Date: 03/22/2000 8:31 AM Subject: Proposed Regulation FD As a retiree (US Armed Forces and Aerospace) and a personal investor, I have taken responsibility for the funding of my own retirement, making my way by investing in sound companies with good to exciting futures, and hanging on for the ride. I do not listen to financial analysts, rather I do my own research. Any system that preserves selective disclosure is unfair in the extreme. Such a system tends to force me to go to an intermediary, who has no responsibility for my success, to determine if I should establish an investment partnership with a stock-issuing company. That intermediary, the financial analyst, can select any approach he chooses to maximize his profit and the profit of his associates, the company executives who are disclosing to him alone. He can withhold, release or selectively manipulate that privately disclosed information, regardless of its effect on my investment plans. Selective disclosure, in effect, unfairly gives them substantial ownership of my money if I invest in that company. In fact, the effect is the same whether I have come to the investment decision privately or with their contribution. I encourage the SEC to eliminate this unfair practice. Sanford D. Cook 1488 Smith Street San Luis Obispo CA 93401