’ of our Constitution as contemplated by those who framed and ratified the Constitution.

Chicken Friends     by Tom Preble

Smart Growth and Housing Availability     by Wendell Cox Consultanacy

The truth about transit

 

(click to enlarge)

Free State Project

Why Light Rail is Being Built: In Portland and Dallas, like so many  urban areas, light rail and its expansion has to do with the  availability of federal money. If the federal government made
transit funding available to dig massive holes and fill them up again, I suspect that elected officials, bureaucrats and dutiful consultants (in the best tradition of Arthur Andersen) would be piously touting the inestimable value of the holes to the urban
fabric, while trying to convince the electorate to provide local matching funds.

Wendell Cox

 

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