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- Newsgroups: comp.os.os2.advocacy
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wupost!sdd.hp.com!news.cs.indiana.edu!noose.ecn.purdue.edu!ecn.purdue.edu!helz
- From: helz@ecn.purdue.edu (Randall A Helzerman)
- Subject: Re: Is Microsoft the next Standard Oil?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan5.013917.29243@noose.ecn.purdue.edu>
- Sender: news@noose.ecn.purdue.edu (USENET news)
- Organization: Purdue University Engineering Computer Network
- References: <1993Jan4.005008.13699@noose.ecn.purdue.edu> <8305@lib.tmc.edu> <1993Jan4.204009.25416@noose.ecn.purdue.edu> <8318@lib.tmc.edu>
- Date: Tue, 5 Jan 1993 01:39:17 GMT
- Lines: 32
-
- In article <8318@lib.tmc.edu>, jmaynard@oac.hsc.uth.tmc.edu (Jay Maynard) writes:
- |> In article <1993Jan4.204009.25416@noose.ecn.purdue.edu> helz@ecn.purdue.edu (Randall A Helzerman) writes:
- |> >A company can't put another company out of business. Only a company's
- |> >_customers_ can either keep it in business or put it out.
- |>
- |> Sure it can. To extend the metaphor, the customers are the bullets for the
- |> company's economic gun. It's happened before, and it will happen again unless
- |> the FTC stops them.
-
- Metaphoric bullets and economic guns are not to be confused with the real thing.
-
- *sigh* we obiously have it too soft in this country if people can possibly
- think that customers chooseing a less expensive item is in the same league
- as armed coercion.
-
- The _magnitude_ of such mental confusion just astounds me. And its exactly what
- is allowing this slow gradual errosion of our rights and privledges in this
- country.
-
- Take a look at the handwriting on the wall folks. Supreme Court decisions which
- enable the Feds to regulate behavior in your bedroom. Laws which allow the
- police to confiscate your property with no obligation to ever bring you to
- trial.
-
- One day very soon we're gunna wake up and find that "everything which isn't
- cumpulsory is forbidden" for our own good of course, and to save our eternal
- souls. We may not like what Microsoft is doing, I sure don't, but if we
- don't respect Microsoft's right to sell things it owns the way it wants to
- sell them, then nobody's going to respect our rights either. If we sanction
- armed robbery against Microsoft (there's no other word for it) then whose
- going to stop such against us?
-
-