Hi Harry.
You write:
You sound very cynical.
No, it's a sincere question. I feel rather like I'm in one
of those psychological experiments where the proctor and a
few confederates are trying to convince someone that the
air is green. Don't you see the green air? I do And so
do I What's wrong
Perhaps the majority (~60%) of Americans aren't concerned.
However, I would say the rest of Americans are concerned.
The popularity of Fahrenheit 911 is a good example.
Harry
Keith Nagel at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Harry.
You write:
You sound very cynical.
No, it's a sincere
At 12:31 PM 1/9/2005, you wrote:
Perhaps the majority (~60%) of Americans aren't concerned.
However, I would say the rest of Americans are concerned.
The popularity of Fahrenheit 911 is a good example.
Apathy rules I guess.
Aw, who cares, anyway!
s
Steve, living in an oil state like Texas, I am painfully
aware of the apathy..or.. err.. dispair of our leadership in the DOE. This Gov't
bureaucracy gleens $ 20bil plus per year from a special tax on petroleum to fund
themselves.
In Washington, it becomes a game of musical chairs each
4
Oh my goodness looks like you've got some clear and horrific facts
here
Yes, I'm familiar with revenue streams. I've been in IT for 17 years and
seen the major emphasis and push for the big boys in IT to develop them in
services once they realized that hardware and software sales were
http://www.technewsworld.com/story/39360.html
COMMENTARY
The Big Science Chill
By Sonia Arrison
TechNewsWorld
01/07/05 5:00 AM PT
When smart people in California's tech mecca fail, they pick up the pieces
and the community pats them on the back for taking a risk in the name of
progress
Keith,
You sound very cynical.
The scientific climate may be chilly in the US, but in Canada
you will get frost bite in 30 seconds if you mention the subject! ;-)
I noticed that only two people from Canada attended the last CF conference,
and I don't think they were scientists or engineers.
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