<<<
Chronological Index
>>> <<<
Thread Index
>>>
Re: [ga] A Monroe Doctrine for the Internet
- To: Danny Younger <dannyyounger@xxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: Re: [ga] A Monroe Doctrine for the Internet
- From: Hugh Dierker <hdierker2204@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 6 Nov 2005 21:01:33 -0800 (PST)
- Cc: ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Domainkey-signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=nofws; s=s1024; d=yahoo.com; h=Message-ID:Received:Date:From:Subject:To:Cc:In-Reply-To:MIME-Version:Content-Type:Content-Transfer-Encoding; b=BzGl1hJqDUy4bz//EHqIVTgR/bH3Hys/LmQikDwwwjuGk0FUaMPv5AOZcTrnsNzkflUI2Vy3/66lPtRaXUHS7hZK51D5JnN2NlfK3zYmg8FoiLdBccwR8jdlFvjWaKXmzfTcfdPHtnUkzHdMs9NYQijCNwuwXTPIGZ2t8WHSbIw= ;
- In-reply-to: <20051106215315.82797.qmail@web53507.mail.yahoo.com>
- Sender: owner-ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Danny,
Your argument does not necessarily follow.
So the rich kid on the block owns a car. The remaining twenty cannot afford one. So it is consensus to take the car from the rich kid? I think that is communism not consensus.
Eric
Danny Younger <dannyyounger@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
<snip>
As we look at the WSIS process, we currently see the
U.S. on one side of the debate and the rest of the
world on the other side. The consensus view does not
at the moment support the U.S. position.
The big question is this: "Will the U.S. government
honor Internet tradition and accept what appears to be
a worldwide consensus, or not?"
---------------------------------
Yahoo! FareChase - Search multiple travel sites in one click.
<<<
Chronological Index
>>> <<<
Thread Index
>>>
|