It looks like Bill Gates has redefined the term, “the pot calling the kettle black”. Yup, good ol Bill has declared that high school is obsolete. At a high school summit, Bill was quoted as saying:
“America’s high schools are obsolete, By obsolete, I don’t just mean that they’re broken, flawed or under funded, though a case could be made for every one of those points. By obsolete, I mean our high schools - even when they’re working as designed - cannot teach all our students what they need to know today.”
The first thing that came to my mind, in reading this story, is how ironic Bill is by talking about things being ‘obsolete’. I know, I know, most of you out there are totally dependant on Windows, which in itself, should be in the dictionary next to the word ‘obsolete’. Most normal Americans are a part of the large desperate flock that Bill Gates himself has helped to build, based on poor programming, shady business practices, and lovely little blue screens. Bill himself dropped out of college, so my real question is, what kind of example is Microsoft leaving for all these children?
http://www.pentecostblog.com
This whole society smells of mediocrity and stinks of stupidity.
I wonder someone like Bill Gates complains about high schools being obsolete. He is the one (not the only one) to take advantage out of it.
We say “do not spit in the soup you eat”.
If schools were better, then people would be more cultured and would automatically be more sophisticated consumers.
On the contrary, this society has to grow sick people (brainwashed) in order to have a healty economy.
Who would pay for Windows when able to use Linux? Or better, who wouldn’t be able to produce something better?
The fact is: we have the society we deserve.
And also we have the OS we deserve.
As simple as sad as that.
Patrizia
This is not Bill Gates, indeed it isn't, it's a painting of Bill Gates, or to be more accurate, the picture shown here is a photograph of a painting , or even more precisely, the reproduction of a photograph transferred off a printing plate by small inked dots.
Now i'm into this analysis I might as well keep going on, because what you really see is an upside down image flipped left to right on the back of your retina, an electrochemical hallucination in the head.
Monday, February 28, 2005
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