Could not agree more There are a lot of bad laws out their an we should fight them despite their enforceability. It is still illegal to engage in sexual acts with my wife in Arizona because we rent instead of own our dwelling. (This was one of many late 1800 laws enacted to help crack down on prostitution, but it actually applies to every one) But if and when we have a child (hopefully soon) it is unlikely that the police will show up at the maternity ward to arrest us for obvious violations. But that does not mean we should not protest the law. Some blue laws are funny like the wearing of red during the commission of any crime doubles the penalty Others, like many of the sodomy laws or the vagrancy laws, are selectively enforced to torment certain subclasses of individuals. Or with that big-anti government abuse lawyer who was busted a few years ago in a social club raid, enforced to take out your political enemies. (Any one remember her name, I would love to look up the story again for my blog) Others hold real purpose, like the fact that free water must be made available at all public events, or individuals must be allowed and encourage to bring their own water. Although the one nasty water fountain hardly competes with the$2 / bottle of bottled water sales, these, more useful, laws are more likely to be repealed because there appears to be financial interest in fighting them. While on the other hand most of our "average" citizens are apathetic at best. The solution is not to dysfunctional circumvent the laws and hope the hang man does not come for us, but to fight the laws using the power of our republic! To bad there are too few of us who understand that BTW selectively enforced laws are one of my biggest political pet peeves And also this is a good time to plug http://www.congress.org/congressorg/megavote/ On Sat, 30 Apr 2005, Vaughn Treude wrote: > There are a lot of bad laws out there. You can hardly breathe without > breaking one. Plus - and I've probably ranted on this before - > unenforceability is really the only reason bad laws ever get repealed. > (Think Prohibition, the 55 MPH speed limit, and the Draft during the > Vietnam era.) In other words, government bad, civil disobedience good. > :-) > > Vaughn > > On Fri, 2005-04-29 at 18:29, Donn Shumway wrote: > > > > On 4/29/05, Joseph Sinclair wrote: > > The error you're getting is similar to the one I get when I > > attempt to > > play a region-locked DVD (secondary text is "cannot open > > resource"). > > Even though my player is set for the correct region. I don't > > have DeCSS > > installed (since I don't like to break the law, even really > > bad laws > > like the DMCA), so I guess most commercial DVD's just won't > > play on my > > Ubuntu box. > > > > > > I hope this does not turn into another 'The law vs. OSS' debate, but I > > have a few questions for you... > > > > 1) Do you own or did you legally rent the DVD's you're trying to play? > > 2) Do you own your dvd player? > > 3) Are the subject DVDs intended for your current region? > > 4) Are you intending to distribute software with libdvdcss included in > > order to circumvent the DVD's copy protection? > > > > If the answers to 1-3 are Yes, and to 4 is No... Why do you think you > > would be breaking the law? > > > > -- > > Donn > > "Sarcasm is the safe alternative to expressing anger." > > --Richard North Patterson > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss > --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss