From: David Rosoff <drosoff@arc.unm.edu>
To: jim bell <minow@apple.com>
Message Hash: f7631b620e9a88c11ea97b2fc9c9049c8bb4f655e1bcd37b8099edb7f1ed7cf7
Message ID: <1.5.4.16.19960525030725.34bfb678@arc.unm.edu>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-05-25 08:42:51 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 25 May 1996 16:42:51 +0800
From: David Rosoff <drosoff@arc.unm.edu>
Date: Sat, 25 May 1996 16:42:51 +0800
To: jim bell <minow@apple.com>
Subject: Re: [SCARE]: "If you only knew what we know..."
Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19960525030725.34bfb678@arc.unm.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
At 01.03 PM 5/24/96 -0800, jim bell wrote:
>If the Libyans are so bad (and they probably are) then why shouldn't the
>public in other countries be entitled to pool their contributions and take
>their government down?
I believe I understand the basic concepts of AP - perhaps not the far-reaching
implications, but the fundamentals. I've thought about it, and I am against this
system. What will happen when you've killed off all of the politicians/gov't
employees
who haven't quit? Do you really think this will make things better? Anarchy
simply
won't work with people. Have you ever read Lord of the Flies? I'm sure some
people
haven't. I will explain my reasoning.
In Lord of the Flies (a novel by William Golding) a group of British
schoolboys are
deposited on a desert island. They have been evacuated from England because
of a
nuclear war. There are no adults. A responsible few try to maintain the
rules and
order of society to which they all are accustomed, but they are symbolically
"AP'ed"
out of power when the anarchists of the group break away and form their own
tribe.
To make a long story short, they revert to animal sacrifice, and human
sacrifice,
before the story closes. Very unsettling, no? The defects of society can be
traced
back to the defects in the individual. A direct quote from the author, who
is not
infallible, or even a reputable authority on the flaws and merits of
humanity, but
still, who is to say that once our notably corrupt governments are gone, the
corruption
in ourselves won't surface? Who is to say that we are any better than the
government?
They had to come from somewhere - the public, obviously. Have any of you AP
proponents
considered that perhaps our oh-so-corrupt government officials are simply
the best
that our amoral, decaying populace has to offer? What would we gain by
rubbing them
out?
The point I make is that in elected governments (and I realize, not all are
so lucky)
the elected people are, most likely, the best of what the public has to
offer. Who
can blame them for being corrupt? Doesn't all power corrupt? I believe so. Maybe
the current form of government isn't perfect, or even great, but it is still
much
better than anything that could possibly result from anonymous terrorism,
which is
really what AP is, isn't it? Peace can only be achieved by understanding,
not through
force or fear.
>(okay, this is a rhetorical question...)
Oops. Well. It's too late now... :-)
David
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: 2.6.2
iQCVAwUBMaZ4tRguzHDTdpL5AQEW3gP+OvHHoPxJnFQUahCsjYcQaRJ2FV6eJA7F
s0BQ0jSvJCsGjMCEzT+bsNpErSNVxIafuq5AkMJQFhQHkhxUrPl/eqtBhomh5YV1
6CD5VGL0y030zmdzDBhLpJjLjKIkMzAC1DIdLmWCXZRyHDCD00KRdyRup72XZAqQ
Ka3Klr8JOBQ=
=LXi/
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Return to May 1996
Return to “Subir Grewal <grewals@acf2.nyu.edu>”