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To: freeus who wrote (286)12/3/1999 5:03:00 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22706
 
etc etc etc

Easy Freeus. A couple of more posts like this one, and the U.N. will send a "Black Helicopter" over to pick you up! :0)



To: freeus who wrote (286)12/4/1999 2:54:00 PM
From: Ruffian  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 22706
 
ViewPoint;

The clash between World Trade Organization protesters and police last
week in Seattle underscores the problems of balancing new free-trade
initiatives with concerns about human rights, the environment and the
American belief in a decent standard of living for all.

While President Clinton denounced last week's violent protests, he said
he sympathized with protesters' issues. Seattle's police chief also
defended the protesters' rights to free speech even as he imposed tighter
restrictions on protesters to keep them from disrupting the WTO talks.

It's a fine line. The very countries the protesters aim to ‘‘protect'' have
WTO reps telling them to shut up and go home. WTO reps quoted in the
Wall Street Journal basically said they know how to help the people in
their countries more than a bunch of American liberals.

I don't profess to know even one of the answers in this extremely
complicated matter of helping vs. harming nations. In all of this, however,
one constant remains: Communications gives people power. And
wireless communications gives them even greater power.

We even saw this in Seattle, where David E. Sanger, writing for the The
New York Times, reported that ‘‘officers confiscated cell phones and
gas masks from the demonstrators, denying them the two tools that
allowed the protesters to run circles around the police the day before.''

Wireless manufacturers thus are practically foaming at the mouth to enter
the Chinese market. With the world's largest population and a low
teledensity, China is the end of the rainbow. The pot of gold.

On the surface, it may appear manufacturers are willing to overlook
everything—how China cheated companies willing to invest in the
country by declaring China-China-foreign ventures illegal; its human
rights abuses; etc.—just to have the chance to invest in China.

But what will happen in China when the teledensity goes from 11 percent
to a penetration rate of even 50 percent? What will happen in
less-developed nations when the teledensity increases from 2 percent to
20 percent?

What will happen? The same things that happened when Gutenberg
invented the printing press. The same things that happened when people
got access to the Internet. Power will flow from the few to the many.

It may take a few generations, but people will become empowered. And
when people are empowered, they can change the world. And those
people may have the power to stop the abuses to their neighbors and the
environment.