Airport insanity

Adam adam.cypherpunks at fastmail.fm
Sat Oct 23 20:37:02 PDT 2004


You know, the more I read posts by Mr. Donald, the more I believe that
he is quite possibly the most apt troll I have ever encountered. It is
quite apparent from reading his responses that he is obviously an
exceptionally intelligent (academically anyway) individual. I find it
hard to believe that such intelligence could reside in a person with
such critically flawed core beliefs. 

I have a hunch that Mr. Donald is instead playing the role of an
elaborate "devil's advocate", furiously defending his stance against
retaliations by our fellow Cypherpunks. Tyler Durden mentioned this
hypothesis many emails ago, and I believe him to be accurate, especially
since Mr. Donald never responded to the charge.

None-the-less, this has been one of the more inteteresting (and
infuriating) threads in recent memory of Cypherpunks. I'm glad we're
going through it with such vigor.

-Adam


On Tue, 19 Oct 2004 09:39:05 -0700, "James A. Donald"
<jamesd at echeque.com> said:
>     --
> Thomas Shaddack:
> >  > > It isn't a problem for you until it happens to you. Who 
> >  > > knows when being interested in anon e-cash will become a 
> >  > > ground to blacklist *you*.
> 
> James A. Donald:
> >  > I know when it will happen.  It will happen when people 
> >  > interested in anon ecash go on suicide missions.   :-)
> 
> Bill Stewart
> > More likely, when anon ecash money-launderers start being 
> > accused of funding terrorist activities.
> 
> When e-currency handlers (cambists) are accused of money 
> laundering terrorist's money, the feds steal the money, but 
> they do not obstruct them from travelling, or, surprisingly, 
> even from doing business - well, perhaps not so surprisingly, 
> for if they stopped them from doing business there would be 
> nothing to steal.
> 
> When the state uses repressive measures against those that seek 
> to murder us, there is still a large gap between that and using 
> repressive measures against everyone.
> 
> We are not terrorists, we don't look like terrorists, we don't 
> sound like terrorists. Indeed, the more visible real terrorists 
> are, the less even Tim McViegh looks like a terrorist and the 
> more he looks like a patriot.
> 
> When people are under attack they are going to lash out, to 
> kill and destroy.  Lashing out an external enemy, real or 
> imaginary, is a healthy substitute for lashing out at internal 
> enemies.  We do not have a choice of peace, merely a choice 
> between war against external or internal enemies.   Clearly, 
> war against external enemies is less dangerous to freedom.
> 
> War is dangerous to freedom, but we do not have a choice of 
> peace.  The question is where the war is to be fought - in 
> America, or elsewhere.  War within America will surely destroy 
> freedom.
> 
> What we need to fear is those that talk about the home front 
> and internal security, those who claim that Christians are as 
> big a threat as Muslims - or that black Muslims are as big a
> threat as Middle Eastern Muslims. 
> 
>     --digsig
>          James A. Donald
>      6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG
>      cGrCJvmIhJnYLWO2RB3qmnqijcHlOOsA7iklRoZD
>      4Ar75eLN10XbfJw/mqPpGQeUW0SzMlz4CLrpHIeEe





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