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Navigator, November, 2003

Navigator, November, 2003
Articles
The Party of Modernity
David Kelley
(11/1/2003)
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Commentaries
The Battle for Toleration--and Its Betrayal
Roger Donway
(11/1/2003)
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Reviews
One Hundred Film Classics
Robert James Bidinotto (11/1/2003)
The Ten Best Films--Objectively Speaking
Robert James Bidinotto (11/1/2003)
Browse all reviews

News
Arrivals and Departures at TOC
Laura Baratta departs and Linda Bloomer and David Shetterly arrive.
David Kelley, Stephen Hicks, and Michael Newberry Addresses Conference of New Art Foundation
The inaugural conference of the Foundation for the Advancement of Art, the mission of the organization is "to establish innovative representationalism as the alternative to postmodern art in the world's leading contemporary art museums."
Ed Hudgins Visits East-Central Europe
Edward Hudgins visited Prague in the Czech Republic, Vienna in Austria, and Budapest in Hungary on a trip sponsored by the Center for First Principles and by several businesses.
Explore the TOC Web Site
The TOC web site and what it has to offer.
Soundings, November 2003
Fighting corruption, Wordwatchers Corner, Lawyers fighting for welfare rights, Polls about beliefs show cultural split.
» More TAS News…

Recommended Readings
Suggested Readings: Modernity

Letters
Letters: Can there be an 'After Socialism'?
  (11/1/2003)
Letters: How Chile Was Saved
  (11/1/2003)


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Sightings, November 2003

Duncan Scott, restorer and distributor of the film classic We the Living, which is based on Ayn Rand's first novel, has announced that the movie will be released to theaters across North America throughout the winter of 2003 and the spring of 2004. It will be the first theatrical reissue of the film in fifteen years. "Thousands of people have discovered Ayn Rand since we last released We the Living," Scott said. "We know they won't want to miss an opportunity to see this unforgettable film on the big screen."

The re-release will begin with a showing at the 600-seat Egyptian Theater in Los Angeles on December 3, 2003. Scott will introduce the film and participate in the question-and-answer session with the audience after the screening. Following the Los Angeles event, We the Living will be shown in New York City, San Francisco, Chicago, and as many as twenty other U.S. and Canadian cities, according to Scott. Dates for future screening will be announced in November and will be available at the distributor's Web site, www.duncanscott.com.


Robert James Bidinotto, a contributing editor to Navigator and the editor of TOC's "Atlas Society" Web site, has started a Web site of his own, called ecoNOT.com, with the slogan "Individualism, not Environmentalism." His introduction to the site states: "Most people think of themselves as 'environmentalists.' But by that term, they mean something far different—and far more innocent—than do the most prominent philosophers, founders, and leaders of the modern environmentalist movement.

"Typically, the person who calls himself an "environmentalist" is really just a nature-loving "conservationist." Appreciating the earth's natural beauty and bounty, he is understandably concerned about trash, noise, pollution, and poisons. Still, he sees the earth and its bounty as resources--resources for intelligent human use, development, and enjoyment. At root, then, his concern for the earth is human-centered: he believes that this is our environment, to be used by people to enhance their lives, well-being, and happiness.

"But the leaders of the organized environmentalist movement have a very different attitude and agenda.

"Their basic premise is that human activities to develop natural resources constitute a desecration of nature--that, in fact, nature exists for its own sake, not for human use and enjoyment. By their theory of ecology, they see man not as the crowning glory of nature, nor even as just another part of 'the web of life'--but rather as a blight upon the earth, as the enemy of the natural world. And they see man's works as a growing menace to all that exists."


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