CRRoot@dstsystems.com wrote: > Would you not say that conforming in a nonconformist world is essentially > an act of nonconformism? > > Just curious. Yes, so many people are trying to be a nonconformist, that some times I feel as if I am the only one you isn't (But,...but,... I don't WANT to be different, I want to be the same...) ;) It was that way all the way through high school, many of my classmates were rebelling against 'sameness', (and frequently all in the same way to...go figure.) I was one of very few people who did not rebel against anything, and therefore did not fit in (Sound familiar?) I believe that a certain amount of diversity is good, but it is not a silver bullet. I really like that new 1/2 price commercial, (all together now) IT'S THE SAME THING!!! Through the eighties, many business rebelled against the I.S. Department and went to this new-fangled PC thingy (with MSware). I resisted as long as I could and didn't get my first PC until 1991 (a 386 and retired it this year). I could be accused of being a luddite, because I just yesterday did my first ECommerce transaction. I first saw Unix (or Xenix) in 198? on some kind of TRS-80. Took my first class in it in 1985/6 and really liked it I found BSD386 in 1992, but didn't have any way to get it to my machine, and finally got Linux in 1994/5. We now return you to alt.talk.politics.hal.rambles.on. Hal Duston hald@sound.net Boring is good A conformist in a nonconformist world