Table of Contents:
If you encounter any difficulty using this document please let me know as soon as you notice. Contact information is at the bottom of this page.
I am happy to receive addresses of potential readers of Ender's Review who might like to receive a few trial issues and/or an invitation to subscribe. Or, if you prefer, please, send a link to this page or the index (which also has comprehensive source site links) to those you think might be interested.
Find all RSS feeds & e-mail lists on the Sign Up page –
or use this RSS feed for Ender's Review
![]()
"I can tell you what the Libertarian Party is today: it's built inside-out. For us—unlike the other parties—elections should not be the principle focus of our activities, they should be a test of how well we've done in the area we really should be concentrating on instead. Our objective is to change civilization from one that tolerates the beat-up-and-kill 'philosophy' of the Republicans and Democrats to one that respects, values, and defends individual liberty as a basic principle."
http://www.ncc-1776.org/tle2007/tle416-20070506-02.html
"Rep. Paul’s cause, however, is not exactly a return to the Republican party of Barry Goldwater: he is a true paleo-Republican in that he wants to go all the way back to the conservatism of Robert A. Taft. Here is a ten-term congressman from Texas who remembers what the Republican party used to stand for – limited government, the foreign policy of the Founders, and the preservation of our old Republic against the Scylla of domestic tyranny and the Charybdis of conquests abroad. "
http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=10947
"Coalitions like SaveNetRadio.org have been petitioning Congress for relief after the Copyright Royalty Board denied an appeal to reconsider its decision earlier this year on Internet radio fees. Today, two senators rode to their rescue."
"During the recent MSNBC Republican presidential debate, Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul made three profound points on U.S. foreign policy that the American people would be wise to heed. "
http://www.fff.org/comment/com0705d.asp
"Franklin's squad descended on Siler's home on July 8, 2004 on the pretext of serving a warrant for probation violations. Their real objective, however, was to rummage through the home in search of either money or contraband that could be used to justify seizing and forfeiting Siler's assets. The police ordered Siler's wife to take their son and leave; before doing so, however, she turned on a tape recorder, which captured roughly half of what turned into a two-hour torture session. "
http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2007/05/because-they-can-logic-of-torture-state.html
"I've written before that one of several reasons why I've come to believe David Ruttenberg is that after all of the entrapment, undercover operations, and harassment he has endured at the hands of the Manassas Park Police Department, the guy to this point has never been charged with a crime...."
http://www.theagitator.com/archives/027784.php#027784
"So the police were stealing maybe tens of thousands of dollars from the taxpayers by doing jobs other than those they were being paid for, declaring themselves to be, not subject to the law, but the law themselves! And this was good why? Well, because I come from a law enforcement family, I guess, and we stand to benefit from making everyone else bend over and take it."
http://www.gene-callahan.org/blog/2007/05/police-and-thieves.html
"Now, there were plenty of candidates on those stages who really were clutter: They don't have a chance to win and their messages are indistinguishable from the people who do have a shot. But it's telling that the Post didn't single out, say, Chris Dodd or Jim Gilmore. It singled out the two most anti-war and anti-establishment figures in the race, two men who clearly are alternatives to the frontrunners."
http://www.reason.com/blog/show/120094.html
"We must learn to achieve results by bypassing government. Government is so entwined in all aspects of our lives that every one of us is, to a greater or lesser degree, compromised. But it is precisely for that reason that we need to assist one another and proceed with some compassion. ... Noncooperation, civil disobedience, the pricking of conscience by calling to account, confronting those who are destroying and hurting others with the consequences of their actions and the disconnect between their alleged goals and their destructive means, social action – those should be the ways forward."
http://www.lewrockwell.com/snyder/snyder11.html
"A healthy society would be just and humane as well as free. That does not mean everyone would be equal in wealth, any more than they would be equal in height or beauty or athletic ability. It does mean that concern for one’s fellow man would be deeper and more widespread than one sees today. A healthy society would include widespread emotional health as well as freedom from coercion."
http://www.strike-the-root.com/71/allport/allport17.html
"I am not against nature or the preservation thereof. What I am against is the use of the state — the agent of institutionalized aggression — to advance the agenda of the conservation movement. It is imperative that the distinction be made between freedom and statism. While freedom involves property, prosperity, and free exchange, statism involves theft, plunder, and poverty."
http://www.mises.org/story/2539
"[O]ur relation with the state is not just against, and not just beyond, but against-and-beyond. The only autonomy we can have is an autonomy that moves against-and-beyond, with as much emphasis on the beyond as possible – getting on with our own project, but understanding that project as a movement against-and-beyond."
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=41&ItemID=12786
"E-gold's big mistake was to run this highly innovative non-bank bank with a toe-hold in the Land of the Free. Had they kept all their domiciles and offices and assets well outside Uncle's jurisdiction, they would have been harder to hobble. Some of their rivals are doing just that."
http://www.strike-the-root.com/71/davies/davies13.html
"It may be too late to save Iraq from a massive bloodbath, but the only hope remaining is to attempt to use a U.S. withdrawal to hammer out an agreement that would decentralize the Iraqi government, allow self-determination among the various groups, and create oil revenue sharing. This decentralization plan could take the form of a loose confederation of autonomous regions or even a partition into several states."
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1964
"All of the students had downloaded music illegally in the past, and their answers to the survey questions indicated that most intended to continue downloading in the future. It turns out not to matter whether the university or a student's parents believe that such music downloads are wrong; these norms were simply not absorbed by the students."
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070511-file-swapping-as-the-man-says-no-students-say-yes.html
"Given direct stakes in the fortunes of their company, KDHP worker-owners were not only able to wipe off the cumulative losses of 24 million US dollars run up by Tata Tea, within a year, but also register a post-tax surplus of 500,000 dollars as on Mar. 31, 2006. They also managed to declare a 14 percent dividend for its first year of operations. ... Initially, a cooperative model did not enthuse the workers since there were fears that it would lack professional management. But a plan was worked out combining worker participation with professional management. "
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=37480
"[W]hat we're seeing is the mellowing of the regime governing 'post-Soviet' Russia, from unalloyed totalitarianism into a superficially democratic form of authoritarian despotism, while the United States mutates from a republic into a quasi-Soviet corporatist police state. The pigs and farmers have become indistinguishable from each other. And the two nations they rule are being plundered by them in remarkably similar ways."
http://freedominourtime.blogspot.com/2007/05/planet-of-pig-men_11.html
"Ultimately, the real rationale for missile defense is to protect U.S. forces so they can engage in military intervention throughout the world to enforce a Pax Americana—a strategy of empire by another name. But such a strategy ignores the obvious: the result will be increased resentment of and animosity toward what is perceived by the rest of the world as an imperialist America."
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1966
"[O]n April 30, Posada filed a motion in federal court declaring that he continued to work for the CIA for more than 25 years. That puts him on the CIA's payroll when he engineered the terrorist airline bombing. In his motion, Posada asserted the right to present evidence of his CIA work as a defense to the perjury charges. The specter of Posada revealing the dirty deeds committed by the CIA when George H.W. Bush was director of the CIA was intolerable to Washington."
http://www.counterpunch.org/cohn05102007.html
"Of course, Orwell's Big Brother had a ruthless efficiency that's hard to imagine in a government today. But that completely misses the point. A sloppy and inefficient police state is no reason to cheer; watch the movie Brazil and see how scary it can be. You can also see hints of what it might look like in our completely dysfunctional “no-fly” list and useless projects to secretly categorize people according to potential terrorist risk. Police states are inherently inefficient. There's no reason to assume today's will be any more effective."
http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2007/05/is_big_brother_1.html
"In a great society, individuals matter only in so far as they compose the masses, and only then if they are tax paying, voting, white masses. A drone isn’t essential to a hive, but drones are. No colony recognizes that one of its own got eaten or squished and didn’t come home. If half of them didn’t come home, it would be noticed and there would be some changes made in quick order (not because any of them mattered as individuals, however). Until then, keep your head down and your shoulder to the plow, increase output, conserve and follow orders, all for the good of the tribe. "
http://www.strike-the-root.com/71/fontana/fontana13.html
"Paul Wolfowitz is now almost certain to get booted from the World Bank. Unfortunately, the World Bank itself will probably survive. … So what will Wolfowitz do with himself now that he is again disgraced? Obviously, this is why God made think tanks."
http://jimbovard.com/blog/2007/05/08/which-think-tank-for-wolfowitz/
"What Republicans stood for in the past was a sober realism about the limits of our power and our good intentions. That spirit is absent today. They act as though slogans are a substitute for strategy. What they claim as steadfast resolve looks more like blind obstinacy."
http://www.reason.com/news/show/120120.html
"A story catches your eye -- usually something buried beneath the 'big news' of the day -- and once again you're tumbled from your private concerns into a dreadful realization of where history has taken you: into a strange hybrid world of unfree freedom, where you can say what you want, do what you want -- unless those in power arbitrarily decide that you can't. In 99 cases out of 100, they'll leave you alone (as long as you're white and look non-threatening; if not, that ratio drops considerably). But this liberty is illusory; it no longer has a physical reality, or even a statutory one. It is now a 'gift' of the authorities, one which they can bestow -- or revoke -- according to their own, ever-shifting needs and desires."
"It is true that China is likely to become an even more formidable economic power than it is now. But is it likely to use this power to threaten the United States? The answer is no. And the basis for that answer is a burgeoning academic literature, written mainly by political scientists, that finds that the more free-market countries become, the more peaceable they become. "
http://antiwar.com/henderson/?articleid=10923
"People don't always respond to incentives in the ways you might predict. What distinguishes good economic thinking from bad is recognition of the subtle, creative, and often unforeseen ways that people respond to incentives. Ignoring the complex operation of incentives is a recipe for unintended consequences. ... The important lesson for policymakers is that regulations will almost always have unintended consequences, because creative people continually find ways to exploit margins of choice that were not considered by the regulators."
http://www.econlib.org/library/Columns/y2007/Whitmanincentives.html
"Researchers have produced new DNA evidence that almost certainly confirms the theory that all modern humans have a common ancestry. The genetic survey, produced by a collaborative team led by scholars at Cambridge and Anglia Ruskin Universities, shows that Australia's aboriginal population sprang from the same tiny group of colonists, along with their New Guinean neighbours."
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/05/070509161829.htm
"One word summarizes the greatest environmental, economic, and moral problem of this or any other age: waste. By waste I mean that which is thrown away with nothing in return, or consumed to no benefit. Using resources unproductively is waste."
http://partialobserver.com/article.cfm?id=2252
"The cycle of alarmist predictions is now well established. Not so long before some new UN moot on What To Do About the Weather, a prominent fearmonger like James Hansen or Michael Mann will make a tremulous statement about the accelerating tempo and dimensions of the warming crisis. The cry is taken up by the IPCC, (and in the 1990s, by the Clinton/Gore White House), with the press releases headlined by the New York Times, with exactly the same intentional lack of critical evaluation as that newspaper's recycling of the government's lies about Saddam's weapons of mass destruction."
http://www.counterpunch.org/cockburn05122007.html
"I kind of like this outreach stuff. I propose that the NBA improve its talent pool by reaching out to one-legged dwarves with a weight problem. I’m serious. These constitute an untapped repository of athleticism. Clearly untapped, since there is not one overweight dwarf in the entire league. You think I’m kidding? Check out the numbers. The NBA doesn’t like to reveal the true figures, but they can be found. You can’t believe it’s a coincidence, can you? It’s discrimination. Only a right-wing fascist Nazi could deny it."
http://fredoneverything.net/GAO.shtml
"The bill, which the House passed and President Bush has threatened to veto, expands the federal government's involvement in prosecuting bias-motivated crimes by eliminating the requirement that victims be engaged in a federally protected activity such as voting. It also adds four new bias categories (gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, and disability) to the existing four (race, color, religion, and national origin)."
http://www.reason.com/news/show/120087.html
"As the imagery market becomes international, though, the competing demands of local governments may be more difficult to sort out. The issue is already becoming tricky for companies like Google that offer popular products using satellite imagery. Google has already faced requests from Vice President Cheney to remove images of his residence and from the Indian government to blur sensitive military sites."
"Hearing George W. Bush constantly invoke freedom is like hearing Bill Clinton praise chastity. The Bush team has made so many power grabs at home and bankrolled so many dictators abroad. And yet Bush still seems to believe that citing freedom can sanctify everything he does and every war he intends to wage. ... 'Open the door to freedom! Put a strong man at the helm!' was the campaign slogan for National Socialist candidates in the 1932 Reichstag elections. The fact that Nazi politicians invoked freedom to win votes did nothing to protect people from their subsequent tyranny."
http://www.fff.org/freedom/fd0702c.asp
"In one of those quirky coincidences in which history abounds, there was one key benchmark that all three of these Establishment factions agreed upon: the passage of an 'oil law' granting foreign companies feasting rights to Iraq's staggeringly rich energy resources."
http://www.chris-floyd.com/Articles/Articles/
Progress_Report%3A_Redefining_Forward_Motion_in_Iraq/
"Satisfaction — it’s always roughly just about one Friedman Unit away, in the realm of national policy. Don’t believe it. Don’t buy it. Don’t ever again trust anyone who fails to question it, because they are right now indicating with their words and deeds that they would rather see more people die than tell a socially awkward truth. To hell with ‘em."
http://www.bradspangler.com/blog/archives/628
"I am struck by how many advocates of dicatorship or foreign aggression have recently received federal laurels. Bush presented the National Humanities Award to the Hoover Institution last November, whose star columnist Thomas Sowell recently suggested the need for a military coup. "
http://jimbovard.com/blog/2007/05/09/another-award-for-a-tyrant-apologist/
"The Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution has been used to justify a wide expansion of government power, from antidiscrimination laws to drug prohibition to a ban on guns near schools. In objecting to use of the Commerce Clause for such remote purposes, some constitutionalists rely on a particular historical interpretation of both the Clause and the Constitution as a whole."
http://www.fee.org/in_brief/default.asp?id=1296
"Giuliani is a media creation. Giuliani was unknown until in search of name recognition he staged a stormtrooper assault on the financial firm Princeton/Newport involving fifty federal marshals outfitted with automatic weapons and bulletproof vests. On another occasion he had two New York investment bankers hauled off their trading floor in handcuffs. Giuliani’s victims had done nothing and were exonerated. But Giuliani’s media stunts served to turn public sentiment against white-collar defendants. "
http://www.lewrockwell.com/roberts/roberts208.html
"Still, to understand the events of that extraordinary time, it's necessary to appreciate the almost cultlike atmosphere of power worship and war hysteria that, by the spring of 2007, had taken hold of both the Bush administration and many leading intellectuals."
http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/opinion_columnists/article/0,2777,DRMN_23972_5525286,00.html
"While the Lincoln presidency and the War Between the States did not lead to an immediate flood of new executive orders, it did help to set a longer-term precedent of concentrating powers in the executive branch. When the Progressive Era came to the United States, one can say that Lincoln helped to 'set the table' when the intellectuals and political classes began to demand that government be centralized and that the presidency be strengthened."
http://www.fff.org/freedom/fd0701e.asp
"The British had been trading in India since the early 17th century. But the commercial relationship changed towards the end of the 18th, as a new group of conservatives came to power in London, determined to make Britain the sole global power. Lord Wellesley, the brother of the Duke of Wellington and governor general in India from 1798 to 1805, called his new approach the Forward Policy. But it was in effect a project for a new British century. Wellesley made it clear he would not tolerate any European rivals, especially the French, and planned to remove any hostile Muslim regimes that might presume to resist the west's growing might."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,2076090,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=27
"Beyond the obscenity of sending more men and women to die -- and kill -- in the ungodly quagmire of a failed criminal enterprise, can we just point out here that increasing troops levels by tens of thousands from January 2007 to at least April 2008 is not a 'surge;' it is what used to be known in the English language as an 'escalation'."
http://www.chris-floyd.com/Articles/Articles/
Eternal_Return%3A_Burying_the_Real_Story_of_War/
"The US bombing of Cambodia remains a divisive and iconic topic. It was a mobilizing issue for the antiwar movement and is still cited regularly as an example of American war crimes. ... In the years since the Vietnam War, something of a consensus has emerged on the extent of US involvement in Cambodia. ... Previously, it was estimated that between 50,000 and 150,000 Cambodian civilians were killed by the bombing. Given the fivefold increase in tonnage revealed by the database, the number of casualties is surely higher."
http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?itemID=12814§ionID=44
"Another practice of the Union Army that is reminiscent of totalitarian regimes of the twentieth century was forced relocation of suspected dissenters. ... Plunder and pillage was also the Official Policy of the Lincoln regime from the start of the war.... Before being defeated in the Battle of Fredericksburg the Union Army occupied the town for a short while. Cisco quotes a Union Army officer as saying that 'the men had emptied every house and store of its contents, and the streets, as a matter of course, were filled with chairs and sofas, pianos, books, and everything imaginable'. . . ."
http://www.lewrockwell.com/dilorenzo/dilorenzo123.html
"Balanchine and Nureyev rated him the greatest dancer of the twentieth century, and he is generally acknowledged to have been the most influential dancer in the history of filmed and televised musicals. … His perfectionism was legendary as was his modesty and consideration towards his fellow artists...."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Astaire
"Just as it would be ridiculous to evaluate the authorship of Jean-Luc Godard or Howard Hawks by focusing strictly on the films that are relevant only to our so-called 'official' cultural indicators, like box office receipts, Academy Awards, and festival attendances, so too is it only sensible to realize that informed judgments cannot be made on the shapes, textures, and meanings of Welles' career, if all we have is a very limited pool of evidence."
http://www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/directors/03/welles.html
"In Munich Sophie met artists, writers and philosophers … important contacts for her concern with the Christian faith. Of foremost importance was the question of how the individual must act under dictatorship. "
http://www.jlrweb.com/whiterose/sophie.html
"One of the first country-rockers, Nelson experienced a creative renaissance at the outset of the Seventies. He formed the Stone Canyon Band, whose sweet country-rock sound anticipated the laid-back likes of the Eagles and Linda Ronstadt. One of the biggest hits of his career, 'Garden Party,' pointedly rejected the notion that he would allow himself to be relegated to a nostalgia act."
http://www.rockhall.com/inductee/ricky-nelson
"First, the U.S. Secretary of State called the Attorney General and demanded, 'What is this I hear about your drug people planning to raid some ... some commune or something out west?' ... After hearing what his State Department colleague had to say, the Attorney General called his subordinate, the DEA Man, and barked, 'Did you do any investigation? Do you have any idea who owns that place out there?' "
http://www.backwoodshome.com/columns/wolfe070507.html
"Rachel scowls, rubbing puffy hands over the swollen full-moon belly. 'But labor can go on for hours — or even days,' she notes. 'Especially when you’re lying down with feet in stirrups, pushing uphill,' the old woman acknowledges. 'That’s absurd,' Todd murmurs. 'Why not let gravity work?' Rachel shakes her head. 'That position was designed to benefit doctors, not women'."
http://news.mywebpal.com/news_tool_v2.cfm?show=localnews&pnpID=724&NewsID=804803
"Ayn Rand wrote four great novels.Anthem is the one too small to use as a doorstop. Unlike most people, my first taste of Rand was her non-fiction — specifically, The Virtue of Selfishness. But the first novel of hers I read, because it seemed less intimidating than the others, was Anthem."
http://wconger.blogspot.com/2007/05/listen-to-anthem.html
"Roberts’s deftly captures so much of the untidy business of emotions. Even though these space dwellers are living the dream that so many writers have limned out before, Roberts’ never relies on that ideal of only the best and brightest making it out of the Earth’s gravity well. His characters always remain fallible; they make poor decisions based on faulty information or suffer from despair or fail to repair generations worth of psychological damage."
http://www.bookslut.com/specfic_floozy/2007_05_011073.php
"Vaxadrin is the only weight loss pill recommended by Dr. Stephen T. Colbert, DFA. " video w/audio
http://www.comedycentral.com/motherload/?lnk=v&ml_video=86504
"With the surge of support for Congressman Ron Paul's Presidential campaign, Karl Rove has once again engineered a victory for the Republican Party establishment. In a bold move that has surprised many political analysts and pundits, President George W. Bush has announced his decision to have Congressman Ron Paul recalled to active duty by Executive Order #2008STOPRONPAUL."
http://www.thespoof.com/news/spoof.cfm?headline=s2i18509
"Aasif Mandvi reports from the Gates of Hell that Bush has really raised the bar on hollow threats. " video w/audio
http://www.comedycentral.com/motherload/?lnk=v&ml_video=86501
"The Onion News Network's Brian Scott reports on a popular new Gap clothing line hand-sewn by children overseas." video w/audio
http://www.theonion.com/content/video/gap_unveils_new_for_kids_by_kids
"Modern biological and physical science is, overwhelmingly, government-funded science. If your work, for whatever reason, does not appeal to the relevant funding agency's bureaucrats and academic review committees, you can forget about getting any money to carry out your proposal. Recall the human frailties I mentioned previously; they apply just as much in the funding context as in the publication context. Indeed, these two contexts are themselves tightly linked: if you don't get funding, you'll never produce publishable work, and if you don't land good publications, you won't continue to receive funding."
http://hnn.us/blogs/entries/38532.html
"The libertarian qua libertarian should especially be concerned about the statist causes and effects of political correctness, even though it sometimes presents itself in technically non-coercive ways. … Libertarians should speak the cold truth, even when we agree with the politically correct and even when we don’t. On the other hand, sometimes libertarians don't know how to put things in a way such that people will actually listen to them and consider them. Just because it's politically incorrect and true to say the US is a murderous empire and taxation is extortion doesn't mean it's a good way to open every conversation."
http://www.lewrockwell.com/gregory/gregory137.html
"One basic attitude I’ve learned from my family is that they were freethinkers. People stopped calling themselves that because it was so specifically German and the Germans were so hated during the First World War. And so, I am now honorary president of the American Humanist Association, which is just the very same thing. But you know, I don’t mock religion at all. It’s very helpful to people. "
http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/3178/kurt_vonneguts_last_interview/
"The three agencies involved at V-Tech shared responsibility like the three crones in the myth shared one eye — they fumbled so much as they passed it around that they dropped it. In short, what we have here is a full-throttle display of the Diminishing Utility of More Bureaucrats and Laws (DUMBEL), whereby what was everyone’s responsibility became no one’s job."
"One tactic frequently employed by alienating mothers is to try to provoke the father into blowing his top by interfering with his relationship with his children. When he does, mom pretends to be scared of 'his awful temper,' and gets the father’s already limited role in his daughter’s life reduced. Baldwin was foolish to play into Basinger's hands."
http://www.newswithviews.com/Sacks/glenn64.htm
"There's an increasing hubris among many elected officials that their job is so important, their time so much more precious than ours and their position in public life so privileged, that they can zip by us on the road, pushing everyday folk aside so they can get to their far more important destinations."
http://www.reason.com/news/show/120125.html
"Naturally, these resolutions breezed through the House and Senate, though I should note that they are non-binding and do not authorize or appropriate any taxpayer funds. Still, the resolutions clearly reflect Congress's inflated sense of government's contribution to society."
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=8235
"It seems like only yesterday that Bill Gates was touting Windows Vista as 'dramatically more secure than any other operating system released' and claiming that security researchers would be lucky to find one Vista flaw in a month. Yet, only yesterday, Microsoft released 19 critical patches, including six that dealt directly with holes inside IE7 running under Vista. Guess that pretty much covers the rest of the year."
http://weblog.infoworld.com/robertxcringely/archives/2007/05/the_age_of_inse.html
Find all RSS feeds & e-mail lists on the Sign Up page –
or use this RSS feed for Ender's Review
![]()
Each week immediately after Ender's Review is posted at Endervidualism a small plain text note (~5K) containing a few links to the web edition is sent to ERevNote subscribers.
If you know of prospective readers, please send them a link to this page, or alternately if you don't wish to e-mail them yourself, you can e-mail their addresses to me at this address: Tom@Endervidualism.com and I will send them a message with a link to the latest issue and invite them to subscribe.
Comments suggestions and discussion on the content and structure of this review are welcome at the ERevD: EnderReviewDiscussion Yahoo group. Feel free to jump in there at any time.
Alternately, you may elect to receive a copy of an HTML e-mail object (50 - 90K). Archives of the HTML e-mail are available to EnderReview members. You may join that group or subscribe to its mailing list.