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Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Sat, 01 Apr 2000 13:00:00 GMT
Happy April Fool's day from an April fool. My 44th birthday is only five days away.

Slashdot appears to have their April first filter turned on. Only two articles to judge by so far, but one is in pig-latin and the other in some sort of Netherlandean. [/.]

John Taylor is late with The Libertarian Enterprise. Grumble, grumble, moan, moan.

Dave at Dave's Picks sent some flow my way. Thanks, Dave. Glad you liked some of my links.

Philip Greenspun - High Powered Research: "My research plan for the next 30 years is to figure out the most useful and most efficient ways to harness the power of the Internet." [cafe]

Greenspun's Tenth Rule of Programming: "Any sufficiently complicated C or Fortran program contains an ad-hoc, informally-specified bug-ridden slow implementation of half of Common Lisp."
Amen.

Lindsay Perigo's Politically Correct Show - 29 March, 2000: "The last nail in the coffin of individual liberty in New Zealand may well turn out to be the forthcoming constitutional 'hui'..." Especially interesting is A Constitution for New Freeland, which borrows liberally from the U.S. declaration of independence and constitution, but says it all in Lindsay's inimitable style.

Ari Armstrong at Colorado Freedom Report - Clinton Urges Prior Restraint of Constitutional Liberties: What if we were to apply the current statist stand on the second amendment to the first amendment, or the fourth? Would Clinton be talking about registering books? [market]

Daniel Forbes at Salon - The drug war gravy train: U.S. News & World Report, Sporting News, Family Circle, Seventeen, Parade, and USA Weekend have submitted their editorial content to the ONDCP and received credit for drug-war ads owed the government under advertising contracts. 20 other magazines participated in the advertising program, but Salon has no evidence that they tampered with their editorial policy as well as running ads. Not only that, but the ONDCP gets all of its advertising at a 50% discount; part of the congressional edict that funded the advertising program. It was a big story a while back that TV shows have been altering their content for the drug warriors. Now magazines are doing it, too. And we're paying for it with our stolen taxes.

Jeffrey Rosen at the New Republic - Why Patrick Dorismond didn't have to die. Excessive Force: Explores "the difference between two radically different theories of policing that, thanks to Giuliani, are now frequently confused: 'broken windows' and 'zero tolerance.'"

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