On Sat, Jan 12, 2002 at 10:50:11AM -0600, Glenn McDavid wrote:

> Quite right.  Furthermore, he may not be in a position to advocate
> Linux there.  I work for another local government and I know somebody
> there who got reprimanded for advocating Linux and was forbidden from
> giving a presentation about Linux at the Departmental education forum.
> The LAN admin management will not discuss any alternative to Microsoft.
> A few of us meet quietly sometimes and try to think of ways around this
> formidable obstacle :-(>

Hrm.  Not to sow the seeds of discord, but how "forbidden" are we
talking?  If one were a big enough troublemaker, one might be able to
turn this into a First Amendment issue.  I wonder if PFAW or ACLU
might not have something to say about it.  

I raise this issue because you say it's a government agency.  They
obviously do have some control over what people are allowed to bring
to meetings, but it might be possible to show that if you define the
issue enough, they have violated his right to express an opinion.

> Not sure the desktop  is the best place to start, but the state budget
> problems should help people consider alternatives to Redmond.

<pure personal opinion>
  Alternatives to Ventura, too.
</pure personal opinon>

-- 
"Trying to do something with your life is like
sitting down to eat a moose." --Douglas Wood