Ph: 1882114981

Richard Stallman's Personal Home Page

Political Articles | Political Notes | Travel Experiences | Travel Photos | Scientific Links | Airlines | Serious Bio | Humorous Bio | Curiosities
Sayings | Photos and drawings | Humor | Personal Ad | Lifelong Activist | Links | Linguistic Swifties | Archive | Thanks

ht://Dig Search:

RSS site feed

This is the personal web site of Richard Stallman.
The views expressed here are my personal views, not those of the Free Software Foundation or the GNU Project.
The largest part of the site is the political notes, and they are typically updated every day.
Please also look at the Urgent action notes, and occasionally at the Long-term action notes.

I am looking for volunteers to browse slashdot and boingboing and show me items that I ought to see. If you'd like to help me in this way, please write to rms at gnu period org.

I am looking for a couple of additional volunteers to help edit the pages on the site for me. If you'd like to help me in this way, please write to rms at gnu period org.

 [America Means Civil Liberties / Patriotism Means Protecting Them / www.aclu.org/safefree ]
graphic by Susan Henson
Americans, you may wish to copy this icon to your own page, as a way of showing what patriotism means to you.

Urgent action items

Urgent action items.

US citizens: sign this petition denouncing Bush's plan to call contraception abortion.

US citizens: phone your congresscritters in support of HR 1258 (impeachment of Bush) and HR 33 (impeachment of Cheney).

The Capitol Switchboard numbers are 202-224-3121, 888-818-6641 and 888-355-3588.

Also sign Kucinich's petition.

US citizens: support the ACLU's campaign to end the nasty practices of the "Department of Homeland Security".

Notice the similarity between "Department of Homeland Security" and "Committee for Public Safety"? The latter, headed by Robespierre, carried out "the terror".

US citizens: support the campaign for digital publication of Senate campaign contribution reports.

US citizens: call your senators to tell them to end government subsidy for the oil companies (and tax them instead). You can also sign this petition.

The Capitol Switchboard numbers are 202-224-3121, 888-818-6641 and 888-355-3588.

US citizens: call your representatives and ask them to cosponsor these two bills:

The Medical Marijuana Patient Protection Act of 2008 (H.R. 5842) would give states greater authority to determine their own medical marijuana policies.

The Personal Use of Marijuana By Responsible Adults Act of 2008 (H.R. 5843) would remove federal penalties for possessing up to 3.5 ounces of marijuana.

The Capitol Switchboard numbers are 202-224-3121, 888-818-6641 and 888-355-3588.

Here are some congressional elections that can affect abortion rights.

Now if only they let everyone vote and count the votes accurately...

Massachusetts voters: support Question 2, to eliminate criminal penalties for possession of small amounts of marijuana.

US voters: find out whether your representatives and senators are supported by the oil companies.

Report information on the term "intellectual property"

I am looking for volunteers to give me information for two research projects. One project is to verify when various US law schools started using the propaganda term "intellectual property" in names of classes. If you are at a university which has a law school, you could probably easily find out when it did so. The other project is to find out when the US Congress started to have committees named "intellectual property".

If you have information for me, please email it to rms at gnu dot orgy minus the y.

Support the Green Party

Nader for President

UK voters: support the Liberal Democrats.

The Lifelong Activist

People often ask how I manage to continue devoting myself to progressive activism (such as the free software movement) for years without burning out. The best way I can answer is by recommending a book, The Lifelong Activist by Hillary Rettig.

I disagree with the book on one theoretical point in the last part of the book: we shouldn't think of political activism as being marketing and sales, because those terms refer to business, and politics is something much more important than mere business. However, this doesn't diminish the value of the book's practical advice about borrowing techniques from marketing and sales.

Disclosure: I am friends with the author.

Recording of Guantanamero

Listen to the recording of Guantanamero, a protest song written in Spanish. The recording is in Ogg Vorbis format. To install an Ogg Vorbis player, see the FSF's Ogg Players page.
Economists
[More Cartoons]

Don't Buy Harry Potter Books

See harry-potter.html.

UK airports

I'm looking for people who would like to launch and run a petition where people will publicly state that if the UK starts fingerprinting air travelers, they will not fly out of UK airports. The site should display the names and cities of signers. Please write to rms at gnu.org if you are interested.

No national identity cards

I'd like to make a list of countries that do not require a national identity card, and have no plans to adopt one. If you live in or have confirmed knowledge of such a country, please send email to rms at gnu.org.

Here's my current list of countries with no national ID cards and no plans for one: Australia, New Zealand and Canada. Australia's previous government tried to institute national ID cards, but the Labour government dropped the plan. India has none, but I've recently heard India has plans to institute them. Likewise the Philippines.

Austria doesn't require people to have a national ID card, but requires people to notify the police of where they are staying even for 3 days.

Norway, Denmark and Sweden don't have ID cards as such, but they have ID numbers that citizens are forced to use frequently. Meanwhile, Ireland seems to be planning to allow the UK to pressure it to impose ID cards. (What was the point of fighting for Irish independence, one must wonder, if Ireland will change its domestic policies under British pressure.)


Long-term action items

Buy a printer which does not report your activities to the police.

Support the National Initiative for Democracy (http://Vote.org).

Personal ways to reduce climate change.

We cannot assume that personal voluntary changes will suffice, so treaties and laws are needed as well.

http://hfopi.de A project to plan a world order that would be good for people.

Also, see the Simultaneous Policy.

After reading this, I have a suggestion: to denounce the term "piracy" as a propaganda smear when applied to copying and sharing. (See words to avoid.)

A crucial part of rejecting the term is never using the term yourself. Another crucial part is explaining frequently that it is propaganda, that you reject it, and that that is why you don't use it.

Choose tap water rather than bottled water.

(I only get bottled water in the US when I am going to take a long bus ride.)

Sign the petition to the UN Secretary General to call on China to free the Panchen Lama, who has been a political prisoner for over a decade. Support the campaign for Net Neutrality. This campaign does not go far enough; it has adopted too narrow a definition of "neutrality". Net Neutrality ought to include rejecting discrimination based on what system or application the user is using. Support the campaign to repeal the overbroad "authorization for use of military force", adopted by a panicky congress in 2001, which gives Bush carte blanche to start wars anywhere. With new US passports designed insanely with an RFID, this article discusses good and bad methods for making it stop disclosing your personal information. Buy fair trade goods. Boycott Coca Cola Company for using paramilitaries to murder union organizers. Support the National Union of Journalists' boycott of Yahoo. Support Amnesty International's campaign against Internet censorship. Donate to Gush Shalom's campaign for food and medicine for occupied Palestine. Support the Identity Project, which opposes ID card requirements in the US. Boycott Blu-ray and HD-DVD. US citizens: sign the new Not In Our Name statement, and publicize it so that others will sign. You can also donate to Not in our Name. Request your Secure Flight Secret File Boycott Harry Potter Books Sign the petition to legalize peer-to-peer sharing in the US. Protest Bush by buying gas from Citgo. Sign the petition asking Canada to give refugee status to Americans who escape from the Bush forces. Sign the petition for independent inspection of voting machines in the US. Support the campaign to help local independent businesses by buying from them rather than from chain stores. Support conscientious objectors in Israel. Build RFID-zappers for yourself and for your friends. In the US and Mexico: establish butterfly gardens to help migrating monarch butterflies survive. Don't publish papers with the IEEE! As the IEEE rejects public-domain papers, let the public reject the IEEE. See http://cr.yp.to/writing/ieee.html.

It is not surprising to me that an official whose title includes the term "intellectual property rights" would act in the grasping, greedy fashion reported in that page. The term is propaganda, and interferes with clear thinking about the various disparate laws it lumps together. In general, anyone who uses the term is either trying to confuse you, or confused himself.

Get even for 9/11: support gay marriage!

People will say, "That makes no sense--what does one have to do with the other?" Which provides a chance to explain:

We don't know who the perpetrators are--perhaps Muslim fanatics, perhaps Christian fanatics (supporters of the Bush regime), perhaps both. It is tricky to get even with people when you can't identify them. How can we do it in this case?

Both of those groups hate gays and oppose gay rights. Thus, supporting gay marriage offers us a way we can be sure to make the perpetrators miserable, whoever they were.

There is a boycott of Caterpillar--the company that makes the bulldozers Israel uses to knock down Palestinian homes. Support Senator Boxer's campaign to pressure oil companies to stay out of ANWR.

I'm annoyed by the gratuitous suggestion that you say that the ANWR wilderness was "god-given", which presumes absurd views on the nature of the universe. I suggest editing out that part of the letter.

US voters, support Kucinich's campaign to create a Department of Peace which would encourage nonviolent solutions to international problems. In France, people are vowing to boycott the record companies due to the laws that they are lobbying for. Evidence of wide-ranging and persistent FBI misconduct, including sheltering murderers, shows that other instances of alleged FBI misconduct, such as the fabricated evidence against Leonard Peltier, deserve fresh investigations. Sign this petition. US citizens: you can sign your name to the campaign to repeal part of the U.S.A. P.A.T. R.I.O.T. Act. This would make the police once again have to get search warrants before they can get information from bookstores or libraries about what you have read or borrowed.

This is a step in the right direction, but it does not go far enough. The PAT RIOT act was extended in December 2003 to give the police equally easy access to many kinds of transaction records about you. The PAT RIOT act attacks your freedom in other ways, too, and not all of them will expire in 2005. See http://www.aclu.org/safefree/.

Israelis who refuse military service in the occupation of Palestine have trouble supporting their families. Yesh Gvul is asking for donations of funds to help these families. (The idea is that this will help more people decide to refuse.) Support the call for a Nobel Prize in Sustainable Development. Citizens of Europe: sign the resolution that demands a voter-verifiable audit trail for electronic voting machines. Please sign the petition against unsafe computerization of elections and careless purging of voter lists. Support federal medical marijuana legislation. Join the boycott of Chinese products to support human rights for Tibetans and Chinese. Precisely how the Bush team stole the Florida election is documented. Florida Secretary of State Katherine Harris, who was co-chair of the Bush campaign in Florida and a close associate of Bush's brother, deliberately blocked careful checking of the list of felons, with the result that thousands of Black people who were not felons and were legally entitled to vote were blocked from voting.

This gun is smoking enough for me. Dubya's forces stole the election; Dubya should resign!

(He stole the second election too.)


Political Articles

This is a list of my political articles that are not related to the GNU Project. For GNU-related articles, see the GNU philosophy directory. You can also order copies of my book, 'Free Software, Free Society', signed or not signed.

A letter to Costa Rica (about the referendum on the proposed sweatshop treaty with the US). An interview about the Steamed Bread Murder Case and what it implies about right and wrong and copyright. (This is the English version--it was also published in Chinese.) A letter on the Animal Rights movement. A response to Financial Times article on "intellectual property rights". The Conundrum of the Bush Forces Soldier Here are my responses to the consultation in this link. They might interest some readers. Here's a recording of a radio show that I was on. The Knife- Stupid Airport Security Tricks What Should the US do in Iraq? Biopiracy or Bioprivateering? The states need to form a union. A slightly revised version of an article that appeared in Salon Magazine on 11 September 2002. Dear President Musharraf... On July 22, Israel killed a Hamas leader, Salah Shaheda, who was in charge of many Hamas attacks. Is the US killing many Afghan civilians to save one US soldier? Political fencing in Israel. I got a message with a series of points criticizing Americans for blaming companies and institutions rather than themselves. I partly agree with the underlying message that people should take charge and solve problems, rather than just cast blame on others. However, the points go too far--they whitewash companies and institutions that really did something wrong. British book publishers plan to put a microchip into every book to record who owns it -- an unprecedented surveillance measure. Given the publishers' opposition to such institutions as free lending libraries and used book stores, we must suspect that this scheme is aimed at them. Will they try to collect a fee every time a used book is resold, as part of storing the new owner's name on the chip? Good Fences Make Good Neighbors. I was shocked to learn recently that there is no border fence dividing Israel from the occupied Palestinian territories. The reason is that expansionists want to annex these territories permanently. In their eyes, a fence would be an admission that those territories are not part of Israel, so they won't allow it. When President Chavez of Venezuela was ousted in a military coup, newspaper coverage in the US hinted that Chavez was mentally unstable. He thought he could make his country independent of the IMF. He thought that the generals of his Venezuela would be loyal to Venezuela instead of Washington. A man would have to be crazy to believe such things--or would he? When police say "No witnesses", one must suspect they are up to some kind of dirty work that they don't want to admit to the public. An encounter in a Paris airport. Human Rights in the US, and in China. The Chinese government has released a report detailing human rights violations in the US. The abuses include torture of detainees by police, sometimes resulting in death. All governments should be pressured to correct their abuses of human rights; from Bolivia to Spain, from the US to China, no government should escape. Someone to watch over me. Nowadays, just because you're paranoid doesn't mean you aren't really under surveillance. Stopping terrorists before they start. Making sure that the CIA does not create new enemies to attack us tomorrow surely deserves high priority in any sincere "War on Terrorism". Bush has proposed a large increase in military spending, including pay raises for soldiers, reserves to cover the expenses of possible combat, unmanned vehicles, and ballistic missile defense. Some of these make sense, more or less -- but ballistic missile defense? It's clear what is happening here: Bush is at his old tricks. The Injustice of Military Courts. Bush has a plan to try alleged terrorists in military courts---courts where the prosecutor, the defense lawyer, and the judges all work for Bush. If we could only be sure that the accused are really guilty, shoddy trials would not matter--we wouldn't need trials at all. But accusations against innocent people happen with terrible regularity, and the danger of false convictions is immense. Police State Minus One Day And Counting. In late October Congress signed an anti-terrorism bill that undermined basic protections against police intrusion. It also attacks freedom of assembly. This article was originally published on Newsforge the day before the bill (S.1510) was passed. The only proposed provision that Congress rejected was that for indefinite detention of noncitizens without trial; Bush then proposed military trials as a way to get the same job done. Who watches the watchmen? Whenever police ask to be allowed to bypass search warrants, we must be on guard. First published on Newsforge. If we are not careful, the deadly attacks on New York and Washington will lead to far worse secondary damage, if the U.S. Congress adopts "preventive measures" that take away the freedom that America stands for. Thousands are dead -- but millions could be deprived of civil liberties. First published on Newsforge. While traveling from South Africa to Sweden in June, I became a victim of the War on Drugs. First published on Newsforge. Science must "push copyright aside." Written for a debate about electronic access to scientific literature. First published 8 June 2001. The antidemocratic suppression of public protest is now a standard part of the effort to impose antidemocratic trade treaties. Waiting for the Knock, an article about Britain's plans for secret police raids to seize decryption keys. First published in the Guardian (London), 25 November 1999.

Sad to say, this law was adopted in Britain in July 2000. Residents of the UK must now start using steganography to protect themselves from secret raids.

Although generally supportive of President Hugo Chávez, Stallman has criticised some policies on television broadcasting, free speech rights, and personal privacy rights, in meetings with Chávez and in public speeches in Venezuela.

Political notes

"Those who profess to favor freedom, yet depreciate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground. They want rain without thunder and lightning. They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters. This struggle may be a moral one; or it may be a physical one; or it may be both moral and physical; but it must be a struggle. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will."

Some of the notes have links to articles from The Independent or the Belfast Telegraph. It now appears that many of their past articles are available only for a fee (and not accessible anonymously at all). I would like to replace all those non-functional links with new accessible links--either links to the same article on another site, or links to other articles that provide the same information to substantiate the point of the note. Please help me find replacements for them.

Here are notes about various issues I care about, usually with links to more information. The first file is the current one; go there to see the latest notes.

[ Currnet (2008 May - August) | 2008 January - April | 2007 September - December | 2007 May - August | 2007 January - April | 2006 September- December | 2006 May - August | 2006 January - April | 2005 September - December | 2005 May - August | 2005 January - April | 2004 September - December | 2004 May - August | 2004 January - April | 2003 September - December | 2003 May - August | 2003 January - April 2004 January - April | 2003 November - February | 2003 September - December | 2003 May - August | 2003 January - April | 2002 | 2001 | 2000 ]

Political notes about the 2001 G8 summit in Genoa, Italy are being archived on their own page

Travel experiences

Photos about my travels

Photos from some of my trips OSCON More Photos from OSCON my visit to Switzerland in May 2003 Some pictures from Vaasa where I slipped on icy ground in the airport, broke my elbow, and gave my speech by telephone from the hospital bed my trips to Greece In Singapore in March 2001, a lovely parrot (50k jpeg) became enamored of me, while others enjoyed my recorder playing (91k jpeg) my visit to China in May/June 2000. I also visited Tibet unawares, because nobody told me that JiuZhaiGou was part of Tibetan territory annexed by China since the conquest my visit to Brazil: some from Rio de Janeiro and some from Porto Alegre where the Software Livre 2000 event was held. my trip to Slovenia

Scientific Links

Homeopathy debunked, and thoroughly, as pseudoscience.

Airlines

In a rare act of thoughtfulnes, the TSA has decided not to add to its "terrorist suspect" list everyone that forgets to bring ID.

John Gilmore was once kicked off a plane for wearing a sticker saying "terrorist suspect". The morons on the flight crew thought that meant he was dangerous, but it only referred to the fact that everyone who flies in a plane is treated by the TSA as a terrorist suspect.

Sherri Davidoff reports on flying in the US without her wallet, concluding that the TSA's attempts to identify people have nothing to do with protecting passengers and are solely about control.

A TSA agent took from an airline pilot the standard issue knife that the airline gives to all its pilots.

This TSA idiot firmly denied that he was enforcing a dumb rule.

The worst thing about the TSA is not that its staff enforce rules in stupid ways. It is that they insist it is right to enforce rules in stupid ways. They are being paid to act like robots instead of humans.

When people act like robots, do they still deserve to be treated like people, or is it legitimate to treat them as robots?

Air travellers now face strip searches in public.

Remember the Shoe Bomber? Wait till they catch the Bra Bomber and start requiring all women passengers to remove their bras.

The TSA has abruptly abolished the right to board a plane without showing ID.

As the article explains, this and the "no fly" list are "security theater", with results that are unjust.

Student with 2" gun necklace pendant stopped at airport.

This tendency towards absurd zeal is not limited to the occasional idiot. It pervades the whole system.

When the TSA insisted on opening James Hoyne's backup feeding tube, they put his life in danger.

Here's another person who the TSA deceptively harassed about his shoes. The article also explains how ineffective the TSA is at catching real weapons.

TSA agents took stole a baby's food. "You need a doctor's note," they said. The parents are both doctors, the TSA refused to accept their note, or to let them contact another doctor.

Once the TSA has found an excuse to take something away from you, their policy is to be as cruel as possible.

The "liquid explosive" danger is fantasy. When the TSA confiscates liquids, this is gratuitous abuse.

TSA searches, detains 5 year old because his name was on no-fly list.

Here's the text of a complaint that I am sending to the TSA for misleading treatment at Logan Airport.

When I continued to verbally criticize the conduct of the agents, and didn't sit down and shut up, they called the State Police, and one Officer Gillespie told me that "Unless you shut up I will throw you out." I asked if that meant he would arrest me for speaking, and he said, "No, for making a scene." (Different words for the same act.) I told him that was bullying and abuse of power, and refused to shut up.

I then promised I would write about it for my web site, and he asked what it was, so I told him. Unfortunately it took a few days for me to get the work done. I hope he has not concluded I failed to follow through.

In another incidence, a man who put a note saying "Kip Hawley Is An Idiot" (that's the head of the TSA) on his plastic bag of liquids was treated like a criminal by the TSA.

This was, in effect, perfect proof that the TSA attacks those who criticize it, even in the total absence of any legitimate reason to do so.

The TSA's response to subsequent inquiries followed the standard dishonest rule of unjust government: admit nothing, deny everything, make counterallegations.

Don't fly Air France if you can help it. This is not a boycott, just a suggestion. Air France is unbelievable.

The Transportation Security Administration is tyrannizing airline passengers in the name of security.

For future trips, I think I will print copies of that article so I can hand them out while waiting in the line at the checkpoint.

Go to China or else! (12 April 2003)

Distinguishing real, useful air security measures from snake oil.

The US government keeps track of lots of information about Americans who travel — including what books you read, and the size of your hotel bed, if they can find it out.

To search all air passengers for bombs and weapons is legitimate provided the search does nothing else. When the government uses this search as an excuse to take note of anything other than bombs and weapons, that is dishonest, and therefore unjust.

a Serious Bio

Richard Matthew Stallman is a software developer and software freedom activist. In 1983 he announced the project to develop the GNU operating system, a Unix-like operating system meant to be entirely free software, and has been the project's leader ever since. With that announcement Stallman also launched the Free Software Movement. In October 1985 he started the Free Software Foundation.

The GNU/Linux system, which is a variant of GNU that also uses the kernel Linux developed by Linus Torvalds, are used in tens or hundreds of millions of computers, and are now preinstalled in computers available in retail stores. However, the distributors of these systems often disregard the ideas of freedom which make free software important.

That is why, since the mid-1990s, Stallman has spent most of his time in political advocacy for free software, and spreading the ethical ideas of the movement, as well as campaigning against both software patents and dangerous extension of copyright laws. Before that, Stallman developed a number of widely used software components of the GNU system, including the original Emacs, the GNU Compiler Collection, the GNU symbolic debugger (gdb), GNU Emacs, and various other programs for the GNU operating system.

Stallman pioneered the concept of copyleft, and is the main author of the GNU General Public License, the most widely used free software license.

Stallman gives speeches frequently about free software and related topics. Common speech titles include "The GNU Operating System and the Free Software movement", "The Dangers of Software Patents", and "Copyright and Community in the Age of the Computer Networks". A fourth common topic consists of explaining the changes in version 3 of the GNU General Public License, which was released in June 2007.

In 1999, Stallman called for development of a free on-line encyclopedia through the means of inviting the public to contribute articles.

In Venezuela, Stallman has promoted the adoption of free software in the state's oil company (PDVSA), in municipal government, and in the nation's military. Stallman is on the Advisory Council of TeleSUR, the television station launched by Venezuela and other countries to counter the biased news of the corporate stations.

After personal meetings, Stallman has obtained positive statements about free software from the then-President of India, Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, from French 2007 presidential candidate Ségolène Royal, and from the president of Ecuador Rafael Correa.

Stallman's writings on free software issues can be found in Free Software, Free Society (GNU Press, ISBN 1-882114-98-1). He has received the following awards:

1986: Honorary life time membership of the Chalmers Computer Society 1990: Receives the exceptional merit award MacArthur Fellowship 1990: The Association for Computing Machinery's Grace Murray Hopper Award "For pioneering work in the development of the extensible editor EMACS (Editing Macros)."[70] 1996: Honorary doctorate from Sweden's Royal Institute of Technology 1998: Electronic Frontier Foundation's Pioneer award 1999: Yuri Rubinsky Memorial Award 2001: The Takeda Techno-Entrepreneurship Award for Social/Economic Well-Being 2001: Honorary doctorate from the University of Glasgow 2002: United States National Academy of Engineering membership 2003: Honorary doctorate from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel 2004: Honorary doctorate from the Universidad Nacional de Salta. 2004: Honorary professorship from the Universidad Nacional de Ingeniería del Perú. 2005: Fundazione Pistoletto prize. 2007: Honorary professorship from the Universidad Inca Garcilaso de la Vega. 2007: Honorary doctorate from the Universidad de Los Angeles de Chimbote. 2007: Honorary doctorate from the University of Pavia.

Stallman graduated from Harvard in 1974 with a BA in physics. During his college years, he also worked as a staff hacker at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab, learning operating system development by doing it. He wrote the first extensible Emacs text editor there in 1975. He also developed the AI technique of dependency-directed backtracking, also known as truth maintenance. In January 1984 he resigned from MIT to start the GNU project.

Richard Stallman's 1983 biography

(this biography was published in the first edition of "The Hacker's Dictionary".)

I was built at a laboratory in Manhattan around 1953, and moved to the MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab in 1971. My hobbies include affection, international folk dance, flying, cooking, physics, recorder, puns, science fiction fandom, and programming; I magically get paid for doing the last one. About a year ago i split up with the PDP-10 computer to which i was married for ten years. We still love each other, but the world is taking us in different directions. For the moment I still live in Cambridge, Massachusetts, among our old memories. "Richard Stallman" is just my mundane name; you can call me "rms".

 [image of rms playing recorder to a butterfly that is visiting the computer room] (jpeg 2k) (jpeg 64k) There is a black-and-white photograph of me as a 5820K Encapsulated Postscript file, a 3762K JPEG file, and a 5815K TIFF file.

Here is a color photo in JPEG format.

Curiosities

Sometimes people write asking questions about how I use software. Here is some info on my computer use Predicting the attack on Pearl Harbor

Photos and drawings

"You assist an evil system most effectively by obeying its orders and decrees. An evil system never deserves such allegiance. Allegiance to it means partaking of the evil. A good person will resist an evil system with his or her whole soul."
-Mahatma Gandhi

Photos from Copyright vs. Community event, Jan 31, 2008.

A photo from a recent interview.

A photo of RMS with a large "aureole" by Roberto Brenlla.

An imaginative painting of Richard Stallman, by Jin Wicked.

Another drawing of me, by Banlu Kemiyatorn.


Some humor

I like computers, music and butterflies---among other things.

Here I am wearing my "power tie".

Here I am struggling to open a bottle of water.

My application to an Ex Boyfriends List

What Republicans Believe.

I am also a saint, in the Church of Emacs--Saint IGNUcius. The Church of Emacs will soon be officially listed by at least one person as his religion for census purposes.

There are no godfathers in the Church of Emacs, since there are no gods, but you can be someone's editorfather.

Here are my funny poetry and song parodies and some jokes.

Stallman Does Dallas: "I have to warn you that Texans have been known to have an adverse reaction to my personality . . . "

The Dalai Lama today announced the official release of Yellow Hat GNU/Linux.

On Hacking: In June 2000, while visiting Korea, I did a fun hack that clearly illustrates the original and true meaning of the word "hacker".

A science fiction story: Jinnetic Engineering

I found A funny song about the Mickey Mouse Copyright Act (officially the Sonny Bono Copyright Act) which extended copyright retroactively by 20 years on works made as early as the 1920s.

My Puns in Spanish

Links

Other sites and organizations of interest:
Full Frontal Scrutiny exposes phony "consumer groups" funded by business. Courtney Love explains how the record companies are the real ``music pirates'' — and also why you should not refer to artistic works as ``content''. (However, she used the term ``intellectual property'' which is propaganda for those same record companies; see the explanation. xenu.net has copious information about the Church of Scientology. See enturbulation.org is the center for organizing protests against the church. exscientologykids.com provides advice to children that want to leave the church, including statements by former members. Copwatch.org: A database of citizen complaints against police. The Bush War Crimes Commission dr The Fully Informed Juror Association: what the judge won't tell you if you are on a jury. Verified Voting pushes to make sure voting machines in the US are not vulnerable to massive centralized computerized fraud. WDM's campaigns tackle the root causes of poverty--the policies of governments and business that keep people poor. Information on DNA profiling and the risk of false matches. Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance Patriotic Posters. MoveOn, with over a million US members, works to defend world peace, human rights, democracy and the environment from the man who stole the US presidency. Advice for consumers on how to resist being influenced by advertising. Americans United for Separation of Church and State respect the right of all people to practice religion as they please without government interference. http://d.webring.com/hub?ring=stop_abuse: a webring for sites presenting tangible facts about human rights abuse, lack of enforcement, selective enforcement, abuse of power by executive or judicial branches, abuse of power by religious authorities, waste of natural resources, pollution, disinformation, discrimination, covering-up fraud or dangerous experiments, government corruption and sites proposing practical ways to improve the situation. www.mpp.org: the Marijuana Policy Project focuses on "removing criminal penalties for marijuana use, with a particular emphasis on making marijuana medically available to seriously ill people." FAIR - the media watch group uses painstaking and careful statistics to document the bias of the mainstream media. WhiteHouseForSale.org tracks Dubya's fund-raising.

Thanks

I would like to thank:

Positive Internet for sponsoring this web site. Ian Bell, Matt Lurz, Mike Minor, Debarshi 'Rishi' Ray, Riyaz Usman, and John C. Vernaleo for installing new text. Graziano Sorbaioli for improving the layout of the main page.

Please send comments on these web pages to rms at gnu period org.

copyright (c) 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Richard Stallman
Verbatim copying and redistribution of this entire page are permitted provided this notice is preserved.
Verbatim copying and redistribution of any of the photos in the photos subdirectory is permitted under the Creative Commons Noderivs license version 3.0 or later. You can copy and redistribute the photo of me playing music to the butterfly under the Creative Commons Noderivs Nocommercial license version 3.0 or later. Any other photos of me in this directory may be copied and redistributed under the Creative Commons Noderivs license version 3.0 or later.


Valid HTML 4.01!


You are viewing a mobilized version of this site...
View original page here

Mobilized by Mowser Mowser