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addams wrote:I'm not a bot.
That is what a bot would type.
addams wrote:Politics is hard. I can't do it.
It takes a nasty Jr. High School Girl in a man's body to keep up.
Belial wrote:The problem is how easy it is to do one under the guise of the other.
addams wrote:I'm not a bot.
That is what a bot would type.
Shivahn wrote:I'm not sure it's often the case when a bomb is about to be triggered by a cell phone trigger and the police also know that this trigger is set up this way and also it's the only trigger and they just need to find it. It seems that Hollywood is almost the only time something like that happens.
addams wrote:I'm not a bot.
That is what a bot would type.
Roosevelt wrote:I wrote:Does Space Teddy Roosevelt wrestle Space Bears and fight the Space Spanish-American War with his band of Space-volunteers the Space Rough Riders?
Yes.
EdgarJPublius wrote:I'm given to believe that modern IEDs are capable of being detonated by the interruption of cellular signals, and/or by jamming signals.
Giving the government the authorization to block cellular communications is not likely to solve the problem.
addams wrote:I'm not a bot.
That is what a bot would type.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
lutzj wrote:EdgarJPublius wrote:I'm given to believe that modern IEDs are capable of being detonated by the interruption of cellular signals, and/or by jamming signals.
Giving the government the authorization to block cellular communications is not likely to solve the problem.
You'd have to be a pretty ballsy bomb-maker to build something that goes off whenever it loses cell service. The government should have the capability to temporary infrastructure for all sorts of reasons, although in the case of cell coverage those situations are very specific and rare.
Roosevelt wrote:I wrote:Does Space Teddy Roosevelt wrestle Space Bears and fight the Space Spanish-American War with his band of Space-volunteers the Space Rough Riders?
Yes.
Shivahn wrote:I'm not sure it's often the case when a bomb is about to be triggered by a cell phone trigger and the police also know that this trigger is set up this way and also it's the only trigger and they just need to find it. It seems that Hollywood is almost the only time something like that happens.
addams wrote: There is no such thing as an Unbiased Jury.
Belial wrote:I'm all outraged out. Call me when the violent rebellion starts.
Randomizer wrote:So... does anyone think it was justified when Egypt shut down cell phones and the internet? Was it justified when BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) in San Francisco, California shut down cell phone service? Would it be justified to shut down suspected rioters use of social media, as was being considered by David Cameron in the British Parliament?
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
sourmìlk wrote:Randomizer wrote:So... does anyone think it was justified when Egypt shut down cell phones and the internet? Was it justified when BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) in San Francisco, California shut down cell phone service? Would it be justified to shut down suspected rioters use of social media, as was being considered by David Cameron in the British Parliament?
Nobody here would be okay with that.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
sourmìlk wrote:We give the government a few powers that we'd prefer they not use other than in extenuating circumstances, and I'm okay with that because if they abuse it, there are systems to hold them accountable. If police bust into a place without a warrant because they feel they have probable cause, but they really don't, they can be held accountable by the courts.
Soralin wrote:sourmìlk wrote:We give the government a few powers that we'd prefer they not use other than in extenuating circumstances, and I'm okay with that because if they abuse it, there are systems to hold them accountable. If police bust into a place without a warrant because they feel they have probable cause, but they really don't, they can be held accountable by the courts.
And how are those systems working out? If police bust into a place without a warrant, they could theoretically be held accountable, but what do you think the chances are of that actually happening?
Soralin wrote:sourmìlk wrote:We give the government a few powers that we'd prefer they not use other than in extenuating circumstances, and I'm okay with that because if they abuse it, there are systems to hold them accountable. If police bust into a place without a warrant because they feel they have probable cause, but they really don't, they can be held accountable by the courts.
And how are those systems working out? If police bust into a place without a warrant, they could theoretically be held accountable, but what do you think the chances are of that actually happening?
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
BattleMoose wrote:I certainly don't think police are abusing their power to search homes with a warrant and certainly challenge the assumption that the police will abuse any additional powers that are granted to them.
The police have a lot of authority, well above and beyond those of an ordinary citizen and they do not abuse this authority at their every whim.
This attitude that the police will abuse any additional powers granted to them (and inherently that the current amount of authority they have is the perfect amount) is just an assumption, a completely unqualified one I might add and one that I challenge.
Nordic Einar wrote:BattleMoose wrote:I certainly don't think police are abusing their power to search homes with a warrant and certainly challenge the assumption that the police will abuse any additional powers that are granted to them.
The police have a lot of authority, well above and beyond those of an ordinary citizen and they do not abuse this authority at their every whim.
This attitude that the police will abuse any additional powers granted to them (and inherently that the current amount of authority they have is the perfect amount) is just an assumption, a completely unqualified one I might add and one that I challenge.
Come down to D.C. and ask some local trans women about the Metropolitan Police Department and how great they are at "not abusing their authority at their every whim."
I imagine your perspective will change.
sourmìlk wrote:Well you have the plan for the worst, so you should operate under the assumption that power may be abused (otherwise we can just give the government unlimited power). The trick is to place limits on it and ensure that there are systems in place to prevent and then punish abuses of power.
Police in general tend to have bad track records with trans* people. I don't know if DC is worse than other cities, but it's bad enough that there's a whole coalition specifically about it.BattleMoose wrote:For the most part, I suspect the police are probably acting unlawfully. There is plenty of that. But for the purposes of actually having a sensible discussion, it would be enlightening to learn which powers the police are specifically abusing in relation to trans women in D.C.
General_Norris, on feminism, wrote:If you lose your six Pokémon, you lost.
BattleMoose wrote:Nordic Einar wrote:BattleMoose wrote:I certainly don't think police are abusing their power to search homes with a warrant and certainly challenge the assumption that the police will abuse any additional powers that are granted to them.
The police have a lot of authority, well above and beyond those of an ordinary citizen and they do not abuse this authority at their every whim.
This attitude that the police will abuse any additional powers granted to them (and inherently that the current amount of authority they have is the perfect amount) is just an assumption, a completely unqualified one I might add and one that I challenge.
Come down to D.C. and ask some local trans women about the Metropolitan Police Department and how great they are at "not abusing their authority at their every whim."
I imagine your perspective will change.
For the most part, I suspect the police are probably acting unlawfully. There is plenty of that. But for the purposes of actually having a sensible discussion, it would be enlightening to learn which powers the police are specifically abusing in relation to trans women in D.C.
Princess Marzipan wrote:Police in general tend to have bad track records with trans* people. I don't know if DC is worse than other cities, but it's bad enough that there's a whole coalition specifically about it.BattleMoose wrote:For the most part, I suspect the police are probably acting unlawfully. There is plenty of that. But for the purposes of actually having a sensible discussion, it would be enlightening to learn which powers the police are specifically abusing in relation to trans women in D.C.
http://www.dctranscoalition.org/
http://metroweekly.com/poliglot/2012/02 ... tabil.html
General_Norris, on feminism, wrote:If you lose your six Pokémon, you lost.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
Nordic Einar wrote:It means we sure as fuck better be wary about giving the government power that infringes on civil liberties, because the likelihood of them abusing that power - and the likelihood that those abused by that power are going to be people w/ little power to fight back - is historically pretty fucking high. And clear, concise, and enforceable systems of oversight had better be set up before power is given.
As things stand, not expanding the already massive power of the government in the arena of limiting civil rights for dubious or unlikely "safety" concerns is probably the safest way to insure no government abuses of power occur.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
Refresh my memory, who exactly made that argument?sourmìlk wrote:but it's distinct from the argument that we can't give the government more power because it might abuse it.
General_Norris, on feminism, wrote:If you lose your six Pokémon, you lost.
Terry Pratchett wrote:The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it.
Verifiable discipline taken against MPD officers who violate policy related to trans people. Both 2010 and 2011 saw egregious attacks on trans people by police officers. In one case, while no criminal proceedings took place, MPD has been unable to explain whether or not the offending officer is still patrolling the streets, potentially endangering the lives of other trans people.
So-called "Prostitution Free Zones" are anti-loitering laws that allow police to declare a neighborhood a 'PFZ' for up to 20ish days. While an area is a PFZ, individuals in that area whom police have a "reasonable suspicion" of engaging in prostitution can be asked to vacate the area, and it is then unlawful for them to return to the area (AT ALL) for the remainder of the PFZ. Things that count as "reasonable suspicion"? Standing in a group of two or more. Having more than 3 condoms in their person. Talking to anyone in a car, as a pedestrian.
In essence, these zones have become "Trans Free Zones". Trans women, particularly trans women of color, are forced to vacate areas (which are often, like, major residential areas or major business areas where tons of non-sex work related social interaction take place) and are then barred from entering those areas again, all because they were "walking while trans." Trans women are constantly harassed by police in these areas because, as far as many MPD officers are concerned, "If I see a trans woman walking down K Street after 11, I absolutely assume she's a prostitute. That's exactly what she's doing, it always is."*
We're talking about government that doesn't feel it needs to disclose its interpretation of the law to the public. I am not okay with this government having the power to shut down the public's communication networks.BattleMoose wrote:Curiously if we don't provide the authority to limit wireless communication with the appropriate requirements and they still apply it inappropriately then it is still an unlawful act.
Yes. We should.BattleMoose wrote:We should be incredibly expedient in dealing with unlawful acts performed by the police force or even the judiciary.
General_Norris, on feminism, wrote:If you lose your six Pokémon, you lost.
Princess Marzipan wrote:We're talking about government that doesn't feel it needs to disclose its interpretation of the law to the public. I am not okay with this government having the power the shut down to public's communication networks.BattleMoose wrote:Curiously if we don't provide the authority to limit wireless communication with the appropriate requirements and they still apply it inappropriately then it is still an unlawful act.
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