Re: A Cyberspace Independence Refutation
At 06:36 AM 2/12/96 -0500, lmccarth@cs.umass.edu wrote:
I'm afraid I'm not willing to take [vulnerability of the state] on faith.
You delete my arguments, and then say: "I am not willing to take this on faith", implying that I made no arguments.
Strata made some good observations about the tangible vulnerability of the net-as-we-know-it to government intervention.
During the American revolution, the British troops could go where they pleased, and destroy whatever they wished, but they could not obtain political control by so doing. Yes, we are vulnerable, and so are they. If they used the measures proposed by Strata, the measures proposed by Jim Bell would gather wide support. Ob Crypto: They cannot obtain political control by mere acts of destruction, because they cannot be sufficiently selective in who they silence. For destruction to be effective, you must not only harm those who oppose you, you must refrain from harming those who do not oppose you. The destructive acts proposed by Strata conspicuously fail to do this. Under the extreme conditions that Strata envisages, the measures proposed by Jim Bell would be effective in obtaining politically desired consequences, because they are selective and targeted, and the measures that Strata fears would be ineffective in obtaining the politically desired consequences, because they are unselective and untargeted. --------------------------------------------------------------------- | We have the right to defend ourselves | http://www.jim.com/jamesd/ and our property, because of the kind | of animals that we are. True law | James A. Donald derives from this right, not from the | arbitrary power of the state. | jamesd@echeque.com
I wrote: # I'm afraid I'm not willing to take [vulnerability of the state] on faith. James Donald writes:
You delete my arguments, and then say: "I am not willing to take this on faith", implying that I made no arguments.
Frankly, I though much of what you said was not really in the form of an argument, and thus did not bear response. At any rate, see my message prior to this, in which I have gone back and responded to everything I didn't explictly address before. I wrote: # Strata made some good observations about the tangible vulnerability of # the net-as-we-know-it to government intervention. James Donald writes:
During the American revolution, the British troops could go where they pleased, and destroy whatever they wished, but they could not obtain political control by so doing.
It helped that Americans formed an army and otherwise took up arms against the limeys. (ObImpunity: I'm a limey by birth.) Ah, I see you are about to address the difference between flying-lead wars and flying-electron wars below....
Yes, we are vulnerable, and so are they. If they used the measures proposed by Strata, the measures proposed by Jim Bell would gather wide support.
I disagree. I presume that Jim Bell will now pounce, call me a "fucking statist" or some such, and induce many folks to killfile the remainder of this thread. I don't plan to respond to anything he says about this. (Are we witnessing the birth of a new corollary to Godwin's Law ?)
Ob Crypto:
They cannot obtain political control by mere acts of destruction, because they cannot be sufficiently selective in who they silence.
I disagree. (This level of debate seems rather unproductive.)
For destruction to be effective, you must not only harm those who oppose you, you must refrain from harming those who do not oppose you.
I disagree. It seems to me that all sorts of "innocent bystanders" etc. get mowed down, usually at no noticeable detriment to the mowers. Since this thread is already doomed, I'll plough ahead and suggest that lots of people who didn't oppose the U.S. were obliterated by Fat Man and Little Boy, and yet the Enola Gay's mission(s?) was/were effective for the USG.
The destructive acts proposed by Strata conspicuously fail to do this.
Probably true.
Under the extreme conditions that Strata envisages, the measures proposed by Jim Bell would be effective in obtaining politically desired consequences, because they are selective and targeted, and the measures that Strata fears would be ineffective in obtaining the politically desired consequences, because they are unselective and untargeted.
See my comments above. -Lewis "You're always disappointed, nothing seems to keep you high -- drive your bargains, push your papers, win your medals, fuck your strangers; don't it leave you on the empty side ?" (Joni Mitchell, 1972)
participants (2)
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jamesd@echeque.com -
lmccarth@cs.umass.edu