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Subject: IP: a comment re Microsoft "profoundly dangerous to the rule of law" - Boston Globe
> >To: farber@cis.upenn.edu >Subject: Re: IP: Microsoft "profoundly dangerous to the rule of law" - >Boston Globe >From: "Perry E. Metzger" <perry@piermont.com> >Date: 11 Jun 2000 22:48:33 -0400 > > > > > >Bill Gates and his entourage have come to represent a certain kind of > > >techno-libertarian dissent that has grown up in the United States > since the > > >1970s. >[...] > > >How will Microsoft's conduct be thought of in terms of the history of the > > >decade? As being profoundly dangerous to the rule of law. >[...] > >As an actual live libertarian, let me note: > >1) Bill Gates is NOT a libertarian. So far as I can tell, he holds no > libertarian views, contributes money to causes that libertarians > would not support (such as various educational tax measures he has > supported in Washington State), and to my knowledge is a member of > no mainstream libertarian leaning organizations (such as the Cato > Institute). There are lots of Real Live Techno-Libertarians out > there. They created organizations like EFF and such. Bill Gates has > never shown the slightest inclination to support their causes, or > the slightest public support for their viewpoints. > >2) Libertarians are intensely concerned with the primacy rule of > law. One of the main libertarian issues of recent decades has, in > fact, been the decay of the rule of law in the U.S. -- libertarians > are profoundly concerned that rights are often trampled because of > public opinion or expediency, and that deeper principles are > ignored. If anyone would hold that law must be made in the > legislatures and courts, and not by poll and public relations, it > would be libertarians. > >3) I'm also rather concerned by the notion of "libertarian" as a dirty > word being subtly pushed here. Liberty is a notion that most of us > hold very dear. Freedom speech, freedom of religion, etc., are > cornerstones of our nation. The country was founded on libertarian > principles. What's wrong with all that? > >Perry
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