Relevant:
|
2012-09-21 — reuters.com
``I've found it rare for men in Hess's position to admit being "propagandists for the rich" to themselves, much less the wider world. But perhaps because he refrained from airing his fellow propagandists' dirty laundry, Hess never faced the coordinated public relations backlash you'd expect against such an apostate today. Of all his wanderings off the reservation, Hess engendered the most suspicion in the sartorial realm, according to Jerome Tuccille, an old friend whose amusing memoir of the anarchocapitalists' wartime coalition-building adventures, It Usually Begins With Ayn Rand, is packed with vivid descriptions of Hess in various "Field Marshal of the Revolution" ensembles:''
read original article |
permalink to this page |
discuss |
Comments: Be the first to add a comment |