
At 06:05 PM 11/15/96 -0500, hallam@vesuvius.ai.mit.edu wrote:
The main change is that from now on the decisions are to be made by the department of commerce and not by the department of state.
This is probably good news since the commerce department has the interests of industry as its primary mission.
I am expecting them to use the Interstate commerce clause in the Constitution to enable them to enact whatever rules they want without that pesky "freedom of speech" thing getting in the way. I am sure that any commerce secretary that dare to loosen the export restrictions would quickly find him/herself out of a job. Clinton and Gore have both shown that they get arroused at the thought of being able to read everyone else's e-mail and listen to their phone calls. I don't expect them to do anything that would thwart that fetish. (Power is the ultamite turn-on. When you can pry into the details of every part of a person's life, you have a great deal of power. Clinton/Gore/etc have shown no resistance to that seduction.) I expect that this will add more bodies to the LaBrea ITAR pits, not take any away.
There is a third document I believe but its not yet been issued.
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