Speaking of ringing hollow...
How does having keys to my house keep somebody from throwing a fire bomb
on it, or driving a car through it?
It don't. It's a bait and switch.
After it's burned down or a big hole in its side a key is rather
redundent.
On Fri, 21 Sep 2001, Declan McCullagh wrote:
> http://www.wartimeliberty.com/article.pl?sid=01/09/21/0450203
>
> Crypto Op-Ed: Privacy No Longer an Argument
> posted by admin on Thursday September 20, @11:39PM
>
> M. W. Guzy has a provocative and not entirely coherent essay
> in Wednesday's St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Excerpt: "(Then-Senator
> John) Ashcroft wrote that mandating deciphering tools was tantamount
> to requiring 'individuals to surrender the keys to their house... to
> the FBI just in case they are someday suspected of breaking the law.'
> Somehow, that argument rings a little hollow when viewed through the
> smoldering ruins of the World Trade Center
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