Virginia League of the South Library
Why We Will Win by Dr. Michael Hill
Experience shows us that life is hard. It is hard for each individual in his day-to-day affairs. It is doubly difficult when men must act together to accomplish a corporate goal. Inevitably, problems will surface that threaten to rip apart an organization committed to any sort of serious accomplishments. How we handled these difficulties—as individual LS members and as an organization--will go a long way in determining whether we will win or lose.
Take Action: The Global Food Crisis by Dr. Michael Hill
For whatever reasons it has come about, the global food crisis (coupled with the global energy crisis) WILL have a big impact on your life. And this will probably be sooner rather than later.
The South As It's Own Nation DixieNet
The South as its own nation is more than powerful, populous, and prosperous enough to assume its place among the nations of the earth today. For the South, secession is the only practical, the only realistic, and the only moral choice.
Were the Anti-Federalists Wrong? by Wayne D. Carlson
In the great debates that occurred in each of the 13 Independent Republics, to consider the momentous question of rejection or ratification of the newly proposed Constitution in 1787, there were no small number of great and learned men that vehemently opposed, and warned against, the adoption of that document. History remembers them as the "Antifederalists.
The New Dixie Manifesto:States' Rights Will Rise Again...
by Dr. Michael Hill & Dr.Thomas Fleming
We believe it is time for the people of the Southern states to take control of their own governments, their own institutions, their own culture, their own communities and their own lives.
Back To Eden: From Wage Slave To Freeholder
by Franklin Sanders
In a county once covered with independent freeholders -- self-sufficient farmers and small business owners -- most people have become propertyless employees.
Living in an Imperial World by Dr. Karen Kwiatkowski
The republic is dead. Not sick, not dying, not failing, or in a gradual decline, not waiting to be resuscitated, but already stone cold dead.
Firearms, Freedom, and the Yankee Empire of Death by Thomas Moore
Yankees love to scoff at our so-called Southern “love affair with guns.” Certainly no one should become too enamored of his possessions or to any of the things of this world, including our cars, trucks, houses, riding mowers, and barbecue grills, with which it may be also said we have “love affairs.” But the Southern gun-owners I know don’t just love guns, they love life and they love freedom, which guns help protect.
Eminent Domain by Robert Mills
In recent decades, there has been growing concern about the manner in which some states and units of government exercise their power of eminent domain. Some governments appear inclined to exercise eminent domain for the benefit of developers or commercial interests, on the basis that anything that increases the value of a given tract of land is a sufficient public use.
|