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Forgetting the Court

Submitted by Shih-Ming Laura Yeh, Oct 4, 2007 15:46

Dear Mr. Blackwell,

All errors that have been made since 2001, seem to be "an error of art", tossed over like overcooked pasta. Perhaps it is one reason there has been so much distaste over the internet.

Those whose careers have merged, crossed and intersected Hollywood, were always responsible for fixing these errors, until the cellular networks creeped up on us.

In 2007, our government is paralyzed. During the Clinton Supreme Court scandal, we missed the opportunity to fix an emerging problem, a new conflict of new technology with OLD stable heads. While all heads were turned to SCANDAL, the latest and greatest SCANDAL-propagating tool was making a broad entrance. To this date, this technology - wireless, GPS-accessing, cellular, has no official regulation. The new DVD format, similarly has no regulation.

To date, the only federal ban of cellphone use is aboard passenger, commercial flights. Has this helped our economy? It seems prudent to observe the unstable trends, that TOTAL laissez-faire have brought about. Our education, similarly, has been affected.

Mr. Guiliani is a very valuable resource locally. [To me, more valuable than Mrs. Clinton.] New Yorkers need Mr. Guiliani. The White House, accepting Guiliani, will simply be walking into another Hollywood movie. What happened in 2001? An impact of a Hollywood movie-making invasion on our culture. NEW YORK took a hit. California took a hit even earlier, as a bridge of the skyways, between the 2000 Sydney summer olympics, and returns home.

Can Mr. Guiliani handle Hollywood? He must be able to not sweep "errors of art" under the carpet. These errors have become large indeed. We can not construct (another) Hollywood facade in NYC as a permanent building. We can not continue to mistake corporate politics and corporate entertainment (or abuse of middle-managment) for a war in Iraq. Some see no entertainment whatsoever in how our computer networks, ladened under the weight of wireless, are being abused for self-aggrandizement,
and in the name of the entertainment industry.

As some politicians have left construction alone, so Mr. Guiliani would have a tendency to leave Hollywood alone. The White House needs one who is willing to blacklist, and for the sake of taxpayer dollars, preferably a doctor or engineer ([SOMEONE] scientifically-minded enough to regulate the consumer computer industry). Who will do the job? Star tracking we don't need; MINDING those dollars, cent for cent, we do need.

Sincerely,
Shih-Ming Laura Yeh


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Dear Mr. Blackwell, All errors that have been made since 2001, seem to be "an error of art", tossed over like...

Shih-Ming Laura Yeh 

Oct 4, 2007 15:46

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