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Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Tue, 04 Apr 2000 12:00:00 GMT
It's a sad day for freedom. A clueless federal judge ruled yesterday that Microsoft is guilty of violating some bogus anti-trust statute. The only organizations in this country that have or have ever had a monopoly on anything are criminal organizations, like the government. It's time to privatize the post office, every police force, every fire brigade, every road, every school, every retirment program. It's time to eliminate the entire alphabet soup of monopolistic government agencies. The computer industry has pumped huge profits into the economy because up to now it has been largely untouched by government. Government destroys everything it touches. If they are allowed to get away with destroying Microsoft, do you think for one minute that they're going to stop there? It will be the beginning of the end for the computer industry. Mr. Gates, you've already wasted large amounts of money on useless lawyers. Start spending your money on useful self-defense hardware. If any jack-booted government thug lays one finger on your property, defend it, with extreme prejudice.

Jerry Pournelle - Curent View for Monday, April 3: Jerry calmed down a little more than I did before writing his screed. "Does anyone doubt that $500 million invested in the right places in Congressional races and in DC would have saved Microsoft the multi-billion dollar hit it took today?" (That link will break next Monday, and likely reappear here. You'd think Jerry of all people would know to always create the permanent link at the same time you create the front page.) [latte]

{@Administratium} is a story from The Federalist about the recent discovery of the heaviest element known to science.

Larry Klayman at WorldNetDaily - Bill's boy: "Earlier this week, United States District Judge Royce Lamberth issued a landmark decision, finding for the first time in American history that a United States president had committed a crime." And the white house of cards continues to fall. [wnd]

Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr. at LewRockwell.com - Seeking Con-Census: you're probably sick of stories about the census, but read this anyway. "But what about the 5-year jail term that is promised for any Census employee who discloses information to an outside party? It's not credible. If federal agents can't get jail terms for gassing and burning religious separatists in Texas, but instead are rewarded with medals for their bravery, why should any federal employee be deterred from doing whatever he wants with Census information?" [sierra]

My compliments to J. Orlin Grabbe for the following (I'd just point to his page, but he doesn't provide an archive that I've been able to find). [grabbe]

Janet Reno Solves the Elian Problem

RenoElian: Janet Reno Solves the Elian Problem

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