| What am I missing here? This statement and your response seem utterly unrelated. This is what I read: targeted only at sites beyond the reach of current U.S. law A gap exists in current law, and new laws should be aimed at that gap instead of at increasing penalties for existing law. cover activity clearly prohibited under existing U.S. laws The new law should not criminalize things that are not already illegal. with strong due process It shouldn't give the government the right to take away property without trial. focused on criminal activity Rather than, for instance, speech the government doesn't like. You can disbelieve the statement, but I don't see a way to read this as an implicit reservation of the right to China-style censorship. It is in fact claiming exactly the opposite. I'm not saying that I totally trust the Administration's motives, or that I believe they will necessarily do the right thing, but I don't think this sentence has any sinister undertones. What do you see in here that says otherwise? |
It's true, in many ways US law is much more just than Chinese law. But that doesn't mean that walling off US citizens from the rest of the Internet in any way is a good idea.