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posted by azrael on Tuesday July 08 2014, @02:01AM   Printer-friendly
from the doesn't-constitute-an-endorsement dept.

*Updated: Mr. Guillot AKA yankprintster (4225) responded and is interested in answering some questions. Ask him your questions below in the comments*

B.J. Guillot is one of three candidates currently seeking to represent Washington's 2nd Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives. Mr. Guillot is also a reader of SoylentNews. In a recent interview with CoinTelegraph about his enthusiastic support of cryptocurrency, Mr. Guillot was asked "When did you first hear about Bitcoin, and when did you get into it?" He explains that he got turned on to Bitcoin while reading a certain news for nerds site, and then mentions:

Since I have the floor, let me just state for the record, the new Slashdot web design and user experience is really poor. I've since moved on to SoylentNews.org for my daily science and tech news.

Perhaps Mr. Guillot would be kind enough to answer a few questions about his positions on topics of particular concern to the SN community. I invite him to answer directly in the comments below, or if he would prefer, I will collect and forward the highest-modded comments to Mr. Guillot, and then submit a new story with his responses.

According to his campaign website, Mr. Guillot holds a B.S. in Computer Science and Mathematics, and has software development experience.

The Crypto Crimson reports that while many politicians are "quick to jump on the bitcoin bandwagon" following the U.S. Federal Election Commission's recent opinon declaring that political committes may accept contributions in the form of Bitcoin, unlike these other politicians, Mr. Guillot is an active miner who "currently achiev[es] a hashrate of five Terahash per Second - certainly the fastest bitcoin mining politician".

The top item to appear in the "Issues" section of Mr. Guillot's campaign website is "NSA Spying". Mr. Guillot's stated positon on this issue is: "The Federal Government needs to immediately stop its spying and metadata collection of its citizen's phone calls and emails. It's also time to discontinue the Patriot Act. No more extensions!".

On his campaign website, Mr. Guillot also states his positions on: "Internet Freedom", "Patent Reform", "Bitcoin", "National Debt", "FairTax", "Military", "Second Amendment", "Energy", and "Education".

 
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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by c0lo on Tuesday July 08 2014, @04:36AM

    by c0lo (156) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday July 08 2014, @04:36AM (#65705) Journal

    A: Once you aren't spying on Americans inside the US, it's fair game for the NSA to spy on people outside the US.

    Then I suppose you will accept as fair the following consequences:
    * creation of regional specific IT services, in which US companies will be forbidden to participate (starting with networks which avoid US soil/jurisdiction, to regional clouds)
    * any relation involving US interest will be "distrusted by default, unless controlling mechanisms are defined"

    --
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aoFiw2jMy-0 https://soylentnews.org/~MichaelDavidCrawford
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 08 2014, @06:16AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 08 2014, @06:16AM (#65739)

    Outside the United States, the NSA would essentially be under rules like those that bind the CIA. They can spy on people like Angela Merkel if the information they gain is more valuable to the national interest than the fallout from the international incident that would result if they were caught. She would ask herself and her ministers the same questions before directing the Bundesnachrichtendienst to conduct a similar operation against Barack Obama. Doing such a thing should thus be subject to a cost-benefit analysis.