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- From: mykes@shell.portal.com (mike myke schwartz)
- Subject: Re: Conservative Values (Re: New group proposal: alt.conservative.forum)
- Message-ID: <C02Mws.CtK@unix.portal.com>
- Followup-To: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,talk.politics.misc
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- References: <1992Dec29.183432.57596@watson.ibm.com>
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 12:05:16 GMT
- Lines: 511
-
- Mike Jones (mjones@fenway.aix.kingston.ibm.com) wrote:
- : mykes@shell.portal.com (mike myke schwartz) writes:
- : : Russ Anderson (rja@mahogany126.cray.com) wrote:
- : : : In article <1gl52rINN4mf@master.cs.rose-hulman.edu>, pearsodc@HYDRA.ROSE-HULMAN.EDU (if God's your father then call home!) writes:
- : : : > I would like to formally propose a new group, alt.conservative.forum,
- : : : > a moderated group to discuss conservative values and assorted political
- : : : > goings-on from a distinctly right-wing standpoint.
- : : : What are "conservative values"?
- : : : Take the following issues:
- : : : Drug prohibition: Conservative (former Drug Czar) Bill Bennett supports the
- : : : "War on Drugs" while Conservatives such as Milton Friedman, William F.
- : : : Buckley, and George Schultz oppose it. Which side represents the
- : : : conservative view?
- : : The difference between Bennett and the othes mentioned are that Bennett
- : : is a pragmatist who was put in the position of Drug Czar, because the war on
- : : drugs was mandated by the people....
- :
- : Bwahahahaha. Sorry to begin a post that way, but I can't possibly summon any
- : other response to this cliam. The war on drugs was mandated by lots of
- : (mostly right-wing) politicians as a way to get more control over the
- : population, espcially the poor and minorities. It is promulgated by the same
- : sort of bluestocking Puritanism that drove the Prohibition movement, and is
- : having about the same amount of success (i.e., costing the taxpayers lots of
- : money, cutting down slightly on use among the middle class, and creating a
- : whole new generation of crime figures).
- :
-
- Give me a break. The kind of rubbish you wrote here is pure and utter nonsense.
- The war on drugs has been under constant attack by liberal democrats in
- congress as being not enough and not spending enough on it. In the Cabrini
- Green public housing project in Chicago (last week), LIBERAL democrat Mayor
- Richard J. Daley Jr. ordered the project sealed off and had the police do
- a door to door search for drugs and weapons. How well is the war on drugs
- working? The facts are that drug use among potential new users, particularly
- the young, is WAY WAY down. Among current users, there is little effect.
- Among criminals that traffic the drugs, known as king-pins, the crimes have
- gotten significantly more violent. And the drugs being used are more harmful
- than ever before (Crack and designer drugs were non-existant when I went to
- school). Your friend and mine, Clinoccio, said (during the presidential
- debates) "I am a strong advocate of the war on drugs. The war on drugs
- saved my brother's life. He was addicted to drugs. I propose that all
- non-violent first time offenders be sent to boot camp." Go ahead and light
- up your joint, but only if you want to go to boot camp.
-
- I know you are well intentioned, but... Your debating style is clear.
- You use the word "Puritan" above to appeal to the anti-religious
- political correctness crowd. That kind of bullsh*t logic is weak. Stick
- to facts and direct them to MY points if you want good debate... I'll
- be counting your blasphemous remarks to illustrate this point... Puritanism
- has NOTHING to do with anything related to the war on drugs, at least to me.
- And I'll get to that later.
-
- And do NOT confuse me with some sort of religious person, because I am not.
- I do believe in God, but not as you would think. To me, God is what was
- before the Big Bang. He/it IS the Big Bang. It is EVERYWHERE. It has
- NOTHING to do with the bible or with ANY organized religion. But blasphemey
- certainly insults 85% of the population which DOES believe in organized
- religion. Why do you insult so? Your DEMOCRATIC congress, gasp, uses
- public government property for prayer purposes, opening each morning with
- a minister giving a prayer. Clinoccio goes to church, even. Carter went
- to church.
-
- : : Friedman, Buckley, and Shultz are strong
- : : believers in the FREE MARKET... in a TRUE free market, legalized drugs would
- : : result in a significant decrease in drug use - or at least the least harmful
- : : drugs would get more use than the harmful ones. A pragmatist like Bennett
- : : knows we don't have a free market, and even the most radical conservative
- : : policies implemented towards a move to free market would take decades to
- : : achieve. After all, it took us 60 years to go as far downhill as we have
- : : since FDR's massive anti-free market policies were enacted...
- :
- : Please elaborate. If, say, marijuana were made legal tomorrow, what
- : inhibitors would there be to a basically free market in it?
- :
-
- For starters, I support legalization of ALL drugs, not just marijuana. But
- the issue is not black and white. I know that in a free market, where drugs
- are legal, the least harmful drugs will get the most use and the most harmful
- drugs will have little demand. Legalization of drugs does not mean freely
- obtainable... For example, I would suggest a drug like cocaine be available
- by prescription only (even for recreational purposes), and that laws restricting
- access to minors, as with alcohol and cigarettes make sense. I know that the
- bulk of the related crime would disappear. And there would be a double
- effect for government revenues, too - currently illegal income is tax free,
- and a consumption/luxury/vice tax would be gladly paid by consumers.
-
- But I more than understand the other side of the issue, too. When considering
- the benefits to society as a whole, what kind of productivity are we going
- to have as a nation if 66% of the population is addicted to drugs? The very
- poor and minority people you claim we conservatives want to control may be
- affected more adversely than it seems on the surface. And there is plenty
- of evidence that habitual drug use is socially harmful - for example, a dear
- friend of mine (who recently died of cancer :( was a bigtime cocaine user.
- He ran a medium sized software company, and when I'd visit him, he'd pull
- out a five finger bag of cocaine and offer it to me (I refused). His company
- relied heavily on him, his contacts, his negotiating ability and his management
- skills to succeed. The feeling of power he got from the drug blinded him and
- impaired his ability to function to his fullest potential. After several
- years of his company floundering, he gave up the drugs (and cigarettes, too)
- and not coincidentally, his company took off. I won't say which company it
- is, but it is still going strong, and is well known. There have been other
- countries which tried legalized drugs, and the experiment failed.
-
- SO you see, it is not black and white, or simple as it would seem. Given
- that drugs are deemed illegal by society, and the far too many crack babies
- and the like, I submit that you either go all out in a war against drugs,
- or make them legal. No in between. And it is not MY style to just think
- of my own ass (say, for argument's sake that I'd LOVE to do all the legal
- drugs I could get my hands on) on this matter.
-
-
- : : Bennett's policies are good today, while the others' are good goals to
- : : achieve over the next half century...
- :
- : No, and yes. Bennett's policies are an excuse for much greater government
- : interference in our lives. They've resulted in the gutting of the Fourth
- : Amendment, and serious dents in the Fifth.
-
- OK, now you drag out the constitutional arguments. Well, everyone who performs
- public service for our government takes an oath to uphold and protect and
- defend the constitution. You self-rightous jerks don't have a monopoly
- on interpreting the constitution. The constitution does have 4th and 5th
- amendment rights specified, but it also specifies that the government is
- bound to promote the welfare of ALL the people, the people as a whole.
- I accept that you are unhappy that the conflict in the constitution is
- not settled as you would prefer, but in many cases, I am not pleased with
- the way it has been settled on other issues. Can't win 'em all...
-
- :
- : : : Abortion: Conservatives such as George Bush & Dan Quayle want abortion
- : : : made illegal (in most cases) while Conservative Barry Goldwater does
- : : : not. Which side represents the conservative view?
- : : You make a HUGE mistake in calling Bush a conservative. That aside,
- :
- : You mean he's a liberal? Bush may not be a true-believer Reaganista, but
- : surely on the political spectrum of the country, you'd have to accept that
- : he's a conservative. The problem is that, whatever his beliefs, he's
- : wishy-washy about them. The man just isn't very ideological.
- :
-
- If LLoyd Bentsen can be a conservative democrat, why can't Bush be a liberal
- republican? I certainly do not consider Bush to be conservative. Just as
- you would claim Carter to be a moderate, I claim Bush to be a moderate -
- at best. The republican party encompasses a wide range of beliefs, from
- libertarian to liberal. Conservative agendas win the white house. Clinton
- had to pretend to be a lot more conservative than he is to win, and so did
- Bush. If Bush is/was a conservative, he would have won big. But he's not,
- and he didn't.
-
- : : consider that Bush was in favor of legalized abortion in 1980, but as the
- : : increase in volume of abortions became an alarming trend, his position changed.
- :
- : More like, "as it became a requirement for his holding office, his position
- : changed." The man has no principles. One of the reasons he's about to become
- : the ex-President is that in the absence of Lee Atwater it became all too
- : obvious that the primary reason George Bush wanted to be President was that
- : "being President" seemed like a pretty neat thing to do.
- :
-
- I'll grant that unifying the party position on abortion certainly played
- a part in his change of position. But you make it a trivial black/white or
- yes/no thing and it was not. Bush may not be 100% credable in everything
- he says, but in this case, he says the rise in abortion rates really did
- convince him abortion is wrong, and he says it with enough conviction for
- me to accept his word.
-
- I bet clinoccio wants to be president because it is neat, too. What of it?
- BOTH of them have dedicated their careers to public service, and serving
- as president is clearly an honorable way to do it = and it is the pinnacle
- of achievement in their field. So be it. Picking Clinton over Bush as
- president would be like picking me over Tommy Lasorda to manage the dodgers.
- We both like baseball and know the ins and outs, but Lasorda is simply eminently
- more qualified. Bush is head and shoulders the better equipped man for the
- job, but sense and reason lost out to emotion this time around.
-
- : : As for Goldwater, not all of his ideas are mainstream conservative. In 1964,
- : : he proposed using nuclear weapons in VietNam...
- :
- : This sounds like some of the Christianity arguments in sci.skeptic. Whenever
- : presented with an X that doesn't match your picture of X, claim they're not
- : *really* X. The point of the original article was that there's not "a
- : conservative position" on many of the issues that are now claimed as
- : conservative (by, say, the Republican convention). OK, so Goldwater's not a
- : mainstream conservative. He's still a prominent conservative, and he doesn't
- : agree with the Robertson wing on abortion. Which is "the conservative
- : position"?
- :
-
- ok, strike 2. Your second uncalled for attack on religion. If you want to
- flame religion, start another thread...
-
- There is NO such thing as the conservative position. Good enough for you?
- There are just good conservative men, men of conviction and public service
- and of record. I know that by voting Republican, and preferably for
- conservative republicans, that I will be happy with most of the results
- of their actions in government. You paranoia pushers have claimed that
- stacking the supreme court with conservatives would have horrible results.
- Yet I urge you to name a single decision made by them (since Bush's last
- appointment) that you are NOT satisfied with, and elaborate why. The typical
- paranoia you've spread is that Roe v. Wade would be overturned, if not
- in the PA case, then the Guam case. Bwahahaha. (perhaps you can relate
- to your own choice of debate tactics). Keep it up and you will lose all
- credability for your causes.
-
-
- : : : Isolationism: Conservative George Bush supports an activist US role in
- : : : the "new world order" while conservative Pat Buchannan does not.
- : : : Which side represents the conservative view?
- : : Flat out wrong assertion here. Buchannan advocated america first as a policy,
- : : which is not the same thing as isolationism. The only reason America First
- : : was deemed important was the slow economy. Also, Buchannan sure got a lot
- : : of votes and won a lot of states during the primaries... that should indicate
- : : to you which side represents the conservative view.
- :
- : No one claimed that Buchanan was a complete isolationist. It would be hard
- : claim that Buchanan would support an activist role for the US, though. By
- : the way, your second argument here contradicts your claim above that Bush
- : isn't a conservative. By count of votes, I'd certainly have to say that he
- : represents the conservative view.
- :
-
- Sarcasm. I guess I will have to think for you? Buchanan won ZERO states
- and had a horrible accounting in the polls. Bush was the ONLY hope this
- year to be the next president of the republican party. By count of votes,
- the conservatives voted far less for Bush than liberals voted for Dukakis
- in '88. By count of votes.
-
- : : A more appropriate question is "Does Reagan support america first or an
- : : active foreign policy role?" After all, Reagan won almost 100% of the
- : : conservative vote in two elections, plus a LOT of democrats, too...
- : : (In case you don't figure it out, no doubt you will, Reagan would favor
- : : active foreign policy...).
- :
- : What the hell does Reagan have to do with anything *now*? Besides, Reagan
- : supported a very limited activism. I expect that he would have supported
- : Desert Storm, but I think he'd have sent troops (or at least air power) to
- : Bosnia long before he sent anyone to Somalia.
- :
-
- What does Reagan have to do with anything? He's only the greatest and most
- successful conservative of all time, including Abe Lincoln. And he has been
- consistent over his half century of political experience. Funny how you
- can bring up Goldwater when it is convenient...
-
- : : : Free-Trade: Conservative George Bush supports free-trade while conservative
- : : : Pat Buchannan does not. Which side represents the conservative view?
- : : :
- : : : Capital gains tax: Conservative Ronald Reagan wanted capital gains taxed
- : : : at the same rate as other income (1986 tax reform) while Conservatives
- : : : George Bush and Jack Kemp want capital gains taxed at a lower rate than
- : : : other income. Which side represents the conservative view?
- : : If you want a real laugh, conservative Patrick Moynahan suggests a capital
- : : gains tax cut to 15% from 28%.
- :
- : Pat Moynihan? Conservative? Whaaaaa?
-
- Sigh. Sarcasm again. I use sarcasm for a reason, because this particular
- issue is railed against for 12 years by liberals as a benefit for the rich
- and as socking it to the middle class and poor. I'm not rich, but I sure
- would LOVE to get this benefit. OOps, now we have a democrat in office
- and we HAVE to keep him in at all costs, so only now can we do the RIGHT
- thing (correct thing).
-
- :
- : : How can you lump Bush and Kemp into the
- : : same camp? Bush never followed any of Kemp's policies, and even had promised
- : : to not have Kemp in his next cabinet.
- :
- : Well, that's sort of the point. Bush and Kemp put themselves into the same
- : camp. They run under the same party banner, compete for the same votes in
- : primaries (at least hypothetically), look for support from the same
- : interest groups, etc. But they don't agree on many issues. Which represents
- : the conservative position? How can you tell?
- :
-
- Bush and Kemp are NOT in the same camp. They are in the same party. Nixon
- and Reagan are in the same party, but not in the same camp either. Kemp
- campaigned for Bush, as did all of the cabinet members. Reagan did NOT
- campaign for Bush at all.
-
- : : The most successful governmental
- : : economic policies in this century, known as trickle-down, were a Kemp/Reagan
- : : implementation. Reagan's terms not only produced enormous prosperity and
- : : growth, but year after year the debt and defecit as a percentage of
- : : GDP _decreased_ (source: Milton Friedman, interviewd on Wall Street Week).
- :
- : This claim is so vague as to be meaningless. It is true that you can pick
- : starting and ending points to illustrate this fact, but there's no independent
- : reason to pick those points. If you take "the 80's" (1980-1989), or "the
- : Reagan years (1980-1988), that isn't a true statement. (I'll welcome FACTS
- : to prove me wrong, because I don't have the numbers handy.) The growth was
- : largely fueled by massive increases in public and private debt, which has
- : been very much responsible for the mess we're in now.
-
- I did not video tape Wall Street Week, nor do I have a transcript of it.
- The best of my recollection is what I wrote. I apologize for saying that
- the DEBT decreased. But the defecit did indeed decrease. Since you ask
- me to do your research for you, I will provide you with the data, as found
- in my 1992 Universal Almanac. All dollar figures are in BILLIONS.
-
- 1980 GNP 2732.0, defecit = 73.8, %GNP = .0270
- 1985 GNP 4014.9, defecit = 212.3, %GNP = .0529
- 1987 GNP 4536.7, defecit = 148.0, %GNP = .0327
- 1988 GNP 4864.3, defecit = 155.1, %GNP = .0319
- 1989 GNP 5200.8, defecit = 152.0, %GNP = .0292
-
- Less vague: 84 straight quarters of better than average growth, longest in
- peacetime in history.
- More people became millionaires in the 80's than ever before. Went from
- 4000 to 64000.
- More people left the middle class to become upper class, and blacks fared
- better than whites.
- More people left the lower class to become middle class, and blacks fared
- better than whites.
- Increase in Jobs of 18 million, far more than population growth. Decrease
- in unemployment from 7.7% to 5.5%.
-
- How does Reagan's defecit investment policy differ from Clinoccio's proposals?
- Tax cut for the middle class? Remains to be seen. Reagan lowered taxes on
- everyone in 1982 (Reagan/Kemp/Roth tax cut) and here's the resulting revenues:
- 1980-1989: 517.1, 599.3, 617.8, 600.6, 666.5, 734.1, 769.1, 854.1, 909.0, 990.8
-
- :
- : : Allow me to refer to Rush's book, which I got as a Christmas present (note:
- : : I would not have bought it for myself :)... The difference between
- : : conservatives and liberals is that liberals believe that there is a finite
- : : pie which must be allocated among the population, while conservatives believe
- : : the pie grows all the time.
- :
- : That's about what I'd expect from Rush. He speaks well, I'll give him that,
- : but that statement is completely self-serving and false. It's as though I
- : said that the difference between liberals and conservatives is that liberals
- : love their children and conservatives eat theirs for breakfast with
- : strawberries and cream.
- :
-
- No, conservatives allow their children to be born, and liberals terminate
- the pregnancies ahead of time. My statement is much more accurate than yours.
- You owe me a major apology for suggesting I don't love my child. I love YOUR
- child. And I love those that are aborted.
-
- : : Kemp's (and Moynahan's) capital gains tax cuts
- : : are meant to spur growth of the pie at a time the pie is growing slower
- : : than we would have liked. Given the spending controls Reagan (and Bush, btw)
- : : proposed, Reagan would have liked to have lowered capital gains more than he
- : : proposed in '86.
- :
- : But Moynihan isn't a conservative by any sensible measure! What's he doing
- : in a discussion of what conservative issues are? And here's Bush again. I
- : thought he wasn't a conservative (ref: your post, above)? By the by, it
- : would have been pretty nice (and I mean that seriously) if these alleged
- : spending controls had ever shown up in any budget proposals.
- :
-
- By the by, the capital gains tax cut has been part of the agenda of the last
- 3 presidential terms. That makes it a CONSERVATIVE issue. Pointing out
- a FLAMING liberal who embraces the concept, only now that a democrat is
- elected is FAIR game.
-
- By the by, what year did Carter send up a balanced budget proposal? I can't
- tell from my almanac:
- Defecit for years 1977-1981: -53.6, -59.2, -40.2, -73.8
-
- Hmmmm... liberal democrat president, liberal democrat congress... president
- submits balanced budget, yet we still have defecit spending. THis is the
- SAME party working TOGETHER. Given congress' intent to sabotage anything
- conservative, especially the president, what's your point?
-
- : : : Yugoslovia breakup: Conservative (former Sec of State) George Schultz supports
- : : : intervention in the former Yugoslovia while conservative George Bush does
- : : : not. Which side represents the conservative view?
- : : Who says (besides you) that Bush doesn't favor intervention in the former
- : : Yugoslavia?
- :
- : Ummmm....Bush? At least so far. To date, Bush has opposed intervention in
- : Bosnia. This is a fact. Schultz supports it. Fact. Which side represents the
- : conservative view?
- :
-
- To date, Bush has opposed intervention in Bosnia by jumping in with both
- feet and not having a concept of what to do there... You can bet that
- Bush is indeed looking for a way to intervene that makes sense.
-
- : : Bush is simply a lot slower at getting involved because he
- : : (and consistently so) prefers to use force and commit american lives to such
- : : noble causes only if he can see a logical, successful, and rapid solution.
- : : Remember VietNam? VietNam is similar to this situation in that it is a civil
- : : war, albeit with attrocities being committed that nobody here likes.
- :
- : Well....it's not really very much like Vietnam at all. In Vietnam we were
- : supporting a puppet regime (first of the French, then of ours). The vast
- : majority of the citizens of South Vietnam were opposed to the existing
- : regime, to the extent that the US military classified all South Vietnamese
- : civilians as potentially hostile. The Bosnian situation really is a civil
- : war. It's also nice that our nobility only exists when we can ensure that it
- : costs us virtually nothing. Besides, the other big difference between Bosnia
- : and Vietnam is that we, alone and through NATO, have been studying that part
- : of the world militarily for the whole damned Cold War! Theoretically, we've
- : been spending literally billions of tax dollars to prepare for meeting the
- : whole damned Red Army in Eastern Europe for the last 40 years. Now you
- : expect me to believe that we can't mop up the Serbian Air Force in an
- : afternoon? What have they been spending my tax dollars on, the officers'
- : mess?
- :
-
- A couple of points here... First, it IS a lot like vietnam. No, it isn't
- a clone, and no two situations are alike. If we lose a lot of american
- lives over there with no effect, then it will be too much like vietnam
- for my tastes!
-
- I suggest that you go do some research on the value/effect of strategic
- bombing... In Iraq, we dropped more bombs than in all the rest of the
- wars in history combined. Then we had to send in ground forces. And after
- it was all said and done, Saddam still had enough of an air force to cause
- a lot of hurt to the kurds. We bombed every airfield they had many times
- over. Bombing is simply not enough. I suppose you expect the Serbs to wear
- red uniforms so we can identify them and shoot them easy. Can you tell
- a serb from a croat? Your simplistic assessment of what we can do in bosnia
- needs some serious thought. I assure you, Bush is MUCH MUCH MUCH more of
- an expert than you or I, and he has the help of Colin Powell and others.
-
- : : my turn:
- :
- : It'd be nice if you'd answered any of Russ' questions before taking your
- : turn, but OK.
- :
- : : Last night on larry king, guest hosted by liberal Bob Beckel (who also filled
- : : in for Mike Kinsley on Cross Fire), two guests were Patricia Ireland (NOW)
- : : and a woman from Clinton's campaign staff. The hypocracy was sooo evident.
- :
- : Hypocracy, eh? OK, proceed.
- :
- : : 1) Clinton's cabinet is representative of America.
- : : Who on the cabinet represents me, or Pat Buchannan, or (gasp)
- : : Pat Robertson, or Dan Quayle, or George Bush, or Ross Perot,
- : : or John Switzer, or the 57% of the population that didn't vote for
- : : clinoccio?
- :
- : Here, at least technically, you have a point.
- :
-
- Well, my turn to concede something. I am exstatic about the appointments
- of Bentsen and Panealla. We conservatives CAN'T lose! It is put up or
- shut up time for these guys. If they want to be reelected, they have to
- do the RIGHT thing, which will be Reaganomics. If they don't do the right
- thing, liberals are going to have a tough time getting elected dogcatcher
- in podunk iowa.
-
- : : 2) Both women agreed that they were comfortable with clinton because
- : : with hillary as his wife, he is obviously comfortable with strong,
- : : capable women... Comfortable enough to have a 12 year long affair
- : : with someone else?
- :
- : 1. How does this relate to hypocracy?
-
- Too obvious to deserve a reply.
-
- : 2. What proof do you have that Clinton had an affair? (Hint: Unsupported
- : allegations made to a tabloid for pay don't count.)
-
- Hint: SUPPORTED allegations DO count. The woman made tape recordings,
- which are 100% legal evidence in a court of law. And tabloid was the only
- place that would take the story because of media bias. And tabloid was
- not the only place to carry the story (althouth tabloid was first). Clinton
- made a weak denial at best, and refused to talk about it. He could have
- called her a liar, but that would have risked a slander suit!
-
- : 3. What is the connection between Clinton's having an affair (if he did) and
- : his being comfortable working with capable women?
- :
-
- The hypocracy is not only clinoccio's, but NOW's. I guess women don't
- believe that having a husband cheat on a wife is an offense to the woman...
-
- : : 3) Clinton promised a NEW kind of government and change. How does
- : : appointing several former Carter administration people to his
- : : cabinet mean NEW or change (other than change back to the old that
- : : failed)?
- :
- : Several? I thought it was two, out of about 15. Are you claiming that there
- : was *no one* in the Carter administration with worthwhile ideas? If they
- : support Clinton's ideas and policies, what does their prior service mean
- : in terms of implementing those policies and ideas? How does appointing a
- : couple of former Carter administration people NOT mean NEW or change?
- :
-
- For a while there, it was two PER DAY. Whether they support Clinton's
- positions is irrelevent. What IS relevent is they are neither new nor
- is it any kind of change but a change backwards.
-
- : Mike Jones | AIX/ESA Development | mjones@donald.aix.kingston.ibm.com
- :
-
- 1) I wish I had played IBM puts all last year :)
- 2) I like the software and high end hardware IBM makes!
-
- : More young men have lost their lives to AIDS than died in the entire Vietnam
- : War.
- : - Andew Sullivan, The New Republic 12/17/1990
-
-
- While I hope and pray that there is a cure for AIDS, I have little belief
- that there will be a cure. To my knowledge, there are no cures for viruses,
- only medecine to make people more comfortable that have the virus. It is
- tragic that the virus runs its course and causes a long and pitiful death.
- There is every reason in the world to offer assistance, comfort, and love
- to those who contract this terrible disease. It is obvious that there is
- a certain way to eliminate this disease, but in order to do so, it takes
- a concerted effort and sacrifice among a population that is unwilling to
- do what it takes.
- - Myke Schwartz, UseNet 12/30/1992
-