LinuxPlanet Interviews Robert Bork
Greg writes: "Robert Bork, former Supreme Court appointee from the Reagan era and a recent entrant in the MS antitrust case, did an
interview
over at LinuxPlanet. The topic? The Evil Empire's court settlement." Bork isn't actually new to the Microsoft case or to the subject of monopolies -- his legal experience makes this an interesting read, even for those who don't consider Microsoft an "evil empire."
A well educated citizenry being necessary to the sucess of a free state, the right of the people to keep and read books shall not be infringed.
So we can only keep and read books that relate to education? We can only keep and read books that are permitted by the state?
The most apalling interpretation is that the right is somehow "granted", when it specifically says that the right shall not be infringed. The plain english is that government cannot "grant", it can only "infringe" on a pre-existing right.
Offtopic, here I come.
Bob-
The Ludwig von Mises Institute. The reasoning individuals economics