Table of Contents:
If you encounter any difficulty using this document please let me know as soon as you notice. Contact information is at the bottom of this page.
I am happy to receive addresses of potential readers of Ender's Review who might like to receive a few trial issues and/or an invitation to subscribe. Or, if you prefer, please, send a link to this page or the index (which also has comprehensive source site links) to those you think might be interested.
Find all RSS feeds & e-mail lists on the Sign Up page –
or use this RSS feed for Ender's Review
![]()
"In an effort to make the cause of freedom more appealing, I have collaborated with the Mackinac Center to establish the Freedom in Fiction Prize. This international contest will offer a prize of up to $100,000 and create an incentive for authors to write the next best-selling book championing values necessary for a free, productive and truly compassionate society."
http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig8/rodney1.html
"[T]he great story of the last decade is that these bouts of meddling do not attest to the authoritarian nature of Beijing’s Communist Party as much as they signify the extraordinary resilience of Hong Kong’s system and the ability of its citizens to preserve it."
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1997
"Heroism comes in many forms. To be sure, courage is demonstrated through feats of great physical risk on and off the battlefield. But to me, the greatest heroes of the modern era are those who stand for integrity and character when under intense pressure to do otherwise."
http://www.sptimes.com/2007/07/08/Opinion/Quiet_hero_lets_truth.shtml
"In Saudi Arabia, net users can't get access to websites of opposition groups. Jordan and Bahrain both briefly banned Google Earth, citing security concerns. The Chinese government doesn't let netizens get to the BBC site in any language. So what's a curious Web surfer to do in these Net-filtering countries? They should get to know a kind-hearted soul using Psiphon (http://psiphon.civisec.org/), a software tool created by researchers at the University of Toronto's Citizen Lab."
http://www.nowtoronto.com/issues/2007-07-12/goods_next.php
"For nearly six years now we've been hearing from politicians and pundits about how Sept. 11, 2001 'changed everything.' One especially unwelcome change wrought by that day has been that, ever since, large numbers of otherwise sane and sensible people continue to utter the most ridiculous things regarding the subject of terrorism."
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/
opinion_columnists/article/0,2777,DRMN_23972_5622100,00.html
"The Pennsylvania case shows how all gun owners could be threatened by HR 2640. After all, did you ever tell anyone that the Second Amendment was included in the Bill of Rights because the Founders (such as James Madison) wanted the people to be able to overturn a tyrannical American government?"
http://www.libertyforall.net/?p=749
"Currently many noncustodial fathers ... are required to pay their child support to the state to reimburse the cost of public assistance, instead of to the children’s mothers. ... The Responsible Fathers Act will make this money go directly to the mothers, instead of the state, a policy which research shows helps bring fathers closer to their children. ... but the bill’s stick—increasing federal reimbursements for child support enforcement--is damaging and misguided. Federal Office of Child Support Enforcement data shows that two-thirds of those behind on child support nationwide earn poverty-level wages; less than four percent of the national child support debt is owed by those earning $40,000 or more a year."
http://www.newswithviews.com/Sacks/glenn70.htm
"President Bush, who in other areas has been quick to assert broad authority, even when its constitutional basis is questionable, has been strangely reluctant to exercise a power that is indisputably his in the manner the Framers envisioned. So far he has been much stingier with clemency than any of his recent predecessors, except his father."
http://www.reason.com/news/show/121284.html
"Vest's fairy tale is the Free State of Christiania, a product of the 1970s, when anarchists, hippies and other alternative groups founded their own little island in the midst of an ocean of bourgeoisie. Since then authorities have tolerated the community, which was eventually dubbed a 'social experiment,' but its days could soon be numbered. The colorful Christiania settlement faces the prospect of a radical reorganization, one in which police could very well end up clearing out residents by force."
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,494006,00.html
"Incremental reforms, if we are to tolerate them, should begin with the abolition of municipal police departments in favor of sheriff's departments, which are directly correctable by the public. Even then, stringent limits must be applied to the officer/population ratio, in order to eliminate the 'standing army' the Founding Fathers worried about, and which has manifested itself in our time as the 'thin blue line' that is all that stands between the American people—and their freedom."
http://www.ncc-1776.org/tle2007/tle425-20070708-08.html
"Social ostracism could be a powerful tool in a voluntaryist society against those who are anti-social or are violating the person and/or property of another human being. Since no man is an island, and needs to interact with others to survive, the prospect of being ostracised may deter people from committing coercive acts. ... Arguments against free riders within a stateless and voluntaryist society is just another method that the statist uses to justify his faulty and erroneous paradigm. "
http://www.strike-the-root.com/72/awuku/awuku1.html
"Every man throughout the country was armed with knife and revolver, and it was known that instant justice would be administered to each offence, and perfect peace reigned. "
http://praxeology.net/blog/2007/07/11/emerson-on-anarchy/
"While the aesthetics of windmills are a matter of taste, no one disputes that the noise they generate can be annoying for those nearby. And as the article also reports, Mercurio gets most of his energy from solar panels, not from wind. Because he's been relying entirely on his 56 panels since the windmill was shut down, it's plausible that he values the windmill more as an advertisement for his windmill installation business than as a necessary source of energy."
http://www.abetterearth.org/blog/id.4135/news_detail.asp
"Even if Microsoft is seeing fewer critical issues with Windows Vista than with XP, there are still plenty of Vista issues stemming from compatibility issues and lack of familiarity with the new OS. Because OEMs are required to be the first line of support for any operating system they ship, the support issue is not minor. If the likes of Dell are finding that support calls stemming from frustrations with Vista are too high, it's in their interest for customers to end up with the OS they want, not the OS Microsoft wants to sell them."
"It's nice to see that the contempt for 'legitimate' authority that characterized Thomas Jefferson and Company still finds a small echo in July 4 festivities."
http://www.tuccille.com/blog/2007/07/spirit-of-independence.html
"To the extent that there is anything real out there at all ... the best way to deal with it is to insure that the unalienable individual, civil, Constitutional, and human right of every man, woman, and responsible child to obtain, own, and carry, openly or concealed, any weapon—rifle, shotgun, handgun, machinegun, anything—any time, any place, without asking anyone's permission is energetically enforced."
http://www.ncc-1776.org/tle2007/tle425-20070708-02.html
"The U.S. government has hundreds of thousands of peaceful people in its domestic prisons, and people think it’s going to protect our rights if we only give it more of our liberty? This should be absurd on its face. As far as this relates to foreign policy, the same government that wages chemical warfare on plant life in Colombia and strong-arms Mexico to maintain draconian drug laws is probably not going to be very humanitarian abroad in the terror war."
http://www.fff.org/comment/com0707d.asp
"Among the many examples of how the CIA today makes the agency detailed in the "crown jewels" documents look pallid by comparison is the system of torture created by the Bush administration in the treatment of suspected terrorists."
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0728,hentoff,77169,6.html
"Interviews with US veterans show for the first time the pattern of brutality in Iraq … The report steers clear of widely reported atrocities, such as the massacre in Haditha in 2005, but instead unearths a pattern of human rights abuses."
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/article2758829.ece
"'I took an oath to the president, and I take that oath very seriously.' This declaration was offered as a pious summation civic duty by former White House Political Director Sara Taylor. She stated this without irony or self-awareness. Clearly, she was someone who had been immersed in a culture of fuhrerprinzip, in which there was no allegiance higher than loyalty to the Grand and Glorious Decider."
http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2007/07/praetorian-conservatism.html
"We didn’t just invade Iraq – when we launched 'Operation Iraqi Freedom' the American people not only signed on to an occupation that resembles, in many respects, Israel’s occupation of Palestine, we also bought into a serial war strategy, the first of which was Gulf War I. Gulf War II landed us in our present predicament. Gulf War III – involving, at a minimum, Iran, Syria, and Lebanon – is about to break out, and no one seems willing to stand against it."
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=11276
"As you may know -- unless you rely on the corporate media for your news, of course -- yesterday the U.S. Senate unanimously declared that Iran was committing acts of war against the United States: a 97-0 vote to give George W. Bush a clear and unmistakable casus belli for attacking Iran whenever Dick Cheney tells him to. ... This vote is the clearest signal yet that there will be no real opposition to a Bush Administration attack on Iran. This is yet another blank check from these slavish, ignorant goons; Bush can cash it anytime."
"What is it about religious conservatives that makes them want to bang whores so bad? … If you want to play God with the people of this nation through draconian policy, dull the pain with something legal, like bumfights or alcohol. We celebrate Ted Kennedy's foppish drunkenness on an almost daily basis, if you'll recall. Just be consistent."
http://www.thesimon.com/magazine/articles/canon_fodder/01418_keep_pants.html
"If Rudy Giuliani won't stop talking trash about medical marijuana, and endorsing pharmaceutical alternatives, I won’t stop bringing up the fact that he worked as a hired consultant for OxyContin manufacturer Purdue Pharma. Giuliani has less than no credibility on this issue because he worked for a company that is in direct competition with medical marijuana."
http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle_blog/2007/jul/10/rudy_giuliani_hates_medical_mari
"This move could also be interpreted as an attack on Microsoft's recent arguments that interoperability must be built on narrow, exclusive patent agreements. Unlike Microsoft's patent covenants, which offer only vague assurances and are only available to select users, IBM's patent covenant has no ambiguous exceptions and is available to all. Although the significance of the specific patents and the relevance of the standards associated with IBM's pledge can be questioned, the structure of the pledge itself is really an excellent model of what a patent covenant should look like."
"From the outside, worker-managed businesses behave like traditional companies. In internal relations, however, there are not always simple, clear systems of participation in the decision-making process. Decisions ranging from investments to wages - both hikes and cuts - are taken at the grass-roots level. Experience has shown that the most successful businesses take participation seriously."
http://in.news.yahoo.com/070714/43/6i1ah.html
"LifeSharers members agree to donate their organs when they die. They also agree to offer them first to other members, if any member needs them, before offering them to others. This is done through directed donation, which is legal under federal law and in all 50 states."
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bal-op.organdonors12jul12,0,3665832.story
"Muscular young men are likely to have more sex partners than their less-chiseled peers, researchers at the University of California Los Angeles said on Monday. Their study, published in the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, suggests muscles in men are akin to elaborate tail feathers in male peacocks: They attract females looking for a virile mate."
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?alias=women-drawn-to-men-with-m&chanID=sa003&modsrc=reuters
"Although proponents of other plans to change the U.S. tax system usually talk about how their tax will be revenue-neutral, Forbes does them one better: he claims that his flat-tax plan will generate increased government revenue. And what will the government do with this extra revenue? Forbes wants it to 'fund programs like Social Security and Medicare' and 'help us wage a successful war against Islamic terrorism'; that is, he wants to increase the funding of the welfare/warfare state." [The link below goes to part one. The essay also has a part two.]
http://www.fff.org/freedom/fd0703e.asp
"From the Austrian point of view, today's money regimes — even when taking into account the protections against government monetary mismanagement — would be incompatible with Mises's principle of sound money. In fact, Austrians consider today's monetary order a serious threat to the free societal order."
http://www.mises.org/story/2623
"The House, like the Senate, will continue to allow direct to consumer advertising of new drugs with unknown risks – a flagrant safety risk that will cost many people their lives. Congressional leaders said they couldn’t prevent this advertisement for fear of violating the first amendment rights of drug companies. What a joke. The FDA routinely squashes the first amendment rights of American citizens to understand natural health options and the science that explains how they can prevent and treat disease. Thus, the first amendment argument is simply a matter of convenience."
http://www.newswithviews.com/Richards/byron38.htm
"As I have stated many times on this site,
http://www.newstarget.com/021931.html
"The state is the most destructive institution human beings have ever devised—a fire that, at best, can be controlled for only a short time before it o’erleaps its improvised confinements and spreads its flames far and wide. Whatever promotes the growth of the state also weakens the capacity of individuals in civil society to fend off the state’s depredations and therefore augments the public’s multifaceted victimization at the hands of state functionaries. Nothing promotes the growth of the state as much as war."
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1998
"Every time Bush stands up to speak about the war, how we have to stick it out, how we have to stand up against evil, how our nation is being called to do its historic duty, I have the same thought: and what are you doing besides making this stupid speech? ... They [Bush and the political class] gave the commanders the notion that it would be a good idea to demolish a country and a people. Bush and those he hired have given the orders. And unlike the case of Osama, there is no doubt about the paper trail that leads directly to the White House."
http://www.mises.org/story/2638
"People like Santorum and Milligan (and Dana Rohrabacher, the stupidest consequential public figure not named Bush or Hannity) ache for disaster. They pant after it with vulgar, undisguised lust. They are tremulous with unconsummated desire for validation in the form of dead Americans and ruined cities. Revolting and vile as this is, it is not unique. "
http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2007/07/praying-for-terrorist-strike-gops.html
"Apparently, the pretzel logic behind this is that the Administration will try to link the assessment with Bush's new propaganda push labeling al Qaeda as the 'main enemy' in Iraq, the 'primary source' of violence in the conquered land. Oddly enough, the Bushists seem to think that admitting ... that the entire 'War on Terror' has been an abject failure ... would somehow reflect positively on the Administration. This also seems to be the thinking behind the now-open Republican longing for a new terrorist strike on American soil, which they think will somehow vindicate the Dear Leader, and renew popular support for Bush's Hitlerite war crime in Iraq. "
"Heinlein was, then, his own kind of libertarian, one who exemplified the libertarian strains in both the Goldwater right and the bohemian left, and maintained eager fan bases in both camps. A gang of others who managed the same straddle, many of them Heinlein fans, split in 1969 from the leading conservative youth group, Young American[s] for Freedom, in what some mark as the beginnings of a self-conscious libertarian activist movement."
http://www.reason.com/news/show/120766.html
"It underscores a troubling lesson we seem to never learn: that within all power structures, and certainly within Presidential Administrations, there are often struggles for domination, competing agendas, and subterfuge. Policies and military actions can veer in dangerous directions that have little to do with normal democratic processes. "
http://www.10zenmonkeys.com/
2007/07/12/dont-call-it-a-conspiracy-the-kennedy-brothers/
"At first this analysis of class may seem paradoxical. Free-market advocates have long emphasized that trade brings increasingly elaborate forms social cooperation through the division of labor and free exchange. As Ludwig von Mises pointed out, the realization that specialization and trade allow unlimited mutual benefits induces people to put aside their differences and to cooperate in the productive process. How could the classical liberals of the early nineteenth century have been interested in class struggle?"
http://www.fee.org/in_brief/default.asp?id=1433
"In the long, ongoing argument about whether the heroic individual or the impersonal process shapes history, the pendulum has long lingered on the latter. It’s a little surprising to realize that in some respects the argument that Day-Lewis is making is not that much unlike the one John Wayne did in his body of work—or by broadening the frame of reference a bit to bring Alan Ladd into the picture, one might dub it the Shane school of history, where misfits with good hearts redeem and renew a country."
http://www.common-place.org/vol-07/no-04/school/
"Supposedly, Iran is one of the very worst regimes in human history. Its evil has risen to levels unparalleled since the Third Reich. It is a chief sponsor of terror, the command center from which our enemies conspire to strike. It is lying about its nuclear ambitions. It is thumbing its nose at the international community, and so on. How can anyone fall for this nonsense? It’s the exact same propaganda we heard five years ago, except the last letter in the name of the enemy nation. "
http://www.lewrockwell.com/gregory/gregory139.html
"Frankly, no one would care what happened in Iraq if it weren’t for its large oil deposits. Yet Iraq’s oil production has never recovered from decades of wars and grinding economic sanctions. ... [B]ases in Iraq set up to project U.S. power in the Gulf region are of greatly reduced value if they are constantly under assault from unfriendly Sunni and Shi’ite militias fighting in a civil war."
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1996
"The Bush Faction's violence and extremism have been answered with violence and extremism. Their mass slaughter of civilians has been answered with the mass slaughter of civilians. The inherent criminality of their invasion has unleashed and begotten criminality on a massive scale."
"Nearly 12 percent of Army recruits who entered basic training this year needed a special waiver for those with criminal records, a dramatic increase over last year and 2 1/2 times the percentage four years ago, according to new Army statistics obtained by the Globe. ... But former military officials and defense specialists said they fear that enlisting more soldiers with criminal backgrounds will increase the risk of disciplinary problems and criminal activity among soldiers in uniform." [It sounds like Arlo Guthrie's 60's strategy for avoiding the draft won't work next time.]
"[T]he majority of her work ... tended to involve innocent, but heroic young women who find themselves in gloomy, mysterious castles ruled by even more mysterious barons with dark pasts."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Radcliffe
Timeline for Mr. Wizard's life with links to other relevant pages for TV Shows and Film. I grew up with his show and watched it avidly though I don't recall many individual episodes these days. [Like Don Herbert, I also went to LaCrosse Central High School and LaCrosse State. (Though it is now known as UW-LaCrosse and was called WSU-LaCrosse when I graduated.)]
http://www.mrwizardstudios.com/bioandtimeline.htm
"There's a saying: 'Your face is your fortune'; Marty had received a double-whammy. His nose was mangled in his youthful years in a boxing match; his walleyed orbs were the result of both a hyperactive thyroid and a botched operation after a car accident before his 30th birthday, in 1963. ... He appeared in a number of movies, his most-remembered role being that of Igor (pronounced: Eye-gor) in Young Frankenstein (1974)."
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001204/bio
"Arthur applied for a visa to play in the South African Open, a prestigious event. His visa was denied because of the color of his skin. ... His call for expulsion [of] South Africa from the tennis tour and Davis Cup play was quickly supported by numerous prominent individuals and organizations, both in and out of the tennis world. In effect, he raised the world’s awareness to the oppressive form of government (apartheid) of South Africa. Buoyed by Arthur Ashe’s initial efforts, blacks in South Africa slowly but surely began to see change come about in their country."
http://www.cmgww.com/sports/ashe/about/bio.htm
Political satire stars Aaron Eckhart, Cameron Bright, Maria Bello, William H. Macy, Katie Holmes, David Koechner, J.K Simmons, Robert Duvall; screenplay by Jason Reitman, adapted from the Christopher Buckley novel, directed by Jason Reitman. “In addition to seemingly ubiquitous spin, the trend known as ‘political correctness’ also occupies center stage in this black comedy. This film, based on a novel with the same name, follows the life of a Washington DC lobbyist who represents tobacco interests. It makes many comments on the state of politics in America.”
http://endervidualism.com/agora/thanku4smoking.htm
"'The Marching Morons' is a science fiction short story written by Cyril M. Kornbluth, originally published in Galaxy in April, 1951. It was included in The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume Two after being voted one of the best novellas up to 1965." [That story collection may be one of the best ever assembled.]
http://tonova.typepad.com/thesuddencurve/2007/07/the-marching-mo.html
"Generally, the wheels of justice turn much faster in Hardyville than elsewhere. But due to various technicalities, the case of the DEA Five seemed only to be spinning its wheels in mud. Thick, tenacious, knee-deep mud. The mud the locals not-so-fondly refer to as 'tiger poop.' We blamed it on the attorneys, who kept looking for things like courthouses, judges, precedents, and such, long after they should have figured out that's not how things are done here."
http://www.backwoodshome.com/columns/wolfe070709.html
"The officious Minister of Magic has taken to planting anti-Potter screeds in the The Daily Prophet. He also installs his loyal emissary (Imelda Staunton) to prune Hogwarts' faculty of subversive elements and restrict the students' freedoms. This smiling sadist in fuchsia couture renders coy the protestation of Potter producer David Heyman that Order of the Phoenix isn't a political allegory. This is, after all, a movie in which ineffectual bureaucrats refuse to acknowledge an imminent threat to their people—and their power. Make of that what you will." [I believe Order of the Phoenix merits viewing. I saw it Friday and thoroughly enjoyed it.]
http://www.villagevoice.com/film/0728,foundas,77211,20.html
"Officials confirm that all online data has been lost after the Internet crashed and was forced to restart." Video w/audio
http://www.theonion.com/content/video/breaking_news_all_online_data
"Just hours after President George W. Bush commuted Mr. Libby’s prison sentence, news of the deal spread like wildfire through the illegal immigrant community, inspiring many who have sought amnesty to view Mr. Libby as a beacon of hope."
http://www.borowitzreport.com/archive_rpt.asp?rec=6754
"Pelosi then sighed heavily and sipped some organic green tea. 'You know what it makes me wish? It makes me wish there some sort of, say, large political body here in Washington, one that was right now controlled by, say, a completely different political party than this awful president,' she said wistfully, as the aides glanced at each other furtively and rolled their eyes."
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/gate/a/2007/07/11/notes071107.DTL
"From the wild and wooly 1920s comes the story of one of the era's biggest recording stars, who apparently lost a fortune in the 1929 stock market crash but is making a modest return to the spotlight thanks to intrigued fans like moi."
http://unclewarrensattic.libsyn.com/index.php?post_id=234169
"The Lord of the Rings shows not only the great danger associated with all attempts to defeat evil power by power, but it also teaches that collectives do not really exist, that every one of us is the hero of his own individual story, and that law and order can easily exist without the state. Despite its egoistic message, Atlas Shrugged is full of imperatives to act, to fight, to bring salvation. "
"Science does not proceed by consensus or government review but by reliably replicable, public results always open to doubt and falsification. Injecting government review into the scientific process corrupts the process by switching from one in which science drives policy to one in which policy drives science. In truth, these rules reveal the IPCC process for what it really is: politicized science in the service of government, rather than science in the service of the truth."
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=8497
"Cognitive biases aren’t bad; they’re sensible rules of thumb. But like all cognitive biases, correspondent inference theory fails sometimes. And one place it fails pretty spectacularly is in our response to terrorism. Because terrorism often results in the horrific deaths of innocents, we mistakenly infer that the horrific deaths of innocents is the primary motivation of the terrorist, and not the means to a different end."
http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2007/07/correspondent_i.html
"Barton wrote a paper entitled 'Harry Potter and the Half-Crazed Bureaucracy' that was published in the Michigan Law Review in May 2006. The paper is being reprinted as a chapter in the book, "Harry Potter and the Law" (Carolina Press), due out this summer. He also has lectured on the topic at a "Power of Stories" seminar in Gloucester, England, in July 2005."
http://www.utk.edu/news/article.php?id=4155
"She pushed across the table two blocks of postage stamps. 'I was mailing packages and I picked up some of the new Express Mail and Priority Mail stamps. Take a look.' She was right: at first, I couldn't believe it. The chutzpah of those bastards is Olympic."
http://www.counterpunch.org/jackson07092007.html
"Emotionally, I don't understand why so many people get so upset at being marketed to, or at gleefully acknowledging the good that comes from crafting a social world that is dominated by people willingly exchanging skills, services, and goods."
http://www.reason.com/news/show/121343.html
"I’m perplexed by anyone who still hates Clinton more than Bush. I’ve seen this in libertarian circles. I actually didn’t hate Bush right away. I didn’t like him or respect him. He was the president, after all. But I didn’t loathe him the way I did Clinton. So I can see why, at one point, people might have still hated Clinton more."
http://www.strike-the-root.com/72/gregory/gregory1.html
"So I mentioned some key technologies in the iPhone. Multitouch is huge...instead of a single touch point, multitouch allows you to use multiple fingers to resize, reshape, etc. If you really want to see a demo of just how different multitouch can be...check out the YouTube video on Jeff Han at the TED conference in Monterey. His demo is nothing short of breath taking."
http://weblog.infoworld.com/geeks/archives/2007/07/openmokoorg_por.html
Find all RSS feeds & e-mail lists on the Sign Up page –
or use this RSS feed for Ender's Review
![]()
Each week immediately after Ender's Review is posted at Endervidualism a small plain text note (~5K) containing a few links to the web edition is sent to ERevNote subscribers.
If you know of prospective readers, please send them a link to this page, or alternately if you don't wish to e-mail them yourself, you can e-mail their addresses to me at this address: Tom@Endervidualism.com and I will send them a message with a link to the latest issue and invite them to subscribe.
Comments suggestions and discussion on the content and structure of this review are welcome at the ERevD: EnderReviewDiscussion Yahoo group. Feel free to jump in there at any time.
Alternately, you may elect to receive a copy of an HTML e-mail object (50 - 90K). Archives of the HTML e-mail are available to EnderReview members. You may join that group or subscribe to its mailing list.