The defendant was perfectly free to say whatever she wanted. However, she found there is a that pesky little issue of being responsible for what she said.
So this isn't a slap to free speech, it's a glorious example of why it works.
I wanted my dad's hair, I got my mom's wonky chemistry. Yes, I'm one of those people who are chemically depressed.
Before I was on the meds I would have the ambition to do things but couldn't actually get up and do them. It was horribly frustrating.
Now that I'm on the meds I have both the ambition and the ability to do the things I like.
If this could have been 'bred' out of my family's genetics I think we all would have been much better off. That is, unless there's a trade off we haven't seen yet.
And to the MS-centric view of the world those who don't use Outlook (sad, misguided fools that they are) are statistically insignificant and don't really exist.
As a Notes user at work, it's interesting to see how they're trying to tie all the business processes to their systems.
So this isn't a slap to free speech, it's a glorious example of why it works.
Before I was on the meds I would have the ambition to do things but couldn't actually get up and do them. It was horribly frustrating.
Now that I'm on the meds I have both the ambition and the ability to do the things I like.
If this could have been 'bred' out of my family's genetics I think we all would have been much better off. That is, unless there's a trade off we haven't seen yet.
And to the MS-centric view of the world those who don't use Outlook (sad, misguided fools that they are) are statistically insignificant and don't really exist.
As a Notes user at work, it's interesting to see how they're trying to tie all the business processes to their systems.
Too bad. That seems to be the general sway of things. Oh wait, this is Microsoft. *Everyone* uses Outlook in their world.