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dimitria monde thraam at randomomium - 11.30.2000: a good rant on how it's OK to talk about graphic violence, but talk about actually enjoying the use of drugs and you're banned from many online discussion sites. My suggestion to not use drugs is based on my experience. Other people have different experiences and actually find drug use positive. That is their right. As long as they do not initiate force against other people or their property, they may do anything they please.
TJ Kattermann at Sierra Times - Phonebook 2000: to take back America, we've gotta take back local politics. This will not happen with short-lived protests, like Truckstop 2000 or the million whoevers march, but in reestablishing markmanship and gun safety classes at high schools, replacing socialist sheriffs with people who know and respect the constitution, finding every government supported job and eliminating it or filling it with a person who believes in liberty. [sierra]
The tyrants among us have built up a fifty year lead. Oddly, it is still not too late to turn things around. But you, your friends and neighbors and associates are going to have to get busy. We ARE the controlling Constitutional Authority!
bob lonsberry - N.Y. Attorney General Is OUT of Line: a good put-down of Eliot Spitzer's Students Against Violence Initiative, which he plans to fund by suing people.
Liz Michael at Sierra Times - Divorce, American Style: a nice metaphor of America as the marriage between Miss Liberty and Mr. Liberal, and why it's time to for a divorce. Ms. Micheal has drafted The New Confederate States of America Constitution. [sierra]
Bill Rankin at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution - Lawyers weigh cost of free speech: An activist is arrested for singing at a jail-opening ceremony, a jail especially for young offenders. He relishes the court battle, though charges may be dropped. [market]
Dave Zweifel at the Capital Times of Madison, Wisconsin - Nixon, in fact, went to court in 1960: counters a few lies that conservatives are repeating this election. [brianf]
Nixon did, in fact, concede, but only on the condition that the late vote trend continued. Meanwhile, the Republican hierarchy launched investigations, demanded recounts in 11 states (and got them in parts of Illinois and New Jersey) and filed lawsuits in Illinois, New Jersey and Texas.In research by David Greenberg, an American history Ph.D. candidate at Columbia University, as late as Dec. 4 the New York Times was writing stories that the Illinois vote was still in doubt and it wasn't until Dec. 12 that the challenge to Illinois' votes was finally dismissed.
(There's also the myth that Mayor Richard Daley won the presidency for JFK by rigging the Chicago vote. The truth is that even had Nixon won Illinois, Kennedy still had enough electoral votes to win.)
Hendrik Hertzberg points out in the New Yorker that a big difference between then and now was the absence of the media pressure cooker.
Jesse Berst at ZDNet - Net Myths You Should Ignore: seven myths, each with a short description of the truth and a link to more details. There are only 2,500 dotcoms, 35% of them are already profitable, internet executives are not all young, P2P may not be the wave of the future, telecommuting is not catching on much, the internet does not split families, online journalists are no worse than their dead tree counterparts. [faisal]