roundtable: Re: OP-ED ON TV - PUBLIC
roundtable: Re: OP-ED ON TV / PUBLIC
Re: OP-ED ON TV / PUBLIC
Vigdor Schreibman - FINS (fins@access.digex.net)
Fri, 6 Jan 1995 12:38:54 -0500 (EST)
Date: Fri, 6 Jan 1995 12:38:54 -0500 (EST)
From: Vigdor Schreibman - FINS <fins@access.digex.net>
To: Brad Cox <bcox@gmu.edu>
Subject: Re: OP-ED ON TV / PUBLIC
In-Reply-To: <v02110304ab33299d8079@[192.0.1.2]>
Message-Id: <Pine.SUN.3.91.950106122349.12516A-100000@access2.digex.net>
On Fri, 6 Jan 1995, Brad Cox wrote:
> >
> > The most effective way to serve the public good with regard to
> >information and telecommunications infrastructure is literally under our
> >fingertips. The Internet, and the National Research and Education Network
> >(NREN) Program that was killed by despicable "conservative" politics
>
> Vigdor, its time to wake up and smell the coffee.
Now isn't that just the best advice, smelling coffee while the
doublespeak rape and plunder artists are doing their thing!
> The biggest question is whether the new conservative majority has
> enough discipline to prevent a return to the social conditions
> of the 1880's, when a laissez-faire legislative majority and
> legal system permitted the profound social chaos inherent in an
> unregulated market economy to express itself.
The "Magna Carta of the Knowledge Age," produced by Newtonian politics
was designed to advance the Robber Baron ethic, as explicitly advocated
by one of its chief authors, George Gilder, in the June 6, 1994 issue
of Forbes ASAP. I read and hear quite well, thank you, and I certainly
don't need coffee snifters, Newtonian ever so "nonpartisan" and
"conservative" doublespeak, or any of the other made for TV think tank
wasteland to know when the big sleaze is going down.
Vigdor Schreibman
<fins@access.digex.net>