Aimee Farr spun:
>Finally, the law has an impressive track record, in stark contrast to
>'crypto-anarchy.'
So law proponents ever adversarial, no matter the facts. Homework
on the exegesis of cryptoanarchy would demonstrate otherwise:
it is law (and its siamese twin, order) which appears whereever
cryptoanarchy rises to prominence in a people -- L&O a perfect
means to strenghening strangleholds.
Opposition to organized control of law and order is timeless,
spaceless. Time and space a conceit of L&O in the scientific
realm.
Opposition to government is timeless and spaceless, or was
until the notion of imperial full employment was concocted,
imperialism coming to America during WW2. And now more
people work for government in the US than in any other nation
today, and most others of the citizenry get a piece of the dole
in one way or the other.
That does not mean there is not considerable anti-government
sentiment among the govs beneficiaries, perhaps the most
vociferous of gov critics are those who know it from the inside.
This interior dissent, too, is bred by imperialism, with it incessant
interior struggle among it beneficiaries.
It is no accident that cypherpunks was founded by and is fed by
dissident beneficiaries of government largesse and protection
from bad, bad people who give shit not for L&O in any disguise.
National defense education, with it emphasis on training an
elite citizenry, has produced thousands of Jim and Jane Bells
still searching for what was promised the smart guys if they just
abided the rules. Their promisers chuckling at the bright-eyed
idiots who never knew what it was like to survive under
oldtime cryptoanarchy -- when keeping secrets from the
day's tax criminals was the highest accomplishment --
especially the rats in their midst whispering rules of right
and wrong, what history proved and didn't, who was
first and who is clueless.
Me, I'm an immortal, got medical and preaching licenses to
prove it, in the name of Anonymous, awarded by Anonymous.
Teller lied, the NYT says, it was a young physicist who
designed the H-bomb, the very one who later became
a fierce opponent of nuclear weapons. A rat.