Sometimes I want to chuck my computer out
the window.
Today the Washington Post's Jennifer Rubin wrote an article about John McCain called "The Human Rights Community Lost a Champion." Subtitle: "No greater friend of the oppressed."
(I just covered the McCain foreign-policy legacy on yesterday's episode (#1227) of the Tom Woods Show, by the way.)
Here we have the Internet, the most potentially liberating force of all time, and we're going to use it to spread state propaganda -- which we could just as easily have done before the Internet?
That makes me crazy.
But then,
of course, I remember: thanks to the Internet, I reach a boatload of people every day who want to hear something different. And I myself am able to hear from dissident voices every day.
All of this is quite liberating indeed.
But it's also liberating for you, your lifestyle, and even your
job.
Only 36 hours remain to watch the replay of last night's presentation, where Sara and Andrew got extremely specific about how and what to do if you want to build something online that's long term and can generate good revenue for you.
For this kind of business, there is no one on earth I
would more happily and confidently refer you to.
The Internet can be liberating, as it has been for me, but you have to take the first step.
Luckily, it's a single click:
Tom Woods