From the November 2007 issue
Denver
Post columnist David Harsanyi decided something had to be done
about government meddling “the first time I was forced to haul my
fragile body out into the frigid New York winter to enjoy a
cigarette.” In revenge, he wrote Nanny State: How Food
Fascists, Teetotaling Do-Gooders, Priggish Moralists, and Other
Boneheaded Bureaucrats are Turning America into a Nation of
Children (Broadway), excerpted in this issue (page 18).
Harsanyi’s article decries intrusive rules that are ostensibly
aimed at stopping drunk driving but in fact are focused on drinking
itself. “Though I am a big believer in the right to drink
irresponsibly, and do as often as possible, I would never get
behind the wheel intoxicated,” Harsanyi says. “I always ride a
bicycle. It’s good for the environment as well.”
Rogier van
Bakel immigrated to the United States from the Netherlands, just
like Ayaan Hirsi Ali, whom he interviews on page 26. But the
similarities pretty much end there. Bakel is a freelance journalist
who has written for Wired, Playboy, and Rolling
Stone, while Hirsi Ali is a Somali refugee who became a Dutch
parliamentarian and a controversial critic of Islam. While van
Bakel doesn’t agree with all of Hirsi Ali’s views, he calls her a
“refreshing voice” with challenging things to say about
immigration, assimilation, and liberty.
Juliet
Samuel, Reason’s Burton C. Gray Memorial Intern for 2007,
hasn’t read much chick lit, unless you count the Nancy Drew books
she read as a girl. But she made an exception for Rajaa Alsanea’s
Saudi chick lit sensation Girls of Riyadh, which “piqued my
interest as one possible way of bringing feminism to chick
culture.” Now in her junior year at Harvard, Samuel digs into the
book in “Much Ado About Shopping” (page 55) and finds powerful
political themes in a superficially shallow tale about “the sex and
shopping habits of four rich Saudi girls.”
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