Elementary Propaganda
<div align="justify">Columnist Søren Højbjerg considers the need to reflect the ugliness of the anti-freedom movement effectively.</div>
<div align="justify">Columnist Søren Højbjerg considers the need to reflect the ugliness of the anti-freedom movement effectively.</div>
<div align="justify">This is the era for bad legislation based on corruption. We link to an article on ineffective medicines and pharmaceutical industry lobbying.</div>
<p style="text-align: justify;">In the brave new world of California the time may soon arrive when Big Brother controls your thermostat.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-size: 8pt;">We flag our readers about this story published by CAGE Canada. It is about SIDS, and it points out once again how “public health” and other medical “authorities” cannot and must not be trusted, as they lie and manipulate – all the time.</span></p>
<div style="text-align: justify;">The German Police Union and the head of German police speak plainly in this interview published by Merkur-On-Line.de.<br />
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<div style="text-align: justify;">This Friday January 18th, in the city of Erlangen, Germany, there will be another demonstration against the Nazi smoking ban based on the passive smoking fraud.</div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;">In spite of the supercilious tone of this English piece published by <i>Der Spiegel</i>, which tries to paint a German freedom fighter as Don Quixote, it is nevertheless reported that he is one of the many who defy the smoking ban. As our own correspondents verify, hatred of anti-tobacco runs very deep, amongst very many indeed, in Germany.<br />
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<div align="justify">In Economics 101 classrooms the cigarette trade used to be used as an example of an "inelastic" market. No longer true.</div>
<div align="justify">Superstition rules the twenty-first century for the same reasons that it did in previous unenlightened times. It is time to grow up again.</div>
<div align="justify">"In 1936, the American social scientist Robert Merton wrote an article in which he attempted to formalise what social scientists have long understood, but activists, policymakers and politicians have either ignored or denied. Merton argued that both individual and government actions have effects that are unforeseen, unintended and all too frequently unwelcome."</div>