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VOLUME XV, NUMBER 4 Immigration and Property Rights The heated national debate over immigration has serious consequences for both Americans and foreigners. Will the shortage of agricultural workers drive up the prices of farm products? What changes in U.S. immigration policy would most help lower prices, improve productivity, and increase real wages? Which changes would make matters worse? These are some of the questions that journalist Peter Laufer and economist Benjamin Powell discussed at the Sept. 21 Independent Policy Forum, Immigration Wars: Open or Closed Borders for America? New Book Examines the Crisis Since 9/11 Immediately after 9/11, government officials and commentators claimed that the terrorist attacks had changed everything. In contrast, economist and historian Robert Higgs (Senior Fellow at the Independent Institute and editor of The Independent Review) warned that history would likely repeat itself in one key respect: the government s hasty reactions would resemble its responses to previous crises, providing little more than opportunities for special interests to feather their nests and for the government itself to expand its powers at the expense of the public s wealth and civil liberties. Peter Laufer, former NBC News correspondent and author of Wetback Nation, addresses the Independent Policy Forum. Laufer, a former NBC television news correspondent and talk-radio host, began by reading two excerpts from his new book, Wetback Nation: The Case for Opening the Mexican- American Border. The first selection explored (continued on page 3) IN THIS ISSUE: Independent Policy Forum...1 New Book on Crisis Since 9/11...1 President s Letter...2 Independent Institute in the News...4 The Independent Review...5 Garvey Fellowship Winners...6 Tax Benefits This Year...8 Robert Higgs s new book, Resurgence of the Warfare State: The Crisis Since 9/11 ($12.95, paperback), is a real-time analysis of the U.S. government s tragic but predictable response: the quick enactment of the USA PATRIOT Act, (continued on page 3)

2 The INDEPENDENT President s Letter: Just Say No to Leviathan Virtually alone, the Independent Institute has warned against the unprecedented growth of government power after recent crises from Medicare to the war on terrorism to the Katrina catastrophe to the new flu pandemic. Huge programs have been created or expanded without political discussion, accountability, or likelihood of success should an actual crisis occur. As an article in the Wall Street Journal declared, The era of small government is over. Sept. 11 challenged it. Katrina killed it. With the federal government growing by one-third since 9/11, Congress has increased the national debt to $8 trillion, and the feds this year are consuming 20 percent of the gross domestic product and a record $2.5 trillion. As our Senior Fellow Robert Higgs has shown (see p. 1), unless effectively challenged, the result is record incompetence, waste, pork, and corruption. Fortunately, this year also provides a unique opportunity to prove the Wall Street Journal claim wrong. Americans have a long and rich heritage of charitable giving that pre-dates any income tax code, and this year has broken all records. So as not to reduce taxpayers support of their usual favorite charities, Congress has enacted the Katrina Emergency Tax Relief Act of 2005 (KETRA), which temporarily suspends limits on charitable deductions. In a nutshell, you can deduct from your taxes a gift made to the Independent Institute before December 31, 2005, even when that gift brings your total giving above the usual limits for deductibility (see p. 7)! With 85 of every dollar donated going directly to our programs, we are among the most cost-effective of nonprofit organizations, earning Charity Navigator s highest 4-Star Rating (p. 8). What does your donation support? We provide real solutions to problems of government failure in our new books by Dr. Higgs, Against Leviathan and Resurgence of the Warfare State (p. 1), as well in as our journal The Independent Review (p. 5), and our conference and media projects (p. 4). Please help us prove the Wall Street Journal s predictions wrong by becoming an Independent Associate Member and receive a FREE copy of Dr. Higgs new book (please see attached envelope). EXECUTIVE STAFF DAVID J. TH EROUX, Founder and President MARY L. G. TH EROUX, Vice President MARTIN BUERGER, COO & Vice President ALEXANDER TABARROK, Ph.D., Research Director BRUCE L. BENSON, Ph.D., Senior Fellow IVAN ELAND, Ph.D., Senior Fellow ROBERT HIGGS, Ph.D., Senior Fellow ALVARO VARGAS LLOSA, Senior Fellow RICHARD K. VEDDER, Ph.D., Senior Fellow K. A. BARNES, Controller JOHN CAMPBELL, Development Director CARL P. CLOSE, Academic Affairs Director PAT ROSE, Public Affairs Director FRED HAMDEN, Sales and Marketing Director TONY GEE, Publications Director BOARD OF DIRECTORS ROBERT L. ERWIN, Chairman, Large Scale Biology Corporation JAMES D. FAIR, III, Chairman, Algonquin Petroleum Corp. JOHN S. FAY, President, Piney Woods Corporation PETER A. HOWLEY, Chairman, Western Ventures BRUCE JACOBS, President, Grede Foundries, Inc. WILLARD A. SPEAKMAN, III, President, Speakman Company W. DIETER TEDE, President, Audubon Cellars & Winery DAVID J. THEROUX, Founder and President, The Independent Institute MARY L. G. THEROUX, former Chairman, Garvey International PETER A. THIEL, Managing Member, Clarium Capital Management SALLY VON BEHREN, Businesswoman BOARD OF ADVISORS HERMAN BELZ Professor of History, University of Maryland THOMAS BORCHERDING Professor of Economics, Claremont Graduate School BOUDEWIJN BOUCKAERT Professor of Law, University of Ghent, Belgium JAMES M. BUCHANAN Nobel Laureate in Economic Science, George Mason University ALLAN C. CARLSON President, Howard Center for Family, Religion, and Society ROBERT D. COOTER Herman F. Selvin Professor of Law, University of California, Berkeley ROBERT W. CRANDALL Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution RICHARD A. EPSTEIN James Parker Hall Distinguished Service Professor of Law, University of Chicago A. ERNEST FITZGERALD Author, The High Priests of Waste and The Pentagonists B. DELWORTH GARDNER Professor of Economics, Brigham Young University GEORGE GILDER Senior Fellow, Discovery Institute NATHAN GLAZER Professor of Education and Sociology, Harvard University WILLIAM M. H. HAMMETT Former President, Manhattan Institute RONALD HAMOWY Emeritus Professor of History, University of Alberta, Canada STEVE H. HANKE Professor of Applied Economics, Johns Hopkins University RONALD MAX HARTWELL Emeritus Professor of History, Oxford University JAMES J. HECKMAN Nobel Laureate in Economic Science, University of Chicago H. ROBERT HELLER President, International Payments Institute WENDY KAMINER Contributing Editor, The Atlantic Monthly LAWRENCE A. KUDLOW Chief Executive Officer, Kudlow & Company JOHN R. MacARTHUR Publisher, Harper s Magazine DEIRDRE N. McCLOSKEY Distinguished Professor of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Illinois at Chicago J. HUSTON McCULLOCH Professor of Economics, Ohio State University FORREST McDONALD Distinguished University Research Professor of History, University of Alabama THOMAS GALE MOORE Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution CHARLES MURRAY Senior Fellow, American Enterprise Institute MICHAEL NOVAK Jewett Chair in Religion and Public Policy, American Enterprise Institute JUNE E. O NEILL Director, Center for the Study of Business and Government, Baruch College CHARLES E. PHELPS Provost and Professor of Political Science and Economics, University of Rochester PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS Chairman, Institute of Political Economy NATHAN ROSENBERG Fairleigh S. Dickinson, Jr. Professor of Economics, Stanford University SIMON ROTTENBERG Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts PAUL H. RUBIN Professor of Economics and Law, Emory University BRUCE M. RUSSETT Dean Acheson Professor of International Relations, Yale University PASCAL SALIN Professor of Economics, University of Paris, France ARTHUR SELDON Founder-Director, Institute of Economic Affairs, London WILLIAM F. SHUGHART II Robert M. Hearin Chair and Professor of Economics, University of Mississippi VERNON L. SMITH Nobel Laureate in Economic Science, George Mason University JOEL H. SPRING Professor of Education, State University of New York, Old Westbury RICHARD L. STROUP Professor of Economics, Montana State University THOMAS S. SZASZ Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry, State University of New York, Syracuse ROBERT D. TOLLISON Robert M. Hearin Chair and Professor of Economics, University of Mississippi ARNOLD S. TREBACH Professor of Criminal Justice, American University GORDON TULLOCK University Professor of Law and Economics, George Mason University GORE VIDAL Author, Burr, Lincoln, 1876, The Golden Age, and other books RICHARD E. WAGNER Hobart R. Harris Professor of Economics, George Mason University SIR ALAN WALTERS Vice Chairman, AIG Trading Corporation PAUL H. WEAVER Author, News and the Culture of Lying and The Suicidal Corporation WALTER E. WILLIAMS Distinguished Professor of Economics, George Mason University CHARLES WOLFE, Jr. Senior Economist and Fellow, International Economics, RAND Corporation THE INDEPENDENT (ISSN 1047-7969): newsletter of The Independent Institute. Copyright 2005, The Independent Institute, 100 Swan Way, Oakland, CA 94621-1428 510-632-1366 Fax: 510-568-6040 Email: info@independent. org www.independent.org.

The INDEPENDENT 3 Independent Policy Forum: Immigration and Property Rights (continued from page 1) the role of borders, broadly construed, in everyday life. The second discussed the frustrations of Americans who live in areas where illegal aliens frequently cross the U.S.-Mexico border and who are dissatisfied with current policies and their enforcement. As Laufer noted, these frustrations led President Bush to propose increasing the number of work visas, but the Bush plan also ties them to one employer and limits their duration to three years, renewable only once. Laufer criticized this proposal, arguing that it leaves too much discretion to employers and doesn t encourage employees to buy into the American system, because it allows them to work in the U.S. for six years at most. Benjamin Powell, who directs the Independent Institute s Center on Entrepreneurial Innovation, then discussed the economics of immigration. He noted, for example, that immigrants to the U.S. tend to pay their own way over the course of their lifetime, rather than on net being subsidized by U.S. taxpayers. He also argued that policies which consistently enforced private-property rights and freedom of association would reduce most of the complaints about undocumented immigrants. First, American property owners near the Mexican border would no longer be troubled by trespassing and littering; immigrants would use normal transportation channels. Second, employers and others would be able to hire or invite to visit whomever they wanted. In the end, I honestly think the only humane, moral and efficient solution is one that involves the free passages of all people of all races and all places of origin in any quantity so long as they are free from demonstrated criminal intent or terrorist activity, Powell concluded. For a transcript of the Independent Policy Forum, Immigration Wars: Open or Closed Borders for America?, featuring Peter Laufer and Benjamin Powell (9/21/05), see http://independent.org/events. Benjamin Powell, Director of the Independent Institute s Center on Entrepreneurial Innovation, addresses the Independent Policy Forum. New Book: New Book Examines the Crisis Since 9/11 (continued from page 1) the federal takeover of airport security, the massive increase in defense and other government spending, and the carnage in Afghanistan and Iraq wrought by leaders unaccountable for their costly and deadly mistakes. Higgs paints a bleak picture, showing how America s political leaders in the name of crisis management have discarded many of the checks and balances created to thwart potential abuses of government power, spent additional billions of dollars on programs unrelated to national security, trampled civil and economic liberties and due process at home, and pursued reckless military adventures that have needlessly killed thousands of innocents abroad. If George Orwell were alive today, he would not be surprised, but he would have plenty of fresh raw material for his continuing analysis of Newspeak, writes Higgs in the book s introduction. To listen to political leaders pronouncements at any time requires a strong stomach, but during the past four years the challenge has often been greater than I could bear. How anyone can actually admire these people surpasses my powers of comprehension. To purchase Resurgence of the Warfare State, see http://independent.org/store/book_detail. asp?bookid=60. Praise for Resurgence of the Warfare State Robert Higgs provides a top-notch analysis of how the crusade for global democracy abroad and the related growth in the surveillance state at home threaten freedom and constitutional government. Ron Paul, U.S. Congressman In his very powerful and incisive book, Robert Higgs is a prophet who deserves honor and more importantly, urgent attention. This book is well worth reading for anyone seeking a more peaceful, safer and freer world. Daniel Ellsberg, author, Secrets: A Memoir of Vietnam and the Pentagon Papers

4 The INDEPENDENT The Independent Institute in the News Independent Institute Research Fellow Benjamin Powell on MSNBC. Opinion: Alvaro Vargas Llosa s New Republic article critiquing Argentineborn, Cuban revolutionary Che Guevara continues to generate attention and was most recently republished in Canada s National Post. Vargas Llosa also wrote on Brazil s President Lula da Silva for Providence Journal as well as on Social Security reform for San Diego Union-Tribune. William Watkins wrote an article on the constitutionality of the Gonzales v. Raich case for Chronicles magazine as well as an op ed on the role of the Supreme Court for South Carolina s Herald-Journal. Benjamin Powell wrote several pieces on free trade, outsourcing, California s budget crisis, telecom mergers, and housing prices for Christian Science Monitor, Sacramento Business Journal, San Francisco Business Times, Phoenix Business Journal, East Bay Business Times, Columbus Business First, Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal, and Orlando Business Journal. Gabriel Roth s op ed on state-financed roads was published in Providence Journal, East Valley Tribune, Scottsdale Tribune, Phoenix Business Journal, Kokomo Tribune, Wilmington s News-Journal, and Salina Journal. Ivan Eland s piece on privatizing airport security was placed with Seattle Post-Intelligencer, San Diego Union-Tribune, and East Bay Business Times. He also wrote on foreign policy for Chronicle of Higher Education. Research Director Alex Tabarrok wrote on private governments for Washington Examiner, Research Analyst Anthony Gregory s piece on the FBI and ACLU ran in Chicago s Star, Pierre Lemieux wrote a piece on the price of oil for Financial Post, and Wendy McElroy continues her weekly column with Fox News. Broadcast: William Watkins discussed recent changes in the Supreme Court, including the death of Chief Justice Rehnquist and the nomination of John Roberts, on several radio programs including KPCC Air Talk, a National Public Radio affiliate in Los Angeles. Senior Fellow Alvaro Vargas Llosa talked with John Batchelor on the ABC Radio Network about revolutionary Che Guevara. Research Analyst Gabriel Gasave was interviewed on Sin Fronteras, a television news program in Buenos Aires, on Che Guevara; Wendy McElroy was a guest on KNEW s Jeff Katz Show in San Francisco; Ivan Eland discussed the war on terror on Wisconsin Public Radio s Ben Mehrens Show ; and Benjamin Powell was interviewed on immigration and border policy on KGO s Gene Burns Show in San Francisco. Additional Print Highlights: S. Fred Singer was interviewed in a syndicated article by Bill Steigerwald on global warming and climate policy; Dallas Morning News, Puerto Rico s El Nuevo Dia, and Miami Herald cited Alvaro Vargas Llosa on Latin American issues; Economic Affairs reviewed Vargas Llosa s Liberty for Latin America; Weekly Standard reviewed Restoring Free Speech and Liberty on Campus by Donald Downs; and several research fellows were quoted in Raleigh Metro, PR Week, Dallas Morning News, San Francisco Examiner, Reuters, New York Daily News, Christian Science Monitor, Puerto Rico s Claridad and El Nuevo Dia, Canada s Globe and Mail, New York Times, State, and Miami Herald. Millions of Impressions 100 80 60 40 20 0 Print Media Impressions FY2002 FY2005 FY2002 FY2003 FY2004 FY2005 Media coverage of the Independent Institute s program continues to increase at a rapid rate, with articles and print citations nearly doubling from 2004 to 2005.

The INDEPENDENT 5 The Independent Review Privatization in Central and Eastern Europe The Fall 2005 issue of The Independent Review addresses road transportation and eminent domain, privatization in Latin America and Eastern Europe, and other important and timely topics. Roads and Eminent Domain According to conventional wisdom, road transportation would be highly inefficient without the government s power of eminent domain because property owners could refuse to sell their property at the government s asking price. According to Independent Institute Senior Fellow Bruce Benson (Florida State University), however, there are strong grounds for thinking that private, for-profit road companies would have fewer problems with holdouts and few problems as severe as that of government failure in road transportation. Benson presents his findings in the fall issue s lead article, The Mythology of Holdout as Justification for Eminent Domain and Public Provision of Roads a rigorous article that will appear in the forthcoming Independent Institute book, Street Smart: Competition, Entrepreneurship, and the Future of Roads, edited by Gabriel Roth. Benson makes three main arguments. First, he argues that even if eminent domain is necessary to obtain right-of-way properties, the state can purchase and then transfer the land to private entities. The existence of holdouts, in other words, does not mean that the government must own, build, or operate roads. Second, Benson argues that the holdout problem is not as severe for private entities as for the government. Private entities typically act more quickly than government and can pay more for a property than its assessed value. These differences greatly weaken the rationale for eminent domain. Third, Benson argues that when governments invoke eminent domain, the consequence is often government failure. The Fifth Amendment s public-use requirement has been relaxed. So too has the standard for just compensation; governments are biased to systematically undervalue the properties they can acquire through eminent domain. (See The Independent Review, Fall 2005, at http://independent.org/publications/tir.) Privatization and Popularity The sale of state-owned enterprises to the private sector has resulted in increased economic efficiency i.e., the reallocation of scarce capital and labor to better meet human needs and, as a consequence, has increased standards of living. But not all privatizations are created equal. When privatization is not accompanied by other classical liberal reforms such as the implementation of the rule of law, the results can fall short of the potential. Two articles in the fall issue examine disappointments regarding privatization in Latin American and Eastern Europe. A 2002 poll of more than 18,000 Latin Americans revealed that about 70 percent of respondents believed that privatization had not been good for their countries, notes Mary Shirley (Ronald Coase Institute) in Why Is Sector Reform so Unpopular in Latin America? Shirley found that the reason for the unpopularity of privatization had little to do with its economic effect on most people. The privatization of infrastructure, for example, had resulted mostly in better financial and operating performance, extended coverage and improved access, and generally better services. Job losses didn t seem to answer the question, The Independent Review, Fall 2005 either: Where layoffs were large, a significant percentage of the unemployed were reemployed in the same sector within five years: 45 50 percent in Argentina and 80 90 percent in Mexico, Shirley writes. The main reason that Latin Americans have looked unkindly toward privatization and other sector reforms, according to Shirley, may (continued on page 7)

6 The INDEPENDENT Garvey Fellowship Winners Garvey Fellowship Faculty Prize Winners (left to right) Daniel Pellerin, Christoph Sprich, and David Mitchell. Faculty Prize Winners First Prize ($10,000) Daniel Pellerin Assistant Professor of Political Science University of California, Davis Second Prize ($5,000) Christoph Sprich Lecturer, University of Frieburg, Germany Third Prize ($1,500) David T. Mitchell Visiting Assistant Professor of Economics St. Mary s College of California Student Prize Winners First Prize ($2,500) Alex Binz Highline Community College Second Prize ($1,500) Jeffrey Bergman University of Chicago Law School Third Prize Tied ($500 each) Alexander Jech University of Notre Dame Andrew Kashdan George Mason University Since 1972, the Olive W. Garvey Fellowships contest has rewarded college and university students for their scholarship on economic and personal freedom. Two years ago, the Independent Institute expanded the contest to include untenured college teachers. This year, contestants were asked to submit an essay on the quote by Nobel Laureate economist F. A. Hayek, The great aim for the struggle of liberty has been equality before the law. The essays were judged by a panel of three scholars: Thomas DiLorenzo (Loyola University), Gerald Gunderson (Trinity College), and Fred Foldvary (Santa Clara University). Entries were received from students and faculty in 46 U.S. states and 37 countries, including Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Israel, New Zealand, Peru, and Italy. The hard work of these students and teachers will foster a better understanding and appreciation of the foundations of peace, prosperity, and freedom. In addition to the cash fellowship prizes, these recipients of the Garvey Fellowship will receive assistance in getting their articles published and a two-year subscription (8 issues) to The Institute s quarterly publication, The Independent Review: A Journal of Political Economy. To read the complete text of the winning essays, see http://independent.org/students/ garvey/winners2004-2005.asp. The following is an excerpt from Alex Binz s first place Garvey Fellowship Student Essay entitled Liberté and Egalité against Fraternité : Redistribution and egalitarianism were rampant during the first half of the eighteenth century, especially in France. They are equally prevalent today. Just as Bastiat confronted Lamartine for his misguided policies, so must classical liberals of this century challenge the orthodoxy of material equality. The natural order of society is threatened by the artificial order offered by egalitarianism, and true justice is threatened by the ideals of social justice. Frederich Hayek never spoke truer words than when he declared that the great aim in the struggle for liberty is equality before the law. But if we are to cry, as the French revolutionaries, Vive la republique! we must recognize the full implications of the republican philosophy (continued on page 7)

The INDEPENDENT 7 Garvey Fellowship Winners (continued from page 6)... and the nature of our opposition. Politics may make strange bedfellows, but it makes stranger enemies; for the republic s greatest enemies are those who believe themselves to be its friends. They desire the same republican institutions of justice and equality, but believe that classical liberalism doesn t go far enough to promote the ideal of fraternity. They desire perfect equality for all, but support policies that conflict with true legal equality. They perceive injustice in the vast disparity of wealth, but launch crusades against the cause of that disparity: human liberty. Garvey Fellowship Student Prize Winners (left to right) Alex Binz, Jeffrey Bergman, Alexander Jeck, and Andrew Kashdan. The Independent Review: Privatization in Central and Eastern Europe (continued from page 5) stem from deeply rooted and widely generalized distrust of market forces and government safeguards. Shirley hypothesizes that many Latin Americans lament the fact that even when consumers have gained from privatization, politicians and their cronies have made much bigger gains. In other words, people feel that the privatizations and reforms have not been conducted with sufficient transparency or fairness. If this is the case, then the cure is not to stop privatization and sector reform which have benefited all but the disenfranchised government bureaucrats but to initiate meaningful political and legal reform to end cronyism so that no one benefits unfairly. In the early 1990s, the new leaders of central and eastern Europe embarked on an even larger program of privatization than did Latin America s leaders. Their primary goal was to transform their economies from socialist to capitalist. However, as economist Svetozar Pejovich explains in On the Privatization of Stolen Goods in Central and Eastern Europe, privatization of state-owned enterprises has slowed down, rather than hastened, the transition toward a free-enterprise, private-property economy. This relative failure, writes Pejovich, can be attributed to three factors: the influence of neoclassical economics, the absence of decommunization, and the unwillingness of the new elite in the region to recognize and enforce the right of ownership in state-owned assets. The Western neoclassical economic advisors to central and eastern Europe emphasized the importance of macroeconomic stability, privatization, and price liberalization, Pejovich explains, but they neglected two prerequisites for large-scale entrepreneurship and investment: credible private-property rights and the enforcement of contracts. This omission was especially important because communist-era politicians and bureaucrats retained positions in the government, Pejovich argues: Given their habits and customs of the past, former Communists, although not always intentionally, are favoring policies that attenuate private-property rights and increase regulations. Finally, governments have failed to transfer the proceeds from the sale of state-owned assets to their rightful owners. Some of the proceeds were used to shore up pension funds; some to subsidize bankrupt companies; some were deposited in state-controlled development banks; some were used to balance government budgets. Not all reform efforts in central and eastern Europe have stalled, however. Pejovich lauds the policies of Czech President Vaclav Klaus (continued on page 8) New Publications & Events: www.independent.org To Order Anytime: 1-800-927-8733

8 The INDEPENDENT Exceptional Tax Benefits This Year Only for Exceptional Gifts Before Year-end On September 23, President Bush signed into law the Katrina Emergency Tax Relief Act of 2005 (KETRA), which waives the usual deductibility limits on charitable gifts. The Act s provisions apply to cash gifts made by individuals for any charitable purpose to any public charity (with two exceptions, neither of which apply to the Independent Institute, a fully qualified 501(c)(3) organization). For individual donors, this means that no gifts made to the Independent Institute between Aug. 28, 2005 and Dec. 31, 2005 will be subject to the 50% annual charitable deduction limitation, nor will the deduction be reduced if your income is over $146,000 and is subject to the 3% phase-out for itemized deductions. This presents a unique opportunity to direct more of your own money into advancing a truly positive effort our shared goal of the CHARITY NAVIGATOR freer society our Founders envisioned. We hope you will consider a larger than usual gift to the Independent Institute this year, or make a contemplated gift before Dec. 31 to take advantage of these additional current tax savings. As with all such decisions, you will want to consult with your tax advisor to review the implications for your personal situation. And you can rest assured that your gift to the Independent Institute is deployed efficiently and effectively. As documented by Charity Navigator, the premier independent charity evaluator, nearly 86 of every dollar goes directly to support Institute programs, earning us the highest 4-Star Rating and placing us in the top 10% of all leading policy organizations. We hope you can take advantage of this opportunity to target more of your own assets into a cause you care about! To learn more about KETRA, or to discuss making your gift, please contact John Campbell, Development Director, at 510-632-1366, ext. 114, or jcampbell@independent.org. NON-PROFIT ORG US POSTAGE PAID COLUMBUS, OH PERMIT #2443 100 Swan Way Oakland, California 94621-1428 CHANGE SERVICE RE QUEST ED The Independent Review (continued from page 7) and Estonian Prime Minister Mart Laar, who grasped the importance of establishing the rule of law, credible private-property rights, and free exchange for fostering economic progress. To subscribe to The Independent Review: $28.95/year, $54.95/2-years, go to www.independent.org/store/tir/subscriptions.asp. Subscribe Free! The Light house Stay abreast of the latest social and eco nom ic issues in the weekly email newsletter of The Independent Institute. Insightful analysis and commentary New publications Upcoming events Current media programs Special announcements Subscribe today by sending an email to lighthouse@independent.org