1996-03-12 - Re: A lengthy preliminary analysis of the Leahy bill.

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From: jamesd@echeque.com
To: Cypherpunks <cypherpunks@toad.com>
Message Hash: 198758d64cd8dc588ca698063acf22d10a47a21272cba5b0b910bf9024cd05b1
Message ID: <199603120546.VAA10498@dns2.noc.best.net>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-03-12 12:15:00 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 12 Mar 1996 20:15:00 +0800

Raw message

From: jamesd@echeque.com
Date: Tue, 12 Mar 1996 20:15:00 +0800
To: Cypherpunks <cypherpunks@toad.com>
Subject: Re: A lengthy preliminary analysis of the Leahy bill.
Message-ID: <199603120546.VAA10498@dns2.noc.best.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


At 12:26 PM 3/11/96 -0500, Peter D. Junger wrote:
>     (4) the authority and ability of investigative and law enforcement
>     officers to access and decipher, in a timely manner and as provided
>     by law, wire and electronic communications necessary to provide for
>     public safety and national security should also be preserved;


This provision of the bill makes the entire bill a worthless 
pile of repressive shit, despite all the pious good intentions
in the rest of the bill.

A little constitutional history:

The supreme court used to rule that congress could not delegate 
its own power to bureaucrats, as this violated the principle of 
rule of law.

Thus congress could pass a law than in a certain situation you had 
to do such and such, or refrain from doing so and so, but it could 
not pass a law that in a certain situation you had to do whatever 
some bureaucrat told you to do, because that would violate 
separation of powers and the principle of the rule of law, not men.

Roosevelt threatened to stack the court, the court submitted, and the rule
of law in the US was radically diminished.

The proposed bill would seem to give bureaucrats the power to set aside the
first, fourth, and fifth amendments, at whim.

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              				|  
We have the right to defend ourselves	|   http://www.jim.com/jamesd/
and our property, because of the kind	|  
of animals that we are. True law	|   James A. Donald
derives from this right, not from the	|  
arbitrary power of the state.		|   jamesd@echeque.com






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