Crispy, you and your logic have no place here. Begone! Begone with you, demon child! Hie to your horse at once!
--Andy
Metsfanmax wrote:Woodruff wrote:I'm pretty sure all of us here are aware of this. The Electronic Freedom Foundation has been fighting this battle since well before the FISA amendments of 2008 were instituted (they started in 2005, I believe). Just because there is a law on the books doesn't make it reasonable or Constitutional. As well, what motivation does Congress have for rolling it back? None, as far as as I can tell.
There's a lot of people in this forum feigning shock and horror at the administration, given that "all of us" are aware of this.
Metsfanmax wrote:If you're the administration, it's just irresponsible to not use the tools available to you to protect the citizenry.
Metsfanmax wrote:This is why we have a legislative branch: to set the bounds for what those tools are (in addition to what is enumerated in the Constitution). If they set bounds that overreach the Constitution, we bring it to court and we fix it. This is how the process is supposed to work, and it's why we have a judicial system.
Metsfanmax wrote:Woodruff wrote:It seems reasonable to me that gathering all communication information on every citizen without a warrant or just cause should be considered unreasonable.
So the Fourth Amendment litmus test is: does Woodruff think this method is reasonable?
Metsfanmax wrote:john9blue wrote:i don't think so. they are still monitoring what we do. they are just going to wait until this all blows over and people forget about it and carry on as usual.
So all you folks are doing in these threads is paying lip service to the idea that the government should preserve liberty more? Great success.
crispybits wrote:Night Strike wrote:crispybits wrote:But before the federal court sat, another election took place and the winners of that vote had a clear platform that they would not defend Prop 8, therefore the people by voting the new officials in that they chose effectively overturned their previous vote.
There was no change in administrative policies. It was the old government in place when the Prop 8 suits started, which is why Arnold was named as a party of the lawsuit. Brown was the attorney general when the suit started and is now governor. When the previous administration refused to take up the lawsuit, the lower courts, along with the state supreme court, agreed that public groups who supported the law could defend it. While it was going through the appeals process, the administration changed but their policy didn't, so the public groups chose to keep defending it. The Supreme Court decided those people couldn't keep defending it, which was their decision in the Prop 8 case.
But the point is that there was a change in public opinion, the people voted a new governor in who promised not todefend Prop 8. That changed the playing field because those public groups could no longer claim to have majority electoral support. This means that they became special interest minority groups and lost a lot of political strength.
Unless you want to argue that special interest minority groups with no material interest should be allowed to defend suits against the state when the state itself believes it is neither economical nor in the public interest to fight a losing battle... is that a can of worms you want opened? What if the state wants to settle quietly out of court with the plaintiffs, do they have to check with every special interest minority group with an opinion in case they might be interested in defending it in court?
Woodruff wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:john9blue wrote:i don't think so. they are still monitoring what we do. they are just going to wait until this all blows over and people forget about it and carry on as usual.
So all you folks are doing in these threads is paying lip service to the idea that the government should preserve liberty more? Great success.
I'm not sure where you got that idea from what he said...
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
john9blue wrote:Woodruff wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:john9blue wrote:i don't think so. they are still monitoring what we do. they are just going to wait until this all blows over and people forget about it and carry on as usual.
So all you folks are doing in these threads is paying lip service to the idea that the government should preserve liberty more? Great success.
I'm not sure where you got that idea from what he said...
he thinks i'm saying that it's futile to protest this because it won't change anything.
i should have said that things CAN change because of this, maybe far in the future, but i don't have all that much hope that it will, and even if it does, it would be disingenuous to say that snowden "dictated" that change.
BigBallinStalin wrote:
I'm not sure what people really want. Change comes from soft resistance due to the awareness and response. Libertarians and the like have been warning about the Patriot Act and the news that came out about the NSA around 2005/2006. It seemed that most citizens ignored that--or rejected such criticism yet continued reinforcing the status quo, and now they're scratching their heads about the recent NSA events. Gee, what line of reasoning led to that predicament?
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
john9blue wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
I'm not sure what people really want. Change comes from soft resistance due to the awareness and response. Libertarians and the like have been warning about the Patriot Act and the news that came out about the NSA around 2005/2006. It seemed that most citizens ignored that--or rejected such criticism yet continued reinforcing the status quo, and now they're scratching their heads about the recent NSA events. Gee, what line of reasoning led to that predicament?
yeah, i think recent events have been a real eye-opener for lots of people. even reddit has been willing to criticize obama recently.
but it remains to be seen whether this will change anything. the occupy movement was bigger than this and they didn't really accomplish much at all.
Woodruff wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Woodruff wrote:I'm pretty sure all of us here are aware of this. The Electronic Freedom Foundation has been fighting this battle since well before the FISA amendments of 2008 were instituted (they started in 2005, I believe). Just because there is a law on the books doesn't make it reasonable or Constitutional. As well, what motivation does Congress have for rolling it back? None, as far as as I can tell.
There's a lot of people in this forum feigning shock and horror at the administration, given that "all of us" are aware of this.
You seriously believe anything at all was accomplished, other than identifying a few more "trouble makers?".BigBallinStalin wrote:john9blue wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
I'm not sure what people really want. Change comes from soft resistance due to the awareness and response. Libertarians and the like have been warning about the Patriot Act and the news that came out about the NSA around 2005/2006. It seemed that most citizens ignored that--or rejected such criticism yet continued reinforcing the status quo, and now they're scratching their heads about the recent NSA events. Gee, what line of reasoning led to that predicament?
yeah, i think recent events have been a real eye-opener for lots of people. even reddit has been willing to criticize obama recently.
but it remains to be seen whether this will change anything. the occupy movement was bigger than this and they didn't really accomplish much at all.
Since they occurred during the recession, they seemed mostly about economic issues, but they (in general*) lacked the policies which more people believed in. I knew a few who traveled all the way to go to NY and protest. That sample was hardcore socialist/anti-market, and if that small sample is equivalent to the general Occupy movement, then it's no surprise they weren't taken too seriously.**
*as presented by the mainstream media--which probably undermined their effectiveness, but I'm not so sure.
**Police were effective in shutting down at least a dialogue. I didn't enjoy that kind of response.
john9blue wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
I'm not sure what people really want. Change comes from soft resistance due to the awareness and response. Libertarians and the like have been warning about the Patriot Act and the news that came out about the NSA around 2005/2006. It seemed that most citizens ignored that--or rejected such criticism yet continued reinforcing the status quo, and now they're scratching their heads about the recent NSA events. Gee, what line of reasoning led to that predicament?
yeah, i think recent events have been a real eye-opener for lots of people. even reddit has been willing to criticize obama recently.
PLAYER57832 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:john9blue wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:
I'm not sure what people really want. Change comes from soft resistance due to the awareness and response. Libertarians and the like have been warning about the Patriot Act and the news that came out about the NSA around 2005/2006. It seemed that most citizens ignored that--or rejected such criticism yet continued reinforcing the status quo, and now they're scratching their heads about the recent NSA events. Gee, what line of reasoning led to that predicament?
yeah, i think recent events have been a real eye-opener for lots of people. even reddit has been willing to criticize obama recently.
but it remains to be seen whether this will change anything. the occupy movement was bigger than this and they didn't really accomplish much at all.
Since they occurred during the recession, they seemed mostly about economic issues, but they (in general*) lacked the policies which more people believed in. I knew a few who traveled all the way to go to NY and protest. That sample was hardcore socialist/anti-market, and if that small sample is equivalent to the general Occupy movement, then it's no surprise they weren't taken too seriously.**
*as presented by the mainstream media--which probably undermined their effectiveness, but I'm not so sure.
**Police were effective in shutting down at least a dialogue. I didn't enjoy that kind of response.
You seriously believe anything at all was accomplished, other than identifying a few more "trouble makers?".
Woodruff wrote:
It was here in Nebraska. We were actually able to sit down and speak with our legislatures several times, both in our state government and our Congresscritters. I'm not sure anything necessarily came of it (nothing specific I can point to as having happened law-wise), but the dialogue was definitely there, and they certainly gave the impression of taking it seriously. Which is kind of funny...as hardcore conservative as Nebraska fundamentally is, it's also pretty open-minded about at least looking at things. And they didn't sic the police on us for brutality either, rather the police were there legitimately for our protection.
Why would you imagine that? They were two fundamentally different groups with entirely different goals!Woodruff wrote: I'm still disappointed that the Tea Party and Operation Wall Street never got together, as they should have.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote:
It was here in Nebraska. We were actually able to sit down and speak with our legislatures several times, both in our state government and our Congresscritters. I'm not sure anything necessarily came of it (nothing specific I can point to as having happened law-wise), but the dialogue was definitely there, and they certainly gave the impression of taking it seriously. Which is kind of funny...as hardcore conservative as Nebraska fundamentally is, it's also pretty open-minded about at least looking at things. And they didn't sic the police on us for brutality either, rather the police were there legitimately for our protection.
Except, the ability to sit down with our elected officials has ALWAYS existed.
PLAYER57832 wrote:But, the real point is that the issues these folks were protesting really lay outside the realm of the legislators. They were fighting too many generalities, not specific issues, and protesting instead of going and actually talking to people, convincing people to make change.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Woodruff wrote: I'm still disappointed that the Tea Party and Operation Wall Street never got together, as they should have.
Why would you imagine that? They were two fundamentally different groups with entirely different goals!
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