Microsoft
Decision a Victory for Consumers, Taxpayers
WASHINGTON
- With the United States Justice Department's decision to not break
up Microsoft, members of the high-tech community and taxpayer advocates
alike came together to praise the resolution. The case was initiated
in 1997, lasted over four years, cost taxpayers millions of dollars,
while hurting the prospects for increased investment in the "new
economy" of telecommunications and technology.
Grover
Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform, a public interest
advocacy group, issued the following statement regarding the decision:
"The
Microsoft trial squandered taxpayers' dollars, was a nuisance to
consumers, and a serious deterrent to investors in the high-tech
industry. But from now
on, American taxpayers will no longer see millions of their dollars
wasted in a ridiculous case brought on by Microsoft's competitors.
Consumers will indeed see competition in the marketplace, rather
than the courtroom. And the investors who propel our economy can
finally breathe a sigh of relief. The
unmitigated hubris of the Clinton-Gore administration's willingness
to meddle in the world of commerce has finally come to an end.
"Upwards
of 60% of Americans thought the federal government should not have
broken up Microsoft. With
the case over, and the Bush administration indicating its disdain
for these kinds of tactics, companies like Microsoft can get back
into the business of innovating and creating better products for
consumers, and not wasting valuable resources on litigation.
"Competition
means creating better goods and offering superior services to consumers.
With government out of the business of stifling progress and
tying the hands of corporations, consumers - rather than bureaucrats
and judges - will once
again pick the winners and losers on Wall Street. With the reins
off the high-tech industry, more entrepreneurs will be encouraged
to create new and competitive products and technologies."