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Daily Archives: March 4, 2015
The Surveillance State's Greatest Enemy? The U.S. Constitution
Posted: March 4, 2015 at 4:47 am
Even if proponents of the NSA win over public opinion, their agenda will still be contrary to the Fourth Amendment.
When The Washington Post reported that 63 percent of Americans are "willing to give up personal privacy to let the federal government investigate terror threats," the polling data seemed like bad news for privacy activists and civil libertarians. But Reihan Salam argues that the 32 percent of Americans who oppose giving up privacy in the name of national security are winning. "They dont need a majority of the electorate to embrace their position in order to achieve their goals," he writes. "They merely need a vocal, well-organized minority."
To support that analysis, he points to the experience of gun owners, who've defeated various firearms restrictions even when a majority of Americans favored them. The intensity of their pro-gun views helps them to succeed, he observed, as do their strong social bonds, facilitated by pastimes like hunting and going to gun shows, where they see other gun owners, spread political information, and channel their intense views. Gun control advocates have no equivalent social ties.
Salam believes that surveillance skeptics have a similar edge over surveillance defenders:
No, not all of Snowdens biggest fans in America are affluent, well-educated libertarian technophiles who spend much of their spare time socializing on lesser-known corners of the Web. But these groups certainly overlap. Just as hunting and target shooting are ways that older gun owners cement social bonds, gaming and obsessively following Reddit could serve much the same function among young surveillance skeptics. Libertarian Republicans like Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie, Michigan Rep. Justin Amash, and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul have recognized the growing power of this constituency, and they cater to it by regularly addressing libertarian groups and pushing for surveillance reform...
...it gets worse for the defenders of surveillance authority. The Snowden revelations didnt just make working for the NSA less attractive. As Julian Sanchez, a privacy expert at the libertarian Cato Institute has explained, the revelations badly embarrassed major U.S. technology companies, particularly those that have substantial operations outside of the country. Suddenly the notion that Google and Facebook were essentially arms of the U.S. government seemed like more than a paranoid fantasy, particularly to consumers in Europe and Asia already inclined toward anti-Americanism. Before the revelations, these companies could work closely with the U.S. government to facilitate its surveillance efforts without ever being held to account. Even if they objected to getting pushed around by Uncle Sam behind closed doors, they had little incentive to make a stink about it, as doing so could jeopardize their business by raising suspicions. After the revelations, the international reputation of U.S. tech giants took a hit, and they had little choice but to push back forcefully and to ally themselves with civil liberties groups.
While I don't know who will ultimately win the fight over surveillance policy, these are, indeed, among the factors that give privacy advocates a fighting chance. I'd only add that there is an even bigger advantage that civil libertarians can press, and it too is helpfully illuminated by way of analogy to the gun-control debate. The NRA's most significant advantage is the 2nd Amendment. With its adoption, the Framers decided that the right to bear arms should be protected even in a future instance when a majority of the public and the legislature might feel otherwise.
Surveillance policy is comparable: 63 percent of Americans may be willing to sacrifice privacy in the War on Terrorism, but they lack the power to overturn the Fourth Amendment. Many seem to have forgotten its actual text, so here it is in full:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
That is the law of the land. And the NSA is violating its letter and spirit, no matter how many times its defenders use dubious legal reasoning to argue otherwise. The right of the people to be secure in their "persons, houses, papers, and effects" is meaningless if the NSA can seize and later search details about everyone's communications. The requirements for probable cause and particularity cannot be squared with surveillance that implicates practically everyone. The Fourth Amendment's historic attempt to end general warrants cannot be viewed as a success so long as the government is prying into the private affairs of tens of millions of people who are not even suspected of any wrongdoing.
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The Surveillance State's Greatest Enemy? The U.S. Constitution
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Funeral protest restrictions move ahead in Legislature
Posted: at 4:47 am
DES MOINES A bill to extend the buffer zone between funerals and protests from 500 to 1,000 feet won House Judiciary subcommittee approval despite a lawmakers warning the Legislature should not infringe on First Amendment free speech rights.
HSB 157 was proposed by Rep. Bobby Kaufmann, R-Wilton, in response to protests by members of Westboro Baptist Church at military funerals.
Rep. Zach Nunn, R-Bondurant, said the bill will help deal with protesters using hate speech and attempting to cover it under the First Amendment.
However, Rep. Jake Highfill, R-Johnston, said that although the Westboro protesters are sick and wrong and I certainly couldnt disagree with them more, the intent of the First Amendment is not to protect popular opinion.
The bill goes to the full Judiciary Committee, which is scheduled to meet again Wednesday afternoon.
The bill also provides for liquidated damages for infliction of emotional distress upon military family members of up to $10,000 per person
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Funeral protest restrictions move ahead in Legislature
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Funeral protest restrictions move forward in Legislature
Posted: at 4:47 am
DES MOINES | A bill to extend the buffer zone between funerals and protests from 500 to 1,000 feet won House Judiciary subcommittee approval despite a lawmakers warning the Legislature should not infringe on First Amendment free speech rights.
HSB 157 was proposed by Rep. Bobby Kaufmann, R-Wilton, in response to protests by members of Westboro Baptist Church at military funerals.
Rep. Zach Nunn, R-Bondurant, said the bill will help deal with protesters using hate speech and attempting to cover it under the First Amendment.
However, Rep. Jake Highfill, R-Johnston, said that although the Westboro protesters are sick and wrong and I certainly couldnt disagree with them more, the intent of the First Amendment is not to protect popular opinion.
The bill goes to the full Judiciary Committee, which is scheduled to meet again Wednesday afternoon.
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Funeral protest restrictions move forward in Legislature
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Funeral protest restrictions move forward in Iowa Legislature
Posted: at 4:47 am
Protesters would be subject to 1,000 foot buffer zone
March 3, 2015 | 11:16 am
DES MOINES A bill to extend the buffer zone between funerals and protests from 500 to 1,000 feet won House Judiciary subcommittee approval despite a lawmakers warning the Legislature should not infringe on First Amendment free speech rights.
HSB 157 was proposed by Rep. Bobby Kaufmann, R-Wilton, in response to protests by members of Westboro Baptist Church at military funerals.
Rep. Zach Nunn, R-Bondurant, said the bill will help deal with protesters using hate speech and attempting to cover it under the First Amendment.
However, Rep. Jake Highfill, R-Johnston, said that although the Westboro protesters are sick and wrong and I certainly couldnt disagree with them more, the intent of the First Amendment is not to protect popular opinion.
The bill goes to the full Judiciary Committee, which is scheduled to meet again Wednesday afternoon.
The bill also provides for liquidated damages for infliction of emotional distress upon military family members of up to $10,000 per person.
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Funeral protest restrictions move forward in Iowa Legislature
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Wilton Rep. Kaufmann's funeral protest bill moves forward
Posted: at 4:47 am
DES MOINES, Iowa A bill to extend the buffer zone between funerals and protests from 500 to 1,000 feet won House Judiciary subcommittee approval despite a lawmakers warning the Legislature should not infringe on First Amendment free speech rights.
HSB 157 (http://bit.ly/1Cq3fWY)was proposed by Rep. Bobby Kaufmann, R-Wilton, in response to protests by members of Westboro Baptist Church at military funerals.
Rep. Zach Nunn, R-Bondurant, said the bill will help deal with protesters using hate speech and attempting to cover it under the First Amendment.
However, Rep. Jake Highfill, R-Johnston, said that although the Westboro protesters are sick and wrong and I certainly couldnt disagree with them more, the intent of the First Amendment is not to protect popular opinion.
The bill goes to the full Judiciary Committee, which is scheduled to meet again Wednesday afternoon.
The bill also provides for liquidated damages for infliction of emotional distress upon military family members of up to $10,000 per person.
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Wilton Rep. Kaufmann's funeral protest bill moves forward
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Bitcoin – Cryptocurrency – Satoshi – Virtual Currency – Digital Dollars 2015 – Video
Posted: at 4:46 am
Bitcoin - Cryptocurrency - Satoshi - Virtual Currency - Digital Dollars 2015
Please "Sucribe to my channel" and "LIKE" this Video! #Repost @victims_of_miseducation Lol sizzla went off in this interview on the world. He also mentio...
By: Evan Baum
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Bitcoin - Cryptocurrency - Satoshi - Virtual Currency - Digital Dollars 2015 - Video
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primedice Win Chance 66.99% BTC.bitcoin Dice – Video
Posted: at 4:46 am
primedice Win Chance 66.99% BTC.bitcoin Dice
URL :https://primedice.com/?ref=Waliid site : http://bitcoin-values.blogspot.com Waliid Bitcoin Address : 1KwkvEHXqsjSRECkHRTkLHspMNwtMhiDRM.
By: Profit BTC
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primedice Win Chance 66.99% BTC.bitcoin Dice - Video
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#SPPL_ShcooL: Bitcoin – Video
Posted: at 4:46 am
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Please donate to Bella the canary by Bitcoin. – Video
Posted: at 4:46 am
Please donate to Bella the canary by Bitcoin.
You can donate to cute red canary #39;Bella #39; by your bitcoin. It #39;s a kind of bitcoin donation.
By: Jinsoo Shin
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Please donate to Bella the canary by Bitcoin. - Video
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Too soon to change tax treatment of Bitcoin, Treasury says
Posted: at 4:46 am
The Treasury has been monitoring Bitcoin in Australia both from a regulatory perspective and a tax perspective and believes that it is too soon to change taxation laws to provide a boost to local Bitcoin-based businesses.
"I think we will continue to assess the environment, but I would stress that it is an industry in its infancy, so I think to jump in and suggest that there should be changes to the tax law to accommodate it is a little bit early in that process," Kate Preston, general manager of the Treasury's Small Business Tax Division, said.
Treasury and Australian Taxation Office officials today fronted the Senate's inquiry into digital currencies, which is looking at the regulatory environment governing the use of Bitcoin and other crypto-currencies.
"I think the Treasury view would be [that] taxation is not where you start, where there's a lack of a sense from the Tax Office that the current laws aren't working," Preston said.
The establishment of the digital currencies inquiry followed the issuing last year of a set of draft ATO rulings, which have since been finalised, on the treatment of Bitcoin.
Under Australia's existing tax regime, Bitcoin is more akin to a commodity than a currency, the ATO ruled.
The decision has upset Australia Bitcoin businesses, representatives of which at an earlier hearing of the inquiry said that it could drive the nascent industry offshore into other, more-accommodating jurisdictions.
At the heart of the issue is the GST burden incurred by the use of Bitcoin. Under the ATO's ruling, businesses must charge GST when supplying the crypto-currency and when being paid in Bitcoin.
"We recognise in some commercial circumstances there can be double taxation," Michael Hardy, ATO senior assistant commissioner, told today's hearing.
"It's a feature of barter transactions," Hardy said.
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Too soon to change tax treatment of Bitcoin, Treasury says
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