On Fri, 8 Nov 2019 02:09:29 +0000 (UTC) jim bell <jdb10987@yahoo.com> wrote:
On Thursday, November 7, 2019, 04:49:59 PM PST, Punk - Stasi 2.0 <punks@tfwno.gf> wrote:
On Thu, 7 Nov 2019 23:40:15 +0000 (UTC) jim bell <jdb10987@yahoo.com> wrote:
I just did a search of my AP essay. I didn't find a reference to Chuck Hamill's essay, "From Crossbows to Cryptography" in it. https://nakamotoinstitute.org/static/docs/from-crossbows-to-cryptography.pdf... is going on?
AHHH that's the title. I've been looking for that supreme piece of garbage but couldn't find it because I thought the title had the word "arrow" in it. Haha.
> Alternatively, that supreme piece of garbage is just one more piece of decent governmetn diversion. It fuels the incredibly stupid and self-evidently false idea that 'technology' favors freedom.
We don't say that 'technology' ALWAYS 'favors freedom', in any particular case.
I don't know who you mean by "we". I was commenting on what that guy hamill says. Quoting him : "In fact, technology represents one of the most promising avenues available for recapturing our freedoms from those who have stolen them." That's a pretty bold, pretty false, and unfounded, statement. "By its very nature, it favors the bright (who can put it to use) over the dull (who cannot). It favors the adaptable (who are quick to see the merit of the new) over the sluggish (who cling to time-tested ways). And what two better words are there to describe government bureaucracy than “dull” and “sluggish”? " And that, again, is just crazily stupid. The idea that government is 'dull' and 'sluggish' and doesn't use 'technology' to more perfectly enslave its subjects is so incredibly detached from reality....that I have to wonder if the author can be THAT retarded.
That claim sounds like a strawman, which I have found is typically the most common example of false argumentation.
I'm quoting. Where's the strawman?
Government can employ technology for those purposes, and you can then notice that, but that doesn't mean that the net effect of technology favors non-freedom.
Except it does. Technology favors non-freedom. That is my postion and I can easily argue it. And half the argument is simply looking around at what's happening. We live in a fuckign global police-surveillance state. Thanks to cheap microelectronics.
Further, 'Government' buys technology using money robbed from the public, robbery that I have long argued would be prevented using an implementation of the AP system.
Government develops 'technology' in partnership with the corrupt-to-the-core, pseudo-private sector. And that's one of the main reasons why 'technology' works AGAINST freedom. Technical development requires technical infrastructure, and that infrastructure is in the hands of govcorp.
Please try to explain why "government", the major form of "unfreedom", would remain capable of doing its work if any of its employees to try to tax were targetable with a functioning AP-type system.
The problem looks rather simple, and I say this as an open sympathizer to the assassination program. For example, in order for AP to work 'we' need good anonimity. And as 'we' know, good anonimity is nowhere to be found. And that's because the whole telecomms infrastructure is controlled by the enemy, aka govcorp. AP might work IF the technical requirements, like secure communications, were there. So how are you going to 'bootstrap' AP? Yes, in an 'AP world' there may be secure communications. But you can't get to an AP world without secure communications...And today, of course we don't have them.