226 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
226 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
Recipes for Nonsurvival - The Anarchist Cookbook by William Powell
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Reviewed by Esperanza Godot
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Taken from: "New Libertarian", Volume V, Number III, April 1988.
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Write - 1515 West MacArthur Blvd., #19, Costa Mesa, CA 92626
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Transcribed by The Dak - Holiday Inn, Cambodia BBS - 209/456-8584
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This book has been called a "Manual of terror" by Max Geltman,
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writing in National Review (July 22, 1971). I find this phrase aptly
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descriptive, but not in the same sense that Mr. Geltman would have us
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believe.
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This "cookbook" consists of three basic parts: an introduction by
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Professor Bergman entitled "Anarchism today," and two much longer
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sections by William Powell on drug and explosive manufacturing.
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If ever there were an example of Orwellian doublespeak, this is it!
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"Anarchism Today" is basically an interpretation of the philosophic
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roots of anarchism, awkwardly coupled with sketchy references to current
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events. Almost all of the intellectuals discussed are from the
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nineteenth century; and there is virtually no mention of the writings
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from 1930 to present. This may be expected from someone who appears to
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have briefly studied the topic while at college during the 1920's, and
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thereafter relied only on superficial newspaper accounts. Bergman
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should have been aware of Albert Jay Nock, for example, and anarchists
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today are certainly aware of Murray Rothbard, Karl Hess, etc.
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Bergman considers Nihilism to be a form of Anarchism, and Anarchism
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a form of radical revolutionism. He interprets Marxism in an
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anarchistic light, and correctly suggests that Communist governments
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today are feudal/ reactionary. However, his emphasis on the Marxist
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element in anarchist intellectual tradition is clearly one-sided. A
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more through and fair analysis can be found in "Native American
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Anarchism" (1932) by Eunice Minette Schuster.
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Bergman's emphasis on the Nihilistic and destructive aspects of
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Anarchism I find disturbing. This emphasis seems to arise from the
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axiom that the State is all, so to oppose the State is to oppose
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everything. Anarchists do not have to propose a concrete alternative
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because that would be auhoritarian.
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The rest of this book consists mainly of drug and explosive recipes
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relayed to us by William Powell. His motivation for doing so is
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supposedly to allow the "silent majority" access to information which he
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claims only the radical groups now possess. The idea of a "silent
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majority" comes from classical Greek literature and in that context
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referred to the dead who are the real majority. If you follow the steps
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outlined in these recipes, you may soon join them! the "Library
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Journal" (March 15, 1971) puts it this way:
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"Much of it is so sketchy as to be harmless, but there are a number
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of booby traps still for the nitwit who wishes to try them. There
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are drug making recipes...that may make one very ill...there are
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also a number of stunts which could backfire on the idiot who tries
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them."
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Lets get down to specifics.
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Ed Rosenthal told me that he had spent a lot of time trying to track
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down the rumors of pot growing in New York sewers. Well, I just may
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have stumbled on the origin of the "New York White" rumors. Despite
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what Powell may think, plants are not as adaptable as alligators and
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need light to grow. Another choice quote: "...strangely enough,
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insects ignore marijuana and do no harm." Strange indeed.
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The DEA has a Precursor Control Program watch list. This means that
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if you buy large quantities of the common precursors to illegal
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chemicals, the Federal Government may take an interest in your
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activities. Several of the chemicals on this lists are used in Mr.
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Powell's LSD recipe, such as Acetonitrile, Trifluoroacetic Anhydride,
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Dimethylformamide, and Diethylamine. Benzene is also on the list, and my
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also arouse the interest of the EPA because it is a known cancer-causing
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agent.
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Much the same can be said of many of his other recipes, and in some
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cases the precursors are as hard to get as he final product. For
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instance, his recipe for DMT starts out with indole, which is quite hard
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to get. Much better methods using L-Tryptophan (available in most
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health-food stores) are covered in "Synthesis" (1973 - present).
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Powell suggests ground up nutmeg for a psychedelic experience.
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Nutmeg has a poor dose/toxicity ratio! However, the oil extract of
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Nutmeg, containing myristicin, can be used in the synthesis of MMDA - a
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better and mellower high than MDA. See "Journal of Psychedelic Drugs"
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(Vol. 8, #4, October-December 1976).
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On page 58 of Powell's cookbook, Nalline is described as "...a freak
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- a drug someone forgot to make illegal." Perhaps they forgot because
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Nalorphine is a powerful narcotic antagonist, which tents to produce
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violent convulsive reactions in morphine addicts. (See the Merck
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Index.)
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For more information on drugs, see "The clandestine Drug Laboratory
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Situation in the U.S.", "Journal of Forensic Sciences" (January 1983, p.
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18- 31.) This article, obligingly written by the DEA chief, reports
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that none of the 17 labs busted the previous year were successful in
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producing what was intended to be produced. The busted chemists were
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relying on recipes from popular "underground" drug manufacturing books.
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It was noted that such books contain errors which prevent the
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manufacture of the desired chemicals, while at the same time drawing the
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attention of government authorities because of the precursors
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recommended.
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Let's now examine his recommendations for manufacturing explosives:
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His methods for producing Mercury Fulminate is incomplete and
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dangerous. Between steps 2 and 3, the solution should be cooled. Do not
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breathe the fumes. See "A Dictionary of Applied Chemistry" by Sir
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Edward Thorpe.
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Powell's recipe entitled "How to Make TNT" is also quite dangerous
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and incomplete. In step 1, mixing sulfuric acid and nitric acid will
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likely result in fulmination and red toxic fumes. ALso the crude method
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he describes does not cover the removal of the Ortho-Dinitro groups. If
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this were not done, the TNT would be extremely unstable. However, they
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can be removed with great ease by heating the crude material with
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aqueous sodium sulfite. See "Chemistry of Explosives" by George Wright,
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University of Toronto, in "Organic Chemistry" (p. 974).
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The description of picric acid does not sufficiently emphasize its
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unstable nature. For example, storing it in a cracked glass container
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may cause it to explode. See "Thorpe's". However, on page 120 he
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describes two relatively safer and easily obtainable chemicals
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(potassium bichromate and potassium permanganate) as very sensitive,
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unstable, and too hazardous to work with.
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He does have a couple of pages on general safety precautions, but
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the language suggests that they have been lifted from a military manual.
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Also, he uses the German spelling for some chemicals. If you attempt to
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order chemicals from an American company using German spelling, your
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order would likely be looked at with suspicion.
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"The Anarchist Cookbook" was originally published in 1971; the
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review by the "Library Journal," which exposed these dangerous errors,
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came shortly thereafter. I wonder why it has gone through 26 printings
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without these errors being corrected. My theory is that Mr. Powell is
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not an anarchist, but in reality is spreading disinformation to
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potential enemies of the government. At the time of original
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publication, Mr. Powell was an unknown 21-year-old college freshman.
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Where did he get access to this "information?" He says, from radical
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friends on both the left and right.
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The "Minuteman Manual" is listed in the bibliography. The original
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Minutemen were colonial American revolutionaries. In the '60's there
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was a radical offshoot of the John Birch Society called the Minutemen;
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they have since been disbanded by the FBI. It is not likely that the
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1960's Minutemen would have handed out their manual to a long-haired
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21-year-old college freshman. Also, the John Birch Society and the
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Minutemen are opposed to the United Nations, and Powell's father was a
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powerful bureaucrat in the UN propaganda ministry (see "Newsweek", April
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12, 1971.) Things are getting curiouser and curiouser!
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This same William Powell has also written a book entitled "Saudi
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Arabia and its Royal Family" (1982). It consists of interviews with
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members of the Saudi royal family and other observations gathered while
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teaching at the University of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. It does not seem
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likely that the Saudi royal family would give such generous treatment to
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a real anarchist. Reading the Saudi book, I came across some
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interesting quotes (p. 17):
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"Were something or someone to cut the flow of oil from the Arabian
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Gulf, the result would be truly apocalyptic or the United States,
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Western Europe, Japan, and much of the developing world...In a
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worst case scenario, all gasoline available would go to essential
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services such as the military, the police and fire departments,
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and the transportation of foodstuffs. Most nonessential
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businesses and industries would close. Unemployment would
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skyrocket."
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"All major cities would, in all probability, have to be placed
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under martial law. Curfews would be enforced at
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gunpoint...Inflation would metamorphose...into a lethal epidemic.
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We would enter a wheelbarrow economy like that of Germany prior to
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Hitler's rise to power."
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I could go on, but I think you get the idea. While his pessimistic
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analysis does not take full account of the market's ability to conserve
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and switch to alternate fuels, I think a more important point is that
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Powell seems to believe that government is as essential as the
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transportation of foodstuffs, and that it can help solve the fuel crisis
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through the draconian methods he describes. If governments were to run
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out of gas tomorrow, anarchists would be dancing in celebration.
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(Mr. Powell's talk of martial law is not fantasy. Executive Order
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#11490, signed by Richard Nixon in October 1969, allows the president to
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assume dictatorial powers after declaring a "national emergency.")
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It just doesn't add up, unless an alternative theory is developed
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to explain these anomalies. My attempts to get the other side of the
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story from the publisher were met with a stone wall of silence. My
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suggestion is that much of Powell's disinformation and influence may
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have come from the Trilateral Commission and/or the CIA. A U.S. Air
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Force combat controllers group studying theory would seem to dovetail
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with the "National Review" article which presented "The ANarchist
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Cookbook" at face valued and even included a patronizing reference to
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"the boys at Harvard." It is well known that W.F. Buckley, the
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"National Review" editor, is a Yale graduate and once served the CIA in
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Mexico. (E. HOward Hunt, of Watergate fame, was CIA paymaster in Mexico
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City at the same time Buckley served.)
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I would like to quote Mr. Powell from the April 12, 1971 issue of
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Newsweek: "My book places power in the hands of the individual, where
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it belongs. The right calls it communist, the leftists call it
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profiteering, the liberals call it Neo-Nazi."
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And this reviewer calls it bullshit!
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-Esperanza Godot
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Esperanza Godot is a nom de guerre of a Conter-Economics
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Entrepreneur in the Washington-Portland area. Alas, we cannot publish a
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biography of him, like others in our series, but I'm sure you'll agree
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he deserves our title of "Libertarian Entrepreneurs! #3." - Samuel
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Edward Konkin III.
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[End of Transcription]
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