Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 43. Chapters: Libertarian publications, Underground press, Tax Freedom Day, Samizdat, Adbusters, Spiked, The Radical Therapist, Western Standard, Next Magazine, Antiwar.com, The Orange County Register, Brighton Voice, LewRockwell.com, The Freeman, Mother Earth News, World's Smallest Political Quiz, ArtCrimes, Reason, NOLA Express, Kaleidoscope, Creation Books, Liberty, The Independent, Oregon Commentator, Cyclops, The Use of Knowledge in Society, Liberty and Power, Pittsburgh Fair Witness, Hippies, The Great Speckled Bird, The Inquisition, Garfield Thomas Watertunnel, Left and Right: A Journal of Libertarian Thought, Tuesday's Child, Journal of Libertarian Studies, The Libertarian Forum, Liberty Watch, Counterpoise, Samisdat, Inquiry Magazine, Rebirth, Libertarian Review, The Organ, Richmond Chronicle, Omaha Kaleidoscope, Liberator Online. Excerpt: The underground press were the independently published and distributed underground papers associated with the counterculture of the late 1960s and early 1970s in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, and other western nations. The term "underground press" is also used to refer to illegal publications under oppressive regimes, for example, the samizdat and bibu a in the Soviet Union and Poland respectively. This movement borrowed the name from previous "underground presses" such as the Dutch underground press during the Nazi occupations of the 1940s. The French resistance published a large and active underground press that printed over 2 million newspapers a month; the leading titles were Combat, Liberation, Defense de la France, and Le Franc-Tireur. Each paper was the organ of a separate resistance network, and funds were provided from Allied headquarters in London and distributed to the different papers by resistance leader Jean Moulin. Allied prisoners of war (POWs) published an...