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Very well said - You should be working for a news paper, you write better then
most of them. C J Campbell wrote: Well, Mr. Gilmore is a bitter pill to swallow, isn't he? Does Mr. Gilmore have the right to wear his button in public? Of course. And, for those who blame 'the government' for Mr. Gilmore's treatment, I note that Mr. Gilmore was not accused of breaking or violating any government regulations. I realize that the Bush haters will see yet another Republican conspiracy to deprive Mr. Gilmore of his civil rights, but the fact is that Mr. Gilmore was travelling on a British air carrier flying to London. Although he started in the United States, no US government authority has or had a problem with Mr. Gilmore's button. Does British Airways, as a private company, have a right to limit Mr. Gilmore's free speech? I personally think that a private company or individual has the moral right to decide who it wants to do business with, without any government restriction whatsoever. I oppose all laws intended to prevent 'discimination' of any kind on the basis that they violate the fundamental right of freedom of association. IF British Airways is a private company, the British Airways jet is private property, and Mr. Gilmore's presence on that private property should be at the pleasure of the owner of that private property. The question remains, however, that given the extensive involvement of the British government in British Airways, is BA a private company? I would argue that this is a fundamental problem with government intrusion into what should be private enterprise -- that government ownership and subsidy systematically deprive people of their civil rights. Nevertheless, BA is, on paper at least, a private company and should be allowed to behave as such. Mr. Gilmore is a hypocrite. He wants freedom for himself as an individual, but is not willing to allow that freedom to others. British Airways by all rights should be able to choose whether it wants to do business with Mr. Gilmore or anyone else who is travelling with him. Mr. Gilmore knows that, or at least he should know that. Mr. Gilmore's actions are no better than those of the Confederacy during the Civil War -- you cannot claim the right of self-determination while depriving others of freedom. I have little sympathy for Mr. Gilmore. |
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