Volume 9, Issue 11: March 12, 2007: The
Lighthouse
“Enlightening Ideas for Public Policy”
Volume 9, Issue 11: March 12, 2007
In this week’s issue:
1) U.S. Should Fix Blemishes on Human
Rights Record
2) “The Great Global Warming Swindle”
3) The Tragedy of Modern Education
4) Independent Institute Seeks
Development Director



U.S. Should Fix Blemishes on Human
Rights Record
In the wake of post-9/11 measures, the
U.S. record on human rights abuses
leaves much to be desired. This is true
even if the latest critic to say so is
the repressive government of China,
according to Ivan Eland, director of the
Independent Institute’s Center on Peace
and Liberty. Unlike in China, such
abuses are illegal in the United States.
The Military Commissions Act, for
example, “is clearly unconstitutional,”
writes Eland in a new op-ed.
“The Constitution clearly states that
the writ of habeas corpus shall not be
suspended, except in times of rebellion
or invasion -- neither of which applies
in this case. In addition, no exception
is made for non-citizens or persons held
by the U.S. government outside U.S.
territory�. If habeas corpus can be so
denied, the U.S. government can kidnap
people off the streets anywhere in the
world, declare them ‘enemy combatants,’
and hold them secretly and indefinitely
without being charged, having access to
legal counsel, being able to challenge
their detention, and having a trial.”
Habeas corpus protections are needed not
because terrorists should be accorded
courtesy. Rather, they’re needed
precisely because the government can
make mistakes, interning people later
proven to be innocent -- as has happened
at Guantanamo Bay, Eland argues. “What
is supposed to make America unique is a
government divided into independent
branches, which scrutinize and constrain
each other’s power,” Eland concludes.
“Unfortunately, that system of checks
and balances has now been seriously
eroded.”
“China Returns Fire on U.S. Human Rights
Abuses,” by Ivan Eland (3/12/07)
The Emperor Has No Clothes: U.S. Foreign
Policy Exposed, by Ivan Eland
Center on Peace & Liberty (Ivan Eland,
Director)



“The Great Global Warming Swindle”
Atmospheric scientist Dr. S. Fred
Singer, author of Hot Talk, Cold Science
(The Independent Institute), is one of
many skeptics of the so-called “global
warming consensus” featured in the new
documentary, “The Great Global Warming
Swindle,” which aired last week on
British television. The documentary is
unlikely to receive anywhere near the
amount of press coverage in the United
States garnered by Al Gore’s
Oscar-winning documentary, “An
Inconvenient Truth.” But that imbalance
is at least partly corrected by the
British documentary’s having been posted
on the former Veep’s glorious invention,
the Internet (or Internets, plural, for
those now living in the White House).
Science, it should go without saying,
has little do with “consensus,” as the
tragic case of Galileo should have made
clear. Closer to our own day, belated
acceptance of such challengers of
orthodoxy as earth scientists Alfred
Wegner, J. Harlan Bretz, and Sir Gilbert
Walker demonstrates the scientific value
of keeping one’s mind open to dissenting
views.
The new British golabl warming
documentary, The Great Gloabl Warming
Swindle
A related interview of Dr. Singer,
undertaken in conjunction with a PBS
Nova and Frontline documentary.
Hot Talk, Cold Science: Global Warming’s
Unfinished Debate, by S. Fred Singer
(The Independent Institute)
“States of Fear: Science or Politics?”
DVD featuring Michael Crichton, along
with Bruce Ames, Sallie Baliunas,
William Gray, and George Taylor



The Tragedy of Modern Education
Students today are more likely get their
news from watching Jon Stewart on Comedy
Central than from reading a newspaper.
They are even less likely to attempt to
develop their minds by reading books in
their spare time -- which is tragic,
because when it comes to advancing one’s
knowledge, whether of facts or of
values, books are the where the action
is. The contemporary obsession with
entertainment over enlightenment -- 
exemplified the educational system’s
dilution of school curricula with
references to the latest trends in pop
culture -- is rat poison to the life of
the mind.
So too is the adversarial ethos not just
of students who are scornful (and
blissfully ignorant) of the peaks of the
West’s cultural heritage, but also of
many of their would-be educators,
especially the postmodernists among
them. The posturing is mere pretense
because, “shrill protestations aside,
they constitute the dominant ethos,
therefore the majority within the
[educational] system,” writes Jose Yulo.
The cure for the institutionalized
ignorance, argues Yulo, is for schools
to return to the concept of a core
curriculum based on the humanities (and
instruction in logic). Utilizing
cognitively appropriate texts, such a
curriculum would enable students to
better understand moral truths relevant
not only for our own era but for any
era. “Great words from past and present
can be evaluated by each institution and
tailored to fit each particular
circumstance,” Yulo continues. “By
showing students the substance behind a
solid core curriculum, selecting these
works with moral imagination in mind,
and fostering the inborn sense of
proportion and rectitude in each human
soul, educators engage in legitimate
teaching. This teaching allows students
to see for themselves what separates the
clarifying journey of elevation, from
the meandering, ultimately waylaid
descent into salon sophistry.”
“Tragedy and Comedy in Postmodern
Education,” by Jose Yulo (3/9/07)
Jose Yulo is on the faculty of the 2007
Liberty, Economy & Society Summer
Seminars for Students. Space for the
seminar is limited but still available.
Restoring Free Speech and Liberty on
Campus, by Donald Downs
Faulty Towers: Tenure and the Structure
of Higher Education, by Ryan Amacher and
Roger Meiners
The Diversity Myth: Multiculturalism and
Political Intolerance on Campus, by
David Sacks and Peter Thiel



Independent Institute Seeks Development
Director
The Independent Institute is currently
seeking an experienced development
professional with a strong commitment to
individual liberty to head up its
Development Department. The Development
Director has responsibility for
establishing, maintaining and developing
relationships with donors. Strategies
utilized include major gifts, planned
giving, annual campaigns, educational
events, direct mail, and Web-based
efforts.
The qualified candidate will be a
self-motivated, committed professional
with successful fund-raising experience
to assist us in our continued growth.
Candidates must possess four years of
development or fundraising experience at
a nonprofit organization and personal
commitment to free-market principles and
individual liberty.
For more information, see the full job
listing. Please DO NOT reply to the
Lighthouse e-mail address.



THE LIGHTHOUSE, edited by Carl P. Close,
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