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Re: denial of service and government rights
Greg Broiles wrote:
> At 05:24 PM 12/1/96 -0800, Dale Thorn wrote:
> >So what you're saying is I (or we) can testify in front of Congress on
> >essentially any topic, telling a blatant lie (that we know is false, and
> >which they will subsequently prove is false), and totally get away with
> >it. You and I can do that, is that what you're saying?
> This is idiotic. I suspect it's deliberately idiotic, but I can't see what
> anyone gains by it. If you've got a point to make, would you please just
> say what you're thinking and move on?
See below.
> There's a big difference between something being punishable and someone
> being punished. The false testimony was given on behalf of a friendly
> government, and in favor of a cause which met with widespread national
> support and was the focus of much (literal) flag-waving and patriotic
> speechifying. In general, you face very few risks if you lie in a way which
> helps a very popular cause, and the people you're lying to want to do the
> thing that your lies are purportedly justifying. Your risks are much
> greater if you're saying something unpopular or if you are an unpopular
> person. I'm not talking about law, I'm talking about politics. And the fact
> that laws are sometimes enforced in a political matter shouldn't be news to
> anyone. (I'm not saying that's good, but I think it's attributable to and a
> result of to the general fallibility of human beings, myself included, so
> I'm skeptical about easy answers. Real-world solutions tend to fall short
> of theoretical perfection. Doh.)
> >If that is true, then my original contention that things are far worse
> >than the person I originally responded to was imagining, stands as
> >correct. Things are bad indeed.
> I'd sure appreciate it if you'd just say what you're thinking (if it's
> on-topic) instead of playing stupid "Is X true? Is Y true? Wow! I've just
> discovered something new!" games. Your comments suggest to me that what
> you're dancing around is, essentially, that the government is morally wrong
> because it (eliding distinctions between governments and branches of
> governments) enforces laws in an erratic or discriminatory or political
> fashion. That's what I'm extracting from your messages. If there's
> something more to what you're saying, I think I'd have a better chance of
> extracting it if you devoted less energy to tricky rhetorical strategies.
I sympathize. My original posting was short and clear. This is what
happens when people who don't think as clearly as you do (sadly, a
majority of c-punks) respond to a posting with deliberately twisted
logic to "refute" a point. See Black Unicorn's recent posts about
denial of service for an excellent example of this.