
At 11:47 AM 12/11/1996, Timothy C. May wrote:
1. The _general_ subjects of "bigotry" and "redlining" are not closely related to themes of this list, though the implications of strong privacy for these issues is certainly on topic. (And my views on these implications are well known...I've seen no point to step in to the debate to repeat them, and don't plan to argue with Matt M. about the "evils of bigotry.")
2. Many of the posts by Matt M. and "Red Rackham" and others have been so massive, containing paragraph-by-paragraph rebuttals of political and ethical points, that I've just given up on trying to follow the points.
If anyone has well-formed questions about how redlining and "bigotry" is affected by strong cryptography and crypto anarchy, fire away. Just don't bury them deep in a long diatribe about the evils of "prejudice" and "discrimination."
Didn't Tim May originate the "Generation of Science" thread or, earlier, the sliderule thread? I don't think either topic can said to be strictly cypherpunk unless a discrete logarithm sliderule has been invented. The truth is that I enjoyed those threads as did most others on the list. I would like to see more like them. And, I dare say that my posts are more worthwhile than 7 out of 8 posts we've been seeing on the list lately.
(Personally, and off-topic for the list (so I'll be brief),...
Point 1: You obviously find the subject interesting enough to comment on it. Others probably also find it interesting. Point 2: Excuse me if I am wrong, but your comments look to me to be precisely on topic for this list, anyway.
...the ills of our society seem to me to have _very little_ to do with "prejudice." In fact, most people are not "discriminating" enough, in the sense that discrimination implies value judgements and assessments of probable success based on data available. As someone noted, the Asian communities in the U.S. are doing well and are quite "discriminatory" in lending policies. Get used to it, as crypto anarchy will make coerced transactions even more difficult. The racial and ethnic groups which are most into "victimology" are the least successful--which is _cause_ and which is _effect_ may be debatable to many of you, but the correlation is very clear....maybe it's time they try something different, like getting their culture to embrace learning, reading, science, math, and business success, instead of glorifying victimization, crack cocaine, basketball stars, and pimps.)
This obsession of "on topic/off topic" is not healthy for the list. It stifles brainstorming and the free exchange of ideas. Red Rackham P.S. Sorry for the length of some of the messages. That Miszewski had the temerity to actually stand up for his beliefs, so it was unavoidable.

At 3:15 PM -0800 12/11/96, Huge Cajones Remailer wrote:
Didn't Tim May originate the "Generation of Science" thread or, earlier, the sliderule thread? I don't think either topic can said to be strictly cypherpunk unless a discrete logarithm sliderule has been invented.
The truth is that I enjoyed those threads as did most others on the list. I would like to see more like them. And, I dare say that my posts are more worthwhile than 7 out of 8 posts we've been seeing on the list lately.
Of course I write stuff that is not necessarily "crypto relevant"...we all do. The list is a discussion of issues important to the members of the list: there has never been a formal charter or set of rules on what is "allowed" and what is "not allowed." However, traditionally libertarian vs. socialist debates are seldom useful, and about as welcome on any list (even libertarian lists) as are debates about abortion, gun control, and other such contentious issues. And my point about preferring a "well-formed question" was related to what I said about the huge back-and-forth debate between Red Rackham and Matthew M., which I found too convoluted to follow. I favor well--formed essays; I try my best to write such essays myself. Recall that I specifically said: "Many of the posts by Matt M. and "Red Rackham" and others have been so massive, containing paragraph-by-paragraph rebuttals of political and ethical points, that I've just given up on trying to follow the points." This is what sparked my request for well-formed questions. Interestingly, Matthew M. did just this, in private e-mail. He phrased several questions about crypto anarchy, and implications for the underclasses, and I answered his questions. He is free to post his questions and my answers if he wishes to.
Point 1: You obviously find the subject interesting enough to comment on it. Others probably also find it interesting.
Personally, I think the implications of strong cryptography for "redlining" are indeed on-topic, and interesting. I said as much, and have written several articles yesterday and today on precisely this topic. What I _don't_ find very on-topic, personally, are rambling debates about social justice, labels such as "bigoted" and "racist," and what governments should do to subsidize those who have failed to prepare themselves for the modern world.
Point 2: Excuse me if I am wrong, but your comments look to me to be precisely on topic for this list, anyway.
Thank you. I said it was interesting, just not the "traditional libertarian debate" about social justice and "what to do about the poor." It is rarely fruitful.
This obsession of "on topic/off topic" is not healthy for the list. It stifles brainstorming and the free exchange of ideas.
I'm not so obsessed with this...you must be knew to the list, or you'd've known of my views on this.
P.S. Sorry for the length of some of the messages. That Miszewski had the temerity to actually stand up for his beliefs, so it was unavoidable.
I have a feeling not more than 5 people even skimmed your extremely long and detailed messages replying to Matthew (in my case, I gave up after several screenfuls, with my scroll bar showing I was only partly through the message!). You might consider instead just picking a couple of his points and using them to make your own points...responding to every single paragraph is rarely effective. --Tim May Just say "No" to "Big Brother Inside" We got computers, we're tapping phone lines, I know that that ain't allowed. ---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---- Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@got.net 408-728-0152 | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero W.A.S.T.E.: Corralitos, CA | knowledge, reputations, information markets, Higher Power: 2^1398269 | black markets, collapse of governments. "National borders aren't even speed bumps on the information superhighway."
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Timothy C. May