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Table of Contents - The Barnes Review

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Personal from the Editor<br />

This issue is different from any other we have published this<br />

year—it contains two indices to every article we published in<br />

2003. We feel our annual index is important to researchers <strong>of</strong><br />

today and in the future because TBR is truly the only magazine<br />

<strong>of</strong> authentic history published in America.<br />

We are proud to put former Senator Joseph McCarthy on the cover this<br />

isse. He was a real American whom we fancy would be a subscriber to TBR<br />

today if he were alive because <strong>of</strong> his own courageous fight for truth.<br />

But we’re also proud <strong>of</strong> Rev. Warren Baldwin’s article on the ancient<br />

and virtually forgotten theory <strong>of</strong> the “just war.” This is a theme we never<br />

hear today, as our nation stumbles from disaster to disaster. It is time for us<br />

to step back and consider what our habitual intervention into wars has<br />

gained for us—wars that are none <strong>of</strong> our business. <strong>The</strong> answer is nothing—<br />

unless you are a large stockholder, in “defense” industries, or a banker,<br />

bureaucrat or politician pr<strong>of</strong>iting from the war business. Rev. Baldwin’s lecture<br />

should be reprinted and given the widest circulation.<br />

<strong>The</strong> above are only two <strong>of</strong> the subjects covered in this issue; we could<br />

go on but we’ll leave the rest to you to discover for yourself.<br />

We’re happy to see that we are getting some very good letters from<br />

readers. We would like to print them all but <strong>of</strong> course that is impossible. But<br />

please do not let this stop you from writing letters—critical ones as well as<br />

favorable ones. And please consider doing an article on a Revisionist subject.<br />

Much <strong>of</strong> our material comes from readers. Don’t fear that you are not a<br />

“great writer.” Send it in and if it’s good, we will publish it. We may return it<br />

with a few suggestions to improve it, but if you are privy to historical information<br />

that needs to be told, then we want to hear from you. Remember, socalled<br />

“amateur” historians are the ones doing the best reporting these days.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y are not shackled by fear <strong>of</strong> job loss for exposing historical fact suppressed<br />

by political correctness, as are so many “scholars.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> cause <strong>of</strong> historical Revisionism is not and should not be esoteric. It<br />

is for the people. If we wish to make history honest, then we cannot rely on<br />

the war- and government-dependents to do it for us. We have to say that the<br />

historical magazines in America—with one exception—are a tragic joke—<br />

and that one exception is TBR. And if you don’t believe it, then read any issue<br />

<strong>of</strong> the American Historical <strong>Review</strong>, published by the venerable but worthless<br />

American Historical Society—as politically correct as any.<br />

It’s been suggested that we do an article on this novel perversion called<br />

political correctness. Well, we don’t have to. Let me refer you to the excellent<br />

report issued by American Free Press entitled Cultural Communism, because<br />

that is what we are talking about here. Political correctness is not a<br />

weed that has spontaneously invaded our national garden, it is a plan, one<br />

developed years ago. Political correctness is a form <strong>of</strong> Marxism that is far<br />

more insidious than what we call communism. We heartily recommend that<br />

you procure a copy <strong>of</strong> this report. <strong>The</strong> price is but $2. Write directly to AFP<br />

at 1433 Pennsylvania Avenue SE, Washington, D.C. 20003.<br />

Also see a special Christmas <strong>of</strong>fer for TBR readers inside the center <strong>of</strong><br />

this issue. It’s loaded with great books from TBR BOOK CLUB (available at a<br />

10% discount to subscribers) and a special one year TBR $32 gift subscription<br />

<strong>of</strong>fer. <strong>The</strong>re can be no better gift than the gift <strong>of</strong> knowledge; it’s a gift<br />

that keeps on giving for a lifetime. When you buy one gift subscription (or<br />

more if you’d like) renew your own subscription to TBR for $32 at the same<br />

time. It is a great deal for all who love truth.<br />

THE BARNES REVIEW was founded in 1994, and as we make our way to<br />

our 10th anniversary, we remind you <strong>of</strong> the struggle it has been and will continue<br />

to be to bring you authentic history every issue. But we will continue<br />

to do so as long as we stand—no matter how politically un-correct it is or<br />

what the Thought Police mutter about us. Nevertheless, we think you’ll find<br />

quite a few gems in this issue so let us not delay you from your reading<br />

adventure any longer. . . . ❖<br />

2 N O V E M B E R / D E C E M B E R 2 0 0 3<br />

FRED BLAHUT<br />

Seabrook, Maryland<br />

CHRISTOPHER BOLLYN<br />

Berlin, Germany<br />

ROBERT CLARKSON, J.D.<br />

Anderson, South Carolina<br />

TREVOR J. CONSTABLE<br />

San Diego, California<br />

HARRY COOPER<br />

Hernando, Florida<br />

SAM G. DICKSON, J.D.<br />

Atlanta, Georgia<br />

NICHOLAS ELIOPOULOS<br />

Chicago, Illinois<br />

THE BARNES REVIEW<br />

Publisher: W. A. CARTO<br />

Editor: M. RAPHAEL JOHNSON, PH.D.<br />

Editorial Assistant: JOHN TIFFANY<br />

Art & Production Director: PAUL T. ANGEL<br />

Contributing Editors:<br />

PAUL FROMM<br />

Rexdale, Canada<br />

VERNE E. FUERST, PH.D.<br />

Farmington, Connecticut<br />

GEORGE GABRIC<br />

San Pedro, California<br />

JUERGEN GRAF<br />

Basel, Switzerland<br />

A.B. KOPANSKI, PH.D.<br />

Klang Lama, Malaysia<br />

RICHARD LANDWEHR<br />

Brookings, Oregon<br />

EUSTACE MULLINS<br />

Staunton, Virginia<br />

THE BARNES REVIEW (ISSN 1078-4799) is published bimonthly by TBR Co., 645<br />

Pennsylvania Avenue SE, Suite 100, Washington, D.C. 20003. Periodical rate postage<br />

paid at Washington, D.C. For credit card orders including subscriptions, call 1-877-<br />

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or fax 301-729-2712. TBR Website: www.barnesreview.org. Email addresses—<br />

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P.O.Box 15877,Washington,D.C.20003.<br />

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