actually .. it does make him right. the fact that the government was breaking the law and lying about it shows the very agencies in question were not open to discussion of their illegal activities, by anyone .. especially a low level it geek, and of course not Congress and the public either.
No, both can be wrong. And in this case are. Amazing how some folks want to trash Congress as bloated incompetents EXCEPT when they want to say Congress are the paragons of truth and justice. Sadly, Congress and the White House have a long and injurious history of leaking important intelligence.
here is my ultimate rebuttal Old-thing ..
Benjamin Franklin once said: "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." That quote often comes up in the context of new technology and concerns about government surveillance.Mar 2, 2015
and if you dig around, you'll find this quote doesn't mean what most take it for today. has more to do with oppressive taxes. but it fits this narrative quite well whether Franklin intended it to or not.
Quotes like that are so incredibly overly simplistic. You CAN NOT have near complete security without sacrificing some liberty. It IS a trade, and the question is where to balance it. When people throw that quote around they usually mean "Don't take away any of MY freedoms, but feel free to stop and frisk others (as an example) that don't live and look like me."
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Originally Posted by The_Waco_Kid
"is it? did or did not Clapper lie about the depth of the surveillance? he did. that's perjury in the face of a congressional appearance. and you think they'd pay any attention to a low level analyst's complains when they were prepared to lie to congress and the public about it?"
If Clapper lied, that in no way means that Snowden told the truth.
"what other things? don't you know now how the controlled media spins whatever narrative their political masters demand? they "say" he gave other items yet the reporters he contacted say otherwise."
Let's see: according to you, the media spins with no guilt. EXCEPT when you WANT to believe these particular reporters. And when you WANT to believe that Snowden told them the truth. Rather selective and subjective in who you believe.
actually .. it does make him right. the fact that the government was breaking the law and lying about it shows the very agencies in question were not open to discussion of their illegal activities, by anyone .. especially a low level it geek, and of course not Congress and the public either.
No, both can be wrong. And in this case are. Amazing how some folks want to trash Congress as bloated incompetents EXCEPT when they want to say Congress are the paragons of truth and justice. Sadly, Congress and the White House have a long and injurious history of leaking important intelligence.
here is my ultimate rebuttal Old-thing ..
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Benjamin Franklin once said: "Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." That quote often comes up in the context of new technology and concerns about government surveillance.Mar 2, 2015
and if you dig around, you'll find this quote doesn't mean what most take it for today. has more to do with oppressive taxes. but it fits this narrative quite well whether Franklin intended it to or not.
Quotes like that are so incredibly overly simplistic. You CAN NOT have near complete security without sacrificing some liberty. It IS a trade, and the question is where to balance it. When people throw that quote around they usually mean "Don't take away any of MY freedoms, but feel free to stop and frisk others (as an example) that don't live and look like me."
Originally Posted by The_Waco_Kid
Your assumption is that what this person has written is the truth..
I don't assume anything. The author did his own homework. He tells us exactly what he bases his conclusion on for each Snowden lie. Which points do you challenge and why?
The real issue is that the NSA was in violation, the man made multiple attempts to whistle blow and was shot down, he did what any true patriot of the Constitution would do and exposed it.
If that was ALL he did, we wouldn't be having this convo. You left out the rest of what he did. Why did he download 1.5 million documents, including the most sensitive NSA secrets, when only a tiny fraction of them had anything to do with domestic surveillance? I think he was a fucking spy who tried to cover his tracks by masquerading as a whistle-blower. Someone obviously told him exactly what to copy. The sequence in which he copied those docs is also revealing. Why are you in denial? Are you ok with him handing over the NSA's Level 3 toolkit to our adversaries? Why can't you just say you support his disclosure of what you view as NSA wrong-doings - but you ALSO condemn all those other things he did which severely damaged our nation's security?
Just because the government does it, does not make it right, lawful, or within the framework of our Constitution. It is not the right, responsibility, or even legal for our government to collect the information on the people of these United States of America. At some point somebody has to take a stand.
I'm not sure what information you are so uncomfortable with being in the government's hands. Telephone meta-data showing who we call and the duration of each call? Your phone carrier has long kept those records so they can bill you correctly. If we catch a terrorist, I want the government to know who he was talking to. Don't you?
Isn't Epstein one of those people that believe there was a conspiracy in the assassination of JFK?
He has written extensively on the JFK assassination, but I am not familiar with his views. If he is a conspiracy-monger, that should give him more credibility with you and COG, right? The article I posted appeared in the WSJ last week. It echoes what has been written by numerous other investigators.
I think he also has an issue with journalism and fiction.
Ok then, what exactly in his article do you regard as "fiction" - and why? Originally Posted by The2Dogs
Quotes like that are so incredibly overly simplistic. You CAN NOT have near complete security without sacrificing some liberty. It IS a trade, and the question is where to balance it. Originally Posted by Old-T+1
Trading Liberty for security results in tyranny. Originally Posted by CuteOldGuyBroad statements like this are of little value in reality. Platitudes regarding some belief that we can have "absolute, unfettered "Liberty" in our society ignores the reality that to enjoy Liberties we must also have security to assure we can exercise those Liberties.