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Free Republic is a moderated Internet forum and chat site for self-described conservatives, primarily within the United States. [1] It presents articles and comments posted pseudonymously by registered members, known as "Freepers", [ 2 ] using screen names.
Los Angeles Times v. Free Republic, 56 U.S.P.Q.2d 1862 (C.D. Cal. 2000), [1] is a United States district court copyright law case. Several newspapers sued the Internet forum Free Republic for allowing its users to repost the full text of copyrighted newspaper articles, asserting that this constituted copyright infringement.
Liberland, also known as the Free Republic of Liberland, is a micronation promoted by Czech right-libertarian politician and activist Vít Jedlička, [1] [2] who began claiming in 2015 an uninhabited stretch of floodplain on the Croatian bank of the Danube (known as Gornja Siga), to be the territory of a new independent country. Not recognized ...
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Reaganland received favorable reviews from The Guardian, [35] the Los Angeles Times, [36] and The New Republic. [37] Reaganland was one of the New York Times 100 Notables Books of 2020. [ 38 ] It was also subject to a scathing critique in Commentary by Steven F. Hayward , himself an author of a two-part volume on Reagan.
The Guardians of the Free Republics had sent letters to the governors of all 50 states urging them to resign immediately, and threatening them with arrest by the "Provost Marshal" if they did not resign from their corporate office and swear out a new oath to the "dejure republic"; this sparked a flurry of coverage in the news media. Two months ...
Guardians of the Free Republics, active around 2010, was a group based in the U.S. state of Texas regarded as being part of the sovereign citizen movement. The group was associated with Sam Kennedy (whose real name is Glenn Richard Unger ), a talk-show host, [ 1 ] and with Clive Boustred, a British-born conspiracy theorist living in California ...
Foer has written for Slate and New York magazine. [7] [8] He served as editor of American magazine The New Republic from 2006 until 2010, when he resigned—by his subsequent account, because of exhaustion over an interminable search for a patron who could save the magazine. [9] He returned as editor in 2012. [10]