Liar
now with 17% more class
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2003
- Posts
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that's the ONLY option, is it?
Dunno, I'm happy to hear testimony of effective alternatives. That's why my post ended with a question mark.
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that's the ONLY option, is it?
The thing is, sitting down and having a nice chat does sod all most of the time. the way to make the people who decide what's legal change what you think is a bad law or practice allowed by flawed law, is to make a big stink about it in the court of public opinion. When the practice is classified, what are the options except making a big illegal stink about it?
You seem to have missed the question: You can't make a legal public stink about something that is illegal to talk about. And it's not the law per se. It's a practice allowed by a law. And which of the things allowed by law that the NSA et al actually do IS really very secret.Practice, or rather potential practice is encoded into law so it's not really very secret.
Yeah make a public stink about it. But stinks don't mean that it's okay to turn over classified US security documents to the Chinese.
*worshipper
i'm not a fan of a police state, but then again i'm not the type to start dropping chunks of masonry out of my ass just because 'homeland' and 'fatherland' sound similar and therefore according to some must be a signal of the end of freedom![]()
i disagree with republicans all the time, but if compartmentalizing me helps you sleep better at night then you do what you gotta do
You seem to have missed the question: You can't make a legal public stink about something that is illegal to talk about. And it's not the law per se. It's a practice allowed by a law. And which of the things allowed by law that the NSA et al actually do IS really very secret.
Well, it was. Until someone spilled the beans.
A lot of hypothetical things are allowed by law. Some merely because no lawmaker thought of covering it.
Also: Glenn Greenwald is Chinese?
Homeland security says "Terrorist, national security" and they get WHATEVER THE FUCK THEY WANT!!! PATRIOT act says you don't get any rights as a suspected terrorist......and you have SUPPORTED ALL OF IT, in this thread.
Everything that's been leaked has so far been legal and reference-able in existing law. I kind of just assumed that if a law was written to let the NSA carry out a particular type of surveillance that they're actually carrying it out.
I guess I don't see why any of Snowden's leaks are a surprise to anyone.
1. No...but their "Legal" spying and
2. even carrying out of military action against it's own people?
3. Becoming the #1 prison nation in the world by a landslide
4. to protect corporate profit margins.....
5. Homeland security says "Terrorist, national security" and they get WHATEVER THE FUCK THEY WANT, NO ONE HAS ANY RIGHTS!!!...
6. and you have SUPPORTED ALL OF IT.
7. It's pretty clear you are a fan of the police state...
8. And there is your stupid flag waving proudly......you actually think this is a partisan issue.
Then what sensitive operation did he compromise? You know, to aid and abet The Enemy and stuff?
Then what sensitive operation did he compromise? You know, to aid and abet The Enemy and stuff?
to condemn it blanketly without knowing the in's and out's of the industry is a bit naive.
.
2. which military actions are you talking about?
3. we're a nation of laws. when laws are broken, people land in jail. other countries have fewer people in jail because their laws are either fewer, or more lenient, or non-existent. basically, it's not an apt comparison.
4. you're making an illogical leap here. putting convicted offenders in jail has no direct connection to profits, corporate or otherwise. do you have any documentation on this?
5. i understand the thought process behind their use of national security as a legal catch-all, but it's a dangerous precedent they've set and i think it needs to be reviewed, and probably re-worked
6. actually i haven't supported all of it. there was no need for bush to create the DHS when we already have a DoD in place. a waste of money and the genesis of a huge clusterfuck, imo.
7. it's not clear, really. because i don't support that.
8. my republican comment was a direct reply to the previous poster calling me a RW asshat, or something.
Doesn't really matter what the information is, you can't just tell secrets cuz you want to or don't like what they are.
Anyone with any kind of security clearance knows this. He knew it. Fuck him.
We imprison more people by a fucking LANDSLIDE. The overwhelming majority of which are victimless crimes
He leaked that the NSA was using telecom phone matrixes to gather evidence on and discover new overseas terror suspects... when their call phone calls hopped through a US server. And in real time. And they get real time call data on all the people that the suspects are calling which has apparently been able to discover entire terrorist cells.
This specific use of electronic telecom data was classified and Snowden knew it. He chose to go to China and leak it anyway, willfully committing a high level felony.
Is this, like you said, reference-able in existing law?
it's not about the content of his leaks. it's the fact that he did it.
when you steal a box of pencils from your employer, it might only cost him $1.50 but the point is you stole it and therefore incur the consequences.
Can you back this up?
I agree. I'm not disputing that he did a crime, and should pay for it. That's why I said that it was an illegal big stink. And maybe he shoulda manned up and stood for it, and turned himself in in the most public way possible. Preferrably on late Night with Conan or something. Snowden did the Brave Sir Robin thing and ran away. It happens.
So it woulda been cool if he leaked more... vaugely?The law provides a process to obtain telecom records. The Snowden leak contained the specific real-world application, the technology the NSA is employing, as well as the capabilities and limitations of that technology. Those things aren't part of the law and are (were) classified.
On Dec. 31, 2011, there were 197,050 sentenced prisoners under federal jurisdiction. Of these, 94,600 were serving time for drug offenses, 14,900 for violent offenses, 10,700 for property offenses, and 69,000 for "public order" offenses (of which 22,100 were sentenced for immigration offenses, 29,800 for weapons offenses, and 17.100 for "other").
http://drugwarfacts.org/cms/Prisons_and_Drugs#sthash.OdwWe1aJ.dpuf
Total victimless crime prisoners= 266,050
Total non victimless crime prisoners= 25,600
" Violent crime was not responsible for the quadrupling of the incarcerated population in the United States from 1980 to 2003. Violent crime rates had been relatively constant or declining over those decades. The prison population was increased primarily by public policy changes causing more prison sentences and lengthening time served, e.g. through mandatory minimum sentencing, "three strikes" laws, and reductions in the availability of parole or early release. These policies were championed as protecting the public from serious and violent offenders, but instead yielded high rates of confinement for nonviolent offenders. Nearly three quarters of new admissions to state prison were convicted of nonviolent crimes. 49 percent of sentenced state inmates were held for violent offenses. Perhaps the single greatest force behind the growth of the prison population has been the national "war on drugs." The number of incarcerated drug offenders has increased twelvefold since 1980. In 2000, 22 percent of those in federal and state prisons were convicted on drug charges"
http://www.hrw.org/legacy/backgrounder/usa/incarceration/us042903.pdf
http://www.disastercenter.com/crime/uscrime.htm
To accept it blanketly without knowing the in's and out's is a bit naive.
this is true, except i don't accept it blanketly. again, i'm not in that industry so i can't speak about it's in's and out's with complete knowledge
I'm not saying they should expose the information they gather, but I think they owe us a fully public and transparent information on how they determine who they are going to spy on and why. The whole process is a bit sketchy, getting hidden behind "National Sekurity!!"
this sounds pretty on paper, but the argument can be made that notifying everyone about who we're investigating kinda botches the investigation, doesn't it? they (nsa, fbi, etc) should notify someone in the justice dept, maybe, but putting ads in the ny times about who we're investigating seems inept
The one where we drone striked a US citizen...
yeah ok i heard about that. but is this one instance reason to assume evidence of a pattern? the police accidentally shoot innocent people but that doesn't mean every police force across the country is out to get us (not the best analogy, but i'm eating and typing so you get what you get)
The people setting and enforcing the laws benefit from prisons and get paid by capacity. Do you seriously not know everything you claim not to Pete?
If being a nation of laws results in having more people in prison than any other nation, including ones run by dictators then perhaps it's time we stopped being a nation of laws. Clearly the price is too damn high.
That's more than I thought. But prison-worthy "drug offenses" is an extremely broad category that are on a spectrum of victimization. I don't think it's accurate to paint them all all as victimless crimes.
- Essentially victimless - ie possessing large quantities of pot
- Potential victims - highly addictive, physically dangerous drugs such as heroin. Ending up as a non-functioning gutter rat with a chemical compulsion to go to great lengths to obtain money (stealing, etc) can create victims. Society ends up being stuck with medical bills, etc. A pregnant woman hooked on something that permanently damages her fetus.
- Definite victim - ie prescription fraud. It's stealing, fraud, forgery, can get doctors in legal trouble or trouble with their licensing board. This happened to me in residency and it was awful trying to get it sorted out.
- Definite acute victim potential - Driving under the influence, certain other high-risk behaviors under the influence.
the rest of your post about the cca and the money going towards prison corps is something i haven't read much about, so i'll look into that. not saying you're full of shit, just that i don't know much at all about it. but even if there's some shady shit going on between the prison corps and their finances, that still doesn't provide an explanation of your assertions. the various police forces catch law-breakers, the court system determines their incarceration. are you saying that groups like the cca have powerful influence over these 2 entities across the full spectrum of city, county, state, and federal justice system?
i def disagree with people who argue that simply having a large number of citizens in prison in itself means we're somehow a bad society.