\section{European Autonomy and Domestic Meddlers} \dropcap{S}\kern3pt ince\plainmargintext{by Tom Jennings,¨ 1:125/111, June 89. An article I wrote for FidoNews, the¨ electronic newsletter of the FidoNet communications¨ network.} I see my name is getting dragged into this, I thought¨ I'd respond on the subject of Zone 2's autonomy, which is really¨ an issue of control. First of all, no one need worry about trademark abuse; I am in¨ contact with all parties involved, and there is nothing to worry¨ about. Things will be settled to everyone's benefit and¨ satisfaction. No further discussion is needed on this matter. It is none of our business\margintext{What's going on is,¨ provincial law'n'order control freaks in the U.S. were (and still¨ are) trying to make (in this case) European FidoNet members¨ behave `like us', the `correct' way. Same old story. It's¨ especially embarrassing in an international environment. The good¨ part is that it really {\rm is} an inter-national environment,¨ and people {\rm are} learning. It's not a pretty process to watch¨ though, and real damage does get done along the way. Oh well.}¨ how Zone 2 (or any other zone) runs their network(s), other than¨ how they interface to us, just as it is no business to net 125¨ how net XYZ runs theirs, unless it somehow physically affects our¨ operation. If they have different criteria for joining a network,¨ what business is it of ours? To meddle ahead of time ``in case¨ they do something awful'', is silly; they are no more (or less)¨ likely to do something stupid than we in Zone 1 are. Europe is¨ not just the U.S.-only-different; it is a totally different¨ environment, socially, technically, legally and politically.¨ Europe is none of our damn business. Zone 1 is not the police force of the world. Have we not learned ¨ our lessons from other arenas? We do not ``have'' a unified world-wide network, nor is such a thing even desirable. What we¨ do have is a number of cooperative networks, that can cooperate¨ in a world-wide networking effort. This is a critical difference. Unfortunately, meddlers and control freaks will not give up until¨ everything not exactly like themselves is squashed or¨ controlled\margintext{It's funny for me to read two years later¨ and see how fast and how far the law'n'order mentality has gone¨ in this country. Ha ha.}. Or they are in turn removed. We have a¨ growing bureaucracy in our Zone 1 that wants to reorganize us¨ from being a bottom-up network, where sysops choose their net¨ hosts and other /0's, and determine how to run their own BBS,¨ nets and lives, to one (according to POLICY4) where the existing¨ bureaucracy picks their own region and net hosts. Bureaucrats¨ always tell us, if they can control this one more thing, then all¨ the problems will be solved. Our network has never run smoothly, and I propose that it will¨ {\it never} run smoothly; this is good, not bad. It means we're¨ alive, only dead rigid bureaucracies are pure order. (Or pretend¨ they are.) Excessive order is not good for any organism. It¨ stifles creativity and free expression. Let's take a hint from¨ history, OK? \hbox to\bigcol{\hfil\endblob}