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Comment Re:Federal vs. local decision (Re:I like...) (Score 1) 643

Is it to far afield to invoke the author's prejudices when dealing with the amendment?

Again, I was referring to the States' (and towns') rights being diminished by the Federal government. Not those of the individuals. So, yes, it is "too far afield".

I'm sorry if I don't put drinking age and speeding in the same category as "enslavement" viz. tyranny -- but I don't think you do either.

It is not in the same category, but that does not diminish my argument: the Feds should not have this power over local governments. The monies they dispense as subsidies are not theirs to attach strings to...

Comment Re:The death of leniency (Score 1) 643

Yes, but abuse of power is always going to a problem

It will be less of a problem if a stupid law is removed from the books. And it will not be for as long as the "upstanding citizens" (those, whom the police like or are afraid of) are not affected by it, because the cops never apply it to them.

Pointlessly punishing people who are easily understood to have done nothing wrong is worse.

The worst is when the pointless punishment is applied to a perfectly innocent person, who pissed the pig off doing something perfectly legal (such as video-taping him). There is no law against video-taping, so the cop may get creative and invoke something else... For example, if it happened in Wyoming in June, the cop may seize your camera on suspicion, a rabbit may have entered the frame — photographing rabbits during the month of June is illegal in Wyoming.

By ensuring, that the ridiculous law is regularly applied to everyone — including cute little girls taking the perfectly adorable pictures of little bunnies — we increase the chances, the stupid law is promptly abolished and can no longer be used to harass innocent people.

Comment Re:Federal vs. local decision (Re:I like...) (Score 1) 643

Congress has been using the power of the purse to bully states into compliance virtually since the Union began

No citations — no argument.

the proposal of forcing cops to wear cameras is a solid and popular one

If it is so solid and popular, why not leave it to the communities themselves to equip their police departments as they please? Because the elites in Washington "know better" than the rest of us in the boondocks?

So then why raise the ideological issue here and now?

How about because "the injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere"?

Would you really be happier if the feds didn't use the power they have

I would've been (much) happier, if the feds did not have this power at all. And that's my point.

This power is very dangerous — by raising taxes and providing this and that "for free" in return, the governments are able to attach all sorts of "strings" to their help. And not all of these requirements are sensible or universally loved — had they been, there would've been no need to mandate them...

Comment Re:Federal vs. local decision (Re:I like...) (Score 1) 643

The federal government has acted as a check on the tyranny of state governments [...]

None of the abuses you listed were fought with the "federal subsidies" method I am decrying.

The method was used instead to abolish the "tyranny" of drinking age being to low, or legal speeds being too high — for just a few examples...

not saying Madison and Jefferson weren't brilliant -- but you shouldn't ask them about oppression

I am not talking about oppression of individuals here — nor have I invoked the names you are invoking, my argument stands on its own, thank you very much — I'm talking about the Federal government bullying local ones.

Comment Re:The death of leniency (Score 1) 643

because sometimes the laws themselves are poorly written or out of date

Sure. But letting the cop decide, whether or not to enforce a particular law gives him too much power — the power, that he (a representative of Executive branch) is not supposed to have. And abuse that power they will.

Comment Re:Will the cameras work? (Score 1) 643

Why not add data retention and verification to the funding requirements

There will be nothing to "retain" nor "verify", if a cop wraps a piece of chewing gum around camera's lens and microphone hole for a few minutes...

There will just be a string of "unexplained malfunctions" nationwide, which the manufacturers will be at a loss to explain...

An automated system could also scan the footage for blackouts and flag it for review

It may be possible to get it to work, yes, but it is going to be a lot harder, than the Senator realizes...

Comment Re:IPCC members (Score 3) 708

Your source does not say that IPCC members are not scientists, as that would be an obvious lie.

A person may remain an academic and retain various titles, but he stops being a scientist when his research is done not to advance knowledge, but to confirm an already held conviction. Perhaps, you did not read to this text:

A panel of climate experts are telling the House Science Committee that politics often gets in the way of good science at the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), as well as in the U.S. government’s own climate research.

Climate scientists and researchers who dissent even slightly from the talking points of politicians and environmental groups are intimidated and ostracized, said one congressional witness. Politics, the witness said, takes a lead role over science in the study of global warming.

Comment Re:The death of leniency (Score 5, Insightful) 643

I know that doesn't sound like a big deal but cops let thousands of people off per day on minor things where people just need a warning.

That may, actually, be a good thing — enforcing police objectivity by ending the selective enforcement (sometimes affectionately referred to as "Prosecutorial Discretion").

Then, if a silly law affects too many people — including judges, mayors, and good-looking women, who would've all gotten off with a warning before — the law may get amended...

Comment Federal vs. local decision (Re:I like...) (Score 4, Insightful) 643

Though I don't think, this particular one is a bad idea, I am worried about the yet another illustration of how the Federal government's control reaches into the crooks and nannies it was never supposed to reach:

If you want federal funding in your community, you've got to fill in the blank

By ratcheting up the Federal taxes, the Federal government has come into position to dictate the terms to local governments, who can neither print money nor raise their taxes to finance themselves without bankrupting local economies. But don't you worry — it is not dictatorship, you can always refuse the federal monies, can you not?

Comment Re:Impacts (Score 3) 708

IPCC not good enough for you?

Certainly not. The panel would be disbanded, if Climate Change turned out to be a hoax so all members are interested in maintaining the fear. The fear may still be justified, but the glaring conflict of interest disqualifies their reports as evidence.

I would not trust them any more, than I would trust an "anti-poverty" politician to eliminate poverty — what is he going to run on come next elections?

Then how about Koch funded 0.01% papers?

You had the opportunity to offer a link, but chose not to... Is it because you don't have one.

Submission + - Comcast allegedly trying to block CenturyLink from entering its territory (arstechnica.com)

mpicpp writes: CenturyLink has accused Comcast of trying to prevent competition in cities and towns by making it difficult for the company to obtain reasonable franchise agreements from local authorities.

CenturyLink made the claim yesterday in a filing that asks the Federal Communications Commission to block Comcast’s proposed acquisition of Time Warner Cable (TWC) or impose conditions that prevent Comcast from using its market power to harm competitors.

Comcast has a different view on the matter, saying that CenturyLink shouldn’t be able to enter Comcast cities unless CenturyLink promises to build out its network to all residents. Without such conditions, poor people might not be offered service, Comcast argues.

Submission + - The DOT wants to know where you are 1

schwit1 writes: What could go wrong? The DOT has proposed that all new cars be required to broadcast their location and speed.

They claim that this data could be used to provide drivers with a warning if their vehicle might be getting too close to another vehicle. It will also be necessary to make driverless cars more reliable.

I wonder what other uses this information could have.

Submission + - Senator wants all US cops to wear video cameras (arstechnica.com)

mpicpp writes: Ferguson teen's shooting death may dramatically expand the surveillance society.

Claire McCaskill, the Democratic senator from Missouri, says police departments nationwide should require their officers to wear body cameras in order to qualify for the hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funding they receive each year.

McCaskill's comments come in the wake of the Ferguson, Missouri, shooting death of Michael Brown and is one of a myriad of calls in the episode's aftermath for police officers to wear video cams.

"Everywhere I go, people now have cameras," McCaskill said Tuesday during a question-and-answer session with voters in her home state. "And police officers are now at a disadvantage because someone can tape the last part of an encounter and not tape the first part of the encounter. And it gives the impression that the police officer has overreacted when they haven't."

The lawmaker did not offer legislation to support her words.

McCaskill, however, is not alone in her thinking. Last week, an online petition asking the White House to require all police departments to wear lapel cameras hit 100,000 signatures. The Obama administration has promised to publicly address petitions reaching 100,000 signatures.

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