The Freeman August 1953

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The Freeman August 1953 AMERICAN RIGHTS VS. TREATY LAW Frank E. Holman The Red Army's Bid for Power Pierre Faillant Articles and Book Reviews by F'rank H. Knight, Eudocio Ravines, Countess Waldeck, J. Donald Adams, Frank L. Howley, Max Eastman, Serge Fliegers, Edward Davison C~----------"""""--"'--_-_- -_-_-_- -_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_- --_-_-_-_-_- -_-_-_~L- -_- -_-~_ POLYESTER BOB EVERYWHERE./ Strong enough for a Marine's bullet-stopping port more colorful and attractive. Corru­ STYRENE MONOMER from l\10nsanto's Te: body armor, supple enough for a fisherman's gated or flat panels ... in a variety of colors ... City plant is an essential ingredient in pc casting rod ... that's polyester glass fiber that you can saw, nail, or drill. No painting, no ester resins. Perhaps this new material ( laminate. sash, no maintenance. Greenhouses with no serve yOll. Write for latest polyester report Here's a unique material that's going places danger of breakage, no whitewashing! your company letterhead. lVloNsANTO eRE ... into hundreds of products that will increase In industry, too: corrosion-resistant storage CAL COMPANY, Texas Division, Texas City, T your enjoyment of living. tanks; lightweight pipe; dent-proof machinery MOLDED BOATS that won't leak, rot or warp. housings; molded cab roofs for trucks and SPORT CARS, custom-lnade, if you wish-because agricultural machinery; illuminated displays. the materials are workable, without need of New products are appearing every day because costly metal-stamping dies. CONTEMPORARY the producers of glass fibers, the resin makers, FURNITURE you can leave outside. SWIMMING and custom molders are all cooperating to help POOLS molded in sections and shipped for manufacturers put a new production technique assembly! to work: the lamination of glass fibers with WEATHERPROOF BUILDING PANELS that admit polyester resins to produce large lightweight light to make your home, patio, garage or car- molded products. SERVING INDUSTRY ••• WHICH SERVES MANK' THE .d Fortnightly Our Contributors For FRANK E. HOLMAN began the practice of law in Seattle over forty years ago and has since dis­ Individualists tinguished himself as one of the outstanding reeman jurists in the country. From 1948-49 he was president of the American Bar Association. Editor IIENRY HAZLIIT Managing Editor FLORENCE NORTON EUDOCIO RAVINES is well qualified as an expert on totalitarian regimes in Latin America. Born in Peru, he was trained in Moscow in the same schools and methods as Mao Tse-tung, returned to this hemisphere to organize and direct the VOL. 3, No. 23 AUGUST 10, 1953 successful "Popular Front" in Chile. He broke Contents with the Communist Party soon after the Stalin-Hitler Pact. In our issue of May 4 Editorials ("Peronism at Bay") he wrote of Argentina's The Fortnight....... ; . .. .. .. ........ .. 797 internal disruption and Peron's flirtation with the Kremlin. The Imperial Ice-Cap Cracks. .. ................... .. 799 But Aggression Continues........................... 800 FRANK H. KNIGHT, profQssor emeritus of eco­ Psychology of E.P.T 801· nomics at the University of Chicago, is a fre­ Twilight of European Aid........................... 801 quent contributor to economic journals and the author of a number of books on economic The Controlist Mania............................... 802 history and theory. Let's Look at the Record. .......................... .. 802 PIERRE FAILLANT is a French newspaperman, at­ Articles tached to the Agence France Presse in Paris. "'·American Rights VB. "Treaty Law" FRANK E. HOLMAN 803 COUNTESS WALDECK is contributing a regular Peron, Would-Be "Liberator" EUDOCIO RAVINES 806 "Letter" from various countries of Europe. Her next Letter will come from Germany. The Fallacies in the "Single Tax" FRANK H. KNIGHT 809 The Red Army's Bid for Power PIERRE FAILLANT 812 J. DONALD ADAMS, editor and essayist, well Letter from Paris R. G. WALDECK 814 known for his "Speaking of Books" department What Americans Need to Know J. DONALD ADAMS 815 in the New York Times Sunday Book Review, divides his time between the literary and the The Gory Road HELEN WOODWARD 816 outdoor life, with the la,tter about to meet the former in a forthcoming book he is preparing Books and the Arts on the American Indian. Science for Science's Sake MAX EASTMAN 818 HELEN WOODWARD needs no introduction to The Defense of Liberty BEN RAY REDMAN 819 FREEMAN readers. She has been a frequent Unwilling Slaves ROBERT DONLEVIN 820 contributor of book reviews, articles, and fea­ tures since the magazine's first days. Eighth Army in Defeat FRANK L. HOWLEY 821 For the Record " JAMES RORTY 821 FRANK L. HOWLEY, Brigadier General Retired of Prolific and Unhappy EDWARD DAVISON 822 the U. S. Army, is Vice Chancellor of New York Trade and Aid N. 1. STONE 823 University and author of the recently published Your War for Peace. Sax and Htis 'Phone SERGE FLIEGERS 824 EDWARD DAVISON, poet, critic, and professor, has Poem just been named director of the Hunter College Castaway WITTER BYNNER 816 School for General Studies in New York. 'I ~ This Is What He Said................................ 813 Among Ourselves From Our Readers " 825 This past exceptionally hot and humid week has been brightened for us by the arrival of THE FREEMAN is published fortnightly. Publication Office, Orange, Conn. Editorial and three manuscripts from Europe: one on Ger­ General Offices, 240 Madison Avenue, New York 16, N. Y. Copyrighted in the United States, 1953, by the Freeman Magazine, Inc. Henry Hazlitt, President; Lawrence many's political and strategic situation by our Fertig, Vice President; Claude Robinson, Secretary; Kurt Lassen, Treasurer. currently roving contributor, William Henry Entered as second class matter at the Post Office at Orange, Conn. Rates: Twenty-five Chamberlin; another on West Germany's cents the copy; five dollars a year in the United States; nine dollars for two years; six dollars a year elsewhere. economy by Wilhelm Ropke; and from the The editors cannot be responsible for unsolicited manuscri~ts unless return postage or. Swiss journalist Peter Schmid a repor,t on better, a stamped, self-aadressed envelope is enclosed. Manuscripts must be typed double-spaced. North Africa. These will appear in early issues Articles signed with a name, pseudonym, Elr initials do. not necessarily represent the of the FREEMAN. Meantime we wish all our opinion of the editors, either as to substance or style. readers, wherever they may be, a pleasant ~.. Printed in U.S.A., by Wilson H. Lee Co., Orange, Connecticut. vacation. This desirable site at Iron Gate, Va., three miles from the important railroad center of Clifton Forge, includes eight buildings and sheds, water system with two tanks having a total capacity of 225,000 gallons, sprinkler system and metal fence. There's a fine-spring on the property, rated at 2,500,000 gallons per day, and if you need more, For Pin-Point Suneys a practically unlimited supply could be piped from a nearby mountain river. giving detailed information Most of the 150 men who formerly worked here on this and other available still live in town; other good workers available in sites, write to the Clifton Forge and surrounding country. Chesapeahe and Ohio C & 0 tracks adjoin property and U. S. Highway 220 Railway, Industrial is only two blocks away. Development . Department, Cleveland 1, Ohio, Detroit, Michigan, or Huntington, W. Va. Chesapeake and Ohio Railway SERVING: VIRGINIA • WEST .VffiGINIA • KENTUCKY • OHIO • INDIANA· MICHIGAN· SOUTHERN ONTARIO reemanTHE MONDAY, AUGUST 10, 1953 Neither the United States nor the United Nations The Fortnight have come out of the Korean war with increased prestige. On the contrary, both have lost prestige. And now that, at long last, we have our truce in The United Nations, whose very frown was going Korea, what have we gained by it? How much is to halt an aggressor, was not able (or willing?) it worth to us? The first answer will be that at with its armed might to halt the armies of a sup­ least we have gained an end to, or a suspension posedly second-rate and backward foe. It was the of, the blood-letting and the slaughter. American United States and the United Nations that were boys are no longer under fire, and American par­ put in the position of suing for a truce. Certainly ents can breathe easier. All this is true; and yet it was not our own tactics that were chiefly re­ the satisfaction that we can take in this truth is sponsible for dragging out the truce negotiations considerably blunted when we recall that we could for more than two years and 158 meetings by the have had all this simply by not blundering into a top truce teams. If the Chinese Communists had land war in Korea in the first place. had a sincere desjre for a truce, they could have got it in one day and in one meeting. It was vve The question must be put differently. What have who, over these two years, allowed ourselves to we gained as the result of more than three years be accused and insulted daily and kept yielding of war, of the expenditure of billions, of 140,000 one point after another. On the battlefield itself, American casualties? And to cthis the answer must the best we won was a stalemate; and we turned be doubtful. We "halted" this particular aggres­ even this into the appearance of defeat by ac­ sion, in the sense that we threw it back to ap­ cepting a screening of our prisoners by a "neu­ proximately its point of origin. We inflicted on the tral" commission of five nations including, in enemy, so far as we are able to calculate, con­ addition to India, the two Communist satellites, siderably more casualties than we and the South Poland and Czechoslovakia.
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