Re: AP [was: Re: Kiddie porn on the Internet] [NOISE]

At 12:38 PM 9/22/96 -0400, hallam@vesuvius.ai.mit.edu wrote:
I agree with Bill, AP sounds like a very good club for the Exon types to beat us with.
But they're not doing it. They know about it, but they're NOT using it. This should tell you something. This really is no surprise to me; before I started publicizing AP, I tried to carefully consider whether letting the cat out of the bag was going to assist the government in stopping it. My conclusion was that they didn't stand a chance. If anything, they're afraid of publicizing the idea, because their opposition to it can look only self-serving.
Jim's latest comments sounded no different to me than the mealy mouthed "understanding" messages that Sinn Fein publish about the IRA. Given the opportunity to condem any attack on the President under AP rules we get a non commital non-condemnation. Its the type of thing that Gerry Adams says after his men have just killed two kids with a bomb in a litterbin outside a MacDonalds.
Don't try to tar me with that brush. I made it clear long ago that I'm opposed to truly random attacks on ordinary citizens. However, I hasten to add that I'd very much prefer that these attacks be re-targeted against the people who deserve them. However, I usually find that the people who make the biggest deal about disliking random citizen attacks are the ones who recommend replacing them with...nothing...and have no plan to solve the problems with any other method, violent or otherwise. [doctrinaire BS deleted]
As the Marxist idealogues got frustrated by their evident lack of progress they turned to terrorism. The Bader Minehof gang believed that they could spark the revolution by jolting society out of its complacency. Their strategy was remarkably like AP.
Somehow, I doubt it. Anybody who thinks an AP-like system would be effective for bringing in his pet communist (or fascist, or monarchist, or anything other than pure-anarchic) government is an idiot. AP is fundamentally anti-heirarchical in its leanings and effects.
If the heads of large corporations were likely to be assasinated then noone would want to lead a large firm.
Who said companies need "leaders"? Remember, I said AP is anti-heirarchical. Any heirarchies, particularly those forced on people, are strongly deterred. This includes social and religious heirarchies, BTW. Even corporate heirarchies would only exist if approved-of by the vast majority of the shareholders, most of whom will be the workers as well.
In fact as any person with counter terrorism experience will tell you the threat of death is remarkably ineffective as a means of intimidation. It creates the opposite effect, strengthening the resolve of the target. I discussed this point recently with someone close to Mossad who agreed.
Under a set of circumstances similar to the status quo, that is not surprising. But that can change. That WILL change. People occupy positions of authority when they feel, personally, they are better off doing so than not. Give the average member of the public (not merely crazed "terrorists") the opportunity to remove those people, and you won't be able to keep them around. I mean, presumably they do their job for a salary and benefits, right? How many bombs or bullets will they tolerate, rather than resigning and taking a safer job?
Terrorism is becomming an increasing concern. The amount of damage an individual can cause is much greater than that possible in the past.
If anything, I think the advantage of AP is that it REDUCES the amount of damage that any given person has to cause, per citizen, to achieve his anti-government political ends. I've pointed out that it would only take a penny or two from each citizen, on average, to remove one of even the highest-level US officeholders. Far less than that if you include resignations. What I'm advocating is a system that makes it impossible for agents of the status quo to resist the opposition of the public, which is unlike the current system. Rather than have to build a bomb, or wait for somebody else to do so, the ordinary citizen only needs to make a modest contribution to the "revolution fund." And today, an officeholder can claim to resist "terrorism" based on the fact that he opposes the extreme action of a handful of people. What happens when they have to admit that a million people paid for that gun to be fired or that bomb to be planted?
There are plenty of exhausted ideologies about which can be fashioned into a justification of murder.
Don't blame me for them.
Jim's post shows very clearly how Libertarianism can be converted into a justification for terrorism. Its a very short gap between being opposed to government and actively fighting against it.
I see libertarianism as the exhausted remnant of the mercantilism of the 1980s. As constructed it recognises only those rights which favour the privileged in society and none of those which benefit the ecconomically disadvantaged. Politically it reached its peak influence almost a decade ago when Regan and Thatcher were at their zenith. The '94 congress will probably be seen as the turning point in the political tide with the
What, exactly, is the MEANING of "being opposed to government"? If you pay taxes to support that government (even if that support is not voluntary) those taxes mean that you are indeed acting to strengthen that government and assist its efforts. I suggest that you can't realistically claim "opposition to government" (other than rhetorical) under these circumstances. mainstream
of politics moving back to the left again. There will always be people arround who conclude that the failure was not being close enough to the ideology.
If the libertarians are not carefull they will be inexorably linked in the
You've already made it clear you don't consider yourself a libertarian. Why go on with this stuff? public mind
with the terrorists who act in their name.
I think the stereotypical "terrorist" doesn't really claim to "act in their [the public's] name." The one recent counter-example that I've heard of, that of the EPR in Mexico, is a very welcome exception. If anything, I think the governments of the world are truly frightened that "terrorism" as commonly practiced will change from the "blow up random airliner" mode, passing through the "blow up nearby government building" mode, to "find and kill a particular official" mode. Far less collateral damage, far harder to whip up public opposition to in the press, etc. Jim Bell jimbell@pacifier.com

So Jim Bell is opposed to "truly random attacks on ordinary citizens" Its this type ofappoligia for terrorism that disgusts me utterly. He is calling for murder but wants to dress it up in whatever psychotic justifications he can. He is also completely wrong. When the IRA attemoted to assasinate my cousin I was in no way intimidated and neither was he. He continued as a senior poitician for over a decade despite continued danger. I can think of no less effective method of bringing about change in attitudes. I am in no way intimidated by Bell either. He is a kook and I don;t think it he is worth further consideration. Phill

hallam@vesuvius.ai.mit.edu writes:
So Jim Bell is opposed to "truly random attacks on ordinary citizens" Its this type ofappoligia for terrorism that disgusts me utterly.
There is no such thing as an "ordinary citizen". When the U.S. commits war crimes in Korea, Viet Nam, Grenada, Panama, Somalia, Iraq, and elsewhere, every American taxpayer is an accomplice and a fair game. Likewise, any Britih subject is fair game for IRA's self-defense against centuries of British genocide and oppression.
He is calling for murder but wants to dress it up in whatever psychotic justifications he can.
Murder can be justified.
He is also completely wrong. When the IRA attemoted to assasinate my cousin I was in no way intimidated and neither was he. He continued as a senior poitician for over a decade despite continued danger. I can think of no less effective method of bringing about change in attitudes.
I think public executions of politicians would be a more effective way to indimidate the potential successors than covert assassinations. Joe Stalin liked public hangings toward the end of his life. I'd rather see the bastards hang in a nationally televised ceremony, live from the Rose Garden, but I guess -- whatever gets the job done. It's a pity the IRA didn't nail your cousin. I wish them better luck next time. --- Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM Brighton Beach Boardwalk BBS, Forest Hills, N.Y.: +1-718-261-2013, 14.4Kbps

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SANDY SANDFORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C'punks, On Mon, 23 Sep 1996, Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM wrote:
There is no such thing as an "ordinary citizen". When the U.S. commits war crimes in Korea, Viet Nam, Grenada, Panama, Somalia, Iraq, and elsewhere, every American taxpayer is an accomplice and a fair game.
Illogical collectivist claptrap. When a taxpayer is targeted by terrorists, he has been victimized twice--first by the government that stole his money, second by the terrorist that punished him for the (alleged) acts others commited with that money. If a mugger buys a gun with the money he took from me, am I then responsible for the murder he commits with it? Clearly not. This line of "reasoning" is nothing more than a sad variant of the old, "blame the victim" game. For shame. Let's bring this back to crypto for a moment. Dimitri's "logic" must necessarily lead one to the conclusion that Cypherpunks (at least those in the US) are responsible for whatever draconian restrictions "our" government puts on free speech, crypto or whatever. John Gilmore, Philip Zimmermann, Whit Diffie and others will be chagrined to learn this, I'm sure. Dimitri needs to learn what it means to be an adult. Everyone is totally responsible for what they do, but ONLY for what THEY do. No one is responsible for the unassisted, willful acts of others. S a n d y ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

HERE, HERE! On Mon, 23 Sep 1996, Sandy Sandfort wrote:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SANDY SANDFORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
C'punks,
On Mon, 23 Sep 1996, Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM wrote:
There is no such thing as an "ordinary citizen". When the U.S. commits war crimes in Korea, Viet Nam, Grenada, Panama, Somalia, Iraq, and elsewhere, every American taxpayer is an accomplice and a fair game.
Illogical collectivist claptrap. When a taxpayer is targeted by terrorists, he has been victimized twice--first by the government that stole his money, second by the terrorist that punished him for the (alleged) acts others commited with that money. If a mugger buys a gun with the money he took from me, am I then responsible for the murder he commits with it? Clearly not. This line of "reasoning" is nothing more than a sad variant of the old, "blame the victim" game. For shame.
Let's bring this back to crypto for a moment. Dimitri's "logic" must necessarily lead one to the conclusion that Cypherpunks (at least those in the US) are responsible for whatever draconian restrictions "our" government puts on free speech, crypto or whatever. John Gilmore, Philip Zimmermann, Whit Diffie and others will be chagrined to learn this, I'm sure.
Dimitri needs to learn what it means to be an adult. Everyone is totally responsible for what they do, but ONLY for what THEY do. No one is responsible for the unassisted, willful acts of others.
S a n d y
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Sandy Sandfort wrote:
C'punks, On Mon, 23 Sep 1996, Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM wrote:
There is no such thing as an "ordinary citizen". When the U.S. commits war crimes in Korea, Viet Nam, Grenada, Panama, Somalia, Iraq, and elsewhere, every American taxpayer is an accomplice and a fair game.
Illogical collectivist claptrap. When a taxpayer is targeted by terrorists, he has been victimized twice--first by the government that stole his money, second by the terrorist that punished him for the (alleged) acts others commited with that money. If a mugger buys a gun with the money he took from me, am I then responsible for the murder he commits with it? Clearly not. This line of "reasoning" is nothing more than a sad variant of the old, "blame the victim" game. For shame. Let's bring this back to crypto for a moment. Dimitri's "logic" must necessarily lead one to the conclusion that Cypherpunks (at least those in the US) are responsible for whatever draconian restrictions "our" government puts on free speech, crypto or whatever. John Gilmore, Philip Zimmermann, Whit Diffie and others will be chagrined to learn this, I'm sure. Dimitri needs to learn what it means to be an adult. Everyone is totally responsible for what they do, but ONLY for what THEY do. No one is responsible for the unassisted, willful acts of others.
You are committing a logical fallacy with the above. You're saying that the mugger who commits the crime with a stolen gun is equivalent to my own hired hitmen (the local and federal police I pay so dearly for). This is obviously not the case. I didn't hire the mugger, nor did I encourage the thief in an overt way. But I did consciously select and pay for the police and govt. assassins. And so did you. Unless you're saying that the govt. forcibly takes you down to the voting booth, etc.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SANDY SANDFORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C'punks, On Tue, 24 Sep 1996, Dale Thorn wrote:
You are committing a logical fallacy with the above. You're saying that the mugger who commits the crime with a stolen gun is equivalent to my own hired hitmen (the local and federal police I pay so dearly for).
Incorrect. Dale is assuming facts not in evidence. See below.
This is obviously not the case. I didn't hire the mugger, nor did I encourage the thief in an overt way. But I did consciously select and pay for the police and govt. assassins.
Than perhaps attacks against Dale are appropriate since he takes credit for supporting these people.
And so did you. Unless you're saying that the govt. forcibly takes you down to the voting booth, etc.
Well, I don't know what "etc." is supposed to include, but I don't vote. But even assuming, arguendo, that I did, (a) I see no support if I were to vote AGAINST government assassins who are none the less elected, and (b) even a self-defense vote for the lesser of two evils is an awfully thin thread on which to hang a death sentence. Should Sofie, in the movie, "Sofie's Choice" have been put to death because she exercise the "choice" given to her of choosing which of her children was to live? I don't think so. S a n d y ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

On Mon, 23 Sep 1996, Dr.Dimitri Vulis KOTM wrote:
There is no such thing as an "ordinary citizen". When the U.S. commits war crimes in Korea, Viet Nam, Grenada, Panama, Somalia, Iraq, and elsewhere, every American taxpayer is an accomplice and a fair game. Likewise, any Britih subject is fair game for IRA's self-defense against centuries of British genocide and oppression.
Are you aware that from the _American_ point of view, we suffered from Russian war crimes in Korea and elsewhere? Where are the POW's that are missing from that war?
It's a pity the IRA didn't nail your cousin. I wish them better luck next time.
If I were you I wouldn't advocate murder based on nationality; there are lots of swamps in this state that can decompose bodies completely in six months. Even the bones are gone. Phil Fraering pgf@acadian.net 318/261-9649
participants (7)
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Dale Thorn
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Dan Harmon
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dlv@bwalk.dm.com
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hallam@vesuvius.ai.mit.edu
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jim bell
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Phil Fraering
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Sandy Sandfort