--Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson
A COUPLE of days ago it was a special day. It marked the anniversary not only of Pearl Harbor but also of Bill Gates' predatory (and later criminal) behaviour against Netscape and by inference against the Net.
Yesterday was Pearl Harbour Day, which means that it's fully fourteen years since Bill Gates declared war:
On December 7, 1995, Pearl Harbor Day, Bill Gates declared war -- writing an internal memo ordering Microsoft to throw all its resources into launching a "hardcore" attack on the Internet browser market. At the time, Netscape's share of that market was close to 90%; by early 2000, Netscape's share had plunged to 20%, and Microsoft's browser appeared to have won this war.
I remember the day well, because it marked probably the biggest U-turn in the history of Microsoft. Before, Bill Gates had dismissed the Internet as too hard to use, and only of interest to academics. Afterwards, it became perhaps the single most important focus of the entire company. The success of that move was plain in the steadily rising graph of Internet Explorer's market share, and the corresponding decline of Netscape.
Gates Foundation rhetoric makes Africa sound like a basket case, land-wise: references to “depleted” or “degraded” soils.
We hear relatively little about the continent’s vast agricultural assets—which wealthy investors are now busily snapping up. Andrew Rice visits Africa’s “billion-acre Guinea Savannah zone,” which he describes as “a crescent-shaped swath that runs east across Africa all the way to Ethiopia, and southward to Congo and Angola. “The World Bank and the FAO have declared the tract “one of the earth’s last large reserves of underused land,” Rice reports.
Comments
NotZed
2009-12-09 23:09:59
Well that's sad. It's being used, just not for food production for the overweight west.
This world is well and truly buggered.
Roy Schestowitz
2009-12-09 23:19:15
Some see soil, whereas others see oil.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ttq0IdULfjg http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cVlnqnMHQ1c