What is PGP Club's first slogan? It is:Support PGP Club!--Support encryption in general, it's your ticket out of this dystopia the state seems to be want to build for us.At this point I'm not even mad at the NSA or the governments of the world. Like Bruce Schneier, I think if the technology exists then it will be used. It sort of just lies in wait for the right mix of social and political situations to be availed of. Technologies give power to everyone, but some technologies disproportionately help some and not so much others. The problem is getting people to wake up and react to the situation that is unfolding itself. PGP and similar technologies are a form of immunization against state power.I don't really have a problem with the NSA hoovering up data per se, because it's like the story of the scorpion who wanted to cross the river. It is in the nature of any intelligence gathering organization to do this. It's be to expected. Accepted, perhaps not, but expected yes. The problem starts with who has access to that data. If the NSA is concerned exclusively with surveiling violent existential threats to the state, then few people have a problem with that. Unfortunately almost nobody believes that. Now I don't know whether Utah is the modern version of the Bastille (it was stormed only to find just a handful of prisoners, despite what the French think it wasn't their proudest moment, they let their rhetoric cloud their judgement of reality), or it is more like Stazi HQ (real assholes who badly needed the guillotine treatment), but I do know that:A: They're going to do it.B: If you are successful in stopping them doing it then much less friendly nation states will do it. Pick your evil, or...So ultimately only the Cipherpunk route can actually have a realistic chance of working. You can't politic or legislate your way out of this situation. You have to join PGP Club. The biggest problem right now is that people (general population, not the darknet) are being extremely stupid about what is going on. They are aware there's a general sort of problem facing them, but they are not doing anything about it because it always seems like it affects some other guy. It's going to take deaths for people to wake up basically. I believe that large numbers of people in Syria have learned that anonymity and encryption technologies are quite important to not being dead.Maybe that sounds callous, but until people accept responsibility for their own communications instead of outsourcing their security natural selection is going to take care of them. The more people who are aware of this, the more the darknet will grow.--What is PGP Club's second slogan? It is:PGP Club or Die!