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or Keywords.
1958 Sep -- The Search for an Echo
1959 Nov -- Look First to the Thinking
1962 Jul -- Isaiah's Job
1963 Jul -- The Source of Progress
1963 Sep -- Announcing Seminars at FEE
1963 Nov -- E is for Excellence
1964 Jan -- Pull that Veil Away!
1964 Mar -- Why Didn't I Think of That
1964 May -- Getting Off Dead Center
1964 Jul -- The Case Against Name Calling
1964 Sep -- The Poor Should Look to Liberty
1964 Nov -- Unscrambling Socialism
1965 Jan -- A Word for Skepticism
1965 May -- What We Can Learn from a Communist
1965 Jul -- Mainspring (The Mainspring of Human Progress)
1965 Sep -- Economics for Boys and Girls
1965 Nov -- The Influence of Robin Hood
1966 Mar -- Let There be Light
1966 May -- Refinement
1966 Jul -- Grandpa Sobered Up
1966 Sep -- The Natural Way
#36 -- A Lesson in Socialism
#63 -- If Men Were Free to Try
#88 -- Rich Man's Tax, Poor Man's Burden
Most essays are by Leonard E. Read, 1 page each.
All are 8-1/2 x 11, and in good condition.
A few may have text underlinings and/or margin notes.
Many have a name stamped on them.
Sold as a set only.
$40.00, postpaid 1st Class, to U.S. addresses
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About These Newsletters and Essays The late 1950s and early 1960s saw a resurgence of interest in "freedom" philosophies. Leonard E. Read was the guiding light of The Foundation for Economic Education (FEE). FEE published The Freeman and Notes from FEE, consisting of political, economic, and social commentary, from a somewhat religious and economically conservative viewpoint. FEE and a revived libertarian movement gained wide exposure, all likely given a boost by the publication of Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand. Nathaniel Branden and Barbara Branden, along with Ayn Rand, set up the Nathaniel Branden Lectures (NBL), later renamed The Nathaniel Branden Institute (NBI), after the publication and impact of her novel Atlas Shrugged. The purpose of NBI was to promote the Objectivist philosophy (Objectivism) of Ayn Rand as delineated in Atlas Shrugged. And to make money ;>) . To those ends, Rand and the Brandens, through NBI, held taped and live lectures in various major cities throughout the United States. They published The Objectivist Newsletter, later reformatted and renamed The Objectivist. They also published various Objectivist essays in booklet form. The newsletters and essays also included contributions by others of the New York "inner circle". One famous contributor was Alan Greenspan, who contributed several articles about gold, money, banking, and business. (Most objectivists now consider Greenspan a "turncoat"; a few others wonder if he was really trying to "stop the motor of the world" a la d'Aconia/Galt by bringing down the fiat money and credit banking system [Federal Reserve] of the U.S. by destroying the U.S. Dollar via inflation.) Other contributors included Robert A. Hessen, Beatrice Hessen, Edith Efron, Robert Efron, George Reisman, and Leonard Peikoff. |
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WORKING ON A JOB SUCKS. ESCAPE! SO WHAT ARE THE POSSIBILITIES AFTERWARDS? ** Click to Discover an Eye-Opening Report ** |
Information in this document is subject to change without notice. No part of this document may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, for any purpose, without the express written permission of David A. Bean.