Events like Waco and the Persian Gulf War, in which an authoritarian superpower obliterates a mostly harmless and largely defenseless group of people, translate with relative ease to the cyberspacial realm. Seems like a valid Cypherpunks topic to me, so I will take a crack at responding to the following message L. Todd Masco <cactus@bb.com> writes:
Am I the only one that's struck by the similarity between the propaganda about the Waco massacre and the propaganda preceding the Persion Gulf massacre?
Not at all. We should remember Herbert's Two Laws here. 1. All governments lie. 2. If you think you have found a counterexample, please reread law number one. Also worth remembering is the old saying that "a liar who lies one hundred percent of the time is unlikely to be a successful liar." The trick, therefore, is learning to separate the lies from the truth in a mixture of both. The quintessential lie from the Persian Gulf War was of course the memorable "baby incubator" story, recited tearfully on the floor of the Congress by a supposedly uninvolved eyewitness who later was revealed to be the daughter of the Kuwaiti ambassador. The alleged events, which never happened, turned the tide in Congress with regard to support for the war. Of course lies abounded in the Waco case as well, with Koresh being portrayed as a heavily armed lunatic yearning to fulfill Biblical prophecy by perishing in battle with all his followers. In reality, they simply wished to live their lives and be left alone. The pitfall here, which is to be avoided, is to start characterizing every negative thing said about the folks in Waco or Iraq as false, or to start suggesting that negative comments are a ploy to absolve government of all responsibility for what took place. Some of the negative things said in both these cases were certainly truthful. For instance, political opponents of Saddam Hussein in Iraq certainly had a markedly shortened life expectancy, and the Branch Davidians certainly took a Biblical fire and brimstone approach towards signs of independent thought or action in their offspring. Not a reason for lots of people to be killed, but not a reason to recommend their canonization either. The lesson to be learned here is that societies based on a diffuse "Web of Trust" organization are far less dangerous than those based on a powerful centralized authority. A powerful centralized authority inevitably devolves into interacting with its subjects using the protocol... Do What We Say Or We'll Kill You! Or in its more tasteful two-part form... 1. Do What We Say. 2. You're Under Arrest, And If You Resist, We'll Kill You. At that point, Wars, Wacos, Encryption Bans, and BBS Porno Show trials lurk just around the corner. -- Mike Duvos $ PGP 2.6 Public Key available $ mpd@netcom.com $ via Finger. $