000216.html

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Wed, 16 Feb 2000 13:00:00 GMT
Harry Browne at WorldNetDaily - Why I am running for president. Harry was the Libertarian Party candidate for president in 1996. He is running again. His campaign website is harrybrowne2000.org. If I decide to continue voting, and I'm not at all sure that I will, the Libertarian Party candidate will almost surely get my vote. The Libertarian Party National Convention, where they decide whether their candidate will be Harry or someone else, is in Anaheim California, 30 June through 3 July. I enjoyed Harry's books, How I Found Freedom in an Unfree World, and Why Government Doesn't Work. Worth the bucks.

Associated Press via CBS MarketWatch - Libertarian Seeks Presidency Again: a short piece on Harry's run with some statistics on the 1996 race. The Las Vegas Sun is running the same story.

R.U. Sirius at Salon - Gore's hay day. An interview with Stephen Gaskin, creator of "The Farm", and Green Party candidate for President. Stephen's campaign website is stephen2000.org. I snarfed a great story there, {@The Story of the Golden Horns}. Not long, worth the read. I've never met Stephen, but I read a book of his lectures in San Francisco. I really liked the book. I also read about the home births at The Farm when Karla was pregnant with Christopher. Stephen has a high sounding platform where he proposes universal health care and public education through junior college, but says to "argue about the money later". No, my friend, we're going to have to argue about the money first. I like lots of what the Greens want to do, but they want to use a coercive, socialist, political process to get it done, and that I will not condone.

R.U. Sirius is also running for president with The Revolution political party, "Combining left and libertarian politics with a kind of post-political futurism and the love of a good laugh." Lots of thinking evidenced on their web site.
"TheRevolution"

Wide Open News - Virginia House and Senate Pass UCITA Bill, and the governor is expected to sign it shortly. A sad, sad, day for liberty. Not entirely bad news, however. It's likely to drive lots more people to software licensed with the GNU GPL.

There are images from the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission here.

Version 4.2.0 of the Jargon file is at http://www.jargon.org/. The jargon file, also known as the hacker's dictionary, is a collection of computing terms with entertaining definitions. I remember seeing an early version of it printed on line-printer paper and posted on the wall of the Dynamic Modeling lab in the Project Mac Building at M.I.T. where I worked as an undergraduate. It's grown considerably since those days. Definitely a win. It's being slashdotted at the moment, so is a bit slow.

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