1993-06-04 - Re: Lobbying for Cryptoprivacy, non-U.S.

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From: esr@snark.thyrsus.com (Eric S. Raymond)
To: hughes@soda.berkeley.edu (Eric Hughes)
Message Hash: bd4f2c4b7518db58f2ce928f0f627563302469a42b022f51de0c9f32b2af8537
Message ID: <m0o1jGJ-0001KtC@snark.thyrsus.com>
Reply To: <9306042010.AA21696@soda.berkeley.edu>
UTC Datetime: 1993-06-04 21:36:46 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 4 Jun 93 14:36:46 PDT

Raw message

From: esr@snark.thyrsus.com (Eric S. Raymond)
Date: Fri, 4 Jun 93 14:36:46 PDT
To: hughes@soda.berkeley.edu (Eric Hughes)
Subject: Re: Lobbying for Cryptoprivacy, non-U.S.
In-Reply-To: <9306042010.AA21696@soda.berkeley.edu>
Message-ID: <m0o1jGJ-0001KtC@snark.thyrsus.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text


> At the first CFP conference, Lawrence Tribe made this point extremely
> well, that the fundamental right of citizens should be invariant to
> technology.

That's surprising.  Tribe publicly peddles the leftist arguments for gun
control, including the one that the Founding Fathers never intended the
Second Amendment for weapons of today's lethality.  I wonder why he
doesn't see the parallel.
-- 
					Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com>




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