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Comment Re:Bureaucrats (Score 1) 312

But you haven't given a link to these "government-supplied statistics".

Because, as I clearly stated, I was too busy to bother with it.

You just said that Lott mentioned them.

He did. But he was not the originator of them.

Surely you can see how a skeptic might want an actual link rather than relying on the word of a man who's so dishonest he even lies about his own gender?

(A) You about as much a "skeptic" as I am actually female. Nothing dishonest about that.

(B) This is completely irrelevant and completely removed from the context of your original comment.

I repeat: learn how to argue. You fail at it. Until you do, stop harassing me.

Comment Re: Not authorized is worse than unconstional. (Score 1) 237

Umm... Blatantly wrong. Cops never HAVE TO read you your rights. If the arrest was legal, they can question you all they want without Miranda. They can't use your answers at trial, that's it. No violation of your rights.

It was a bad example, but the principle is not wrong. According to Miranda v Arizona, the USE IN COURT of statements made during questioning without a Miranda warning is unconstitutional.

So yes, I was wrong in a sense. It would not be the police action that is unconstitutional. It would be the use in court of those statements that was unconstitutional.

That still means my basic point was correct: an act can be unconstitutional.

Comment Re:Seriously...? (Score 1) 241

And it's made much easier by the new FCC regulations, which protect only "lawful" content.

Ideally this would make no difference, as there should no more be a way for an ISP to tell "lawful" from "unlawful" content, than there was for old phone companies to tell "lawful" from "unlawful" phone calls. They're carriers, nothing else. They should have no access to the content of your communications at all, without a warrant.

Quite true, of course. But that's not going to stop this train from moving down this track.

Yes, it will. It's stupid, and people know it's stupid. That's why we're having this conversation today. That's why this idea has gone nowhere since the early '90s, when it was first tried (Clipper Chip + Skipjack). It was stupid then, it is stupid now. Nothing has changed in that regard. Right down to the fact that they're still putting stupid people in charge.

Comment Re:Bureaucrats (Score 1) 312

Well, here's a statistic that many aren't aware of, but Lott does mention it. And it's a particularly compelling point when speaking to people who cite "other countries, like the UK".

Immediately after the last big gun ban in the UK, in 1998, FIREARMS violence DOUBLED... and stayed way up for 8 years. This is according to UK's own government statistics.

After that, it did start to decline... but at the same rate it was declining in other countries like the US, where gun ownership was going steadily up. So there is no valid argument that lack of guns caused the later decline.

I've argued before about this with people from the UK, who didn't seem to know about these statistics... and who suddenly shut up when they were pointed out. (I'd find a link but I'm too busy right now.)

Comment Re:Not authorized is worse than unconstional. (Score 1) 237

We don't know if Congress can authorize such an activity.

I think you and GP are basically saying the same thing there: the court did not rule on the Constitutionality. It did not have to.

I look at it this way an activity isn't constitutional or unconstitutional, its legal or illegal; a law, order, process, or procedure could be unconstitutional

An activity can very definitely be unconstitutional. For example: if you're arrested and not read your rights before questioning, your Constitutional rights have been violated. It's not a procedure or policy to do so, nevertheless the officers involved engaged in an unconstitutional act.

Comment Re:Not authorized is worse than unconstional. (Score 1) 237

The whole thing is silly because it's re-directing the focus to a tiny subset of some archaic historical communication system (phone call metadata).

What's silly about it? Much of the law is all about precedent. In this case, precedent says phone calls (and their metadata) are private, barring a judicial warrant. That's not silly at all... it's quite reasonable.

It's like saying that they shouldn't get to make maps of smoke signal fire pit locations.

It would only be like saying that if the smoke signals were invisible to everybody but the parties at either end plus the "smoke signal carrier", and the smoke signal conversations were therefore intended to be private.

This is all just to distract people from their bulk collection of internet communications; and giving politicians an opportunity to say "see, I'm tough on privacy" without actually accomplishing anything significant.

I disagree, since it's all part of the same conversation.

Comment Re:Sounds completely reasonable (Score 1) 302

Who DOESN'T want minimal government? Even communists and fascists think the policies they support are necessary, and mainstream Republicrats think their policies prevent market failures. I have never met anyone who identified as an "excessarchist", only folks who believe everyone else is being excessive.

Specifically, I am referring to a return to federalism, with the vast majority of citizens' government coming from the state and local levels. You know, the way this system was intended to work.

Comment Re: Not forced... (Score 1) 302

These people randomly speed up and slow down because of changing slope of the road. No one is really paying attention to their speed, and they don't realize that you have to push the pedal a little harder uphill and less downhill to maintain speed.

Most of the time that's correct, but I see it with surprising frequency on level terrain. I think most of them are simply not paying full attention to the road; perhaps they're fiddling with a cell phone.

It's the same reason people sometimes fail to notice that the light has turned green. I mean, why should they pay attention, it's not like they're *driving* or anything...

Comment Re: Not forced... (Score 1) 302

At least in my mind, there's a huge difference between "this person has an infection, or cancer, or heart disease" versus "this person was hurt because a drunk driver ran straight through a stop sign and crashed into them". Does your law make such a distinction?

There is, but we don't consider it when deciding whether to provide medical treatment or not. We punish illegal activity in court not in hospital.

Apparently this is confusing some of you. So I'll explain how it works in the USA.

Hypothetically, let's say you cause a car accident, as in this imaginary accident is 100% your fault. As a result of this accident, another person is injured and requires medical care. Your own car insurance policy has a line item called Bodily Injury Coverage. That coverage would pay for the injured person's medical expenses.

The injured person would not file a claim with their health insurance company (assuming they have one) because you, as the person who caused the accident, are held responsible for any expenses you caused to the injured person.

I was simply asking if car insurance works that way overseas. Instead of a private insurance company that you may or may not have, you have NHS. While the NHS is provided as a public service, the care they provide does have a cost. I wanted to know if NHS bears that cost even when there is an at-fault party who caused the problem, or whether in those specific cases, the at-fault party (via their car insurance liability policy) was expected to cover it.

Comment Re: Not forced... (Score 1) 302

At least in my mind, there's a huge difference between "this person has an infection, or cancer, or heart disease" versus "this person was hurt because a drunk driver ran straight through a stop sign and crashed into them". Does your law make such a distinction?

What coverage differences do you want? Are you suggesting the person hit by a drunk driver should not be covered by insurance in the off-chance they can successfully sue the drunk driver to cover the bill?

You could ask me that, yes. Or you could put just a slight bit of thought into it and consider that there is a more reasonable alternative, which is that the drunk driver's insurance would cover this as part of liability coverage. Perhaps NHS could kick in if that's unavailable?

There's loads of ways this could be done, and since I am not knowledgable about the nuances of laws governing nations across the Atlantic, I ask questions instead of making assumptions. That's all.

Comment Re:Sounds completely reasonable (Score 2) 302

I don't like replying to my own post, but I thought of something that was worth adding. What is happening now to the word "libertarian" is just like what happened to the word "hacker".

If you say "that guy's a hacker" the average person will imagine something nefarious, probably criminal, perhaps something involving identity theft. They aren't likely to picture a hobbyist and technology enthusiast who, by means of skill, manages to get devices (that they legitimately own) to perform creative and useful functions (which harm no one) that were never envisioned by their original makers.

The difference is, "hackers" have gotten so much negative attention in the mass media that the original term is gone and it isn't coming back. The only rational response is to accept this and move on. I don't believe "libertarian" is at that point yet, though it's heading there fast. Is reclaiming a word so important to me? In and of itself, no, not really. What's important to me is for people like you to wake up and realize how easy it is to manipulate you, to prevent you from ever entertaining entire categories of thought and philosophy and thereby to steer your thinking, merely by toying with words. I think that deserves some importance.

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