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30 YEARS AGO IN REASON.


* "President Nixon's executive order providing for stabilization of prices, rents, and wages is an act of supreme defiance against the free market and the freedom of Americans....Those who value freedom should recognize the totalitarian implications of Nixon's New Economic Program.

Manuel S Manuel may refer to:
  • Manuel (name)
People referred to as simply Manuel
  • Manuel I Komnenos (1118–1180), Byzantine emperor
  • Manuel I of Portugal (1469-1521)
  • Manuel I of Trebizond (1218–1263)
. Klausner, "The Wage-price Freeze: Bold Action against Free Enterprise"

* "While no sensible person expects the state to vanish overnight, let us not, like Zeno, be caught up in a never-ending succession of half-way measures. When faced, for example, with someone who advocates the death penalty for publishing something in a newspaper, are we to hail...someone who offers a 99-year prison sentence?"

Michael Hoy Hoy, island, 13 mi (21 km) long and 6 mi (9.7 km) wide, off N Scotland, second largest of the Orkney Islands. It is located at the southwestern side of the Scapa Flow anchorage. , "Reynolds' 'Purge' Considered"

* "For the first time in over a century, a significant amount of control over education will be in the hands of its consumers, rather than being the exclusive province of school boards and unions....Libertarians should begin planning now to exert a major influence several years hence in shaping post-demonstration voucher A receipt or release which provides evidence of payment or other discharge of a debt, often for purposes of reimbursement, or attests to the accuracy of the accounts.  systems in a laissez-faire direction."

Robert Poole Robert Lindsay Poole (born 12 June 1948 in Loxton, South Australia) was a controversial Queensland Australian Labor Party politician from 2001 until his resignation in early 2006. , "Education Vouchers Questioned"

* "Some private U.S. investments [in Argentina] were adventures of a piratical pi·rate  
n.
1.
a. One who robs at sea or plunders the land from the sea without commission from a sovereign nation.

b. A ship used for this purpose.

2. One who preys on others; a plunderer.

3.
 nature, backed by coercion coercion, in law, the unlawful act of compelling a person to do, or to abstain from doing, something by depriving him of the exercise of his free will, particularly by use or threat of physical or moral force.  and cheating....The American Government--especially in Central America--has not been a restrained power, the Big Stick being remembered you-may-imagine-how."

N. Guillermo Molinelli, "News from Argentina"
COPYRIGHT 2001 Reason Foundation
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Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Reason
Date:Oct 1, 2001
Words:212
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