Post it herehttp://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/26/business/26nocera.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1
3/26/2011 8:48:04 AM
Don't you love it when the government creates large databases of information on citizens and then wages a private war against you, with no probable cause or reasonable suspicion, or warrants, and ends up throwing you into a facility for a few years! And people wonder why I'm completely against government citizen information databases, especially those in the hands of enforcement officials.
3/26/2011 9:37:21 AM
^ that sounds to me more like a person on a power trip than a "police state".
3/26/2011 9:48:24 AM
lets all vote for socialism, that will make things better
3/26/2011 10:08:13 AM
^^ In Chance's defense, evidence of police state activities are generally considered secrets required to Protect the Homeland™ and Keep Us Safe™.
3/26/2011 10:10:45 AM
This article does seem to suggest that the United States is a country in which there are police.
3/26/2011 10:24:36 AM
so a guy lies to get a loan, defaults on them, contributes to the housing collapse in his own individual way, and he's a good guy? is that the gist of this thread?or is it that the lenders got away with it so he should too. since 40% of murders are never solved, should the other 60% get off too?
3/26/2011 10:50:58 AM
I took it as saying how it's bullshit that the gov't only goes after the small time shit here... they'd hate to lose their best buds in the banking and housing markets by actually holding them responsible for their actions.I have no problem with this guy serving time for his wrongdoing, because in the end, the recession was due to multiple people/reasons, including greedy banks and people (from the CEOs of banks to crooked home buyers). I just have a problem with the way the gov't went about their business with this guy.[Edited on March 26, 2011 at 10:57 AM. Reason : .]
3/26/2011 10:55:41 AM
The government did go after some of the bigger fish. They just weren't able, for whatever reason, to build a strong legal case against them. There is a legitimate (it seems) argument to be made that the lack of successful prosecutions against banking executives is due to inadequate resources to pursue such cases. And it could very well be that the lack of resources is due to a nefarious relationship between financial services companies and the government agencies charged with regulating them. But that makes this a corruption/good governance issue, not a "police state" issue. The term "police state" is so overused that it hardly means anything anymore. Perhaps this is why any criticism of the world's real authoritarian regimes always returns some ridiculous moral equivalency about how the US is "just as bad."[Edited on March 26, 2011 at 11:30 AM. Reason : ]
3/26/2011 11:18:32 AM
Don't blame me, I voted for Corporate Monarchy!
3/26/2011 12:07:23 PM
^^Yeah, I'm afraid I'm not following the "police state" part of this either.
3/26/2011 12:34:52 PM
3/26/2011 1:02:11 PM
3/26/2011 1:40:31 PM
3/26/2011 2:11:05 PM
3/26/2011 2:12:51 PM
http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/cri_pri_per_cap-crime-prisoners-per-capitaCrime Statistics > Prisoners > Per capita (most recent) by country # 1 United States: 715 per 100,000 people
3/26/2011 2:43:39 PM
Our drug laws, as Draconian and wrong-headed as they may be, are not so much meant to protect people from themselves as they are meant to protect society from the harmful effects that are caused by mind-altering substances. Whether those threats are real or imagined, or simply exaggerated, is a legitimate question. But the laws meant to protect against them, and the enforcement of those laws, is not evidence of a police state, at least under any historically appropriate definition of the term.If this were a police state, you would not be allowed to post such accusations without the threat of federal agents promptly whisking you off to an indefinite prison term for "threatening the peace" or some such nonsense. That's what happens in police states.[Edited on March 26, 2011 at 3:32 PM. Reason : ]
3/26/2011 3:28:10 PM
Yeah, dude. Can't have pot users destroying the moral fabric of society, or anything.From Wikipedia:
3/26/2011 5:35:29 PM
And by Wikipedia's definition, what's been described in this thread as evidence of a police state is hardly that.
3/27/2011 9:05:05 AM
3/27/2011 11:15:33 AM
I learned today that possession of a gun permit or concealed carry permit is considered the same as a violent criminal history and can be used to to issue a no-knock warrant against you rather than traditional method of serving you papers.
3/27/2011 1:03:21 PM
Wait until you shoot at the police in your own home while they're executing one of those no knock warrants.
3/27/2011 2:06:49 PM
I think the police should use calling cards. The officers would leave a business card with your door servant requesting the pleasure of your company. You could then order your errand servant to drop off your personal card at the police station, indicating that a visit from the police would not be unwelcome. If, however, you return your calling card to them in an envelope, the constables would know that a personal meeting is undesired and drop the whole matter in the interests of proper etiquette.
3/27/2011 2:14:51 PM
Have you ever read Anna Karenina?
3/27/2011 2:17:51 PM
I find that Tolstoy lacked brevity. He really just needed a good editor.
3/27/2011 2:23:44 PM
Massive police resources are spent to put a man in jail whose crime was a technicality on his mortgage loan. He didn't have the monthly-income he stated on the loan, though his annual income was equal to the aggregate monthly income. The mortgage broker not receive the same punishment, despite the fact that he was aware of the fraud, and, in fact, encouraged it.It's ridiculous. Not really evidence of a "Police State", but of the poor judgement and/or callousness of federal prosecutors.
3/27/2011 2:36:04 PM
^
3/27/2011 3:35:33 PM
3/27/2011 4:24:06 PM
I'm confused. So some IRS guy got suspicious, and went snooping. When his tax records checked out, why did the IRS have any authority to continue further? Were his loans federally backed or something? I get that he committed fraud on his mortgage, but isn't that up to the bank / lender to push for prosecution?
3/27/2011 4:33:40 PM
actually, it's not even clear that he committed fraud on his mortgage. There article claims that it appears the guy's signature was forged on the loan that would have been "fraudulent." Not only that, the guy who processed the "fraudulent loan" was convicted of mortgage fraud, himself, and got a reduced sentence for testifying against Engle. you do the math. That's absurd reasonable doubt right there[Edited on March 27, 2011 at 5:11 PM. Reason : ]
3/27/2011 5:10:26 PM
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2011/03/riaa-lobbyist-becomes-federal-judge-rules-on-file-sharing-cases.ars
3/28/2011 6:27:01 PM
The police, district attorney and judge all work for the same employer. The same guy signs all of their checks. They all have the same motivation. We, the public, don't care what they do as long as they keep the undesirables out of our hair.It should be no surprise that when you allow the executive branch to appoint judges they all work for the same political goal.It's kinda funny when they (very rarely) fight though. Here's an example where the police try to have a judge arrested when he refuses to sign a warrant they want.http://apublicdefender.com/2011/03/25/state-police-want-to-arrest-judge-who-refused-to-sign-arrest-warrant/[Edited on March 28, 2011 at 7:34 PM. Reason : .]
3/28/2011 7:30:14 PM
^^ I can't imagine that would hold up. having been effectively employed by one of the parties in the suit is grounds for immediate recusal.
3/28/2011 9:10:37 PM
Who's going to make her recuse herself? The only people that can investigate are the Obama administration, and they are taking a very tough stance on file sharing. Like making it a criminal felony:http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/ip_white_paper.pdf
3/28/2011 9:25:13 PM
we have this thing called "an appeals process." The whole case will be thrown out on appeal almost instantly because an RIAA lobbyist was the fucking judge. This isn't that hard to figure out
3/28/2011 9:42:52 PM
Appeals only work if the next court level DECIDES to hear it. It's turtles all the way down.
3/28/2011 10:44:55 PM
true. but this case seems like one that would be hard to ignore. again, someone who was once on the payroll of one of the parties involved is the judge?
3/28/2011 10:49:01 PM
Move along citizen...
3/28/2011 10:52:47 PM
3/29/2011 7:16:08 AM
3/29/2011 11:21:56 AM
How to survive in any country: Don't rock the boat.
4/1/2011 11:06:22 AM
ReasonTV (libertarians): Radley Balko on the 3 Worst Cases of Police Abuse in 2011Due to the violence depicted and discussed in this video, viewer discretion is advised.The 1991 beating of Rodney King by the Los Angeles Police Department, which came to light after being caught on video by a citizen trying out a video camera, ushered in a new age of transparency and openness when it comes to law enforcement.Since then, sound and vision from any number of sources - including cell-phone cams and pocket recorders, not to mention footage shot by police themselves - have captured law enforcement in action in a wide range of circumstances. Sometimes, the footage exonerates the police and sometimes it incriminates them. Always, though, we as citizens gain from having a better sense of how law enforcement operates, even (or especially) when what we see is hugely disturbing.Reason.tv's Nick Gillespie talked with Reason columnist Radley Balko, proprietor of The Agitator and a long-time student of the increasing militarization of police. We asked Balko to talk about he thinks are the three most-schocking videos of police abuse that have come to light so far in 2011.Ironically, Balko notes that widespread video of police at work gives rise to the misimpression that such violent abuse is on the rise while police are almost certainly more respectful of civil liberties than they were 50 or 60 years ago. He argues that it's precisely because citizens and watchdogs (including many with the law enforcement community) have more tools at their disposal to ferret out abuse that better practices are being employed.Approximately 5.30 minutes. Shot and edited by Josh Swain, with camera assists by Meredith Bragg and Jim Epstein.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVf-iintxiocontains:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WV6Bq8xeQrUhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcxqyp2wOzEhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yx6iSZMlRMM
4/1/2011 11:32:45 AM
4/1/2011 11:34:24 AM
The right to record a police encounter, or any encounter not covered by business NDAs, should be a human right held in higher regard than gun rights.And I support gun rights. It's in our F-ing bill of rights. But the people who wrote it only had the information of their time. If they had known about recording tech and the internet now, they would have included that. If you have any concept of considering the motivations and human rights philosophy behind the founding fathers, then this should be the top priority human rights issue in the US.
4/1/2011 11:42:30 AM
Not only should recording any and all police encounters be legal (that's a no brainer), but police should be required to have an audio/video recording device on their person at all times.
4/1/2011 12:15:32 PM
4/1/2011 12:26:19 PM
4/1/2011 1:11:53 PM
Here is a terrific example.http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704425804576220383673608952.html?mod=googlenews_wsjThis man is being prosecuted for counterfeiting when he didn't counterfeit American money. His "crime" was doing something that the Federal Government didn't like because it helps expose their sham.How can you be illegally prosecuted for a crime you didn't commit? This legitimate businessman is being held as a political prisoner of the US.
4/3/2011 2:14:36 AM
Judge Prescribes "Indefinite Detention", locks up girl for 10 years over $100 in bad checks, much of it in solitary confinement. Everyone in the town is afraid of her, even local newspapers. Local sheriff refuses to release incriminating public records to the media.http://www.thisamericanlife.org/sites/default/files/transcript_430.pdf[Edited on April 3, 2011 at 7:52 AM. Reason : .]
4/3/2011 7:48:02 AM
4/3/2011 10:34:05 AM