-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.zolatimes.com/v2.27/jbellth.html
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<A HREF="http://www.zolatimes.com/v2.27/jbellth.html">Jim Bell's Theorem</A>
Jim Bell's Theorem

by Zola


The wounded screams echo in my ears.

Last issue we ran an article by Jim Bell called "Assassination Politics
." Some found this controversial. No so much the article itself (which
is radical) but the fact we chose to print it.

Ho hum. When Matt Drudge ran the Monica Lewinsky story in January, and
he was the only reporter in the country reporting it, and the White
House was stonewalling as usual--that was controversial. But now, seven
months after everyone else has had their way with the facts, and after
the President has confessed, reporting the Monica Lewinsky story is
decidedly not controversial. It's pretty old hat, even though the
consequences of the story itself may not be.

When Jim Bell started his series of posts on the cypherpunk mailing list
about three years ago--the posts that became "Assassination
Politics"--they were controversial. But today, after months of raging
debate, after Jim Bell's arrest by the IRS, and after his prison
conviction, Jim Bell's thesis is well-known and there is not that much
more to say about it. Reprinting it, as we did, is not controversial. If
doing so appears shocking, that is because of the power of Bell's ideas:
for "Assassination Politics" is one of the most powerful essays on
freedom written in the 1990s.

There is no self-respecting "Information Warfare" library at the
Pentagon or in the military that does not contain a copy of Jim Bell's
article. Not to mention the Satanic bibliothecas of the IRS and other
government agencies. Apparently The Laissez Faire City Times has some
government-brainwashed serfs for readers who believe material like this
should be reserved to the perusal of bureaucratically-anointed high
priests, and should be kept out of the hands of freedom advocates. Well,
all the better reason we should publish the article.

I intend to keep The Laissez Faire City Times relevant, interesting,
well-written, and thought- provoking. "Assassination Politics" meets all
these criteria. In fact, it also overlaps all three of our chosen
subject areas: freedom, finance, and the digital society. It would be
hard to find a better match up of supply and demand in my book.

But I see quite clearly what the problem is. Let's compare
"Assassination Politics" to another article like "The Tragedy of Pol Pot
Women" in the same issue. "Pol Pot Women" demonstrates poignantly how
governments abuse their citizens. It shows graphically the consequences
of unbridled State power. Most would say this is a "good" article, even
though it implicitly attacks government.

But "Pol Pot Women" is not controversial. Why not? Because of the
article's subtext: Citizens are victims. As you read the story, the
subliminal teachings pour over you like a bath of molten lead: "
Governments have the power. Citizens are victims. Citizens are victims.
Citizens are victims."

Government zombies get off on this. It's like one of those "democratic"
debates that goes something like this: "You, Sir, are abusing power
because you killed 25 citizens, when you should have only killed 15!"
And the Powers That Be smile tolerantly. They have been doing this for a
long time, and they know they are not threatened.

Now we come to Jim Bell's "Assassination Politics." The first, most
provocative thing about this essay is that Jim Bell doesn't present
citizens as victims! It is no wonder the programming of the
mind-controlled robots tells them they are supposed to be upset. For the
message, sub- and supraliminal, of Bell's essay is: Citizens don't have
to be victims. They can turn the table and make government the victim,
when government officials initiate violence. This, of course, is the
ultimate heresy, the final outrage.

When Jim Bell was arrested by the IRS, newspapers reported the alarming
fact that Bell had lists giving the names and addresses of IRS
agents/employees! It didn't occur to the journalists reporting the story
to note that the IRS agents similarly had Jim Bell's name and address.
(In fact, that's how the IRS knew where to show up to arrest him.) Once
again, Jim Bell wasn't acting like the proper victim. The subtext of the
news accounts: The IRS is supposed to collect information on citizens.
Citizens are not supposed to collect information on the IRS.

The wounded screams of IRS suck-ups echo in my ears.

Now, I don't know where these candy-assed freedom advocates came from.
Many of them may be of the variety that sets Atlas Shrugged on one
corner of the table, and tea and crumpets on the other corner, and then
smile at everyone and say, "Isn't freedom nice? Don't you think the
government should give us more of it? Would you like some tea?" Well, to
these moral cowards all I have to say is: Freedom isn't something the
government gives. Freedom is something you take.

What is amazing about Jim Bell's essay is that he was a beginner at the
concepts he was playing with. He was working through in his own mind the
consequences of a digital signature. A digital signature on an encrypted
message. And he realized you could create a lottery. A lottery whose
payoff was a reward to the person who came closest to predicting the
time of death of a given government official.

Now, you don't have to believe such a lottery is a good idea in order to
profit from reading "Assassination Politics." For Jim Bell was, among
other things, doing a thought experiment on one of the consequences of
the digital society. And you can't escape these consequences by ignoring
them, any more than you can escape the consequences of the atomic bomb
by pretending it doesn't exist.

Governments have entire departments distributed among many organizations
and think tanks whose sole purpose is to ferret out possible
consequences like those envisioned by Jim Bell. Then they marshal vast
resources to turn such consequences into practical plans for terrorizing
the heathen across the border who worship God under a different name, as
well as for enslaving their own citizens. To them, "Assassination
Politics" is just a beginning. After that, they get serious. God forbid
that believers in individual sovereignty should even by reading
 encounter the semblance of such a process.

Here is my prescription for those who can't bear to have their blessed
victimhood trifled with. I forbid you to ever again read The Laissez
Faire City Times. I also recommend you take a goodly dose of Prozac and
return to your sedentary somnambulation in front of the Boob Tube. And
remember to keep your mouth shut and your head bowed when the truck
pulls up out front to carry your sorry carcass off to the government
glue factory.

-30-
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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