March 2001
Volume 51, 2001FEATURES
The Luckiest Generation
The Prospects for America's Future Are Bright Not Bleak
MARCH 01, 2001 by W. MICHAEL COX, RICHARD ALM
Oh, What a Piece of Work Is a Man
We Dodge the Tax Collector and Rule-Makers as Lambs Flee the Shearsman
MARCH 01, 2001 by TED ROBERTS
The Anti-Capitalist Children of Capitalism
The Market Economy Gives Anti-Capitalist Rioters the Means to Protest
MARCH 01, 2001 by ALEX MOSELEY
Of Lights and Liberty
The Public Is Still Uneasy with the Specter of Big Brother
MARCH 01, 2001 by E. FRANK STEPHENSON
How the Computer Emancipated the American Corporation
The Information Age Empowers Workers and Disempowers Managers
MARCH 01, 2001 by LARRY SCHWEIKART
National Gun Registration: The Road to Tyranny
Civilian Possession of Firearms Is Necessary for Liberty
MARCH 01, 2001 by MIGUEL A. FARIA JR.
Education, Creativity, and Prosperity: East versus West
Educational Systems that Encourage Creativity and Entrepreneurship Are Key to Prosperity
MARCH 01, 2001 by CHRISTOPHER LINGLE
Gender Madness on Columbia's Campus
A Difficult Struggle for Due Process and Gender Sanity on American Campuses Lies Ahead
MARCH 01, 2001 by WENDY MCELROY
The Ideals of Tyranny
The Achievement of Equality Requires the Abolition of Freedom
MARCH 01, 2001 by JAMES PERON
Socialism, along with other movements founded on egalitarianism, has often been held up as a moral ideal. Many people consider the drive for "equality" to be laudable. It is frequently claimed, however, that socialism, although based on a moral principle, failed because it used immoral means to obtain its ends.

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