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by badRNG
2127 days ago
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Thanks for the recommendation, interesting read. I suppose how one lands on this topic is based on how much continuity one believes there is in a "government." If a government is simply a large institution or cluster of institutions that perform many roles and have a purpose towards the same end, then the claim of "whataboutism" is simply nonsense and trusting one portion of a government and not another is at least somewhat inconsistent, and this "Gell-Mann Amnesia effect" seems clear when a person can go straight from criticizing the government's treatment of striking workers to advocating for workers protections from this same government. I think "the government" doesn't exist as a unified entity in any meaningful way aside from maybe linguistically. The government, in my view, is more a collection of organizations that often have outright antagonistic relations to each other, and interests that are fundamentally in contradiction. I don't really view a regulatory body and the NSA to be meaningfully part of the same organization (I'd say there are plenty of private businesses that are more closely "part of the NSA" than some oversight board.) Claiming that the perceived misbehavior of the NSA should prevent us from advocating for consumer protections is clearly whataboutism according to this frame. This view would make this "Gell-Mann amnesia" accusation appear incoherent, since we are talking about disparate organizations with no meaningful connection to one another. |
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Perhaps we should expect different parts of the government to act with varying motives, but similar competence.
I think the government organizations attempting to ensure backdoors in encryption are acting deceitfully, malevolently, and incompetently, with the stated motive of easing investigations. Thus, I think the privacy regulators will act deceitfully, malevolently, and incompetently, with the stated motive of protecting consumers.