new0515

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Mon, 15 May 2000 12:00:00 GMT
Angus Glashier suggests:
Here's an idea: Why don't all of us who believe in the right to watch pornography get together and hold a Million Masturbators March?

We could all go and hang out in our respective capital cities and... well, let's just leave it at that.

Hehe.

New stuff added at the bottom today. Scroll down...

Brian Fitzgerald - Surrender to your dreams: Brian does a good job of espousing a pacifist ideology. I'm definitely drawn to it, and would likely go there except for my kids. Any time I imagine anyone threatening my kids, I go non-linear, and cannot remain passive. I don't mind anyone espousing pacifism, more power to them, as long as they don't attempt to force anyone else to agree, i.e. by supporting victim disarmament laws. Not sure where Brian stands on that. He reads this page, so we'll likely see the answer soon.

Sarah Foster at WorldNetDaily - FLIR expert had 'heart attack': The autopsy report on the death of Carlos Ghigliotti is in. Cause of death: heart attack. [wnd]

Nancy Johnson at Sierra Times - Second Amendment Sisters: Never Be Victims Again! (an exclusive report on the S.A.S Rally in D.C.): estimates the crowd at the Million Mom March at about 40,000. They had over 3,000 at the Armed Informed Mothers march. [sierra]

There's a new issue of The Libertarian Enterprise today. Ya'll go on over and read it, hear? I especially liked the Letter from Rick Trentham in which he suggested captions for the famous photo of the INS goon pointing a machine gun in the general direction of Elian Gonzalez. My favorite:

They would have sent Lon Horiuchi instead of me, but your mom's already dead.

Google.com press release - Google Goes Mobile With Industry's First Comprehensive Wireless Search Engine: Not only are they going to provide their search engine in WML, they've got a translation service that translates HTML to WML, so you have a way to view the entire web through your cell phone or Palm Pilot. My guess is that these automatically translated pages will look horrid, but you'll at least be able to read the text, which is a whole lot better than nothing. [/.]

Kevin Tuma - Million Mafioso March: hehe

Jim Peron at Laissez Faire City Times - Turning Reason Inside Out: The pseudo-scientists have convinced lots of folks that you have to prove something is safe. This is impossible.

What each of these cases have in common is the reversal of the basic rules of evidence. They are arguing that one must prove a negative -- something which is not possible. Let me illustrate by asking you to prove to me that you are not a child rapist. And for purposes of our argument let us assume you are seeking to work in a child care center. Remember I simply ask you to prove the negative. I don't find it necessary to offer evidence or proof that you may be guilty of something.

Scott Carpenter at Laissez Faire City Times - The Million Mom March: Labels the Million Mom March as an example of "mass groupthink", a pretty accurate description, IMHO.

Unfortunately, mass groupthink does rear its ugly head every so often and, as usual, the results are somewhat less than constructive. So, as the "Million Mom March" began to take shape one wondered where, in light of strong evidence that proves more gun control does not reduce crime or the suicide rate, the tens of thousands of women partaking in the "March" should fit in. While they obviously fall short of being a rioting mob the phenomena is still of a more destructive nature than the behavior exhibited by our thoughtless and carefree teens. After all, binge drinking is primarily a self destructive activity; campaigning to deprive someone of their right to self defense is not. ...

The result of refusing to think gives those in power carte blanche to think for us. This is the essence of collectivism and this my good friends and neighbors is what is at the heart of the great evil that is eating North America. Collectivism naturally requires groupthink (and complacency) on a massive scale in order to grow. Groupthink (thoughtlessness) is how millions of people can be convinced that something which is completely immoral is within their right to enforce upon their fellow man.

Andy Oram at O'Reilly Network - Gnutella and Freenet Represent True Technological Innovation: an article on the technical merits of Gnutella and Freenet. [cafe]

Gnutella and Freenet, in different ways, make the location of documents irrelevant; the search string becomes the location. To achieve this goal, they add a new layer of routing on top of the familiar routing done at the IP level. The new layer may appear at first to introduce numerous problems in efficiency and scaling, but in practice these turn out to be negligible or least tolerable. I think readers should take a close look at these systems; even if Gnutella and Freenet themselves turn out not to be good enough solutions for a new Internet era, they'll teach us some lessons when it's time for yet another leap.

Andy Oram at webreview.com - The Value of Gnutella and Freenet:

The title of this essay contains a hidden message. There are important areas where Gnutella and Freenet have value, but there are also areas where they don't offer much value. The area where all the fears are being spawned -- the distribution of illegal, defamatory, or copyright-infringing material -- is actually not a big danger, according to my analysis.
He claims that anonymous information is not valuable, which I don't believe. Still, these systems, and others like them, are going to make digital copyright enforcement virtually impossible. Will I still pay for software and music. Of course. For the same reason I pay for food and clothing that I could just as easily steal. I want to keep the people who create them in business so that their creations will be available next time I want them.

Wesley Fok's "humble site", chrominance, comments on the two sides of the victim disarmament issue as described by yours truly and kitschbitch, both sparked by the Million Mom March. It's in the 05-14-2000 section, which I can't point at any closer than the home page.

Thorn is a UML modeling tool written in Java. It uses XML to save the models you create. Its purpose is to give the open source world a good modeling tool to help develop and manage the increasingly sophisticated development efforts of the open source community. The current version of the project is unusable for modeling purposes, but it is progressing rapidly (albeit, only on the weekends). [meat]

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