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Will the U.S. Lose Control of the Internet? 553

MattSparkes writes "The first UN-sponsored Internet Governance Forum (IGF) meeting is taking place next week in Athens, which aims to 'contribute to a better understanding of how the internet can be used to its full potential.' It is likely that several countries will object to the US monopoly on Internet governance, as they did at the last meeting, where the US cited fears of a loss of freedom of speech as the reason for retaining power. Other topics to be discussed include online security, access for non-English users and spam."
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Will the U.S. Lose Control of the Internet?

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  • Unlikely (Score:1, Insightful)

    by slusich ( 684826 ) * <slusich@gmail.COMMAcom minus punct> on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:01AM (#16657631)
    With things in the US going the way they are, I think the freedom of speech argument is moot. This seems to be more about maintaining control then preserving freedom. I'm guessing there will be tons of arguments on both sides, but in the end we will pressure them into leaving control right where it is now.
    Personally I believe that the internet would be better served by the release of control, and I can't site any better evidence for this then the whole debate over the .xxx domain.
  • by pathological liar ( 659969 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:06AM (#16657691)
    They blocked the .xxx domain, which is unfortunate, but it was part of a stupid concept to begin with.

    Just imagine what China, Iran, etc. would do with control?
  • by GiovanniZero ( 1006365 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:06AM (#16657699) Homepage Journal
    The US started the internet and everyone joined our network. So it's totally understandable if the US retains "control". The only reason I would actually be unhappy with an international commission or department taking control is that it would just mean another level of bureaucracy to cut through whenever you wanted to do something.
  • by dsginter ( 104154 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:06AM (#16657703)
    At least the U.N. would try to keep things fair for everyone.

    Yeah - until there's a "Food for Bandwidth" scandal.
  • by JonTurner ( 178845 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:07AM (#16657717) Journal
    Online security, access for non-English users and spam? Yeah, right. Other topics to be discussed include spying on the US, countering United Nations efforts, hacking for military secrets, laundering money, limiting access to information (such as news, especially from the West), and whitewashing history ("June 4th Incident, 1989? Never heard of it!".)
  • Soft power (Score:5, Insightful)

    by pubjames ( 468013 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:16AM (#16657889)
    This kind of issue highlights the importance of "soft power". For those of you who have never heard the phase, it basically means the power you get from people trusting you, and from having moral authority.

    As you might have guessed, it is out of favour with the current administration, who prefer military "hard power". Previously, the USA could have said to the rest of the world "trust us to manage the Internet" and much of the world would have gone "ummm, ok!". Now the USA has lost much of its soft power, it makes it much harder, and "hard power" doesn't work well in this kind of situation!
  • Re:One can hope (Score:3, Insightful)

    by the eric conspiracy ( 20178 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:16AM (#16657891)
    I don't know where this insane notion came from that the U.S. is capable of governing the Internet any better than the world community at large. In case you haven't been watching the news, we can barely govern ourselves right now.

    Sad to say, but look at the alternatives. Having the US run it might not be that bad an idea. The UN? Corruption-wracked, financially bankrupt, incapable of acting when it is most needed. Some other international body? Who, exactly?

    Yes, we suck. But others suck MUCH worse.

  • by slughead ( 592713 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:17AM (#16657895) Homepage Journal
    If the U.S. keeps control, eventually the corporatocracy will kill off everything.

    What are you referring to, exactly?

    What have 'they' done thus far to impede the internet?

    Last time I checked, I can still download illegal files, go to any website on the web, and e-mail anybody in the world.

    Sure, some things may end up with me in the FBI's hot-seat, but that has nothing to do with corporations.

    It is likely that several countries will object to the US monopoly on Internet governance

    WHAT governance? The sections of the network owned by people or businesses in the US are governed by THEIR OWNERS. Germany can outlaw swastika's and regulate their own country's infastructure, and the US can regulate theirs. That's what made the internet the powerhouse it is today--give people incentive to build infastructure by giving them control over it.

    THE ONLY reason to give power to others is so they can assert control over US-OWNED NETWORKS. If they're pissed because some companies ban foreign traffic, tough bananas. Go ahead and ban US citizenry from using your network, if you think you can take the financial hit.

    Nice try, UN.

    When the US economic power slows, and the EU (or whatever group) has more power, maybe then will the tables turn and it will be the US complaining about lack of power online. Until then, deal with it.
  • Comment removed (Score:2, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:17AM (#16657897)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Regulations... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Atzanteol ( 99067 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:18AM (#16657919) Homepage
    Wonderful, here come the regulations... The thing about the internet is that it isn't broken, but since the US currently kinda runs things foreign politicians must "do something to fix it" in order to appease their constituents.

    access for non-English

    Read: Requirements for language translations on web-sites.

    online security

    Lets have people register to run a web-site! That way we can track things better and "protect" children! And no more defending the Nazis if you want to after the French and Germans get into this.

    spam

    No more sending email unless it's through state-approved servers.

    Yeah, this is gonna be great... We're from the government, and we're here to help!

  • by the eric conspiracy ( 20178 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:19AM (#16657927)
    the freedom of speech will gain a lot.

    Considering that it is the middle eastern and Chinese governments that are pushing hardest for this I would say that this is exactly opposite to what will actually occur.

  • by RingDev ( 879105 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:25AM (#16658061) Homepage Journal
    And what if the US becomes the next China, Iran, etc...

    The point of having a multi-national body of control is to prevent any singular extremist nation from having a totalitarian control over the Internet.

    -Rick
  • by giorgiofr ( 887762 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:27AM (#16658101)
    I can envision the comments already. Rednecks spouting their crap while moronic hippies spew their BS, both of them thinking they're somehow "right".
    You know what, if a country wants to do as they please with their part of the internet, all they have to do is update a couple of DNS servers. As simple as that. In fact, I'm already looking into using an alternative DNS root.
    NO debating is needed. NO decision needs to be taken. All those who want a non-USA-regulated net have to do is START using the internet the way they like, simply disregarding USA rules. And, well, be ready to be cut off from any USA network, if the USA were so inclined. What's that you say, your citizens won't like it? Tough luck buddy, that's the price of freedom. It goes both ways.
    On a side note, maybe it's time we did away with non-national TLDs. But that can only be done when people stop treating .com as a first choice and everything else as sub-standard.
  • by genooma ( 856335 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:33AM (#16658201)
    the US doesn't *own* the "internet", we are just using mirrors of their DNS servers and we can very well stop doing so in a day or two.
  • The UN? HA! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Explodo ( 743412 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:36AM (#16658239)
    As corrupt and stupid as US politicians are, they're bush-league amateurs compared to UN diplomats. The UN is the single most corrupt organization on the planet, and I have no intention of ever letting them have control of anything without putting up the most resistance that I possibly can. I have no love for US politics, but I detest world politics. Can you imagine the security council having say over censorship on the internet?
  • by dutchwhizzman ( 817898 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:43AM (#16658371)
    You are forgetting the fact that in the last independant survey about freedom of press (which is in my opinion a form of speech) the USA rated amongst several totalitarian 3rd world regimes, not unlike the former Soviet Union. Freedom of speech should not be controlled by a single nation, especially not a nation that can't even let their journalists say what they want and has a legal system that fines organisations like spamhouse for listing an IP address. It's spamhouse's freedom of speech to list that IP address, if others decide to use that address in an e-mail blocking configuration, spamhouse is not to blame.
  • by KiahZero ( 610862 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:43AM (#16658381)
    No court in America is going to allow Bush to hold you as an enemy combatant for suing him over Internet policy.

    Not that I think that the Administration would go that far, but I feel it's necessary to point out that without habeas corpus, you can be seized and you have no ability to challenge the ruling; it doesn't matter that no court would ever affirm your arrest, because you'll never be able to get in front of a court.
  • Re:One can hope (Score:2, Insightful)

    by midway22 ( 975786 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @11:59AM (#16658647)
    Main point to Counteract this notion of releasing the internet to foreign control.. We paid for it, we built it and we run it. The world is not socialistic. We went out on a limb and spent "our" money (hello texpayers.. your money paid for it) to embetter our country and people; this venture was pay dirt but how many other government projects bombed to get this one. A capatalistic move to invest in our infrastructure then release it for public use in the hopes to improve tech, business etc. Other countries think that we should give it up because its so vital now, should be laughed at. You think we suck.. we beg to differ. Not our fault that we did more than built tanks and nukes during the cold war.
  • Re:One can hope (Score:3, Insightful)

    by element-o.p. ( 939033 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @12:03PM (#16658709) Homepage
    I don't know where this insane notion came from that the U.S. is capable of governing the Internet any better than the world community at large.

    Uhh.....because *we* built it?

    In the manufacturing industries that you cite, those companies didn't start using our products, then demand that we release control of the manufacturing facilities to them--they built their own factories and went head-to-head with us. If they produced chips or cell phones or automobiles or videogames more efficiently than us, then they took market share and bought the U.S. companies...if they still wanted them :)

    So, if other countries can manage large, interconnected networks better than us, then they should build their own networks and management infrastructure. If they are indeed better, then networks will migrate to their infrastructure, and the U.S. will lose control of management because someone else is proving that they can manage the Internet better.

    Maybe they could even build the new, improved network based upon IPV6, and eliminate a lot of the problems and work-arounds that the U.S.-managed Internet has today......
  • Re:One can hope (Score:3, Insightful)

    by hador_nyc ( 903322 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @12:07PM (#16658803) Homepage
    Will the U.S. lose control of the Internet? One can hope.
    Just a question, and I don't want to start a flame war, but can you please list out what the US is doing wrong with regards to the internet? I'm not trying to egg you on, nor piss you off. I simply am not aware of what my government is doing wrong here, and I'd like to know. Granted, after you list your facts, I'll look into this to verify what you say, but I'd like a starting point.

    It's clear that you don't like the President, and that's fine with me. I don't either, but with the noted exception of the .xxx domain, what's the problem?

    I disagree with you about the US screwing up good ideas. I think it's more like that the US comes up with a good idea, and then smart folks in other places take it to places that we haven't thought of. Still, the example of the auto, chip, and other manufacturing industries is not as simple as all of that. The US has higher manufacturing costs than other countries do; namely in the form of higher wages and benefits for their employees. Certainly this is not true in all cases, I'm looking more toward Asian competition rather than European competition in those industries. That's how the US beat Europe back 100+ years ago during the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. It was cheaper and easier to make stuff here than in Europe. My guess is that will change when folks there start earning wages closer to those that we do here, and won't that be better for everybody!

    It sounds like you don't like the US very much. That's cool, and I don't agree with folks who say you should get out of the country then. No, dissent is necessary. People who are not happy with things help those who are by giving them the reason to question what they value. Questioning is good. Without it, we'd still have bad things that I need not list out. I agree with you that more change is needed, even as I disagree with you that the US is big and bad.
  • by keyne9 ( 567528 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @12:15PM (#16658965)
    I can't tell if you're serious, or joking. But just in case, I hate to break it to you, but we're (the USA) in the middle of (still) committing human rights abuses. Our "freedom of speech" is being dismantled, and our government is dangerously close to the very things it claims to be fighting against. Until we shape up and return to our roots (you know, that "damned piece of paper"), we aren't fit for determining jack shit about something like this.

    Proper global oversight can and should be the norm for the internet at large.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @12:26PM (#16659165)
    So your point is to let more restrictive people decide what should be allowed becaues the less restrictive group in charge now could possibly become more restrictive in the future?

    If it means that said decision will be locked up in committee for a decade while dozens of countries bicker and politicize over it before finally issuing a fiat with no power to back it up as opposed to decisions being drafted, considered, and executed by a single group beholden by contract to a government led by a guy who hears the voice of God, then yes.
  • by Quila ( 201335 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @12:31PM (#16659251)
    The UN, if given control, will probably have an Internet governing council. This council, aside from running the technical aspects of the Internet with the UN's usual bureaucratic incompetence, will be comprised of a rotating set of members. It is these members that will be responsible for policies, such as freedom of speech.

    The UN Commission on Human Rights counted among its members Cuba, China and Saudi Arabia. After much criticism over the membership of such countries where mass violation of human rights is policy, it was replaced with the Human Rights Council, which includes in its membership -- you guessed it -- Cuba, China and Saudi Arabia.

    The UN apparently believes in using the fox to guard the hen house. Does anybody really want Cuba and China to have a say in our freedom of speech?
  • by wrook ( 134116 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @12:46PM (#16659535) Homepage
    And this is what is wrong with the US:

    "Put us in charge of your freedom because we know what's in your best interest".

    No thanks. I'd rather actually have a *say* in the matter. At least with the UN, my country gets a voice. With the US I get what the US thinks is best for me.

  • by cyberworm ( 710231 ) <cyberworm.gmail@com> on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @12:48PM (#16659607) Homepage
    Well in response to to someone's post about what makes the US more capable than another country to be "in charge" of the internet, my response would be "experience and ownership."

    Exactly what is the problem that needs to be solved here? Maybe I should expand the number of sites I visit on a daily basis, but I don't think I've ever been blocked from visiting anything that I wanted to look at. Hell, I don't think I've ever even been blocked from things I DIDN'T want to look at. I fail to see why the current management needs to be ousted or even given this much bullshit in it's general course of business.

    I'd like to know where this would lead? I'm assuming that it's really the commercial aspect of the internet they are after control over. Perhaps a UN mandated internet tax of some sort, or even better, an online commerce tax mandated by the UN. Certainly we can't say that the Academic aspects of the internet are wholly owned by the US Government, as it's (unless i'm mistaken) pretty much a multi-naitonal group of researcheres and universities sharing information, who could just go ahead and build their own network anyways.

    At best, this is just another attempt by a useless neutered organization to grab at power (and money/tax revenue) it dosn't have. At worst, it's a consortium of poorer and/or angry countries picking on the US for all that we have. It kinda makes me think of those arguments where people say "The United States has xx% of the resources but only has x% of the population," and then proceed to ramble about how it's not fair, and we owe it to the world to be their resource providers for free.

    Get real. Build your own network or shut up and be thankful we let you be a part of ours.
  • You're deluded (Score:3, Insightful)

    by StarKruzr ( 74642 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @12:50PM (#16659647) Journal
    if you think "international" control of the internet won't quickly lead to balkanization and the loss of freedom of speech and information.

    I am an internationalist on many issues, but not this one. Not yet, not when so many governments have proven to abuse censorship power whenever it's given to them.
  • by Fulcrum of Evil ( 560260 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @12:55PM (#16659739)

    Here's a real-life example for you: I was sued in a US court for a part of my website.

    How is that relevant? If the UN controlled the Internet (whatever that means), some tool in Cali can still sue you. As it is, just write to the judge or call them up and explain matters. If you haven't been there in 15 years, what's a judgement going to accomplish?

  • Russia, and other similarly "free" regimes... Be careful, what you wish for, Illiberals.

  • by grimJester ( 890090 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @01:08PM (#16659979)
    THE ONLY reason to give power to others is so they can assert control over US-OWNED NETWORKS. If they're pissed because some companies ban foreign traffic, tough bananas. Go ahead and ban US citizenry from using your network, if you think you can take the financial hit.

    Nice try, UN.


    Hell yeah! That UN shold stop staring blindly at their narrow 'world view' and take a step back to look at the wider US picture! These 'United Nations' that try to wrest away control over every American's Internet from the Leader of the Free World can just go ahead and try!

    Seriously, wtf? The Internet is global and currently the US controls ICANN. Believe it or not, roughly 180 countries see this as a problem. It's not as if the UN is going to hand sole control over to China.
  • by kmortelite ( 870152 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @01:52PM (#16660825)
    But that can only be done when people stop treating .com as a first choice and everything else as sub-standard.

    Wait, there's more than .com? Where have I been? ;-)

    Seriously though, non-national domain names are needed for multinational entities, and .com, .net, .org... make perfect sense for them. It would not very nice for web users have to choose between somecompany.us | somecompany.za | somecompany.fr if they had facilities in USA, South Africa, and France.
  • Comment removed (Score:2, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @01:56PM (#16660911)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Ayanami Rei ( 621112 ) * <rayanami&gmail,com> on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @01:59PM (#16660949) Journal
    A company in California can sue anybody for any reason no matter who is in control of domain names on the internet. Of course, you have the right to countersue (and/or in California, receive SLAPP compensation) for such a frivolous lawsuit.

    Who gets to control how .coms are handed out has next to nothing to do with anything about who sues you for content on your website.

  • Re:One can hope (Score:3, Insightful)

    by fitten ( 521191 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @01:59PM (#16660953)
    Corruption-wracked

    Like the US government? Enron, Diebold, secret energy council meetings?


    Yes. Like Food for Oil and all the "humanitarian aid" to African nations, etc.



    financially bankrupt

    No doubt not helped by the fact that the US owes it millions of dollars. And isn't the US running the largest spending deficit in world history?


    Yes. Like paying the USA for being the majority (if not all) the support/logistics for any operation that's ever undertaken by the UN.



    incapable of acting when it is most needed

    Like the US government during Katrina, you mean?


    Yes. Like the UN without the USA doing the work that the UN desires to be done.


    Sorry, the UN is worse than the US how, exactly?


    Not only is the UN corrupt (at least as much as the USA Government), they are powerless because no other country steps up to the plate sufficiently when the UN requests action in *anything*. Add that to suddenly giving power (Veto power, none-the-less) to any/all governing issues with the Internet by giving power to the UN. Giving France, China, and Russia (all of whom have displayed tendencies to just want to throw kinks in plans in the past) veto power and control over the Internet.

    It's quite obvious why the USA would not want to give up control, regardless of what anyone else thinks would "be best".

  • Re:Unlikely (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Stone Pony ( 665064 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @02:03PM (#16661075)
    You say it would be "stupid from a technological and functional perspective, but... just the kind of "solution" that power-hungry governments would like to implement" because you've got a US-ian perspective and presumably don't have a huge problem with the status quo. Other people do have a problem with the status quo, because when they think of a "power-hungry government", they think of the USA.

    Fortunately, the solution is relatively straightforward. The fact is that the US government paid for the infrastructure that supports the existing DNS. If anyone else doesn't like it, they can pay to build their own infrastructure. Yes, that'll cause some problems, but on the other hand, you'll be free from US government interference. That's a trade-off some countries might be willing to make: like you, I'm surprised that China hasn't done it already.

    This subject is the cue for a feast of nationalistic dick-swinging every time it comes up, so let's just accept that:

    • many people distrust the US government
    • the US government does have a unique position of power over the internet, and if "full spectrum dominance" means anything at all, it means that they would use it if it suited them to do so
    • the US government isn't going to relinquish their position any more than the governments of any one of dozens of countries would if they found themselves in the same situation; nor is there any compelling moral case for them to do so
    • any country that finds the situation intolerable is free to build their own infrastructure and govern it themselves
    • no matter how internationalised content has become, complaining that the US isn't giving the rest of us a whopping great free gift is not the same thing as presenting a moral argument
  • by deepestblue ( 206649 ) <slashdot@NosPAm.ksharanam.net> on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @02:10PM (#16661229)
    While what you say is all fine and dandy, it's still a net loss for the entire connected world if there are multiple DNS islands. Maybe those commenting are trying to prevent that?
  • by Tom ( 822 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @03:48PM (#16662949) Homepage Journal
    Whoever modded parent up, please get a clue.

    I actually had a long phone conversation with a judge in California. Here's the short version of the jurisdiction insanity:

    * Showing up in court, sending a letter to the court, making any statement on the case whatsoever is automatically interpreted as you accepting the court's jurisdiction
    * Not showing up yields you a default judgement
    * There is only one way out of this dilemma: A "special appearance to challenge personal jurisdiction" - but that a) still requires you to hire a lawyer halfway around the globe and b) is a bit tricky because if it isn't executed flawlessly can easily cross into the first bullet point, and if it fails you're back at the second point.

    In short: One way or the other, if you're sued in the US, you are fucked and your only hope is that your country won't enforce the judgement. Which I wouldn't count on - most western countries have treaties about these kinds of things. I was actually served the court papers (the whole 2000 or so pages of them) by a clerk at the townhall. He was kind and helpful and explained a few things about how this works, and that he is bound by law to serve me those court papers as if they were from a local court.
  • by NDPTAL85 ( 260093 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @05:47PM (#16665031)
    As per evidence no I don't have any concrete evidence. Just a lot of anecdoteal evidence in the observations from European friends who all remark how often Americans move around compared to Europeans. This is not hard to understand considering various nations in Europe were at war with each other only 50 years ago whereas the US only had a civil war over a century and a half ago...

    As to the whole people from other states having an impact on the laws in your state....well they do. Always have and always will. In the US a person's identity as an American is stronger then their identity of their state (except for folks from Texas...seriously they still think they have a legal right to scede from the Union because of their unique circumstances coming into the Union..). In Europe people consider themselves to be much more British or French or German than European, at least the older generations. So what does this mean? Well it means that when it comes time to voting in federal laws most Americans take into account that they don't really want a part of their country falling TOO far behind the rest. And there is still quite a bit of leeway by the way. The aforementioned list of southern states that I listed run quite lose with effective government and taxation. They take in very little tax revenue and let their states rot to shit as much as they can within Federal law. And thats fine. But there's a limit and the rest of the country has decided that they just don't want it to go much farther than that. Another example is California's medical weed law. The state of Cali may have approved it but the rest of the country (i.e. the feds) said no way. So its still illegal in Cali even though Cali voters don't want it to be illegal. Same for the assisted suicide law in I think Oregon or WA state. I could go on and on. There wouldn't be much of a country if any one state (or small group of states) was allowed to become TOO different from the other 49 states. You either have a cohesive nation or you don't. Seeing as how there's a lack of rioting in the streets over the issue I can only infer that most Americans are just fine with having a cohesive and strong America instead of fiercly independent nearly fully autonomous individual states.
  • by 2short ( 466733 ) on Tuesday October 31, 2006 @07:19PM (#16666183)

    So my entire original point was that if I buy whisky, legally, in Colorado, while it is illegal to buy it in Utah, it is unreasonable for the original poster to conclude I am a criminal picking an opportune State in which to commit my dastardly crime.

    You seem to think that because the current balance of federal vs. state power is what it is, that's what it should be; or that the current balance is desirable because of your opinion of how cohesive a nation we are or how much we identify with the nation vs. state or something. None of this is very interesting to me.

    In relation to states rights the interesting question to me is, when federal authorities overide states, is it legal according to the constitution? In the Oregon Assisted suicide, or California Medical Pot examples you cite, I would argue it clearly is not. (Please don't tell the Supreme Court disagrees with me; I know that) I would specifically reject your equation of cohesion with strength; enforced uniformity means a lack of competition, stagnation, and weakness.

    I don't even really understand what you're saying about the South except that you appear to think it sucks and don't want to live there, so at least we agree on something.

    "Seeing as how there's a lack of rioting in the streets over the issue I can only infer that most Americans are just fine with having a cohesive and strong America instead of fiercly independent nearly fully autonomous individual states."

    Seeing as their is a lack of rioting in the streets, I can only infer that most Americans have food, shelter and tellivision. I don't think their opinion of maximally localized governance and a strict constructionist aproach to federal power as a firewall against pointless infringements on civil liberties has much to do with it, as I don't think they've given it enough thought to even have such an opinion.

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