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My Visit to Microsoft
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I've just walked into the
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Slate
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offices
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after an hour-long free-form discussion with about 200 Microsoft employees. I
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loved the discussion. There was obviously tension in the air, because my
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visit--though long-scheduled--came on the heels of the "Findings of Fact" by
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the judge presiding over the anti-trust case brought against Microsoft by the
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Justice Department.
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Even though the Justice Department makes its own
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independent decisions in such matters without input from the White House, its
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leaders--including Joel Klein--are appointees of the current administration.
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For that reason, I couldn't comment on the decision that was clearly on many
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people's minds on the Microsoft campus today. I did make clear that there is a
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fundamental American value in making sure that neither heavy-handed government
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nor unfair business practices stamp out competition.
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But then the meeting moved on to other topics, and I
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wasn't surprised to find that, as much as Microsoft's employees are interested
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in technology and the Internet, they are also interested in the same issues as
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all hard-working Americans--how they can give their children the best
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education; how we can make our schools and streets safer; and how we can reach
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across our divisions to bring this nation together.
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And even though national security policy didn't come up,
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I suggested that one crucial issue for voters to ponder is this: whose finger
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do you want on the ALT-CONTROL-DELETE button?
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The
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issue of payment of our U.N. dues came up (in the context of the group's
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feeling that no inappropriate compromise on the issue of choice should be
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accepted), but no other foreign policy issues arose. So I obviously spent too
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much time in advance preparing for a pop quiz about CEO's of software companies
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from hot spots around the world.
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But in
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truth, the questions were wide-ranging. One person asked me my position on hate
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crimes legislation. And to me, in a year when Matthew Shepard was crucified on
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a split rail fence because of his sexual orientation; when James Byrd was
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dragged to his death because of his skin color; and both a Filipino-American
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and a Korean graduate student were murdered because of the shape of their
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eyes--I cannot comprehend how some can argue that hate crimes are no different
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from all other crimes. That is why we need tougher laws to prevent and punish
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them.
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Another person asked me how we can make our schools
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safer in the aftermath of tragedies such as Columbine. I said that I believe
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the solutions range from tough measures to get guns away from kids and
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criminals, to more discipline and values in our schools, to more self-restraint
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in the use of gratuitous violence in the entertainment media, to more parental
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involvement in the lives of our children--which of course means we need to give
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working parents more help in balancing work and family.
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I was certainly impressed by the discussion, and the
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quality and range of the questions. I could see right away that Microsoft was
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home to a great deal of talent and creative drive. That may be why, according
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to certain projections, Bill Gates may be worth a trillion dollars some day. Of
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course, I feel it's important to point out to America's young people: if Bill
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had not dropped out of college, he'd have a chance at being worth two
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trillion dollars.
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After the discussion, I got a chance to visit
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Microsoft's Home of the Future--where I got a chance to see technology that was
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definitely impressive. My favorites were features of Windows 2000:
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magnification for the vision-impaired, and a voice that reads the screen to the
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blind.
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Finally, I stopped over here at the offices of
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Slate
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, where my daughter Karenna worked in '96 and '97. Actually,
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while I started this piece at
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Slate
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, I am finishing it in Seattle
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and e-mailing it. (And all this time, I thought you actually had to be
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physically present at Slate.com in order to write for it.) It was terrific to
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meet some of her friends and former colleagues--and also to try my hand at
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journalism for the first time in almost a quarter of a century.
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Instead of my trusty old typewriter from my days at the
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Nashville Tennessean , I did get to write this article on a state-of
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the-art, ergonometric keyboard. And, true to my old profession, as I write this
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I'm crashing to meet the deadline I was assigned by editor Michael Kinsley.
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All told, it was a wonderful visit. The entire Microsoft
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campus is just bubbling with energy and ideas. I certainly hope to spend even
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more time in the Seattle area. And who knows? If I work at it, I might even be
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able to pick up some endorsements from members of the Sonics. ...
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