Inside Kerry and Bush's Technology Agendas
wbren writes "PC Magazine has posted an interview on its website shedding some light on the two major candidates' policies regarding privacy, The Patriot Act, outsourcing, Internet sales taxes, broadband taxes and other important tech-related issues. PC Magazine calls it an interview, but John Kerry was the only candidate to actually respond directly to the questions asked. Bush's camp referred PC Magazine to George Bush's website to find the answers. The result: detailed and informative responses from Kerry, and many missing responses from the Bush campaign due to lack of information provided by Bush's website."
Admit it: you're just bitter because you are a "shut-in" trapped in the "dark dungeons of the internet" that needs a compassionate punch in the face.
It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
and you know he's intelligent enough to change his mind if confronted with appropriate facts.
Or, more commonly, new opinion polls.
Calvin and Hobbes on W (from a strip 11 years ago this week):
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http://www.ucomics.com/calvinandhobbes/1993/09/21
Now, I'm a huge Kerry supporter, and to be honest I'm not even sure how a decent person could vote Bush--the candidate of bigotry, plutocracy, and jingoism. I'm a conservative, therefore I oppose all those plan to vote Kerry.
Wow, with those two sentences in such close proximity, I really had no idea how you were going to vote. But I guess the violent flip-flop is a dead giveaway that you'll eventually identify with Kerry.
Relax, just having fun.
What is your position on unauthorized online file-sharing?
Kerry: I don't condone illegal sharing of copyrighted material. Widespread sharing and downloading of music, movies, and software undermines the incentives for individuals and companies to create new content. We need to continue to enforce our copyright laws and combat piracy both here and abroad.
Bush: (I couldn't find a specific comment on file sharing.)
If he's not against it, he's for it!