Chris Bray,
39, is a Ph.D. candidate in history at UCLA and a former
infantryman in the U.S. Army. In “When Washington Pleads Weakness”
(page 18) Bray describes how private military forces have served as
a kind of governmental id since the birth of the United States,
operating outside the law but often on behalf of state interests.
“For the first 100 years of the history of this country we had
private armies attacking the neighbors,” he says. “People are
fascinated by this idea of a balanced and free republic that never
entirely existed.”
“The
Framers never expected the president to be the living embodiment of
our national hopes and dreams, the guy or gal who makes the world
safe for democracy and cheers you up when you’re blue,” says Gene
Healy, a senior editor at the libertarian Cato Institute. On page
20, reason excerpts his new book The Cult of the Presidency:
America’s Dangerous Devotion to Presidential Power (Cato).
Healy, 37, says he initially set out to write “yet another
Bush’s-imperial-presidency book” but soon became fascinated by the
longer history of the presidency. “Strange and wonderful as it is
to contemplate during an election year,” says Healy, the Founders
thought “the president was mostly supposed to keep his mouth
shut.”
The San
Francisco–based journalist Wagner James Au, 40, is the author of
the new book The Making of Second Life: Notes from the New
World (HarperCollins). In “Virtually Free” (page 62), he
describes the rise and fall of free minds and free markets in the
online world of Second Life, which he sees as a place where the
science fiction visions of novelists like Neal Stephenson collide
with the work of Robert Nozick, John Rawls, and other political
philosophers interested in the idea of social contracts. Au’s alter
ego in Second Life is Hamlet Au, “a guy who looks like me but wears
a white suit in tribute to Tom Wolfe.” He blogs at New World
Notes (nwn.blogs.com).
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