Harding Institute for Freedom and Democracy

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The Harding Institute for Freedom and Democracy is a Washington, D.C.-based think tank that describes itself on its website as believing "in American ingenuity, a special role for America in the world, the manifest destiny of the American dream, and the importance of American leadership in the cause of freedom and liberty."[1] The Institute is headed by neoconservative M. Thomas Eisenstadt, who serves as a Senior Fellow.[2]

The domain name for the think tank's website was registered in early November 2007 by an internet registration company based in Pennsylvania, according to Joker.com.[3] The website predated this as a blog posting on the group's website states that "Due to a hard-drive crash, we've had to rebuild the website from scratch. Apologies to everyone who has contributed over the years, but sadly it may take some time to reconstruct the archives."[4]

As of June 2008, the Harding Institute for Freedom and Democracy is not listed with Guidestar.org as a U.S.-based 501(c)3 non-profit group.

Funding

A blog posting from January 2008 states that funding from the Harding Family Trust will make it possible for the institute to move into a new office.[5]

Personnel

Staff

Advisory Board

Contact

On its website the group provides no office or postal address or phone of fax numbers. It states that this is "for security reasons" and only provides an email and web address.[6]

Email: info AT hardinginstitute.org
Website: http://www.hardinginstitute.org

Articles and Resources

Sources

  1. "The Harding Institute for Freedom and Democracy", Harding Institute for Freedom and Democracy, accessed February 2008.
  2. ."The Harding Institute for Freedom and Democracy: Staff", accessed February 2008.
  3. "Hardinginsistitute.org", accessed February 2008.
  4. "News", November 2, 2007 post, accessed February 2008.
  5. "News", January 10, 2008, accessed February 2008.
  6. "The Harding Institute for Freedom and Democracy: Contact", accessed February 2008.

Related SourceWatch Articles

External Articles