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Williamson Evers - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia "Williamson M. Evers is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution, located at Stanford University. Between July and December of 2003, he served as a senior education advisor to the Coalition Provisional Authority during the U.S. occupation of Iraq. ..." |
| Biography |
Hoover Institution "He was editor in chief (1976–80) of Inquiry Magazine, published by the Cato Institute, and managing editor (1986–91) of the Journal of Libertarian Studies. ... Additionally, Evers is a research fellow of the Independent Institute and an adjunct fellow of the Ludwig von Mises Institute." |
| Associations |
| Research Fellow, Hoover Institution |
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| Research Fellow, The Independent Institute |
| Adjunct Faculty, Ludwig von Mises Institute |
| Articles |
Bill Evers Goes Neocon, by Justin Raimondo, 15 Jan 2004 "It's funny, but Bill Evers used to be one of those libertarians who went around giving everyone else a purity test, and he often found them wanting. Back in the good old days, he used to write a column for Libertarian Vanguard, the newspaper of the Radical Caucus, ... in which he handed out kudos and judo chops to those that, in his view, deserved them." |
The Triumphant Return from Iraq of The Once-Great Libertarian, by Eric Garris, 15 Jan 2004 "Bill Evers was one of the intellectual guiding lights for our successful faction. He co-wrote the 1974 platform of the California Peace and Freedom Party ... At the 1975 national LP convention, Murray Rothbard and Bill Evers rewrote the party platform. The essential hardcore elements of the Rothbard-Evers platform continue today ..." |
| Writings |
Why Johnny Can't Add: The U.S. Department of Education continues to endorse "fuzzy math"--proof of fuzzy thinking, Hoover Digest, 2000 Related Topic: Educational Freedom "These federal recommendations are for kindergarten through high school, which has serious consequences. ... This whole controversy was born in bureaucratic overreach. The Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 forbids federally determined curricula. The U.S. Constitution doesn't authorize it, and the results have been harmful and foolish." |
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