02-17-2005, 10:22 AM | #121 (permalink) | ||
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HALX is compelled by the federal government to turn over any information he has about me, from his site's IP logs, and from the personal information that I supplied in the course of registering for TFPmembership. HALX is prohibited, under the threat of prosecution from disclosing whether the government has inquired about me, and whether or not he has supplied that information about me to the government in response to that inquiry. My knowledge of this possibility discourages me from practicing my formerly less restrictive free speech rights on this forum, because I have to presume that I am already under surveillance because of the tone of dissent and contempt for the criminality of the Bush administration, lawfully expressed in my posts. Here's some more info, supplied by the very organization that Jerry Falwell specifically aims to marginalize, an organization fair minded enough to represent the interests that it has in common with it's critic, Rush Limbaugh. Quote:
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02-17-2005, 10:22 AM | #122 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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The Patriot Act amends at least 15 separate federal laws, including the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 (http://www.fas.org/irp/agency/doj/fisa/), the Electronic Communication Privacy Act of 1986 (http://www.cpsr.org/issues/privacy/ecpa86), the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (http://www.panix.com/~eck/computer-fraud-act.html), and the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (http://www.ed.gov/policy/gen/guid/fpco/ferpa/index.html). The law permits roving wiretaps and so-called “sneak and peek” warrants, adds new terrorist crimes, knocks down the wall between foreign and domestic intelligence, amends the definition of domestic terrorism and makes many other changes too numerous to catalog. This is already effecting people. Have you flown in the past few years? I have about a dozen times. 3 out of 12 times (reduced to 1/4 of the time for you math people) I have been taken aside to be searched more than everyone around me. Why? There doesn't have to be a reason why anymore. They can profile me all they want. Is it stopping terrorism? Studies say no. After the airport changes, a local news team went undercover and snuck weapons unto a plane at our local international airport. They had an Arab reporter sneak on several knives. |
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02-17-2005, 10:43 AM | #123 (permalink) | |
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
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Enough to justify equating Falwell and Robertson with Bin Laden? Not nearly.
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I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. |
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02-17-2005, 10:53 AM | #124 (permalink) | ||
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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02-17-2005, 11:03 AM | #125 (permalink) | |
Banned from being Banned
Location: Donkey
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__________________
I love lamp. |
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02-17-2005, 11:24 AM | #126 (permalink) | ||
Easy Rider
Location: Moscow on the Ohio
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02-17-2005, 11:38 AM | #127 (permalink) | |
Walking is Still Honest
Location: Seattle, WA
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__________________
I wonder if we're stuck in Rome. |
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02-17-2005, 11:47 AM | #128 (permalink) | |||
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I don't think the ACLU is one to be criticizing anyone about data collection practices: Quote:
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I personally think the ACLU is one of the most destructive forces currently opperating in the country. They don't defend free speech, they defend speech that agrees ideologically with their agenda. If Falwell is trying to build up an organization to counteract the ACLU's heinous influence, that makes him a hero in my book. |
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02-17-2005, 11:49 AM | #129 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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02-17-2005, 11:49 AM | #130 (permalink) | |
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02-17-2005, 12:01 PM | #131 (permalink) | |||
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Christian right leadership, is incalculable. Your "not nearly" conclusion is reasonably contested, by people with moderate and deliberative points of view. Quote:
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in the Cinderella fairy tale, where they know that they will always see the "fairest on of all", when they gaze into it. |
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02-17-2005, 12:38 PM | #132 (permalink) | |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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The problem with the Patriot Act is that it isn't patriotic. We could fix it in order to make it continue to protect civil liberties, while at the same time battle the threat of terrorism. |
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02-19-2005, 01:49 AM | #133 (permalink) | |
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Why not divert some of the funds expended to incarcerate non-violent convicts to better funding for legal aid, and pre-case disposition investigators for indigent defendants, dna testing for inmates who apply for it, (In cases where the evidence to be tested has not been lost or thrown out by prosecutors' offices), and by a national moratorium of the death penalty, modeled after the Illinois governor's actions in 2000. The cost of death penalty trials and appeals is much more expensive than incarcerating inmates serving life sentences. If you counter with the "death penalty is a deterrent" argument, consider that the states of New york and Texas have similar sized populations. New York last executed a condemned inmate in 1963. In 1990, Texans reported 761 violent crimes per 100,000 inhabitants, New Yorkers reported 1180. By 2002, Texans reported 578 violent crimes, and New Yorkers just 496 per 100,000 inhabitants. In that 12 year period, Texas executed approx. 250 convicts, while New York executed none. <a href="http://bjsdata.ojp.usdoj.gov/dataonline/Search/Crime/State/statebystatelist.cfm">http://bjsdata.ojp.usdoj.gov/dataonline/Search/Crime/State/statebystatelist.cfm</a> New York is now contemplating eliminating the states's death penalty statute. <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A17486-2005Feb11?language=printer">http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A17486-2005Feb11?language=printer</a> |
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02-19-2005, 03:11 AM | #134 (permalink) | |||||
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So...the ACLU loses the small amount of credibility and worthiness that you, (I am assuming) credited it with before "fair and balanced" O'Reiley covered this ACLU controversey on his show ? ) The following NYTimes report of the controversey you cited is more detailed: Quote:
Will reports like this one exist without the ACLU representing OUR right to know ? Quote:
Doesn't the disparity between Bush's claim that the invasion of Iraq was actually to "spread freedom" and the information that ACLU foia suits uncovers, revealing a pattern of systemic torture and other abuse of Iraqis, who presumedly were not yet found to be guilty of crime, by regular U.S. armed forces, give you cause to "roll eyes" ? Quote:
alansmithee, is it your opinion that the ACLU foia suits of the U.S. Army are activities consistant with your opinion of the ACLU? Do you think that the law students or the future graduates of Falwell's new law school will better represent the rights of the American people to the protections of the Bill of Rights or of holding the government to lawful compliance with the provisions of the FOIA? I consider your claims about the ACLU to be outrageously and inaccurately disparaging, especially as the events of the day leap out from the front pages of newspapers around the world with the story of the ACLU using the courts to enforce our right to know, even if we are too pathetically propagandized by our political and religious leaders to demand the accountability of our elected officials ! Limbaugh paid for the following PR.....he seems to hold the ACLU in higher regard than you do, and he helps to refute some of your ACLU criticism. Quote:
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02-19-2005, 03:17 AM | #135 (permalink) | |
Crazy
Location: Oregon
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02-19-2005, 04:10 AM | #136 (permalink) | |
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02-19-2005, 05:36 AM | #137 (permalink) | ||||||
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Micheal Moore http://www.americanprogress.org Bill Moyer Justin A. Frank Barbara Boxer Tom Flocco http://www.commondreams.org/ You seemed to have no difficulty in citing them as evidence. Quote:
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02-20-2005, 11:15 PM | #138 (permalink) | |||||
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83 member ACLU board for allegedly criticizing the ACLU for it's alleged violation of it's own donor privacy policy and undermining it's own "mission to preserve free speech rights." One item not covered in your post was that no national ACLU board member "threatened to expel" Kaminer or Meyers. The ACLU Oregon state chapter accused them of "acting inappropriately. You provided no report that ACLU national president Nadine Strossen has predicted that any proposal to discipline the Kaminer and Meyers will be rejected. I believe that the information that you posted is unduly sensational and more negative than the details reported so far actually indicate.......... Quote:
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You stated that, "It is my opinion that the ACLU foia suits are helping undermine US activities in Iraq. It is my opinion that they are doing this knowing that they are undermining the military, and actually have that as a goal. I believe that if Falwell does organize a law school that his organization will better serve the intrests of the country and it's citizens." Do you believe that the government should be exposed, or even challenged when it commits illegal acts, or covers them up ? My "sig" is intended to be a tribute to SCOTUS Justice Robert H. Jackson, the chief U.S. prosecutor at Nuremberg. Can you defend what I quoted from you above about the ACLU intentionally undermining "U.S. activities in Iraq" after reading the following quotes of Justice Jackson ? Do you take into account that the pentagon has the discretion and authority to prevent disclosure of FOIA requested documents on the grounds of national security, if it deems the material to be sensitive ? The ACLU has disclosed new incidents of mistreatment of prisoners in Iraq and the complicity of military commanders in the destruction of evidence of prisoner abuse in Afghanistan. Do you believe that this is information should be concealed from the people of the U.S. ? The U.S. military released this information but you would not have done so ? You are shooting the messenger if you continue to believe that the ACLU's FOIA requests are the problem here. I have paraphased excerpts Justice Robert Jackson's summation at Nuremberg in 1946. In some places, even an ardent partisan might admit to himself that there is cause for concern as far as the decision to invade Iraq and in the prosection of the war. Quote:
THE PRESIDENT: I call on the chief prosecutor, the United States of America. The intellectual bankruptcy and moral perversion of the BUSH regime might have been no concern of international law had it not been utilized to goosestep the NEOCONS across international frontiers. It is not their thoughts, it is their overt acts which we charge to be crimes. Their creed and teachings are important only as evidence of motive, purpose, knowledge, and intent. We charge unlawful aggression but we are not trying the motives, hopes, or frustrations which may have led AMERICA to resort to aggressive war as an instrument of policy. The law, unlike politics, does not concern itself with the good or evil in the status quo, nor with the merits of the grievances against it. It merely requires that the status quo be not attacked by violent means and that policies be not advanced by war. We may admit that overlapping ethnological and cultural groups, economic barriers, and conflicting national ambitions created in the 1990's, as they will continue to create, grave problems for AMERICA as well as for the other peoples of THE WORLD. We may admit too that the world had failed to provide political or legal remedies which would be honorable and acceptable alternatives to war. We do not underwrite either the ethics or the wisdom of any country, including my own, in the face of these problems. But we do say that it is now, as it was for sometime prior to 2003, illegal and criminal for AMERICA or any other nation to redress grievances or seek expansion by resort to aggressive war........... ..............The Crimes of the BUSH Regime. The strength of the case against these defendants under the conspiracy Count, which it is the duty of the INTERNATIONAL COURT to argue, is in its simplicity. It involves but three ultimate inquiries: First, have the acts defined by the Charter as crimes been committed; second, were they committed pursuant to a Common Plan or Conspiracy; third, are these defendants among those who are criminally responsible? The charge requires examination of a criminal policy, not of a multitude of isolated, unplanned, or disputed crimes. The substantive crimes upon which we rely, either as goals of a common plan or as means for its accomplishment, are admitted. The pillars which uphold the conspiracy charge may be found in five groups of overt acts, whose character and magnitude are important considerations in appraising the proof of conspiracy. .................. ................. Laws were enacted of such ambiguity that they could be used to punish almost any innocent act. It was, for example, made a crime to provoke "any act contrary to the public welfare" (PATRIOT ACT I). The doctrine of punishment by analogy was-introduced to enable conviction for acts which no statute forbade (PATRIOT ACT I). ATTORNEY GENERAL ASHCROFT explained that THE BUSH ADMIN. considered every violation of the goals of life which the community set up for itself to be a wrong per se, and that the acts could be punished even though it was not contrary to existing "formal law" (PATRIOT ACT I). The JUSTICE DEPT> and the DEPT. OF HOMELAND SECURITY were instrumentalities of an espionage system which penetrated public and private life (PATRIOT ACT I). ASHCROFT controlled a personal wire-tapping unit. All privacy of communication was abolished (PATRIOT ACT I). HOMELAND SECURITY appointed over every 50 householders spied continuously on all within their ken (TIPS PROGRAM). Upon the strength of this spying individuals were dragged off to "protective custody" and to DETENTION camps without legal proceedings of any kind (JOSE PADILLA) and without statement of any reason therefor (PATRIOT ACT I). The BUSH APPOINTED SECURITY Police were exempted from effective legal responsibility for their acts (PATRIOT ACT I). With all administrative offices in BUSH's control and with the REPUBLICAN CONGRESS reduced to BEING BUSH's RUBBER STAMP, the judiciary remained the last obstacle to this reign of terror (PATRIOT ACT I). But its independence was soon overcome and it was reorganized to dispense a venal justice () Judges were ousted for political or racial reasons and were spied upon and put under pressure to join the REPUBLICAN Party (). After the Supreme Court had acquitted three of the four men whom the BUSHCO accused of BEING ENEMY COMBATANTS, its jurisdiction over treason cases was transferred to a newly established "MILITARY TRIBUNALS" consisting of MILITARY OFFICERS ().................... The result was the removal of all peaceable means either to resist or to change the Government............... .....................The central crime in this pattern of crimes, the kingpin which holds them all together, is the plot for aggressive wars. The chief reason for international cognizance of these crimes lies in this fact. Have we established the Plan or Conspiracy to make aggressive war? Certain admitted or clearly proven facts help answer that question. First is the fact that such war of aggression did take place. Second, it is admitted that from the moment the BUSHCO came to power, every one of them and every one of the defendants worked like beavers to prepare for some war. The question therefore comes to this: Were they preparing for the war which did occur, or were they preparing for some war which never has happened? It is probably true that in their early days none of them had in mind what month of what year war would begin, the exact dispute which would precipitate it, or whether its first impact would be IRAQ, IRAN, or NORTH KOREA. But I submit that the defendants either knew or were chargeable with knowledge that the war for which they were making ready would be a war of AMERICAN aggression. This is partly because there was no real expectation that any power or combination of powers would attack AMERICA. But it is chiefly because the inherent nature of the BUSHCO plans was such that they were certain sooner or later to meet resistance and that they could then be accomplished only by aggression. ............................ ...................The orders for the treatment of IRAQI prisoners of war were so ruthless that ALBERTO GONZALES, pointing out that they would "result in arbitrary mistreatments and killing," protested to the BUSHCO against them as breaches of international law. The reply of RUMSFELD was unambiguous. He said: "The objections arise from the military conception of chivalrous warfare! This is the destruction of an ideology! Therefore, I approve and back the measures" (). The Geneva Convention would have been thrown overboard openly except that RUMSFELD objected because he wanted the benefits of ENEMY observance of it while it was not being allowed to hamper the U.S. in any way. ........................ ...........................The dominant fact which stands out from all the thousands of pages of the record of this Trial is that the central crime of the whole group of BUSHCO crimes the attack on the peace of the world was clearly and deliberately planned. The beginning of these wars of aggression was not an unprepared and spontaneous springing to arms by a population excited by some current indignation. A week before the invasion of IRAQ, BUSH told his military commanders: "I shall give a propagandist cause for starting war. Never mind whether it be plausible or not. The victor shall not be asked later on whether we told the truth or not. In starting and making a war, it is not the right that matters, but victory (). The propagandist scenarios were duly provided by the BUSHCO incessantly and falsely inferring that Saddam had ties to Al Qaeda and the 9/11 Attacks, and posed an imminent threat to America because he possessed large stockpiles of biological weapons and was close to developing nuclear weapons, in order to create the appearance of a credible threat of an impending Iraqi attack on the U.S. or on one of it's allies. ().................. .................Each of these people made a real contribution to the BUSHCO plan. Each one had a key part. Deprive the BUSHCO regime of the functions performed by a RUMSFELD, a WOLFOWITZ, a RICE, or a CHENEY and you have a different regime. Look down the rows of fallen men and picture them as the photographic and documentary evidence shows them to have been in their days of power. Is there one who did not substantially advance the conspiracy along its bloody path toward its bloody goal? Can we assume that the great effort of these people's lives was directed toward ends they never suspected? To escape the implications of their positions and the inference of guilt from their activities, the defendants are almost unanimous in one defense. The refrain is heard time and again: These officials were without authority, without knowledge, without influence without importance....... ........In the testimony of each defendant, at some point there was reached the familiar blank wall: Nobody knew anything about what was going on. Time after time we have heard the chorus from the dock: "I only heard about these things here for the first time." These officials saw no evil, spoke none, and none was uttered in their presence. This claim might sound very plausible if made by one defendant. But when we put all their stories together, the impression which emerges of the BUSH REGIME, which was to herald the new millenium, is ludicrous. If we combine only the stories of the front bench, this is the ridiculous composite picture of BUSH's Government that emerges. It was composed of: A Defense Chief who knew nothing of the excesses of the Military Intelligence Units which he created, and never suspected the IRAQI PRISONER TORTURE program although he was the signer of over a score of decrees which instituted the persecutions of those detainees; A VICE PRESIDENT who was merely an innocent middleman transmitting BUSH's interest in obtaining definitive IRAQI WMD intelligence from the CIA, like a postman or delivery boy; A Secretary of State who knew little of foreign affairs and nothing of foreign policy; A Commanding General in IRAQ who issued orders to the Armed Forces but had no idea of the results they would have in practice; A Homeland security chief who was of the impression that the policing functions of his department were somewhat on the order of issuing colorful threat level warnings that were politically motivated. A Political Advisor and Mastermind who was interested in polling research and had no idea of the violence which his philosophy was inciting in the twenty first century; A provisional authority governor of who reigned but did not rule; and could not account for nearly $9 billion in funds he controlled that belonged to the Iraqi citizens. An NSA director who denied that BUSH saw briefings before 9/11 on the threat of terrorist airliner attacks, but who had no idea that anybody would read them; A CIA Director who knew not even what went on in the interior of his own office, much less the interior of his own department, and nothing at all about the accurate pre-invasion intelligence about Iraqi WMD's or about Saddam's cooperation with AL Queda; A president who never failed to create new justification and a new mission for his troops to justify his war of aggression as each previous justification that he had advanced to the world, wilted under half hearted and delayed media scrutiny and closer inspection on the ground in IRAQ. And a preparation for the war economy that included huge tax cuts for the wealthiest citizens, guaranteeing huge federal deficits, but with no thought that it had anything to do with war. This may seem like a fantastic exaggeration, but this is what you would actually be obliged to conclude if you were to acquit these defendants. They do protest too much. They deny knowing what was common knowledge. They deny knowing plans and programs that were as public as the pronouncements of the NEOCONS of the PNAC and the Party program. They deny even knowing the contents of documents they received and acted upon. ..................... [/quote] If nothing else, and until you find an effective replacement for the ACLU and it's FOIA suits, the Bush government cannot claim that "it knew nothing", because the American people and the world know. I put much effort into backing what I post with information and cited sources that I do not believe to be easily impeached. I rarely post links to http://commondreams.org or to http://americanprogress.org. If I attribute something to Michael Moore, I anticipate that I will have to defend the accuracy of the details. I consider Bill Moyer to be a journalist of the highest reputation for ethics in the U.S. today. alansmithee, if I post something that you can argue is misleading or untrue, please post an objection with linked souces to back up yourself up to the same degree that I have referenced whatever you are objecting to. I seem unreasonable and rabidly partisan mostly because we disagree on many issues and are of different philosophies. |
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02-21-2005, 02:17 PM | #139 (permalink) | |||||
Junkie
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http://www.operationlookout.org/look...end_nambla.htm http://www.aclu.org/FreeSpeech/FreeS...?ID=17134&c=42 http://www.aclu.org/ReligiousLiberty...ID=17318&c=139 http://www.aclu.org/StudentsRights/S...?ID=16785&c=31 http://www.aclu.org/StudentsRights/S...?ID=15931&c=31 http://www.aclu.org/FreeSpeech/FreeS...?ID=17183&c=42 http://www.aclu.org/DrugPolicy/DrugP...?ID=14606&c=79 I could go on, but you should get the point. They have advocated/advocate many positions that I feel are damaging to the well being of society. Quote:
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02-21-2005, 03:06 PM | #140 (permalink) | ||
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If you were attempting to demonstrate that the ACLU is doing more harm than good for society, you failed entirely. If you were attempting to demonstrate that the ACLU is doing more harm than good to you personally, you have still failed entirely, by failing to show any correlation between the articles you posted and your personal life. |
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02-21-2005, 04:15 PM | #141 (permalink) | |
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The ACLU is doing more harm than good by supporting activities that negatively contribute to society. And how my personal life has any bearing on the discussion is really beyond me. I might have failed to convince you, but honestly I don't think you are open to any idea that doesn't fit into your preconcieved notion of how things are. Last edited by alansmithee; 02-21-2005 at 04:19 PM.. |
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02-21-2005, 05:06 PM | #142 (permalink) |
Loser
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It is my opinion that your opinion is not the opinion of society.
It is also a fact that your opinion is not the opinion of society. In this particular case, my opinion is also fact. Once again, simply because you say the ACLU is doing more harm than good doesn't mean anything to anyone but yourself. You posted "proof" of your opinion, but in reality those links only demonstrated that the ACLU defends people and policies with which you personally disagree. So what? Why is that harmful to society? Because you disagree with the ACLU's defense? Nonsense. That is simply harmful to your opinion of how society should be. The ACLU may be harmful to your opinion of a better society, but that does not make the ACLU harmful to society. Perhaps your opinion is what is harmful to society, in which case, the ACLU is the benefactor. Post something which validates your opinion, or accept the fact that your opinion is not society's opinion. And lastly, advocation of illegal acts is a fairly common form of free speech practiced by millions of people, such as those who oppose abortion and those who favor drug use. Your opinion that the advocation of illegal acts should be limited is contrary to the very principles of the Constitution. The Constitution is the foundation of the United States of America. Since you oppose this aspect of the Constitution, and it is this aspect in which you find fault in the ACLU, it becomes apparent that the ACLU defends the Constitution and is therefore a defender of the United States of America. You are free to oppose that because of people and organizations like the ACLU who defend your right to oppose the Constitution. Last edited by Manx; 02-21-2005 at 05:10 PM.. |
02-21-2005, 05:18 PM | #143 (permalink) | |
....is off his meds...you were warned.
Location: The Wild Wild West
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Not one person I associate with supports the ACLU. Conservatives on the whole, most likely don't support the ACLU. So, without any evidence, if I am even remotely correct, society is roughly split 50/50 on the ACLU. Anybody that defends NAMBLA is scum of the earth and a disease to our society. How on earth the first amendment can be used to protect this slimebags is beyond me. Last time I heard, having sex with a boy was illegal. A group that advocates sex with boys should be illegal as well. I think society is split on its support of the ACLU. And if more people knew about the ACLU's defense of NAMBLA, I would guess the number would go up. I can't think of one person who would support a group like these freaks. Guilt by association in my opinion. I would looooooove to see someone try and defend NAMBLA or the ACLU's defense of NAMBLA. |
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02-21-2005, 05:55 PM | #144 (permalink) | |||
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Which is precisely my point. Alan's opinion is not the opinion of society. Quote:
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That anyone would attack NAMBLAs right to express its opinion is sad. That anyone would attack the ACLU for defending NAMBLA is a sign of a fundamental failure to grasp the principles of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. |
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02-21-2005, 06:06 PM | #145 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
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Wasn't the boy raped? Because the real issue was how NAMBLA and their whack ass pedistry literature facilitated the crime. Much like how hate literature found on the persons or property of someone who murdered as a means of hate crime would be gone after. If you got someone inciting behavior, then someone does said behavior, in the context that said behavior is illegal as pedistry is, NAMBLA should've had their balls stapled to the wall.
** The culprits were not charged with rape, but the it was asserted during the trial that there was conspiracy to rape the boy, and that he was murdered after he turned down the sexual advances**
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. Last edited by Mojo_PeiPei; 02-21-2005 at 06:15 PM.. |
02-21-2005, 06:14 PM | #146 (permalink) |
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I thought conservatives didn't agree with the whole hate-crime punishment system?
Regardless, that has nothing to do with the fact that NAMBLA does not tell people to rape children, they advocate for the change of laws. I believe anyone who suggests NAMBLA should be punished for the actions of someone who had NAMBLA literature is simply blinded by their dislike of the NAMBLA cause. A dislike of any cause is most certainly not a reason at all to support the silencing of that cause. I remember way back in the day, a bunch of people got all concerned and wanted to ban the Dungeon's and Dragon's game because some of the kids acted out the game and hurt themselves, or something. As if the game was the source of the careless or illegal behavior. Nonsense. Let's ban rock music, because it facilitates Satanic rituals. Let's ban websites that contain information on obtaining illegal copies of copyrighted work, because it facilitates the downloading of copyrighted material. Oh wait ... <a href="http://www.lokitorrent.com/">we already are</a>. Last edited by Manx; 02-21-2005 at 06:20 PM.. |
02-21-2005, 06:20 PM | #147 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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That is a load of shit Manx.
NAMBLA advocates pedistry, sex with young boys, boys as young as single digits. BY DEFINITION THAT IS RAPE. How can a group who advocates an illegal act which by all current legal definitions is a form of rape, not be telling it's members rape children?
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
02-21-2005, 06:21 PM | #148 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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Also your rock and satan comparison is cute, but it's ill-founded. Rock isn't illegal, neither is performing satanic rituals. Sex with minors is rape, sodomizing minors is rape, both of which are illegal.
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
02-21-2005, 06:22 PM | #149 (permalink) |
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There is a rather basic form of English language difference between advocating for the legality of something, and telling someone to perform an illegal act.
But even if NAMBLA had TOLD someone to perform an illegal act - that STILL doesn't mean they should be punished in anyway if someone then performs the illegal act. I could tell you to jump off a bridge. It's not my responsibility if you do it. |
02-21-2005, 06:23 PM | #150 (permalink) | |
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If we make rock music illegal, you are suggesting that anyone who fights for the legality of it should be punished. |
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02-21-2005, 06:28 PM | #154 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
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If I were a member of some KKK sect, and I handed out propaganda inciting and advocating the killing of minorities, then some yahoo murdered a black person as motivated by hate, and was found with my literature, you better believe I would be arrested.
For any further discussion I suggest everyone here download or somehow legally obtain the South Park episode where Cartman joins NAMBLA.
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
02-21-2005, 06:33 PM | #156 (permalink) | |
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And regardless, I do not believe you would be arrested. |
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I would assume the majority of society agrees that NAMBLA is bad, the other cases are more judgement based. If my opinion of a better society IS a better society, then the ACLU is harmful. Again, using your reasoning we can make NO judgement basis about the effects of anything on anything dealing with society, because nobody knows for certain. Here is a quote of yours from a different thread: Quote:
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You are disproved by legal precedent, inciting riots is not protected speech. Also, Charles Manson is serving a lengthy criminal sentence for murder, yet he just told others to kill-he killed nobody. It is you who seem to lack understanding of constitutional law, as avocation of certain illegal acts IS limited. All you stated after in relation to that assumption is invalid. |
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02-21-2005, 10:50 PM | #158 (permalink) | |||
Banned
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02-21-2005, 10:56 PM | #159 (permalink) |
Loser
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alansmithee -
You have made far too many claims on what I have said when I have not said that which you claim. Then further, you tried to bring a post I made in another thread into this discussion to make a point. I can't imagine what point you think you made. It would be quite impossible for me to continue discussing this with you. The illogic is far too advanced now. Last edited by Manx; 02-21-2005 at 11:44 PM.. |
02-21-2005, 11:18 PM | #160 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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Well Host those Christians inciting to invade and kill Muslims is no different then what the Mullahs are doing in the mosque's. Plus as far as the inciting goes, what they are saying isn't illegal in any common or criminal sense. Not to mention there is a big difference in advocating action against a quasi-corporeal enemy that has attacked America and advocating for the legitimacy and legalization of sodomizing and raping young boys.
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
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beliefs, pose, religious, threat |
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