Nick Gillespie | September 21, 2004
What: Reason magazine and the L.A. Press Club invite you to a party celebrating the publication of Choice: The Best of Reason, edited by Reason editor-in-chief Nick Gilllespie, and "This Is Burning Man," by Reason senior editor Brian Doherty...
When: Wednesday, Sept. 29, from 6 to 9 p.m...
Where: Maple Drive Restaurant, 345 Maple Dr., Beverly Hills. Cash bar, complimentary hors d'oeuvres. Valet parking available on Alden Dr. (just west of Maple)...
WHY: Because in the last 10 years, Reason magazine has been instrumental in reframing the traditional left vs. right divide to that of choice vs. control. Because the San Francisco Weekly recently described "This is Burning Man" as "arguably the best prose ever written about the 18-year-old festival"...
RSVP is a MUST, by Sept. 26, to: Mary.Toledo@reason.org or call Mary at (310) 391-3325.
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Because in the last 10 years, Reason magazine has been
instrumental in reframing the traditional left vs. right divide to
that of choice vs. control.
The fuck? You people are having delusions of relevance. The
right/left paradigm still holds, in spite of the fact that the left
moved to the center and the right has gone over to the far left.
Freedom vs. Oppression may be infinitely more useful, but nobody
outside us geeks could give a flying flaming fuck or a rolling
doughnut.
Waren,
It's in part due to the fact that the traditional placeholders on
the left-right political spectrum have been in a state of profound
flux that the dichotomy of choice vs. control has gained
ascendancy. I think that that Reason has been a vanguard
for this paradigm and that it is the most vital perspective from
which to observe politics.
The political spectrum that makes the most sense when we are
informed from this perspective is the Cartesian spectrum that has
no government control of economic activity on the rightmost point
of the X axis and no government control of social/ civil activity
on the top most point of the Y axis: http://tinyurl.com/3tp5e
(scroll down)
Another enhancement to political vision comes when we extend the
concept of "unintended consequences" (an enhancement in itself) to;
"intended but unspoken consequences". The recognition that people
conspire for political power throws substantial illumination on
political processes.
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