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That explains why I didn't see it on sudo-discuss. I sent it to the
wrong list, my bad.
I'll leave the other discussions to others :)
On 11/13/13 1:28 PM, Art McGee wrote:
Greetings,
I'm curious, but would not this post have been more appropriate for
the sudo-discuss list? I assume you may not be aware of it.
As for your specific point about the American Civil War being about
states' rights, that just makes me say hummmm... :-\
I'm going to do the Fanonian thing and not shout, since I'm too
tired for that anymore, but I will just add that in the opinion of
a lot of historians, some of them Anarchists, the "battle for
power" between U.S. states and the Federal government is simply
that, a battle for power, but it doesn't tell you anything about
why the states want that power. It doesn't tell you anything about
the motivating factors behind such a long-standing struggle, which,
if you're unfamiliar with U.S. history, could lead you to the
erroneous conclusion that it's a neutral "freedom" thing. It's not.
I think you already know this, but your phrasing triggered my White
Supremacy detector, so I had to respond. :-)
Oh, and since I've now delurked and am posting on this discuss
list, I'll just say that I live in Oakland but haven't as yet made
it around to the sudo room in person (I'm hoping to change that in
the upcoming year).
Art McGee
On Wed, Nov 13, 2013 at 11:50 AM, aestetix <aestetix(a)aestetix.com>
wrote:
I've been lurking for a while, but this caught my attention.
Especially given that I recently watched the musical 1776.
IMHO, we're at a turning point in history. I spent part of this
morning watching the testimony on
healthcare.gov, and seeing the
interplay of lawyers and technologists. We seem to be sandwiched
between two paradigms: the NSA/Omnicorp merger from Prism and
other Snowden leaks, and totally unrealistic valuations of
companies like Snapchat, which apparently just turned down a $3
billion cash acquisition offer from Facebook. That spells out a
damned if you do, damned if you don't scenario.
The one common theme we've seen through the history of the US is
the battle for power between State and Federal governments. This is
what the Civil War was *really* about, why laws like the Civil
Rights Act of 1965 are so important, and why the most recent
government shut-down happened. And inherent to this power battle,
for which there is no "better" side, is the will of the people. How
do we overcome the tragedy of the commons enough to build a system
that generally, kind of sort of works?
It's hard to practice what one preaches if there's no cost. For
example, it's easy to use Google/etc, until the government
subpoenas your email and search history and uses that as evidence
(hidden via State Secrets) to throw you in jail. I speak on this
with several friends who are either in jail or dead because of bad
laws, and many more who have been harassed, detained, in most cases
for doing nothing more than dissenting.
This is why I agree strongly with Eddan about the notion of
neutrality. I haven't kept up with sudo room as much lately,
partly because I don't have the time/energy to engage in some of
the transitions that were going on. I'm beginning to get to a point
where I can re-engage with people working on projects tackling
these kinds of issues. I suppose we shall see what happens.
Back into the woodwork, aestetix
---
I've often thought of Sudo Room a little bit like the District of
Columbia. and Rachel's subject for her email reminded me of that.
It is often forgotten that there was a first constitution of the
United States after Independence before the one that people call
the Constitution. It was called the Confederacy of States. The
nation's capital was in Philadelphia and through a series of events
ended up moving to a newly formed neutral district - that we all
know now as DC.
It wasn't just a series of events, but a structural flaw in the
Confederacy that doomed itself. As James Madison wrote in
Federalist 43, "We have seen the inconvenience of this omission,
and the assumption of power into which Congress have been led by
it. With great propriety, therefore, has the new system supplied
the defect. The general precaution, that no new States shall be
formed, without the concurrence of the federal authority, and that
of the States concerned, is consonant to the principles which ought
to govern such transactions."
As population grew and the country was further colonized by the
European settlers, the creation of new states turned into a
disuniting disaster. Different coalitions of states banded together
to promote their collective interest at the expense of others.
Those states excluded formed their own alliances and there were
many cries of treason thrown around back and forth. Each cluster
thought of themselves as the "us" and the others as the "them"
until the "them" became the "us" and the "us" was
"them". And so
on.
So while New York, New Jersey, Virginia, Maryland - all wanted the
new federal seat of power in their states, a deal was struck to
create a district that didn't belong to any particular state. They
all wanted to have the center of the nation's power in their
territories. And this is how we got in Article 1, Section 8 of the
US Constitution, the provision saying:
"To exercise exclusive legislation, in all cases whatsoever, over
such district (not exceeding ten miles square) as may, by cession
of particular States and the acceptance of Congress, become the
seat of the government of the United States; and to exercise like
authority over all places purchased by the consent of the
legislatures of the States in which the same shall be, for the
erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dockyards, and other
needful buildings."
I'm not sure we need forts and magazines and arsenals and such, but
I still think we need a neutral center so that no particular
cluster confuses themselves as being what constitutes Sudo Room.
Only when the country adopted a political structure that
transformed the "us" and "them" into we - did the agreement amongst
them create stability and mutual respect that made them united
states.
_______________________________________________
sudo-announce
mailing list sudo-announce(a)lists.sudoroom.org
http://lists.sudoroom.org/listinfo/sudo-announce
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