John Gilmore interviewed by Greplaw 164
mpawlo writes "I have just published another one of those Greplaw interviews. This time, John Gilmore had the courtesy of answering a wide range of questions on various subjects such as terrorism and security, spam blocking, censorship, secret laws in airports and of course - sarongs. Gilmore starts: 'I'm a civil libertarian millionaire eccentric.' Enjoy!"
"I'm a civil libertarian millionaire eccentric" (Score:5, Funny)
Re:"I'm a civil libertarian millionaire eccentric" (Score:3, Funny)
Re:"I'm a civil libertarian millionaire eccentric" (Score:2)
greplaw? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:greplaw? (Score:2)
I want iGreplaw - it's easy enough for my mum to use!
Re:greplaw? (Score:1)
Server is going down fast... here's the text (Score:1, Informative)
****BEGIN ARTILE TEXT****
# Who is John Gilmore?
I'm a civil libertarian millionaire eccentric. I started out in my teens as a middle-class programmer, worked my way up to senior technical jobs, then learned business in Silicon Valley. A combination of luck and skill brought me through several successful startup companies and gave m
This is the same civil libertarian, John Gilmore.. (Score:3, Insightful)
PS: Moderators!
*Before you kno
Brilliant, stupid, or both? (Score:2)
Re:Brilliant, stupid, or both? (Score:2)
There's nothing wrong with standing up for your principles, but he crosses into k00k territory by aiding the problem just to spite the best solutions we've[tinw] come up with so far.
Server up and fast, parent troll (Score:3, Informative)
'nuff said
I wouldn't be so sure about that. (you slandered) (Score:1)
Then, performing a taceroute on grep.law.harvard that was referenced by Slashdot (thanks alot you pricks), I found it timeout.
Yet, performing a traceroute on greplaw.org, it was barely handling the load for me. And I'm on Texas' Inet2 backbone!
traceroute greplaw.org
traceroute: Warning: greplaw.org has multiple addresses; using 207.44.244.117
traceroute to greplaw.org (207.44.244.117), 30 hops max, 38 byte packets
1 *
Re:Server up and fast, parent troll (Score:1)
Re:Server is going down fast... here's the text (Score:5, Insightful)
THis should read.
"Terrorism is now defined as force applied for political reasons by people other than the US or the Israeli Government."
Thank you.
Re:Server is going down fast... here's the text (Score:3)
"Terrorism is now defined as force applied for political reasons by people other than any government included in the secret amendment to this regulation."
isn't that redundant? (Score:1)
wait, that is redundant. Isn't the US government a branch of the Israeli Government?
(that was a joke. We know it is the other way around.)
Re:Troll? I'm not a troll. It's just a userID. (Score:1)
Re:Troll? I'm not a troll. It's just a userID. (Score:1)
And I thought I was alone... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2, Insightful)
Slow down, cowboy. Neither you or I were born with a-priori knowledge of how to drive a car. Licensing programs for operators of vehicles on public roads are not a restraint on freedom of movement.
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:1, Insightful)
Personally, I think a large percentage of the people driving should lose their right to drive, because they can't seem to do it in a way that doesn't endanger or unduly impose on other drivers. Taking away licensing requirements would only make this worse. Does anyone have statistics on how much the economy loses to traffic every day? Some traffic is legit (construction), but a lot of it is caused by people who just refuse to drive reasonably.
Now, consid
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:1, Insightful)
You want utilitarian government. One that reduces your risk not only of injustice, but also from chance events. The end you are after is reasonable. And, in fact, it is *reasonable* to desire to restrict the freedom of others in order to achieve it. But not all reasonable desires are morally acceptible.
I may, for example, desire to shoot an intruder in my home the first chance I get. But doing that before I even determine that he poses a physical threat to me is not righ
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:1, Interesting)
The funniest thing about the Libertarian party is that the talk out of both sides of their mouths. They claim th
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:3, Interesting)
What I take from John Gilmore arguments, is that people should not be arbitrarily identified just because they are walking down the street or stepping on a plane. In a supposedly "free" societ you don't need a license to walk down a street, and you don't need a license to sit
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2)
How about making it illegal for anyone to be required to show their driver's license unless they are being charged with violating a law? Add in prohibiting individuals or businesses from using a driver's license for any purpose other than determining if the person is qualified to drive a vehicle (e.g. when renting a car, or employing someone who will be driving as part of their job). Same thing should go for Social Security Number - it should ONLY be used for administering the Social Security program. No
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't want the police to start searching my house without a warrant, but I have no problem with the requirement of presenting identification when you are driving any vehicle under 25,000 pounds (standard license). To me, this is common sense.
Don't mean to harsh, but if someone wants to "live off the grid" and not have an id/dl then they sho
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:1, Insightful)
Travel on the public right-of-way, via common conveyances of the time (which right now includes cars) is not a privilege. This has been upheld in numerous court cases: http://www.dlois.com/realtruth/right_to_drive.htm [dlois.com].
Driving is a right, which means you don't need a permit. Permit = permission, and you don't need permission to exercise a right. That's what a right *is*.
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:1)
For example, if you want to live off the grid, you can't expect to get credit. The companies that grant credit want information (credit history) that other companies collect. You don't have to buy into that system if you don't want the benefit.
On the other hand, it's not as simple as walking or biking to avoid having to ID yourself. There was a recent case where a man was arrested for refusing to show ID and he was a
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:3, Interesting)
We call those non-photo drivers licenses...you may still get one in Vermont and several Canadian provinces (New Brunswick and Quebec, perhaps a few others.) You may also get one with a bona fide relgious objection in many states, but as we know, that goes back and forth.
To this day, the most non-ph
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:4, Interesting)
Of course, it'll never happen. But it's a nice thought.
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2)
Well, I think that anonymity at the traffic stop is poss
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:1)
You have got that exactly wrong.
The license you're talking about says, "There exists a John Smith of 22 Mockingbird Lane who is licensed to drive," but doesn't help the cop know whether you are that person. Hence it doesn't say whether you are licensed to drive, unless you establish your claim to that name and address. That's less privacy for you, and less security, too, since your lice
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2)
Not true. A non-photo license has the basic description of the person (height, weight, eye color) that helps in identifying the person.
Non-photo license fraud in New Jersey is entirely unheard of--even though the document could be photocopied on a color copier. The
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2)
Yes, but I'm concerned about photograph archival, which is a major, mostly undebated source of privacy issues, and is not an issue with the non-photo license.
(So how does a barely-21 kid in New Jersey buy booze?)
With a photo license. The photograph is optional (well, was.)
Hones
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:5, Funny)
So it is the right of some drunk driver to mow down a pedestrian and be able to get away with it because in the name of civil liberties, he shouldn't have to have a license plate and drivers license eh?
I have absolutely no idea how to respond to that. Perhaps I need to beat myself over the head with a blunt object to approach that level of thinking and interpretation. You might as well say "So it is the right of some mentally-unbalanced gun nut to mow down a pedestrian and be able to get away with it because in the name of civil liberties, he shouldn't have to have a license to own the gun eh?"
The license had nothing to do with the fact that the guy was ACTING IRRESPONSIBLY. You act like that magic piece of plastic is going to automatically make Daryl the Drunk into Reginald the Responsible. Do you know why people as a whole drive safely? They don't want to damage their property and/or go to jail. The truly good people don't want to hurt other people. You act like the fact that a guy spent a few hours in a line at the DMV should account for his driving skill.
I'm all for much tougher penalties for irresponsible driving practices. Drunken driving should be a felony with at least 30 days in the drunk tank. Repeat offenders should be locked up even longer (presuming we let them out, which we shouldn't). If someone demonstrates a lack of ability to handle liberty, by all means TAKE IT AWAY.
You, sir, are an idiot. There, I said what everyone was thinking. You took my opposition to prior restraint and someone managed to walk away with an advocation of reckless and dangerous behaviour. I don't know what your problem is, but I'd bet it's hard to pronounce.
Yes I agree that big brother should be kept out of your living room, but when you are on the road, you can very easily affect another citizen's right to "life, liberty and the persuit of happiness". This is what pisses me off most about these, "I can do whatever the fuck I feel like" civil libertarians, what you do can adversely affect other people.
Can. That's a really sticky word, isn't it? I *can* choose to shoot a bunch of children with my gun. Should I be automatically subjected to intense psychological evaluation before I can own that gun? Prior restraint goes against everything this country has ever stood for. You cannot in any free society punish the innocent for the crimes of the guilty.
Do people do bad things? Yeah, it happens. But if you go off the deep end trying to prevent bad things from happening, you might as well lock everyone into their own little padded room in restraints so they can't hurt themselves. (Yes, this is hyperbole. That's the point.)
This is coming from someone who is a stron supporter of the ACLU(I would be a member, but I am a cheap bastard)
That's a good thing that you aren't a member, because with your attitudes I'd doubt they'd have you.
It's obvious to me you lost someone to a drunk driver, and I'm sorry about your loss. However, your emotional problems with that should not end up being the basis of law. By taking away someone's ability to chose, you become a petty tyrant as bad as King George III and an enemy to liberty.
God gave me the right to choose, and I'll never give up that God-given right of agency and free choice. Don't try taking that away.
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:3, Informative)
Too bad the "privilege" argument is pure propoganda:
CASE #1: "The use of the highway for the purpose of travel and transportation is not a mere privilege, but a common fundamental right of which the public and individuals cannot rightfully be deprived." Chicago Motor Coach v. Chicago, 169 NE 221.
CASE #2: "The right of the citizen to travel upon the public highways and to transport his
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:5, Insightful)
For example, a five-year-old has the physical ability to turn the ignition key in a car and press the accelerator pedal down. But this doesn't mean that they should be allowed to drive.
The key principle is that certain actions are inherently dangerous to other people. Allowing other people to engage in these actions is a direct and severe imposition on *my* right to stay alive. Of particular importance, in the case of driving, is the fact that it is not possible for a completely untrained driver to not willfully (if unintentionally) endangering me, because he or she does not have the skill to operate a dangerous device in a way that won't endanger me.
Simply by their using the vehicle, they are putting me at risk. There is no effective difference to me (as a victim) between them driving on public roads and them playing Russian roulette with me when I drive on public roads (using a gun with a sufficiently large cylinder).
So we have to balance their rights to be able to act freely with my rights to not be killed by other people's free actions. The current solution is to require training for people who use dangerous devices so that the user of the device can, with high degree of confidence, willfully avoid causing harm to others.
(Note also that it is not good enough for me for them to be punished after they kill me. I'm still dead. The rights we have in a free society should not include the right to kill one or more people, as long as we die ourselves or suffer some other punishment afterwards.)
Now, obviously, if one has a requirement but never enforces it, it doesn't protect my rights at all. So the requirement has to be enforced. I don't really care how it is enforced. The key is that there must be some mechanism to distinguish between drivers who can intend to not hurt me and, to a high degree of reliability, follow through on that intent; and those who through incompetence or inability either cannot intend to not hurt me, or lack the ability to translate intention into action.
A license is one way to accomplish this. A license that doesn't clearly identify itself as belonging to the driver isn't as useful, because this removes the ability for people to distinguish between proper drivers and threats to society. So, typically, you have to use something like a photo ID. I'd be happy with on-the-spot proficiency checks, or an IDless card with a hash value off my fingerprint that could be verified with a fingerprint scanner, or any other way to verify that the operator of the device has the capability to avoid harming others through using it.
The principle of being able to avoid harming others is also why it makes sense to outlaw drunk driving (and increase penalties for hurting people while drunk). When sufficiently drunk, you can no longer guarantee the safety of others. So by driving while sufficiently drunk, you are willfully endangering others.
So, the bottom line is: you can have a right to travel. But it doesn't follow that you have the right to travel and kill people while doing it. The right to travel is the right to travel *provided* that you possess the ability to do so without causing injury and death to others--if you do not possess that ability, their rights to stay alive trump your rights to move from A to B.
(Note that this only applies for the people operating the devices. Having IDs for being a passenger is silly, unless the passenger can, by virtue of incompetence, cause a threat to others. And it's only worth implementing checks for commonly-used devices that can hurt others. Machine shop tools can be deadly if used improperly, but they're not sprinkled all over where they can kill bystanders when untrained people use them on a daily basis. Thus, there's no point requiring an explicit license for public machine shop tool operation.)
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:1)
Oh, wait...
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2)
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2)
Remember, thought, that even irresponsible drivers will do some effort of avoiding crashes, simply to keep from getting killed. A trained irresponsible driver, being more skillfull, is more likely to succeed with a last-second desperate evasive maneuver than an untrained one.
Of course,
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2)
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:1, Insightful)
"The claim and exercise of a constitutional right cannot be converted into a crime." - Miller v. U.S., 230 F 2d 486, 489.
I.e., that state can't use the argument, "Sure you have the right to travel... and we have the right to arrest you if you do it in our state without a license."
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2)
God, this is why I really should stop reading YRO articles on
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:1)
But...
You said not having one isn't going to stop them from driving irresponsibly anyway...
I mean, can you see where people are going with this?
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2)
And having to show ID didn't stop the 9/11 hijackers; they all showed perfectly valid official IDs under their own names. So what's the point?
9/11
Re:And I thought I was alone... (Score:2)
Judge Kafka? (Score:5, Interesting)
Is this the United States the Founding Fathers built, or Stalinism by way of Kafka?
Re:Judge Kafka? (Score:2)
No. John was just putting words into the judge's mouth. He was trying to get the judge to rule on a law without giving a case for it being unconstitutional. How's a judge supposed to rule on that?
John was just using the classic straw man tactic.
Re:Judge Kafka? (Score:5, Funny)
Rights (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Rights (Score:5, Funny)
Obviously you're not thinking this through. With the current banning of thongs in two major states the resulting surplus will no doubt follow the third fundamental law of fashion: "Anything deemed unwearable by the religious right will surface within two weeks in San Francisco like a tidal wave."
Given the concentration of techies in the Bay Area, I'd say we have something to look forward to.
Re:Rights (Score:2)
And I don't even want to think about where he'd put his PDA....
Re:Rights (Score:2)
Please, God. No geeks in thongs . . .
Easy way to get back at them. (Score:1)
Re:Rights (Score:2)
For those not in the know, this is what we call THONGS in the Land of Oz.
Re:Rights (Score:2)
Re:Rights (Score:2)
"I don't relish seeing the beginning of the crease of people's buttocks. And I don't enjoy watching young men letting their sexual organs show through their red or black silk underwear," Green said.
Green argued that, if government can dictate what children wear to school and when they have to be off the streets, government should be able to ban
Deadhead (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Deadhead (Score:1, Funny)
We're out here. Just thought you might like to know.
Re:Deadhead (Score:2)
Don't worry, he'll be so high in the voting booth he won't be able to figure out which candidate is the republican.
Re:Deadhead (Score:1)
you might want to check out the libertarian party... assuming you don't like being in prison.
Re:Deadhead (Score:2)
Re:Deadhead (Score:1)
Re:Deadhead (Score:2)
Re:Deadhead (Score:1)
Re:Deadhead (Score:1)
wrong wrong wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
the drug war was first created to get returning GI's , from vietnam off of heroin and originally focused on treatment over criminalization. Of course later Nixon was forced by the right to increase the drug war's focus on criminalization. Oh yeah just as an aside the hippies did not force nixon out of office...he won both terms of his presidency. It was his own criminal activities that forced him out of office....not a bunch of inefectual hippies. They had nothing to do with ending the vietnam war and nothing to do with forcing nixon out of office.
Guys like this, history revisionist, asshole really make it hard for libertarian minded people to support ending the drug war. I mean any time i say the drug war is a waste of money regularly open minded people close thier doors to the idea becouse they have heard all the other consperiacy bullshit guys like this asshole have heaped on to a fairly straight forward argument. What is the saying "With freinds like this who needs enemies"
stendec@gmail.com
Re:wrong wrong wrong (Score:1, Informative)
Nixon is firmly responsible.
Re:wrong wrong wrong (Score:5, Informative)
Earlier interview (Score:4, Informative)
the right to be left alone (Score:4, Insightful)
Arrgh. Now I'm all riled up.
Join the ACLU [aclu.org]. It's safer than direct action against "the Man."
John doesn't like the ACLU (Score:2)
Baby or bathwater? We distort, you decide. Some of our opinions and priorities are different, but John's arguments are always well thought out and interesting.
-Don
ACLU / gun control (Score:2)
Insect Control (Score:2)
I was all ready to launch an emotional defense of my indefensible biologically revisionist opinion about crabs being insects, but John headed me off at the pass: he said "Insects are The Enemy, so we Must Eat Them!"
Gilmore has radical ideas about Insect Control. We agree on the general principles, but d
Re:Insect Control (Score:2)
It's very hard to convey tone via written word alone, so I apologize if I'm missing something . . . but why would it be acceptable for a vegetarian to eat a crab, but not an insect?
I'm sorry but... (Score:2)
. Not only that, but "innocent until proven guilty" - what's proof of guilt, a SUCCESSFUL hijacking?? Hey Sherlock, too late once it's proven, what you gonna do, call 911 at 30,000 fee
Secret law ? (Score:2)
This quote is from the article, from the answer to the "What is this I hear about secret laws in airports" question:
If I understood this correctly, this means th
Re:Gilmore?? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:A wise man... (Score:2, Insightful)
Would you care to post a list of other people that have been taken out for thinking too much?
For as much as some tend to complain about oppression in America, I'm not aware of such things actually happening.
Thanks
Re:A wise man... (Score:3, Insightful)
Then we have Sherman Austin under the Patriot Act.
http://rwor.org/a/1217/austin.htm
With the Patriot Act, there is the distinct possibility of people being silenced and no one ever knowing.
The point is not how many are being silenced now, but how many can and probably will be in the future.
First they came for the Jews
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Jew.
Then they came for the Communists
and I did not speak out
because I was not a Communist.
Then they came for the trade u
Re:A wise man... (Score:1)
The example of Galileo was meant to show people being silenced throughout history, and he was indeed silenced by the church.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathem
Get your shit straight.
Re:A wise man... (Score:3, Interesting)
For as much as some tend to complain about oppression in America, I'm not aware of such things actually happening."
Well if you are not aware of it then it probably never happened.
Here let me go the TheListOfPeopleWeKilledBecauseTheyDaredToQuestion U s.gov and get the list. Oh wait a minute the US does not have a web site where they keep a list of people they assassinated. I guess that means the US govt has never
Re:A wise man... (Score:1)
killjoe makes a credible argument.
Re:A wise man... (Score:1)
For example, your Social Security Number was never meant to be used as a personal identifier when it was created during FDR's socialist reign in the 1930s. Today, the SSN is used to get a job, to file your taxes, even to buy a goddamn cellphone -- all because the people who run these programs want to personally-identify you. Yet, the SS card itself orig
Re:A wise man... (Score:1, Funny)
John F. Kennedy
Martin Luther King
Mohandas K. Gandhi
Jesus Christ
Re:A wise man... (Score:1)
ahem (Score:3, Interesting)
Created On: 03-Oct-03
Domain Name: GREPLAW.ORG
Created On: 11-Apr-2002
Re:Did you hear that? Huh? (Score:2)
"A Jam Spa" would be an anagram of "Pajamas"
personally I prefer "Pyjamas"for its anagram "Jam Pays"
I feel pedanticulatedly sated...
Re:Where the Gary Gilmore interview? (Score:2)
Re:As always, he's a freak (Score:3, Insightful)
That is, of course, if he happens to have permission from the U.S. Government in the form of a drivers' license.
The point is not that airlines or private individuals don't have the right to choose how they wish to restrict access to their property. The point is that the government doesn't have the right to force airlines or private individuals, as proxies, to restrict access to their property.
Although the kidnapping example is technically in the same
Re:As always, he's a freak (Score:2, Insightful)
You also make the point of ones passage being inconsistant; and use that as an example against Gillmores arguments, I fail to see how millions of passengers flying in the United
Re:As always, he's a freak (Score:1)
I fail to see how millions of passengers flying in the United States, each one who had to show ID, are demonstrating 'inconsistant pasage'. [sic]
Let me explain, without further comment on your mangling of my statement. "...reserved for a particular purpose for which your passage is inconsistent..." means, for example, riding an ATV thought a nature preserve which bans motor vehicles. Doesn't seem that hard to understand. I think you have a fundamental misunderstanding of my statement. Try reading it mor
Re:As always, he's a freak (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's not even worry about the legalities, but let's think about the usefulness of your statement.
Nuclear power plants can and should restrict who enters. The list of people allowed in the plant is small and known. The list of people carrying bombs on airplanes is small and unknown. Therefore, checking ID's makes sense to keep people out of nuclear power plants and checking people's bags for bombs makes
Re:As always, he's a freak (Score:1)
Did I say that? Let me check... Nope. The slashbot kneejerk is an amazing thing. I'm railing against his rhetoric, not his message. Maybe you guys should read my message more closely instead of just being a 'bot.
Re:Can someone add this to the "fortune" database? (Score:1)
More people wear turbans in this world than the entire population of the United States.