It's not treason. Once again, "Treason" has a very specific legal definition: Waging war against the United States, or giving aid and comfort to its enemies."
"Aid and comfort" is defined as material aid, not just "gave our enemies a chuckle."
Nothing anyone has done here (including Snowden) qualifies as Treason. There are likely many other crimes committed, but let's stop trotting out treason.
If I'm that kid's mom, I go buy him a different My Little Pony backpack. Maybe a blue one.
And then see what happens.
"We left that one at home. Now he's got a new backpack. Oh, that didn't stop the bullying? Hmm... I wonder why. Why don't you just give me a list of 'approved' backpacks, and then make all the other kids follow it as well?"
Ah, so the histrionic lady is actually the idiot then.
This was a case of "so and so posted a new photo!" notification that she somehow transformed into "someone broke into my house and put that picture on my phone!"
How did Google fuck anyone? It's not like they can instantly fiber-up the entire nation. And it's not like GF going in to some other city makes your service any worse.
Just be patient, and watch all the providers in Google Fiber cities shit their pants. Enjoy the show, and someday soon it will come to everyone.
The Pokemon Company would like a word with you. (http://www.pokemon.com/us/about-pokemon/)
Pokemon IS a company and a brand in its own right. The rights to the video games are jointly owned by TPC, GameFreak, and Nintendo. Nintendo has nothing whatsoever to do with the card game, for instance.
So it's not Nintendo who's fighting this at all, it's The Pokemon Company
No, because our legal system is supposed to be founded on the notion that we'd rather let a hundred guilty people go free than send one innocent man to prison.
That's why we have due process in the first place. Idealistically, we'd be protecting the rights of everyone, not only the "innocent."
[blockquote]Good place to store wealth.[/blockquote]
Is it though? Usually you'll want to store wealth in less risky and volatile places. Bitcoin's price fluctuates too often and too dramatically to make it a good idea for safe "wealth storage."
That may change in the future, but for now, bitcoin seems to be "don't put anything in bitcoin you can't afford to lose."
The sad part is that initiatives to cost the NSA much more money will just result in that money coming out of taxpayers' pockets.
I applaud these measures, but matters are going to get a lot worse before they get better. No way is the NSA going to just roll over and say "welp, we tried. I guess we'll just have to build our own/go elsewhere."
Nope, they'll fight it. And then there will be lawsuits. And those lawsuits will take years to finally come to the Supreme Court where we can finally get a ruling on this mess.
They're passing laws that simply reinforce the 4th Amendment, and then make it unlawful to support anyone assisting the law-breakers. (Something that's already illegal... Since an "accomplice" is a thing already)
It creates a due process for the "cutting off of power" to establishments that are breaking the law (in this case, the 4th Amendment-likes).
They have to pass these as state laws, because they have no way to enforce Federal Law (the real 4th Amendment).
They've basically written themselves the jurisdiction to enforce, at the state level, a federal law.
This is going to be a pretty interesting tactic to watch. The same sort of fight is coming as more and more states support various legalization/decriminalization of marijuana.
To me, it speaks to the absolute loss of faith in Congress/POTUS to legislate what the American people actually want.
Everyone knows that federal law trumps state law, but that just means a bunch of cases that can eventually go to the Supreme Court. That means actual rulings on the constitutionality of some federal programs.
The Court can't rule on, or set precedents on things that haven't been brought to court. There need to be arrests or lawsuits for the Court to consider. They don't get to just say "hey, this NSA stuff isn't right." They have to have an actual case brought to them to decide on.
The states are acting to force the Federal Government to put their money where their mouth is, so to speak. They're throwing down a gauntlet that says "go on, try to get your arrests and cases heard here... We dare you."
Then the legal system, on up to the Supreme Court gets to act as the check it's supposed to be on un-constitutional laws and programs.
On the post: Police Chief: Not Wanting To Talk To Police Officers Is 'Odd'
Re:
On the post: UPDATED: NSA Denies Claims That It Knew About Heartbleed And Did Nothing
Re: Binary Evaluation Set
Treason has a very specific definition: "Waging war against the United States, or giving aid and comfort to its enemies."
The NSA has done neither. Stop using "treason" to describe everything bad someone in the government does.
On the post: 60 Days After Being Asked, James Clapper Finally Answers Ron Wyden's Question About Collecting US Citizens' Communications
Re: FISA court is illegal, entire operation violates 4th Ammendment
TL:DR it's not Treason. None of it.
It's shady, illegal, immoral... All of those things. But not treason.
On the post: 60 Days After Being Asked, James Clapper Finally Answers Ron Wyden's Question About Collecting US Citizens' Communications
Re:
"Aid and comfort" is defined as material aid, not just "gave our enemies a chuckle."
Nothing anyone has done here (including Snowden) qualifies as Treason. There are likely many other crimes committed, but let's stop trotting out treason.
On the post: Kid Bullied For My Little Pony Backpack Told Not To Bring It To School Anymore
Re:
On the post: Kid Bullied For My Little Pony Backpack Told Not To Bring It To School Anymore
And then see what happens.
"We left that one at home. Now he's got a new backpack. Oh, that didn't stop the bullying? Hmm... I wonder why. Why don't you just give me a list of 'approved' backpacks, and then make all the other kids follow it as well?"
On the post: Government Employees Suddenly Worried About Surveillance As New Plans To Stop The Next Snowden Strip All Privacy
On the post: Dumb Criminal Incriminates Dumb Self With Dumb Selfie [UPDATE: Or Not]
Re: Debunked
This was a case of "so and so posted a new photo!" notification that she somehow transformed into "someone broke into my house and put that picture on my phone!"
Baffling.
On the post: Keurig Insists Coffee DRM Brings 'Interactive-Enabled Benefits' And Is For Your Own Safety
"Warning: Only works with Green Mountain brand k-cups."
On the post: Google Fiber Teases 34 More Cities With Actual, Honest-To-Goodness Broadband Competition
Re:
How did Google fuck anyone? It's not like they can instantly fiber-up the entire nation. And it's not like GF going in to some other city makes your service any worse.
Just be patient, and watch all the providers in Google Fiber cities shit their pants. Enjoy the show, and someday soon it will come to everyone.
On the post: Pokemon Vs. Pokellector In Trademark/Copyright Dispute
Re:
http://www.pokemon.com/us/about-pokemon/
Nintendo shares the publishing rights to the video games (along with GameFreak), but does NOT own the entire franchise.
On the post: Pokemon Vs. Pokellector In Trademark/Copyright Dispute
Re:
Pokemon IS a company and a brand in its own right. The rights to the video games are jointly owned by TPC, GameFreak, and Nintendo. Nintendo has nothing whatsoever to do with the card game, for instance.
So it's not Nintendo who's fighting this at all, it's The Pokemon Company
On the post: NSA Surveillance Faces First Constitutional Challenge From Guy Arrested With Secret NSA Evidence
Re: Bad test case
That's why we have due process in the first place. Idealistically, we'd be protecting the rights of everyone, not only the "innocent."
On the post: DailyDirt: Does Bitcoin Matter?
Re: My 2 Bitcoins
Is it though? Usually you'll want to store wealth in less risky and volatile places. Bitcoin's price fluctuates too often and too dramatically to make it a good idea for safe "wealth storage."
That may change in the future, but for now, bitcoin seems to be "don't put anything in bitcoin you can't afford to lose."
On the post: More States Looking To Neutralize The NSA Through Local Legislation
Re: Re: Re:
I applaud these measures, but matters are going to get a lot worse before they get better. No way is the NSA going to just roll over and say "welp, we tried. I guess we'll just have to build our own/go elsewhere."
Nope, they'll fight it. And then there will be lawsuits. And those lawsuits will take years to finally come to the Supreme Court where we can finally get a ruling on this mess.
On the post: More States Looking To Neutralize The NSA Through Local Legislation
Re: i say we bring back 'shunning'...
On the post: More States Looking To Neutralize The NSA Through Local Legislation
Re: Anyone else find this worrisome?
They're passing laws that simply reinforce the 4th Amendment, and then make it unlawful to support anyone assisting the law-breakers. (Something that's already illegal... Since an "accomplice" is a thing already)
It creates a due process for the "cutting off of power" to establishments that are breaking the law (in this case, the 4th Amendment-likes).
They have to pass these as state laws, because they have no way to enforce Federal Law (the real 4th Amendment).
They've basically written themselves the jurisdiction to enforce, at the state level, a federal law.
On the post: More States Looking To Neutralize The NSA Through Local Legislation
To me, it speaks to the absolute loss of faith in Congress/POTUS to legislate what the American people actually want.
Everyone knows that federal law trumps state law, but that just means a bunch of cases that can eventually go to the Supreme Court. That means actual rulings on the constitutionality of some federal programs.
The Court can't rule on, or set precedents on things that haven't been brought to court. There need to be arrests or lawsuits for the Court to consider. They don't get to just say "hey, this NSA stuff isn't right." They have to have an actual case brought to them to decide on.
The states are acting to force the Federal Government to put their money where their mouth is, so to speak. They're throwing down a gauntlet that says "go on, try to get your arrests and cases heard here... We dare you."
Then the legal system, on up to the Supreme Court gets to act as the check it's supposed to be on un-constitutional laws and programs.
On the post: T-Mobile Writes The Best Press Release You'll Ever See From A Phone Company
Re: Re: average intelligence
Yeah, not everyone is going to be a rocket surgeon, but not everyone needs to be either.
On the post: Prince Sues 22 Fans For $1 Million Each For Linking To Bootlegs In Laughably Confused Complaint
Re: An actual letter to his attorney
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