On Fri, 31 Oct 2014 23:30:03 -0700 Stephen Williams <sdw@lig.net> wrote:
On 10/29/14, 11:02 AM, Hashem Nasarat wrote:
On 10/29/2014 12:24 PM, RKN the_PORTABLE wrote:
... Let me sum up gg in a way that I expect cpunks to understand (but then again, I expected cpunks to have more brain and do better research rather than just go white knighting): "Anti-prism people are not pro privacy. They are pro terrorism and paeodofilia! Snowden is just a racist! He could not cope with changing times and the fact that new president is black so he sold out his country and ran away to homophobic and racist RUSSIA!" This analogy is not very useful as USA is also homophobic and racist.
Not really the same at all. Russia's government is still actively oppressing people in these ways while the US is:
A) Far less homophobic and racist than it used to be.
LMAO! self-parody never ends. In some areas,
hardly at all. B) Has gone from the government homophobia hunting people to fire from government jobs in the 1950's to complete legality and usually legal protection now. C) The Millennials as a group are not homophobic or racist to any measurable degree. Remaining pockets are becoming more isolated and their youth are changing too, as far as anyone can tell.
The whole culture is rapidly changing in many ways. Music, Internet, Hollywood, legal cases, politicians (because many have been voted out), etc. have all been changing people's opinions. The rate of evolution, or at least the rate of maturation of active cycles has been apparently increasing each year.
Pervasive cell phone video, major cases of corruption and overstepping bounds and tragedy have caused major pull back of longstanding troublesome trends.
This is how all of this ties into cypherpunks: Observing how opinions, public sentiment, then enforcement, regulations, and market options evolve in each of these cycles should be instructive when trying to induce important change. How can you position things to improve better outcomes when inflection points happen?
sdw