Personally If there is usury it does not make a difference.
Apparently there must be something to fear otherwise foreign corporate governments would not put a price on those involved ?
We all know something is seriously wrong. As a citizen who claims to be free it is your duty to do your research and find a peaceful resolve.
Come in peace, become educated, be proactive, we have been used " It's not your Fault"
But when you do know and you sit idly by you hold ultimate responsibility for the Co Creation.
http://www.republicfortheunitedstates.org/
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cypherpunk
Noteworthy cypherpunks
Cypherpunks list participants included many notable computer industry figures. Most were list regulars, although not all would call themselves "cypherpunks"[1].
Julian Assange is probably best known for founding the WikiLeaks website.
John Gilmore is one of the founders of the Cypherpunks mailing list, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and Cygnus Solutions. He created the alt.* hierarchy in Usenet and is a major contributor to the GNU project.
Julian Assange: — WikiLeaks founder, deniable cryptography inventor, journalist, co-author of Underground
Jim Bell: — author of the Assassination Politics paper
Steven Bellovin: — Bell Labs researcher, later Columbia professor
Matt Blaze: — Bell Labs researcher, later professor at University of Pennsylvania
Jon Callas: — technical lead on OpenPGP specification and Chief Technical Officer of PGP Corporation
Bram Cohen: — creator of BitTorrent
Lance Cottrell: — the original author of the Mixmaster Remailer software, and founder of Anonymizer Inc.
Kent Crispin: — researcher at Lawrence Livermore labs, later at ICANN
Matt Curtin: — founder of Interhack Corporation, lecturer at Ohio State University
Hugh Daniel: — former Sun Microsystems' employee, manager of the FreeS/WAN project
John Gilmore: — Sun Microsystems' fifth employee, one of the founders of the Cypherpunks as well as the Electronic Frontier Foundation, project leader for FreeS/WAN *
Mike Godwin: — Electronic Frontier Foundation lawyer
Ian Goldberg: — professor at University of Waterloo, designer of the Off-the-record messaging protocol*
Lucky Green — "Lucky Green" is a pseudonym. Lucky was the author of the first free software implementation of ring signatures
Peter Gutmann: — researcher at University of Auckland, New Zealand
Sean Hastings: — founding CEO of Havenco and co-author of the book God Wants You Dead
Eric Hughes: — Founding member of Cypherpunks, author of A Cypherpunk's Manifesto[11]*
Peter Junger: — Law professor at Case Western Reserve University
Phil Karn: — Bell Labs researcher, later at Qualcomm
Ryan Lackey: — Founder of HavenCo, the world's first data haven
Timothy C. May: — former Chief Scientist at Intel, author of A Crypto Anarchist Manifesto[12] and the Cyphernomicom[13], and a Founding member of the Cypherpunks
Declan McCullagh: — journalist specializing in security and privacy issues
Jude Milhon: — a Founding Member of the Cypherpunks
Sameer Parekh: — former CEO of C2Net
Len Sassaman: — current maintainer of the Mixmaster Remailer software
Bruce Schneier: — well-known security author*
Peter Shipley: — a Founding member of the Cypherpunks
William Allen Simpson: — designer, with Karn, of the Photuris protocol, an alternative to Internet Key Exchange
Alif Terranson: — the "Savvis Whistleblower" (see Savvis), and the current listowner of the spam-l Mailing List
John Young: — started the Cryptome web site
Peter Wayner: — Founding member of Cypherpunks, author of book Translucent Databases
Philip Zimmermann: — creator of PGP, Founding member of the Cypherpunks
* indicates someone mentioned in the acknowledgements of Stephenson's Cryptonomicon
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