Interview with Jerry Leeman: Today we bring you a story about a handful of fishermen rallying against a billion-dollar green industrial project, shady foreign corporations, and our own federal and state government. All are conspiring to generate a cash cow for...
Author: William B. Allen
William B. Allen was appointed chair-man of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights by President Reagan in August of 1988. He also serves as a professor of government at Harvey Mudd College in Claremont, California, where he specializes in political philosophy, American government, and jurisprudence. He has also taught at American University, the Universite de Rouen in France, and at St. John’s College. Chairman Allen is a member of the Academie de Montesquieu in Bordeaux and he has also been a member of the National Council on the Humanities and the California State Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. His published works include George Washington, A Collection; The Essential Antifederalist; and The Works of Fisher Ames.
Shot, Silenced, and Smeared: One Physician’s Ordeal with Abuse of Process and his Continued Fight to Clear his Name
By Greg Yates The criminal case People v Gosselin took place in a little red house structure known as the “Town of Highland Justice Court” located in Sullivan County, New York. This little red structure is also known as the Barryville Town Hall, where court is...
The Civil Rights Revolution
The hallmark of American citizenship ought to be equal rights of citizenship, without a special bracketing called “civil rights.”



