The following are some links on freedom-related issues which I have found useful.
Naturally, I can't guarantee their accuracy or claim to agree with everything
they may say, but they are among the best freedom-oriented sites which I have
found.
Organizations
Advocates for Self-Government.
An organization emphasizing a personal approach to the advocacy
of liberty. Features "the world's smallest political quiz."
Alliance for Separation of School and
State. Like Advocates for Self-Government, this was started by
Marshall Fritz; it is an educational organization whose purpose is
nicely summarized in its name. It tends toward a Catholic Christian
approach.
Cato Institute. One of the
leading free-market think tanks.
The Drug Reform Coordination Network.
Not a legalization organization, but rather seeks to reduce the abuses
of the War on Drugs.
EFF Effector.
The newsletter of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which fights for
civil liberties in the area of computers and electronic communications.
Free China Movement page.
The Chinese Communist government doesn't want Web users to know about
its many human rights violations, such as its imprisonment of Lin Hai
for communicating with the outside world. But can it wall off a whole
world and keep its people in ignorance?
Institute for Humane Studies.
IHS assists undergraduate and graduate students who have a special
interest in individual liberty.
Independent Institute,
a free market think tank which was recently (2000) the target of a smear
campaign by Oracle Corporation.
Institute for Justice.
An organization which fights legal battles for freedom, with a much
sounder philosophical base than the ACLU.
The Objectivist Center, formerly called the
Institute for Objectivist Studies.
A foundation for the exploration and advancement of the Objectivist
philosophy.
Reason Magazine. A professionally
produced libertarian magazine, generally containing a great deal of
useful information.
World Net Daily.More conservative
than libertarian, and sometimes annoying in its use of buzzwords, but
still a good source of alternative news.
Homeschooling
StrongBrains -- Objectivist-oriented page on education.
townhall.com: A conservative site
with everything from free-speech advocates to Ann Coulter's bizarre
accusations.
Songs of Freedom. If you're here because you're
interested in freedom, you might want to give my own survey of pro-freedom
songs a look.
waco93.com. This has a collection
of useful links related to the federal government's atrocity in Waco.
I do not recommend wetheliving.com. As of this writing (May 9, 2002),
it represents some of its mail archives as being password protected, when in fact
they are just a couple of obvious mouse clicks away without any password.
Update (June 2, 2005): It looks as if they have password-protected
their archives since then. I haven't had a chance to check
carefully.