000920.html

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Wed, 20 Sep 2000 12:00:00 GMT
From brianf:
Hello, lied the politician.

John Doerr and Bill Joy at the San Jose Mercury News - The technology president: From wiring schools to a Net tax moratorium to globalization, Gore gets it: Claims that the Klinton administration, in particular algore, was responsible for our current technology boom. Puleeeeaze. The economy is booming in spite of the state, not because of it. [faisal]

Intel - Open Runtime Platform: A research-oriented Java VM, based on the GNU Classpath, with pluggable JIT and GC. [wes]

Declan McCullagh at Wired Regulating Privacy: At What Cost? The statists have it right that many of us care about our privacy, online and off, but I agree with John Mulligan (of thinkhole), we don't need no more steenking privacy laws. If the state were truly interested in privacy, they would eliminate the social security number. [thinkhole]

Sonia Arrison, director of technology policy at the Pacific Research Institute, says her group and others were slow to realize the public impact of their opponents' arguments.

"I think libertarians were slow off the mark because they simply couldn't believe that the public could be convinced that government is best in protecting privacy," Arrison said. "Throughout history, government has been one of the biggest violators of privacy, so some libertarians cannot fathom why anyone would think that government should now be trusted to protect it."

Charley Reese at the Orlando Sentinel - Do you know good guys, bad guys? Why should you vote for GW? algore is evil, that's why. [lew]

Historians, if there are any, eventually will view the Clinton-Gore administration as one of the most corrupt and incompetent in the 20th century. Certainly no previous administration, except perhaps those of Abraham Lincoln and Woodrow Wilson, has shown such open contempt for the Constitution. None has had a foreign policy and a national-security policy that consists of nothing but blunders.

J.J. Johnson at Sierra Times - (S)election 2000: What are the Real Issues? J.J. outlines the real issues, as opposed to the "issues" being pushed by the candidates and the media.

So dumbed down that those elderly folks who are getting raped on prescription drugs are too old to know how business works, that something must be driving up the costs of their prescription drugs. We must be too ignorant to know that the same pharmaceuticals are a fraction of the cost in other countries -- available over the web. We must be too ignorant to know that the FDA and the requirement to get a prescription for medicines we have taken for decades is the reason for high prescription and health care costs.

bob lonsberry - Soldiers Hung Out to Dry: The army is ruining the careers of two officers because they acted like soldiers in Kosovo. Bob doesn't mention that the U.S. had no business being in Kosovo, but it wasn't these guys' fault they were sent there. That's why we don't ever want the U.S. army operating inside the U.S. Soldiers are trained to kill, not to be diplomats.

Center for Prevention of Handgun Violence - The Legacy of Gun Control: A Flash movie reminding us of why we must remain armed (680K). "It's not about guns. It's about control." [kaba]

GunTruths.com - The First Million Mom March: A graphic reminder of why we must be armed. Not for the squeemish (110k).

Tibor R. Machan at Laissez Faire City Times - Ralph Nader Is Working for Big Business: the unintended consequence of government regulation is to make it easier for big businesses to survive. Hence, Ralph Nader is unintentionally giving a business advantage to exactly those companies he wants to restrain.

Stephen Archer at NewsMax.com - Nugent Speaks Out for Gun Rights: An interview with Ted Nugent about his book, God, Guns, & Rock and Roll. This is the first of a two-part series. Part 2 tomorrow. [kaba]

{pictureRef ({@PRofK}, align:"right", width:"192", height:"128")} Jerri Milburn at We the people... - Open Letter to Senator Dianne Feinstein: a reasoned letter to an unreasonable woman. [kaba]

Speaking of the 2nd Amendment Thomas Jefferson said, "The beauty of the second amendment is that it will not be needed until they try to take it."

Michael G. Mooney and Crystal Carreon at The Modesto Bee - 11-year-old's funeral today: I didn't link to this story when it broke a couple of days ago, so I'll point to the followup here. Basically, a member of a SWAT team murdered an 11-year-old boy with a shotgun. He's claiming that his finger wasn't on the trigger. Yeah, right. Get the rope. It's time for a lynching. [kaba]

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