Last Friday, Ross Ulbricht received a sentence of life in
prison in a New York City federal courtroom. His crime was drug dealing on a massive scale through a
"dark-web" Internet site called Silk Road. Prosecutors showed how Ulbricht, a libertarian with a
master's degree in material science, brokered drug deals worth millions and got
paid in the online currency called bitcoin. In October of 2013, the FBI caught him as he was
administering the site from a San Francisco library. He was convicted in February of this year and sentenced last
week. His lawyers say they will
appeal.
Ulbricht had some interesting things to say after hearing
his sentence. What he said shows
that he is an extreme case of what can happen when an educational system gets
so compartmentalized that it can produce people with massively developed
technical abilities along with huge blind spots in their moral views. Ulbricht apparently saw the drug laws
of the various countries in which the Silk Road customers lived as intrusions
upon the supreme value in his moral universe, which was freedom. He rationalized that because these laws
stood in the way of those who wished to use drugs, he was actually striking a
blow for freedom every time someone used his site to buy illegal drugs. And of course, he got a tidy profit
from the transaction too.
According to prosecutors, Ulbricht believed so strongly in
his right to spread his kind of freedom, that he paid FBI undercover agents to assassinate
someone who threatened to make public a list of his customers. The glaring contradiction between
Ulbricht's espousal of freedom and his attempt to take the life of a fellow
human being apparently never occurred to him, at least not until he had lots of
time to think about his actions in jail.
According to a New York Times report,
Ulbricht reflected after he was sentenced that "the laws of nature are
much like the laws of man. . . . Gravity doesn't care if you agree with it—if
you jump off a cliff you are still going to get hurt. And even though I didn't agree with the law, I still have
been convicted of a crime and must be punished. I understand that now and I respect the law and authority
now."
We will never know for sure if a different educational
experience could have stopped Ulbricht from doing what he did. He grew up in Austin, Texas, graduating
from high school there in 2002, and must have picked up some of the
sky's-the-limit entrepreneurial atmosphere of the place, because before he went
over to the dark side, he operated an online used-book site that donated some
of its proceeds to charity. But
the inner compass, conscience, moral fiber, or whatever you want to call it,
that keeps the vast majority of ordinary people on the good side of the law
most of the time, was missing in his makeup and education. For all I know, he may have taken an
ethics or philosophy course in college, but in his case, it obviously didn't
take.
Ulbricht used technologies that were designed at least in
part to promote freedom. Bitcoins
are a form of digital currency that is designed to be untraceable, and Silk
Road used Tor, a subset of the Web that the U. S. Navy developed to allow
secret communication with, for example, freedom fighters in totalitarian countries. But as Ulbricht himself has learned,
freedom is not an absolute virtue, taking precedence over all others. If you try to act as though it trumps
all other values, you can end up in jail.
Ulbricht committed the same sort of error that many fringe
sects do: they take one virtue and
put it on a pedestal above all others. While some might argue with his comparison between the
laws of man and the laws of nature, Ulbricht got that one absolutely
right. The moral law is just as objective and real as the law
of gravity. Ulbricht erred in
seizing upon one part of that law—the goodness of freedom—to the neglect of the
rest, including the Golden Rule:
do unto others as you would have them do unto you. If he'd been the person threatening to
reveal the names of customers, I don't think he would have liked it if someone
put out a contract on him.
This kind of moral reasoning is not rocket science. But Ross Ulbricht's case shows that a
highly intelligent person can get all the way through a complex educational
system in the U. S. without being able to bring himself to reason morally in a
way that most twelve-year-olds can.
All that human
law can do is to try to model the moral law, whose ultimate source is God. To the extent that it does so, it can serve
as a teacher, though sometimes its lessons are painful to learn, as Ross
Ulbricht has found. A high
priority in libertarian circles these days is liberalization of drug laws, and
some states such as Colorado have already found that the effects of practical
legalization of marijuana are not all good. While drugs, like the Internet, can be used either for good
or harm, I think Ulbricht now has a different view of human laws after his
experiences than he did in his more innocent libertarian days. Yes, some people will abuse drugs no
matter what kind of laws are passed.
But if people are taught, both in school and by the laws, that some
things are right and other things are wrong, maybe more of them can choose the
right paths. And we won't see as
many Ross Ulbrichts running Silk Roads in the future.
Sources:
The news of Ross
Ulbricht's conviction was carried by many news outlets such as the New York Times on May 30, 2015 at http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/30/nyregion/ross-ulbricht-creator-of-silk-road-website-is-sentenced-to-life-in-prison.html. I also referred to a New Yorker online article by Joshua
Kopstein posted on Oct. 3, 2013 at http://www.newyorker.com/tech/elements/how-the-ebay-of-illegal-drugs-came-undone. I blogged on Ulbricht's Silk Road on
Jan. 20, 2014. For more on the
absolute nature of the moral law, see C. S. Lewis's The Abolition of Man, available in numerous print editions and
online at https://archive.org/details/TheAbolitionOfMan_229.
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