Wednesday night's ABC magazine program on Ruby Ridge was a great example of what TV can be but so rarely is. Lots of chopper shots of Ruby Ridge. Lots of hand held camera recreations and interviews with the Weavers and the sniper (face obscured because he has something to hide), etc. But the most interesting thing that this emphasized for me was the sort of modern information warfare issues as highlighted in the recent Economist Survey. Info war is war by other means (a little shooting, communications, publicity, and litigation) and look what happened at Ruby Ridge. The Feds deployed 400 "troopies", some armored personnel carriers, copters, executive jets, Hummers, and other hardware. On the other side were 3 adults and 4 children with some 14 personal weapons. The result. One Fed and two Weavers dead. A $3.1 million legal settlement, and continuing problems for the Feds. That smells like a bad defeat to me. They couldn't even kill 7 people with a 57 to 1 force ratio. In addition, the operation and the various investigations must have cost the Feds millions more. (What *do* the Fibbies have to pay for those Ninja Hoods?) And they lost. That suggests that the ability of The Great Enemy to overcome the sort of directed human activity of the frictionless markets we are building will be quite limited. DCF "Your Honor, the Defense will rest without calling any witnesses. No witnesses we could put on the stand could do as good a job setting forth the Defense case as the Government's witnesses have already done." -- Gerry Spence at the conclusion of the Government's case in US vs. Weaver.
participants (1)
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Duncan Frissell