The tragic of the whole thing is that the protestors who managed to disrupt
the talks at Seattle played straight into the cards of those interests they
are so much against. The US big companies prefer no new talks to any real
changes the way third world and some European countries wanted.

Jan Matthieu
Flemish Greens
-----Oorspronkelijk bericht-----
Van: Michael Gurstein <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Aan: futurework <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Datum: mardi 7 décembre 1999 17:48
Onderwerp: Fw: The Battle of Seattle

>> >This is by no means the end of Big Business.  The
>> >richest 1% still own 90% of everything in this world.
>> >They will not go down without a fight.
>> >
>> >But they have been put on notice that people from all
>> >walks of life have had their fill and will not let up until we
>> >have a fair, just, and democratic economy.  This week,
>> >Seattle was the Lexington and Concord of a movement
>> >that now cannot be stopped.  Mark it down, this last great,
>> >important date of the 20th century -- November 30, 1999 --
>> >The Battle of Seattle, the day the people got tired of having
>> >to work a second job while fighting off the collection agents
>> >and decided it was time the pie was shared with the people
>> >who baked it.
>> >
>> >Yours,
>> >Michael Moore
>> ><A HREF="http://www.michaelmoore.com">http://www.michaelmoore.com</A>
>> >[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> >
>> >P.S.  We're still looking for someone to run our web site.
>> >Someone who can write, edit, and make the thing look
>> >like a million rubles. It's a full time job located in our
>> >New York City office. We need someone who, like us,
>> >sees all the subversive, crazy potential of the Internet.
>> >E-mail us at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> >
>>
>>
>

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