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The Flight of the Barbarous Relic
"Virtually everything every American needs to know about the Federal Reserve,
fiat-money central banking, and monetary history" in novel form.
Demagogue's Survival
Guide
Since you're in politics, you're seeking legally
coercive control...
State Treachery
... a strong distrust of government is indigenous to the
American character.
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by
George F. Smith
I was shocked the other day when I saw my daughter Kimmi pass through the den.
“Hi, Daddy,” she said, then shot upstairs to her room.
She and her sister Kate recently turned 18. They don’t normally check in during
waking hours.
I blinked. Down the stairs she flew. “Bye, Daddy.” The front door slammed and
she was gone.
My daughter had been reduced to a fleeting image in my life. Why wasn’t she home
more often?
I laughed at the answer. She wasn’t home because she had no place to stay.
According to gossip, her room, once habitable, had experienced a cataclysmic
event.
I decided I would fix this problem. I would fix it by cleaning her room.
With a Marine’s demeanor I ventured upstairs and stood dry-mouthed before her
bedroom door, which is chronically closed. I nudged it open.
I marveled as the hallway carpeting, a solid green, became a collage of hues and
rugged relief as it spread throughout her room. I was particularly fascinated
with the pile of unwashed relief keeping the door from opening past the
quarter-way point. Shouldering the door like a blocking sled, I muscled the
laundry back enough to slip inside.
I stood, calculating where next to place my feet. Along with clothes, her floor
was a final resting place for CDs, jewelry, fast food bags, schoolbooks,
pictures, half our kitchen’s tableware, and a monopoly on the world’s Coke cans.
I had the feeling everything was in delicate balance, like an ecosystem. If I
took a wrong step, civilization as we knew it would collapse.
I found patches of green breaking through here and there and leapfrogged from
one spot to the next, making my way to the other side of her bed.
Then I stared at the floor next to where she slept.
The quake had jumbled the contents of her dresser with weeks-old glasses of milk
you could invert without spilling, supine Cheez-It boxes supporting upright
Cheez-It boxes, puddles of chocolate syrup welded to the carpet, plates of
once-edible black stuff, a cornucopia of spent tissues and Q-tips -- all
intermingled with little red cans, most of them open and still brimming.
I wanted to run for my life. Instead I ran to the garage.
I fetched industrial-strength trash bags and came back. I hauled out clothes,
Cokes, and virescent French fries. I scraped the syrup with a steel brush. When
the brush wore out I got a stronger one. As carpet emerged I attacked the room
by vacuum. Then I brought in heavier artillery, the deep-clean machine.
My shirt was sopping when I finished. But the clutter was gone. You could walk
around recklessly, without looking at your feet. I had opened her quarters to
the living.
She once again had a place to stay.
Kimmi arrived home much later and whisked past me to her room upstairs. This
time I waited with a victor’s smile.
Soon she came skipping down the steps. “Daddy!” she exclaimed. My smile
broadened. “What is it, sweetheart?” I asked.
“Can I borrow ten dollars? I’m going to meet Lindsay at the food court.”
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Other Interesting
Sites
Ron Paul's
Campaign for Liberty
Strike the Root
Classics of
Libertarian Thought
BK's
FED Economics Portal
Greenspan's
1966 "Gold and Economic Freedom"
Ludwig
von Mises Institute
"V" for
Vendetta
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