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Not a Suicide Pact: The Constitution in a Time of National Emergency (Inalienable Rights) by
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Gabritiaz
is on page 125 of 171
Pp. 135 “European countries have much stricter laws than the United States does against the acquisition of personal information by business firms, and much laxer laws against the acquisition of personal information by government.”
— Feb 20, 2023 02:17PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 125 of 171
Pp. 133 but we later learn that putting cameras photographing everyone on the streets is surreptitious…
— Feb 20, 2023 02:14PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 125 of 171
Pp. 133 prior restraints as an argument for discouraging terrorism
— Feb 20, 2023 02:12PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 125 of 171
Pp. 128 amendments one to five (except two) all have the effect of guaranteeing a measure of privacy
— Feb 20, 2023 02:04PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 100 of 171
Pp. 123 what is he saying about the Ku Klux Klan?
— Feb 19, 2023 05:10PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 100 of 171
Pp. 116 to top it all of, he argues that Islamism = terrorism “Terrorism and religion are tightly entwined in Muslim extremism today”
— Feb 19, 2023 04:58PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 100 of 171
Pp. 110 “As a matter of constitu-
tional law, the government should be allowed to prevent or punish the
knowing publication or other dissemination of classified material con-
cerning national security, provided that the material was classified in
accordance with proper statutory criteria”
— Feb 19, 2023 04:45PM
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tional law, the government should be allowed to prevent or punish the
knowing publication or other dissemination of classified material con-
cerning national security, provided that the material was classified in
accordance with proper statutory criteria”
Gabritiaz
is on page 100 of 171
Pp. 109 he clearly doesn’t likes the Espionage Act’s lack of narrowness…he would have preferred for a stronger censorship in media
— Feb 19, 2023 04:42PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 77 of 171
Pp. 99 …but argues that private conversations (outside of terrorism denominations or context) should remain private
— Feb 18, 2023 04:35PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 77 of 171
Pp. 95 defends larger-scale surveillance…
— Feb 18, 2023 04:32PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 77 of 171
Pp. 93 FISA looks a lot like the 2018 Australian foreign interference laws…at the very least in the US, different from Australia, there are laws to protect the press…but what about the public?
— Feb 18, 2023 04:30PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 77 of 171
Pp. 90 bro, most people would prefer that their phone calls are not under surveillance…which world do you live in?
— Feb 18, 2023 04:23PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 77 of 171
Pp. 88 he argues for an ease on “probable cause” denominations as a hunch is enough for wiretapping
— Feb 18, 2023 04:19PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 77 of 171
Pp. 83 he is defending slavery….
— Feb 18, 2023 04:12PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 77 of 171
Pp. 81 but the value of the information (which makes it into public concern or not) is defined by the ones seeking it (officers and politicians), opening grounds to hyperboles and interpretation…which cannot be a good thing come on
— Feb 18, 2023 04:06PM
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Gabritiaz
is on page 77 of 171
Pp. 81 his claim is related to public concern arguments tho
— Feb 18, 2023 04:04PM
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