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Re: NYT Libertarian News
[email protected] (David K. Merriman) writes:
> >Mike McNally says:
> >> John Young writes:
> >> > . . . now comes retired Lieut. Col. James (Bo) Gritz
> >>
> >> Mr. Gritz has been usenet flame fodder for quite some time. He's
> >> either a crypto-fascist (no, not that kind of crypto) or a saviour of
> >> the American Way, depending on your personal leanings.
> >
> >The word "nut" comes to mind...
> >
>
> I hate to correct you, but that's "nut^3" :-)
However you may feel personally about Mr. Gritz (and his connection
to Ross Perot, etc), I think he serves at least three useful purposes
for other members of society who might be labelled "loose cannons",
to wit:
1) When the Sierra Club was working for their particular agenda in the
early seventies, many in the "mainstream" dismissed them as whackos
on the extreme edge. Later, when Earth First came along and
redefined what the environmental movement could become, suddenly
the Sierra Club was a reasonable, legitimate voice with which those
in authority could reason. Mr. Gritz, IMHO, is in part helping to
redefine the "envelope" of so-called patriotism. His extreme measures
may serve to help legitimize less unusual actions which are now
considered "out there."
2) He serves as a lightning rod for government enforcement. It is often
in the best interests of those in power not to drawn the line of
acceptable/not acceptable behavior (keep 'em guessing). His actions
(and those of Randy Weaver, David Koresh, etc) all drawn attention
to the willingness of the government to "do something." It then
becomes more possible to predict the actions of certain government
agencies.
3) It keeps said agencies busy. Contrary to popular opinion, the
resources of the government are not infinite (it only seems that
way). The government is more like a few dozen lumbering Goliaths,
each stumbling after whichever David is most irritating at the moment.
Mr. Gritz serves as the decoy to lure certain giants away from
other activites. Federal agents and other resources devoted to
gathering intelligence on Mr. Gritz are no longer available to
gather intelligence on others. [This resource allocation problem,
IMHO, is one the main reasons for the FBI's insistence on the
Digital Telephony Bill -- it allows a far greater degree of
"intelligence" gathered per expenditure of resource.]
Nutty or not, I'll be happy to cheer on Mr. Gritz.
> Dave Merriman
Dan
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