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Technology Stocks : How high will Microsoft fly? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Harvey Allen who wrote (46445)6/12/2000 9:14:00 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
 
So is Cramer saying you should never fight or oppose those in powerful position in the govt, or because the people in robes are smart and graduated from Harvard?!?! He is even more of a clown than I previosly thought.

From TSC:

When lawyers and judges get
together these days-- and
they do, because they have
private lives -- they all talk
about one thing: What the
heck were the Microsoft
(MSFT:Nasdaq - news - boards) guys thinking when they
attacked Judge Jackson and Joel Klein? What kind of stupid
"tactic" was that?

For the most part, in the press, the trial was presented as being
a fair battle between two opponents. Microsoft had a side, the
government had a side. Microsoft had lawyers, the government
had lawyers. Seemed like a classic battle.

But that was all for public consumption. Behind the scenes,
many of the people in the great complex that is the Justice
Department and the Federal judicial system were appalled at
the clan from Redmond. They were seething. They continue to
seethe now that the company's new PR campaign is in the works
to make Microsoft into the victim.

Unless you know some of the folk who work for Justice or the
bench in this country, you might think they are just a bunch of
civil servants who couldn't get a job in the private sector if they
wanted to. You might think they are people who work for the
government because it is easy and fun with good benefits and
not a lot of worry about advancement.

I don't know. I went to Harvard and Harvard law school. I did
great. But the people who did better than me at school all went
to those government jobs. They weren't motivated by money.
They were motivated by doing the right thing. They were
motivated by working for the people of the United States.

They thought guys like me, who were interested in going to
private-sector jobs, were lightweights. They thought
private-sector jobs were for those who didn't understand that
some things were more important than money: like justice and
fairness and equal opportunity. These guys wanted to do
something that mattered.

They are powerful opponents. They work virtually for free. That's
scary to me. It should have been scary to Microsoft.

What did this fraternity of the smartest people in the country
want from Microsoft? Respect. A recognition of the power of the
people. A grudging understanding that laws, not money, still
rule in this country.

This fraternity wanted Microsoft to keep its mouth shut. It wanted
Microsoft to come to Washington and say, "Heck, maybe we
were out of control. What can we do better? What should we be
doing?" This fraternity knew it had the power all along to make
that happen one way or the other. It never wanted things to get
to where they are, believe me. It never expected that it would
get to breakup. It kept expecting that Microsoft would stop
acting like some Dickensian nightmare of a capitalist enterprise.

But Microsoft didn't. It still hasn't. And now the fraternity, which
includes every black-robed member of the Federal bench,
including the Supreme Court, is angry. It doesn't care that you
own Microsoft in your 401(k) or that Bill and Melinda give away
millions. It doesn't care that Microsoft has created jobs and
wealth and happiness. Heck, it wouldn't care right now if
Microsoft broke into, "We are the World" and worked for world
peace, a ban on land mines and a cure for cancer.

To these folks, Microsoft is an outlaw -- the biggest outlaw that
has come down the federal pike in their time working for the
government. Sure, I am long Microsoft. I believe in the stock.
But what the heck? This PR campaign, this pathetic attempt to
gain public sympathy, it ain't flying with the people who matter:
the people who wear black robes to work.

These black-robed workers hate Microsoft. And they like Judge
Jackson. He will do well when the appeals time comes. He is
one of them. Because he represents the U.S. government, as
they do. And because he was just doing his job. As they do. His
verdict will be upheld on appeal. He will win. He played by the
real rules, the code of conduct and respect that everyone must
show the government.

Microsoft didn't. And for these folks, the rules are all that matter.

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