Comment Re:Correction: 4,300 times (Score 1) 83
These are searches with warrants, so no NSL.
These are searches with warrants, so no NSL.
It depends what they are doing. TFA describes a situation where a murderer was found because he kept the victim's phone (on!) in his house. I have no problem with using cell phone intercept to track down a murder suspect in a situation like this, although the degree of stupidity required for this to work is astonishing. So based on the article we don't actually know that there were lax procedures. I'm not saying there weren't, but getting a court order for this sort of thing is precisely what they should be doing, so I'm having trouble seeing this particular revelation as something about which we should be deeply concerned. 25,000 searches over eight years is really not that many in a city the size of Baltimore if, e.g., they are using the device to track down stolen phones.
I take exception to your claim that the rest of us are base (nor do I assert that all Christians are hypocrites—just the ones who actually are). But thank you for the thought!
Sweet! Where do I sign? Wait, is NSA into life extension therapy as well as surveillance?
Is there some sense in which this comment is meaningful or useful?
Is the word "entrapment" mentioned anywhere in the message to which you are replying?
Terrorists are interested in instigating terror. If they were as big a danger as they are said to be, they would already have let off a bomb in an airport security line and killed a hundred people waiting to be screened. The fact that this hasn't happened either means that the government has a machine that watches our every move and knows who is going to set off bombs, in which case they don't need these stings, or else it means that there really aren't that many people who are interested in committing mass murder who are able to get into the United States and act on that wish.
Anarchy beats the crap out of misarchy. Personally I prefer democracy.
17.3.
Dumb question. The job of the FBI is to arrest people who commit crimes. They should arrest exactly those people, and no other people. Of course it's an imperfect science, and they will miss some criminals and arrest some innocent people. But a key demographic they should avoid is arresting people who wouldn't have committed crimes without their help, because it is explicitly not their job to instigate criminal activity.
Christianity forbids warfare outright (Aquinas notwithstanding), and yet look at all the wars that have been fought in the name of Jesus, and all the "christian nations" that have fought wars for supposedly just causes. If you're going to lay terrorism at the feet of Islam, at least get the rest of the story straight.
5.0.1 totally killed the battery in my Nexus 5, but I replaced it (thanks, Amazon for the battery and iFixit for the spudgers) and stuck with 4.4.4 until 5.1 came out. I'm running 5.1 now with no issues. I'm not saying that there are no problems, but this is probably a configuration-dependent issue, so a factory reset ought to fix it.
It's not clear to me that Americans are being offered these jobs. The problem is that Americans have legal rights, including minimum wage, so if you give an American a job you were paying an illegal alien (how can a person be illegal, anyway, but I digress) to do, and you try to pay them what you were paying the illegal person, they will be in a position of power over you, whereas the illegal person would have no power.
So if you want the kind of parity you are asking for, the cure is to get rid of the idea of "illegal" workers. If someone is present, they can work.
I think bl968 was chiming in in agreement, adding additional corroborating information.
"The lazy" sinking to the bottom is a commonly-held belief, but in fact being at the bottom is a lot more work than being at the top. It's not because people are "lazy" that they remain at the bottom. It's because most of the value their work produces is taken as profit by their employers, and they are paid the absolute minimum that their employers can get away with. If they were getting a decent cut of the value they create, they wouldn't be poor. That's not to say that there aren't lazy people at the bottom living corruptly, but the claim that if you are at the bottom, you are lazy, is a fallacy.
What's off-topic is that they advised the PTO to take specific action with respect to a specific applicant.
BLISS is ignorance.