The following is
a summary of the February, 2004
issue of the St. Croix Review: In the editorial, “Ronald Reagan,” Angus MacDonald writes about the times, challenges, and accomplishments of President
Reagan. In his three
articles Allan C. Brownfeld
describes a growing divide within the conservative movement in “The
Term ‘Big Government Conservative’ May Be an Oxymoron, But It Is a
Growing Reality”; he writes
about a neglected national security need in “The Time Has Come to
Secure America’s Weakly Defended and Porous Borders”; and he throws cold water on the movement to free a
prisoner in “The Ill-advised Campaign to Release Convicted Spy
Jonathan Pollard.” Herbert London
has six essays. In “The
Family and the Nation” he
writes about the disintegration of the family and its consequences; he writes
about the many types and the historical context of “Anti-Americanism”; he compares the British experience in the 19th
century with ours in “Pax Americana vs. Pax Britannica.” Dr. London describes an emerging strategy in “Sharon
Defines New Israeli-Palestinian Relations”; in “The Ghost in Israel” he tells how the Israeli economy remains encumbered
by socialism; and in “Dumb, Dumber and ‘Dumberest’” he watches the downward spiral of American culture as
reflected on TV.
In the second of
a series of four essays on “What Is Libertarianism and Why Is It Important?”
Philip Vander Elst traces the Western classical
liberal tradition. He writes about the thoughts of John Milton, and John Stuart
Mill, and he compares historical periods to highlight the horrors of 20th
century fascism and Communism. John
D’Aloia Jr. takes a look
at the mystique recycling has acquired in “Taking Recycling Myths to
the Dump.” Anthony Harrigan in “Neanderthals Revisited” considers the most recent scholarship on the other
group of highly intelligent humanoids that lived on earth. He suggests the
Neanderthals may have been the kinder and gentler group. They might have been
our moral superiors! John Howard covers the lasting consequences of September 11 in “How
Quickly We Forget!” In “Social
Justice vs. Civil Justice,” Miller
Upton writes that we are becoming a
socialist republic, in which the national government is committed to the
redistribution of wealth instead of the protection of individual rights. In “Tabloid
Politics: Formatting Ideology” Irving
Louis Horowitz reviews the impact of
those publications, in tabloid form, that have sprung into being since the
1960s. These publications are usually associated with university professors and
usually represent views of the “hard left.” The publications
addressed are the New York Review of Books, the Boston Review, The Women’s Review of Books, and the Ruminator Review. In the Book
Review section Arnold Beichman reviews The Long Detour: The History and Future of the American
Left, by James Weinstein; and Michael
S. Swisher reviews Tragedy
& Hope: A History of the World in Our Time, by Carroll Quigley.
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