Well, you’ve already accused me of being a government shill, Jim, since I don’t 
think you’re a special flower. You don’t need to educate me. I’m clearly in on 
it.

From: Jim Bell Jim Bell
Reply: Jim Bell [email protected]
Date: November 26, 2013 at 11:21:29 AM
To: Al Billings [email protected], [email protected] 
[email protected]
Subject:  Re: bitcoin as a global medium of exchange (was Re: Interesting take 
on Sanjuro's Assassination Market)  
(Note:  I meant to type "$700,000" in Nigeria, below, not "$700.)
Oh, non-perceptive one, I seek to enlighten you.  While the payment for bribery 
normally is thought of as occurring _before_ (or during) the payback desired, 
as a practical matter it isn't very practical to bribe an American president 
while he is in office.  But since the office of President will continue to 
exist, and the people who are inclined to get favors will continue to exist, 
and they all know this (see 'game theory'),  a logical solution is to delay the 
bribe payment until the office-holder is out of office.  Obviously, while a 
president may wonder what would motivate a briber to actually pay the bribe 
after he leaves office, the reality is (remember reality?) is that word of 
welshing will surely get back to the subsequent office-holder(s), poisoning the 
well for the almost-but-not-quite-briber in the future.  No doubt, for example, 
America's First Muslim President will pick up tens or even hundreds of millions 
of dollars doing the rubber-chicken circuit in the (Muslim) Middle-east.  Do 
you wonder why Obama hasn't 'jawboned' the Arab oil producers to drop oil 
prices to, say, $60 per barrel?  Do you wonder why he hasn't made more threats 
to open up the spigots of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve?  Or why he hasn't 
approved the construction of the Keystone oil pipeline?  That's right:  Obama 
is carrying-water for the very people he expects to be bribed by about 3.5 
years hence.
        Jim Bell

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