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Linking Dangerously

indole writes "Some /.'ers might remember the story of Sherman Austin, a Californina native who created the "anarchy" website raisethefist.com. Besides posting links to bomb-making instructions, the site caught the ire of the FBI for advocating the overthrow of the U.S. government. Well, approximately 18 months later Sherman Austin, now age 20, has been sentenced to 1 year in federal prison. According to Austin, 'he took a plea bargain because he feared his case was eligible for a terrorism enhancement, which could have added 20 years to his sentence.' Doubleplusungood."

1,185 comments

  1. This is bullshit by HanzoSan · · Score: 0, Flamebait



    This is the problem with censorship.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:This is bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      No this the problem of the pseudo-patriotism that we have seen in the USA for the past few years. Is the "Patriot Act" really that patriotic?

    2. Re:This is bullshit by Salgak1 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, it's NOT BS. If you look at all the OTHER issues in his case, convieniently listed here and here. His crime was NOT linking sites, but hacking other sites. The addition of "explosives" issues and call to action to use those links is akin to inciting to riot. The Feds had him cold, and he copped a plea. What's the big deal here ?

    3. Re:This is bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, if linking were illegal we'd go to jail for pointing at Afganistan.

    4. Re:This is bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no, he was not convicted of any sort of hacking or cracking.

      he was convcted of Unlawful Distribution of Information Relating to Explosives, etc... thats all.

    5. Re:This is bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he was convicted of linking. nothing else. IF he was cracking websites, the government never charged him with that.

      Raisethefist.com, Sherman Austin will be convicted on Monday, Sept 23rd as he pleads guilty to felony count: 18 U.S.C. 842 (p)(2)(A): Distribuion of Information Relating to Explosives, Destructive Devices, and Weapons of Mass Destruction with the Intent that such Information be used in Furtherance of a Federal Crime of Violence.

    6. Re:This is bullshit by fatalist23 · · Score: 1

      Is it just me, or does anyone else find the fact that a comment about censorship gets modded to 0,flamebait? (Laughs quietly in the corner)

    7. Re:This is bullshit by optical_phiber · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, we do live in the age of terrorism. When you are talking about freedom of speech, there are boundaries and when you endanger someone else, you have gone over the boundary. Government does not need to know my personal life - that is the freedom of speech. I can dislike the goverment. But information about killing the president - that is a bit too much. I think the guy is pretty lucky he got only one year, don't you?

    8. Re:This is bullshit by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

      So is this link illegal - http://mt.sopris.net/mpc/military/mike.html :)

      Im sure the library at MIT has info on how to develop TNT from scratch.

      --
      Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
    9. Re:This is bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They own you already

  2. IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by tarquin_fim_bim · · Score: 2, Funny

    "(5) he cannot associate with any person or group that seeks to change the government in any way (be that environmental, social justice, political, economic, etc.)"

    GOVERNMENT CHANGES.....
    Oh no, sorry it's California.

    1. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by davesill · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sherman said it in his narrative on the site:

      "Remember, fascism and a police state doesn't come all at once, it comes piece by piece. How far will we allow it go until we are all locked up in concentration camps."

      The government has basically forbid this guy from criticizing the system. I hope that this sends a message to everyone in the same situation to not plead down, and to raise as much hell as possible.

    2. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Cereal+Box · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The government has basically forbid this guy from criticizing the system.

      See, I think there's a difference between "criticizing the system" and advocating the violent overthrow of the government and providing instructions on how to create weapons that will help you accomplish that goal. Do you honestly think this guy was locked up for merely saying "I disagree with this administration?"

    3. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by jmkaza · · Score: 1

      Which means he's legally unable to associate with any registered voter!

    4. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by davesill · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's a very valid point, but I think everyone has to admit that there is a slippery slope for freedom of speech. Our country has a tradition of civil disobdience, and it wasn't all peaceful. I'm wary of any government which is so worried about being overthrown. Earning the respect of the majority of citizens is the way to stay in power, not locking people up for distributing already widely available information.

    5. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by justinbigelow · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "I hope that this sends a message to everyone in the same situation to not plead down, and to raise as much hell as possible." Easy for the guy not looking at a possible 20 year sentence in a federal "pound-you-in-the-ass"* prison to say. * Let the "Office Space" quotes begin.

    6. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by echucker · · Score: 1

      I hope that this sends a message to everyone in the same situation to not plead down, and to raise as much hell as possible.

      Call it a simplistic view or a flame if you like, but that exhortation to fight is a lot easier to spit out if it's not your butt about to head to 20 years in the pen.

    7. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by davesill · · Score: 1

      Not simplistic or flame... Note I said that I "hoped" that "everyone" resisted. Your point is well taken.

    8. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Cereal+Box · · Score: 1

      I'm wary of any government which is so worried about being overthrown. Earning the respect of the majority of citizens is the way to stay in power

      No matter how loved the government is there's always going to be a group of people calling for it to be overthrown. And, inciting others to overthrow ANY government is going to have a detrimental effect on a lot of people if it were to actually occur. Therefore, I think this case ties in to the whole "you can't yell 'fire' in a crowded theater" thing.

      not locking people up for distributing already widely available information

      It's all about context. He didn't say "here's how to make bombs, if you're interested", he said "let's overthrow the government, and a good way to do that is if you make your own bombs! Click here!" The effect is that he's not providing the information out of general interest but he's intending that the information be used to create tools overthrow the government. Big difference there.

      I still think the decision was a good one. It's one thing to say "I don't like our leader, we should vote him out next election" and another to say "we should kill our leader, and here are directions to his house if you're interested." See what I mean?

    9. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by AllUsernamesAreGone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Last I checked, one of the major reasons Americans claim to value their right to arm bears, bear arms and all things inbetween is that it allows them to form an armed militia to overthrow a represive government.

      If someone says "I think your government is repressive/illegal/the result of a military-industrial coup d'etat and I think that you should take up whatever weaponry you have and fire wildly into the air and/or the nearest politician" then he is a) exercising his right to free speech, b) encouraging the use of firearms for the pupose they should be used (especially if the lawyers get in the way of the politicians) and c) making a political statement that may actually be not too far from accurate.

    10. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Frymaster · · Score: 3, Insightful
      but if he is advocating the use of bombs and such to overthrow the government then this is not political speech

      ah yes. violent revolution has no place in america.

    11. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Scratch-O-Matic · · Score: 1

      The government has basically forbid this guy from criticizing the system.

      No, they most certainly have not, and the suggestion that they have is a gross oversimplification that does not serve well the cause of privacy advocacy.

      The story states that he "pleaded guilty in February to distributing information related to explosives." While I would be interested to hear the details of this charge, and while I would not necessarily support the prosecution of a person for simply distributing information, it is clear to me that the charges relate to the facilitation of violence, not to "complaining about the system," as you claim. There are plenty of web sites, groups, and publications that complain about the system and remain uninhibited by law enforcement agencies. Once these folks start encouraging violence (either explicitely or implicitely,) it's a different story. Again, the limits of culpability for such encouragement is a perfectly legitimate debate, but no one involved in that debate should kid themselves that the accused was simply "complaining about the system."

      --


      Evil is the money of root.
    12. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by davesill · · Score: 3, Informative

      Good points. I probably started posting before I'd seen enough of the site that got this guy into trouble. Here is an archive.org cache of the site from last year.

      http://web.archive.org/web/20020826014358/www.ra is ethefist.com/index1.html

    13. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1
      Nah, criticizing the system is fine. We're doing it right now! But the U.S.A. takes an extremely dim view of advocating the violent overthrow of the government. As a looney hard-left type, I'm sure you are fully aware of the fact that the only government in the world that does this is the American government. Going to trial would have been a disaster...he was guilty as hell of the crime he was accused of, and the U.S. Attorney's office maintains around a 98% conviction rate.

      My, we are pretty parochial, aren't we? Assuming everyone knows who "Sherman" is, without even a link? Let me guess...it's a weblog somewhere. I'm sure it makes for interesting conversation down at the Starbuck's.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    14. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by davesill · · Score: 1

      Wishing I had some mod points to funny this comment... I posted a link to an archive.org cache from last year a few comments up, if you're interested.

    15. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by jokell82 · · Score: 2, Funny

      I think Jimmy from cell block D wants to show him his 'Oh' face.

      --
      I dunno who it is
      but it prolly is fhqwhgads.
    16. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      Which means he's legally unable to associate with any registered voter!


      so he can only associate with something like 50% of the US citizenry? ;-)

    17. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by davesill · · Score: 1

      I certainly do see what you mean... Let me ask you this (not intended as flame):

      If things got so bad in America that the people really had to organize, use the internet (or any other form of speech) to inform eachother on how to overthrow the government and then coordinate their efforts, would it still be right for the government to try to stop them? who would decide? does it depend on a critical mass of citizens being in agreement? At what point does that agreement become illegal?

    18. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by cshark · · Score: 1

      What I'm not understanding about all this is how this is bad? Sure, we don't like what he has to say, but this is America. He is entitled to say it. Truth of that matter is he didn't even really say much at all. And the bomb making stuff wasn't even on his web site. If a person can be prosecuted and sent to PRISON because they feel that there is enough wrong with things that there needs to be a revolution, well... that's all I'm going to say to keep from incriminating myself...

      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

    19. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by dipipanone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's all about context. He didn't say "here's how to make bombs, if you're interested", he said "let's overthrow the government, and a good way to do that is if you make your own bombs! Click here!"

      I don't see how that isn't protected speech. Lets be clear here. He wasn't plotting with particular individuals to carry out an act of terror or violence. He was saying that this goverment sucks and should be overthrown -- by violent needs if necessary. And should anyone think that's a good idea, then here's some information on how you can forward those aims.

      Now I don't think what he's proposing is a good idea by any stretch of the imagination. I'm a liberal democrat by persuasion, not a revolutionary anarchist. But the one thing I'd always admired about the USA was the way that political free speech is protected by the constitution and if anything counts as political speech, this guy's website does.

      The effect is that he's not providing the information out of general interest but he's intending that the information be used to create tools overthrow the government. Big difference there.

      Perhaps that's true, but it isn't a difference that I thought was prohibited by law. Americans in this forum often go on about how you need the right to bear arms in case of a tyrannical government. This case makes it pretty clear that even if you actually *had* a tyrannical government, the right to bear arms would be somewhat pointless because the ability to discuss with others the need to use them would render you liable to arrest and imprisonment.

    20. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by commodoresloat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      First of all, speech advocating "regime change" is obviously political speech, whatever else you may say about it. Second, the courts have been clear that "incitement to violence" is a pretty high standard; they have made the distinction between advocating violence and instigating it, or between abstract doctrine vs. action. The Supreme Court has said pretty clearly that the danger that is created by the speech has to be likely to cause an immediate breach of the peace. It is hard to see how a website could do that, no matter what it advocates. This case is a clear violation of the first amendment protection of political speech through intimidation of the defendant.

    21. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Rares+Marian · · Score: 1

      We already know where his house is. We already know where the library is. And you can always go to unitednuclear.com.

      What we need is a way to dissolve the sort of venom that these people like to build up.

      I think that as long as the media play the lackeys they have been, there's going to be someone who can't take it anymore.

      Now assuming the truth were able to pervade the common comunnication channels, then those other bomb making loons who can't handle the truth will find themselves laughed at.

      --
      The message on the other side of this sig is false.
    22. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Jhon · · Score: 2, Informative
      You're right. It doens't:

      Clause 15: To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions
      Clause 2: The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.
    23. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by gtooth · · Score: 1

      encouraging violence implicitly would be hard to prove legally. It seems to me that groups should be able to imply violence to overthrow a corrupt regime if the body is not responsive to the public. However, if the body politic is not responsive to your special interest, perhaps you are framing your words poorly (Re: $) QED if you dont have $ politics is open to you through violence (Re: martyrdom) ~~~~~c'est la vie~~~~~

    24. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Jhon · · Score: 1
      This case is a clear violation of the first amendment protection of political speech through intimidation of the defendant.
      It's not so clear when the guy said in open court he was guilty of the charges against him. If he plans to try to appeal, he's got an uphill (hell, a smooth wall) to climb.

      Moral: If you didn't do anything wrong, don't say you did.
    25. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Kibo · · Score: 1, Troll

      Our annhilation of the native americans worked out pretty good for most of us too, but I don't think it's nessecarily a great thing to make a habit of it.

      It's also worth nothing that one wasn't able to criticize the government back then, and doing so got one a punishment frequently equivalent to having blown something sky high.

      Look, speech of all sorts isn't free. You're held to task for what you say. He was saying something pretty far out there. Advocating actions which would inevitably lead to peoples violent deaths, and he provided a step in that direction. Should it be protected? Well not by me, he was indirectly advocating my murder. F him. Is he a dipshit kid who's mostly harmless and talking out of his ass? Yeah, if you're taking bets. Is this a case of our social network which normally works against natural selection actually comming close to aiding it? Yeah. To bad it didn't finish the job. There are already too many idiots, the world should be more dangerous, especially for the goof balls like this kid. But he didn't even want to find out if a judge or jury thought his speech was protected and free. He crapped out, some anarchist he turned out to be. I guess when convictions try to cross the harsh road of reality they don't always make it to the other side.

      I mean that idealism and golden rule crap is a nice sentiment and all, but it's just not practical. Maybe I'm too cynical, or maybe I'm just pragmatic, but I find a silver rule along the lines of "Do unto other as they advocate doing to you." to be far more functional.

      Would a more comical and effective form of protest have been to provide a way for visitors to send the president a snack pack of Rolled Gold Pretzels? Someone might still get killed, but he could hardly be blamed.

      --
      --Jimmy has fancy plans; and pants to match.
    26. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by ncc74656 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      If things got so bad in America that the people really had to organize, use the internet (or any other form of speech) to inform eachother on how to overthrow the government and then coordinate their efforts, would it still be right for the government to try to stop them? who would decide?

      Whoever wins the war would decide. If things got bad enough (as they did in the late 18th century and again in the middle of the 19th century) that a large-enough group of people start acting together to overthrow the government, they're hardly going to lock themselves up for advocating a violent overthrow of the government. OTOH, the odd crank or two (like the subject of this article) isn't likely to draw anywhere near the numbers of people needed for anything approximating a successful "revolution." He would've been better advised to work within the system. (He probably wouldn't have found adequate support for his radical views even that way, but at least he wouldn't be moldering away at Club Fed for the next year.)

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    27. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 1, Redundant
      Here is an archive.org cache of the site from last year.

      Please, please, please do links in html: <A HREF="http://www.thesite.com/somepage.html"> like this</A>

      Otherwise, us poor pleebes have to clean up what slashdot does to long strings of text.

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
    28. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by snake_dad · · Score: 1, Insightful
      ah yes. violent revolution has no place in america.

      It has a place in American history, As the hostname you link to makes perfectly clear...

      --
      karma capped .sig seeking available Slashdot poster for long-term relationship.
    29. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Yet+Another+Smith · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're right that not all civil disobedience was peaceful. Its also true that there was a great deal of civil disobedience that was very noble in aim. There was also a great deal more that was, in the parlance of our Pres, evil.

      In most parts of the country it is now illegal to burn a cross. This is because in most cases the burning cross was effectively a death threat. It was speech, and might even be considered protected political speech under some circumstances, but it is also intended to dissuade people from excercising their rights through acts or threats of physical harm.

      I have not read his website, but most descriptions in the articles listed here seem to indicate he was advocating the overthrow of the US government, and linking to bomb-making instructions. This could easily be interpreted as exhorting people to plant bombs to disrupt, what? Elections? Courts? I vote in a predominantly Republican area. If his friends, or some ELF or ALF types want to discourage people from voting GOP, would they set off a bomb in my precinct? (probably not, becuase mine is not nearly high-enough income to attract their attention, but its a useful thought experiment)

      His motives are 'populist' and 'left-wing' and may be aligned with the motives of many here, but his actions are very similar to those of the folks out in western North Carolina who have just recently had to take down their 'Run Eric Run' signs from their front yards. He's not Eric Rudolph, but his actions are only different from some of Eric's supporters if you think along the lines of 'its OK for US, but not for THEM.'

      This guy is in one of those nasty little gray areas that make public policy a difficult thing, but I do think its a bit easier to make these distinctions when you realize that 'those harmless kids who want to make the world a better place' are not so different from 'those neanderthal right-wing reactionary muther-f*$kers'. They use a lot of the same rhetoric that this guy uses. Just the book their quoting to justify their actions has a black cover, not a red one.

      Remember, I'm not calling this guy Eric Rudolph. And certainly he shouldn't be given a 20 year terrorist sentence - indeed I think the judge was wrong for superceding the prosecutor's recomendation of 4 months. However, this guy was real close to the boundary between harmless and horrific.

      --
      if ($it != $onething) {$it = $another;}
    30. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by gandy909 · · Score: 1

      Gee, isn't voting against any incumbent a violation then? Or does he even get to havwe a vote now?

      --

      (Stolen sig) Remember: it's a "Microsoft virus", not an "email virus", a "Microsoft worm", not a "computer worm
    31. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by mofolotopo · · Score: 1

      No doubt that the government has the right and the duty to put down violent insurrections, but that doesn't mean they have the right to imprison people for talking about them, does it? Both the clauses you quote have to do with actual violence, not speech advocating violence.

    32. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Master+Bait · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech (unless we say so -- GWB), or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    33. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Golias · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I think everyone has to admit that there is a slippery slope for freedom of speech

      I am always suspicious of "slippery slope" arguments, because they are almost always used to defend radical positions. The "slippery slope" argument usually says "we can not allow these modest, sensible, and moderate restrictions to $FREEDOM, because they will surely lead to fascist, insane, extreme limitations of $FREEDOM," and is applied to gun control ("take away our rocket launchers, and our hunting rifles will be next!"), abortion ("require that abortions be performed by medical doctors, and soon nobody will be allowed to perform them!"), religion ("look, any government with the power to say that I can't perform ritual sex acts on children can turn arround and say you can't drink sacramental wine!"), and speech ("once they are done rounding up all the people trying to incite violent revolt against the government, the publishers of Reason magazine had better watch their ass!")

      It is also frequently used by the big-government extremists to hold on to powers they should not have; such as with drug laws, "If we legalize marajuana, then it's just a matter of time before they will have crack cocaine in convenience stores!" environmental protection, "If the people who want to log these 200 acres are allowed to win, soon they will be strip-mining Yellowstone Park!" and again, with abortion, "if you allow abortions in cases of rape and incest, then every woman who wants an abortion will just claim she was raped, so it will be the same as allowing all abortions!" You get the idea.

      My point is, you almost never hear the "slippery slope" argument applied to defend a position which can stand on it's own merits, removed from the political ideology for which it was chosen as a battleground.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    34. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      in soviet russia, they use evil communist software by linux.

      this message brought to you by the friendly people at microsoft.

      oops did i forget the trademark sign?

    35. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I think there's a difference between "criticizing the system" and advocating the violent overthrow of the government and providing instructions on how to create weapons that will help you accomplish that goal.

      I don't recall anything in the First Amendment about "except for information about how to make weapons." (In fact, I think I even recall something a little later on in the Bill of Rights about a right to keep and bear arms, and no "except for weapons you make yourself".)

      Do you honestly think this guy was locked up for merely saying "I disagree with this administration?"

      Do you honestly think he couldn't be? You apparently haven't been paying attention.

      As Austin puts it on the site:

      Distribution of information related to explosives is not illegal.. What's illegal is the INTENT part. They have to prove you have intent to use the information to cause further crime of violence .. and how do they prove intent? I think Bush made it clear when he said "you're either with me or against me".

      I'd like to think that if I were in his shoes, I wouldn't take the plea, but fight. But then, I've yet to be dragged off in shackles for anything I've said.

      But remember, kids: when the stormtroopers come for you, aim for the head.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    36. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it is useful to point out that the right to bear arms was expressly for one purpose: To overthrow the government, violently, if nessicary.

    37. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "brought to you by the friendly people at microsoft."


      Rather like the Nimda virus.

    38. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      It's interesting to note, that during and immediately after the American revolution there was lots of talk about the people's right to overthrow despotic governments, etc. But immediately after Shay's Rebellion, and the creation of the Federal Army, all this talk was hushed over. Rather like the Bolshevists did a few centuries later.

    39. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Jhon · · Score: 1

      Big difference between free speech and saying we need to violently overthrow the government -- and by the way, this is how. This guy appeared to advocating and inciting insurrection, not mearly engaging in 'free speech'.

    40. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Hatta · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And what exactly is wrong with violent overthrow of the government? Thomas Jefferson said "The tree of liberty must be regularly watered by the blood of patriots." (to paraphrase) It is the tendency of government to become entrenched and intractable to the point where only violent revolution can make a difference. The USA was a "great experiment" to construct a series of rules (a constitution) that would hopefully prevent the need for violent revolution. Whether you count this experiment as a success or failure, I don't see how in good conscience you can forbid someone to advocate a solution to a problem they percieve.

      Why for instance is it ok for GWB to advocate, and actually accomplish the overthrow of an atrocious government that he is not even a citizen of, whereas this fellow cannot even speak what is in his mind the only solution to repair the very government he lives it? The gov't must not have a monopoly on violence. Of all the groups, politicians are the least worthy to handle it.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    41. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      The jist of Sherman's Site (It's crashed, and no longer up, but so far the FBI hasn't got ahold of it. They asked the host company for it, and he told them: "When you bring me a supeona, if there's anything still on it.") was this: You have a right to protect yourself from police and government brutality. To that extent, you have the right to arm yourself. You have the right to revolution, violent or otherwise, if you are being oppressed. You have the right to kill a police officer if they are killing your people, shooting at your protest groups (Haymaker, Kent State, Shay's Rebellion, etc.) Same with the Gestappo, or the Administration. He provided links on how to arm yourself for self-defense against government brutality. All over his site there were plasterings of "We advocate armed revolutionary self-defense." He wasn't advocating making bombs to throw at peace rallies, he was advocating making bombs to throw if the police are shooting at you.

    42. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by commodoresloat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree - that's why I said "through intimidation." Technically the kid eliminated any chance of his case being taken up when he pleaded guilty, but his options were pretty limited.

      All the same, the judge here is f*cked. I've agreed with some of his decisions in the past, he's not a totally loose cannon, but this is ridiculous; more time than the prosecutor agreed to so he could teach the kid a lesson? Does the judge think that if this kid spends more time around hardened criminals he'll learn respect for the law? yeesh.

    43. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Ideoscape · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sherman originally wanted to. But he's a 21 year old good kid, who's never been charged with any serious crime (although he has been shot once by a plastic bullet for filming a protest, still has a piece of it lodged in his knee, and he's been detained a few times for "Disorderly conduct" and "failure to disperse" at protests.), he's in love, and quite frankly, the thought of spending 20 years in prison scared the fuck out of him. He was originally only going to spend 4 months in prison, so he was like "Allright, big fucking deal."

    44. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      He's being charged with linking to a website. It doesn't matter that the website had weapons on them. The jist of it is, he's being charged with *LINKING TO A WEBSITE*.

    45. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      Actually he was not guilty as hell. To prove intent you have to exercise something called "Prior restraint". In otherwords, they'd have to show how his site directly caused something, in order to show intent.

    46. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      I agree with a previous poster: whoever won would claim legitimacy. However, curiously enough, in the USA there is actually a *legal* way to overthrow the government: seek to convene a Constitutional Convention. A Constitutional Convention can be legally convened if enough states call for it and it's not limited to *anything.* It can rewrite laws, add, delete or change Constitutional Amendments, or rewrite the whole darn Constitution for that matter. It can, by doing so, abolish or alter any of the 3 branches of government, or add more if it wants to. Effectively, it can legally do the same things that a revolution would accomplish.

    47. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Dylan+Zimmerman · · Score: 1

      "[F]ree flow of information is the only safeguard against tyranny. The once-chained people whose leaders at last lose their grip on information flow will soon burst with freedom and vitality, but the free nation gradually constricting its grip on public discourse has begun its rapid slide into despotism. Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master."

      Really, that's a very insightful quote, even if it is from a game.

      Either we have freedom of speech entirely or it will slip away as things are declared seditious. Speaking out agains the government is already considered unpatriotic by most people that I know. Anti-war demonstrations are even more so in their eyes. Personally, I think that demonstrations are just about as patriotic as you can possibly get, right up there with voting idiots out of office and I really don't understand why so many people think otherwise.

      Think about what you would do if you were trying to get more control over the US. First, you turn popular opinion against guns (really, any weapons at all). You erode the right to carry them to the point that they all have to be registered and then you make them illegal to own privately. Once the general populace doesn't have weapons, they can't fight against your police forces, so you effectively have total control and you can do whatever you want as long as it won't cause the entire population to revolt at once. You could, for example, send all of the Mormons to labor camps from which they never seem to return. Nobody likes the Mormons, so nobody except them would put up a fight. If the government has control of the news outlets, most people wouldn't even hear about it other than when their neighbors are rounded up for being terrorist sympathizers.

      I only use Mormons as an example because it's about time the Jews got a break from being killed in these hypothetical situations. You can replace that with whatever religious group you want.

    48. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by dbc001 · · Score: 1
      there's a difference between "criticizing the system" and advocating the violent overthrow of the government
      reminds me of the mid 1700s, when a group of young determined men were so pissed at the government that they started shooting at people! eventually i think they started their own country or something, and it was based on "freedom". apparently none of that is relevant here though...
    49. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by 2short · · Score: 1


      Yeah, and when the soldiers they were shooting at shot back, or arrested them for advocating shooting at people, they were shocked at the violation of their liberties. Oh, wait, no they weren't. They expected and accepted that the people who they were shooting at would oppose them. Just like this guy should have expected the people he was advocating killing (you, me, anyone at random) would take steps to oppose them.

      I'll defend to the last your right to say you disagree with me, and to try to convince others to disagree with me. When you go on to try to convince others to kill me, and give them pointers to get them started, forget it.

      If your exercise of your liberty threatens to make me unhappy, I'll just have to deal. If it threatens to make me dead, I'll oppose it, and I hope the government will too. It's simple really: Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness. In that order.

    50. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

      This is the most insightful post in the entire thread. Kudos.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    51. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Scratch-O-Matic · · Score: 1

      He's being charged with linking to a website.

      Wrong. That's like saying a man was charged with "handing a note to a bank teller." The contents of the note make all the difference in the world.

      He's being charged with "distributing information on explosives." Now, as I said, whether that distribution of information should be a crime or not is a perfectly legitimate debate (and by the way, I'm not sure anyone here knows the exact statute under which he was charged.) My original point stands: he was not punished for "criticizing the system," and hundreds of non-violent yet critical web sites are ample evidence for that.

      --


      Evil is the money of root.
    52. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 1
      That's a very valid point, but I think everyone has to admit that there is a slippery slope for freedom of speech.
      Slippery slope, huh? Ain't everything?

      Tim

    53. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Tenebrious1 · · Score: 1

      My point is, you almost never hear the "slippery slope" argument applied to defend a position which can stand on it's own merits, removed from the political ideology for which it was chosen as a battleground.

      Not really. You don't hear "slippery slope" arguements from people who can defend a position on it's own merits. You hear those arguments mainly from people who just don't know the facts (or can't be bothered looking up the facts), or more often would rather appeal to the irrational emotions of people; it's easier to sway people with emotional arguments than with dry facts and figures.

      --
      -- If god wanted me to have a sig, he'd have given me a sense of humor.
    54. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      No, he's being charged with criticizing the system, and advocating self-defense against brutal government. The charge still revolves around a link to a website, which he didn't write (and he didn't link to, his webiste is an open forum), which had information on explosives about it. He's aslo not being charged with "Distributing Information on Explosives". He's being charged with "Electronic distribution of information pertaining toward the use or manufacture of explosives and weapons of mass destruction with *intent*." (emphasis mine). Prior restraint law requires that the court show that a crime was committed or was imminently going to be committed, in order to show intent. The court statements themselves say that "No crime can be traced to the information provided on Mr. Austin's Website." I know, because I have read them. I'm a friend of Sherman.

    55. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      However, and I don't recall the specific case, I do believe the US supreme court has previously ruled that the advocationf of violent rebellion against the government is not protected speech.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    56. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Condor7 · · Score: 1

      "(5) he cannot associate with any person or group that seeks to change the government in any way (be that environmental, social justice, political, economic, etc.)"

      So he can't volunteer for "Get out the Vote". Or campaign for the Democratic party. Or...

    57. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Scratch-O-Matic · · Score: 1

      Can you give me details on the statute under which he was charged with "criticizing the system?"

      I understand that some may disagree with charges stemming from passing along (or providing access to) information, but I maintain that the charges against him relate to encouraging violence. Please understand that I am not arguing for or against the wisdom of charging someone for providing access to information. I am simply saying that he was charged for providing that information, not for "criticizing the system." If I am wrong, which may well be, since I haven't read the court documents myself, I would sure like to hear the specific charges that relate to "criticizing the system."

      --


      Evil is the money of root.
    58. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Marx_Mrvelous · · Score: 1

      I just want to say I agree with you totally.

      --

      Moderation: Put your hand inside the puppet head!
    59. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by RationalAnarchist · · Score: 1

      It's the basis of their *intent* argument. He never said: "Here use these instructions to go bomb the whitehouse." He said "The system is fucked, we should start a revolution, if there is violent response to a peaceful revolution, a violent revolution becomes nessicary, here's some links to information on planning for that." Which is actually moot, because *Sherman didn't post the links.*

    60. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Government forks you!

      Sorry. Had to say that one.

    61. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by spiritraveller · · Score: 1
      I hope that this sends a message to everyone in the same situation to not plead down, and to raise as much hell as possible.

      Uhm, actually, I think it sends the opposite message.

      If you want to survive and avoid the death squads... you keep your mouth shut.

      Some may think the reference to death squads is overreaching... believe what you will.

    62. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Do you honestly think this guy was locked up for merely saying "I disagree with this administration?"

      You're dead fucking right he was. It's more shock and awe bullshit. The RIAA, the government, all the goddamned bullies now know it's open season on those without power.

      As he said, someone posted something on the site and lots worse is available any number of other places.

      This "terrorism enhancement" horseshit is nothing but motherfucking extortion. Now the government bastards don't have to overcharge as was their custom -- all they have to do is use the words and you'll cop to felony jaywalking.

      Between this and the rest of the "unlawful combatant" designations, military tribunals, etc., their boot is on your neck as soon as they have you in their sights.

      Of course nothing will persuade you until they come for you.

    63. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No matter how loved the government is there's always going to be a group of people calling for it to be overthrown. And, inciting others to overthrow ANY government is going to have a detrimental effect on a lot of people if it were to actually occur. Therefore, I think this case ties in to the whole "you can't yell 'fire' in a crowded theater" thing.

      No, dickbrain, this case ties into the "When in the course of human events...." thing. Shit, buy yourself a mind.

    64. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by antiMStroll · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I am always suspicious of "slippery slope" arguments, because they are almost always used to defend radical positions.

      Past radical ideas like the end of slavery, female sufferage, social equality for non-whites, unionized labour, paid vacation and abortion rights? Good thing we're so much smarter today that ideas we consider radical couldn't possibly become basic rights tomorrow.

    65. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (In fact, I think I even recall something a little later on in the Bill of Rights about a right to keep and bear arms, and no "except for weapons you make yourself".)

      I always thought the second ammendment had to do with wearing short sleave shirts. I am so confused!

    66. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      there's a difference between "criticizing the system" and advocating the violent overthrow of the government and providing instructions on how to create weapons that will help you accomplish that goal.

      Why isn't Charlton Heston in jail then?

      Isn't that exactly the justification the gun nuts use when talking about why they should be allowed to keep artillery in their homes: to overthrow the government should it step out of line?

    67. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > but I think everyone has to admit that there is a slippery
      > slope for freedom of speech

      This is nowhere near that slope. It's not even on the same hill.
      Advocating the violent overthrow of the government has never been
      protected speech in the US (nor, AFAIK, any nation). You can
      criticise all the policies you want, criticise all the people you
      want (in any way that isn't slander or libel[1]), advocate all the
      nonviolent reform you want, even advocate illegal things (like
      seccession), and that's all legal. Advocating violent rebellion
      is something entirely else, and is specifically excluded from
      protection by the constitution; this exclusion is as old as the
      clause that protects freedom of speech; it was written in
      originally, so nobody is taking away any freedoms here that
      anyone ever had. And if you think you want the government to be
      overthrown by violent means, go spend a couple of years in central
      Africa so you can witness such events, and then see what you think.
      The people who wrote the constitution had just seen that; they
      didn't want to see it again. War (real war, on your own soil)
      isn't nearly as much fun as gnawing on rocks, and that goes triple
      for revolutions. Cities split, people killing their neigbors and
      friends; families split, people killing their cousins, siblings,
      parents, children... closest thing on Earth to Hell. Whoever
      advocates that, jail's too good for him. An assylum is where he
      belongs.

      [1] Factual information you can publish. Opinions, provided they
      are clearly subjective, you can publish. What you can't do is
      try to pass off speculation or opinion or invented stories or
      unsubstantiated rumors as factual anecdotes. So, "Bill Clinton
      was investigated for charges of obstruction of justice" is fine.
      "Bill Clinton is a Big Loser" is immature but not actionable.
      "Bill Clinton is a murderer" could get you in trouble, if he
      cares to sue you (unless you've got evidence to back it up
      or something). But note that IANALATINLA.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    68. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by jonadab · · Score: 1

      > I don't see how that isn't protected speech.

      Read the ammendment in the Bill of Rights that protects speech.
      It goes out of its way to clearly and expressly exclude this type
      of speech from protection. For good reasons.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    69. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Runagate+Rampant · · Score: 1

      No matter how loved the government is there's always going to be a group of people calling for it to be overthrown. And, inciting others to overthrow ANY government is going to have a detrimental effect on a lot of people if it were to actually occur. Therefore, I think this case ties in to the whole "you can't yell 'fire' in a crowded theater" thing.

      So is the Declaration of independence protected or not protected speech?

    70. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by jonadab · · Score: 1

      My apologies; I seem to have been mistaken. The language I recall
      is not present in that ammendment. I probably thought it was
      because we studied it at the same time we studied the ammendment
      or something like that.

      But I definitely remember learning in US Goverment class that
      advocating the violent overthrow of the goverment has never been
      protected speech.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    71. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whitney v. California

    72. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by whatch+durrin · · Score: 1
      If the kid was innocent, he shouldn't have plead.

      If, however, his rights were infringed in some way, and the courts hold a "pretty high standard" for incitement as you say, his lawyers should appeal and the issue will be resolved, right?

      That's why the appeals courts are there. Let them do their job. It's the job of prosecutors to prosecute, which they obviously did here.

      --
      ***
      Radio Shack. You've got questions...we've got blank stares(TM).
    73. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Dausha · · Score: 2, Interesting

      [C]ertainly he shouldn't be given a 20 year terrorist sentence - indeed I think the judge was wrong for superceding the prosecutor's recomendation of 4 months. However, this guy was real close to the boundary between harmless and horrific.

      In an interview with Mike Tyson, he made a rather interesting quote, which I must paraphrase. Prison does not rehabilitate. Prison trains the inmate to be better at what got him in prison. So, will this fellow skew more towards the horrific in the future?

      Or, is my quoting M. Tyson horrific? Both?

      --
      What those who want activist courts fear is rule by the people.
    74. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by salesgeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "let's overthrow the government, and a good way to do that is if you make your own bombs! Click here!"
      The statement "let's overthrow the government." might be ok by itself. In this context, it would be on the treasonous side of not ok.

      --
      -- $G
    75. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by whatch+durrin · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well put.

      The US founding fathers recognized that sometimes governments get too powerful, and hoped to avoid internal wars by setting up a system of checks and balances between the branches, and by allowing citizens to vote for their representatives.

      We have laws for a reason. If we reach a point where our laws become unreasonably restrictive, our elected officials ignore this fact, and a majority of citizens get tired of it, we'll have another revolution. At that point you can basically throw the laws out the window and start over. Until then, handle it the way the founders intended - peaceably.

      --
      ***
      Radio Shack. You've got questions...we've got blank stares(TM).
    76. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Dausha · · Score: 1

      Amendment II

      A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.

      Since we're asserting that the Bill of Rights be fully enforced, I thought I should ask for my rocket launcher (see above 'slippery slope' discussion) now.

      After all, the SC has upheld that yelling "Fire!" in a theatre is not protected under Free Speech. So, I think advocating violent insurrection would probably not be upheld. Then again, with the SC using extra-US legal documents to interpret the Constitution, anything is possible.

      --
      What those who want activist courts fear is rule by the people.
    77. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by zo219 · · Score: 1
      But why do they always have to get Carried Away.

      His first sentence is dead on - it's that immediate leap to concentration camps. Boring. Hack thinking - and I couldn't be less interested in pointless martyrdom. Posting radical thought to the web. . .and also providing *bomb* instructions. Duh?

      Flawed, juvenile thinking. I hope the message this sends is, Adults only, please.

    78. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > And what exactly is wrong with violent overthrow of the government?

      Hmmmm. Probably what many participants of the Russion Revolution thought. Look what they went through. Also, considering that violence has a bad tendency to spread, do you want to risk starting WW3 by overthrowing the single most powerful government on Earth?

      > The USA was a "great experiment" to construct a series of rules (a constitution) that would hopefully prevent the need for violent revolution.

      The USA is no longer a "great experiment". It's the world's single super/hyper power. If it gets screwed, everyone, everywhere will end up screwed.

      > Whether you count this experiment as a success or failure,

      Reasonable success.

      >I don't see how in good conscience you can forbid someone to advocate a solution to a problem they percieve.

      I can. The German Nazis perceived homosexuality as a problem. Someone advocated a "final" solution. Want to know what the solution was? Google "Extermination Camp".

      > Why for instance is it ok for GWB to advocate, and actually accomplish the overthrow of an atrocious government that he is not even a citizen of, whereas this fellow cannot even speak what is in his mind the only solution to repair the very government he lives it?

      You have a very funny definition of repair.

      > The gov't must not have a monopoly on violence.

      Ah, is that why there are so many militant pacifists these days?

    79. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Hes+Nikke · · Score: 2, Insightful

      and do you think that the current federal government would let the states organize to the point were they call such a convention? i think we are already past the point of no return on that one....

      --
      Don't call me back. Give me a call back. Bye. So yeah. But bye our, well, but alright we are on a shirt this chill.
    80. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Dausha · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't see how that isn't protected speech. Lets be clear here. He wasn't plotting with particular individuals to carry out an act of terror or violence. He was saying that this goverment sucks and should be overthrown -- by violent needs if necessary. And should anyone think that's a good idea, then here's some information on how you can forward those aims.

      Well, let us try a different set of circumstances. Imagine a web site where there are details on how to lynch a minority. Or, what if the site discusses how to bomb an abortion clinic or how to kill an abortion doctor? Would they be protected by Free Speech? If they added the purpose was "to overthrow the US Government," would that enter the site into hallowed protection? Whave if they said, "here's how to do it, but we do not advocate?"

      There have been sites as I have mentioned above--sorry, no URLs to accompany. The owners of said sites were convicted by a jury of peers and sentenced to prison. This fellow met the same fate (or chose to waive his right to trial by jury and pled out). They all claimed a right, and were found not in the right. If he should go free, than so should they. I think the clause in the Premable "establish justice and secure domestic tranquility" has bearing. Looking at his site, I conclude he meant what he said, and sought to disrupt our tranquility.

      --
      What those who want activist courts fear is rule by the people.
    81. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by whatch+durrin · · Score: 1
      Thomas Jefferson said "The tree of liberty must be regularly watered by the blood of patriots."

      Can you prove that we wasn't talking about defending the country from outsiders? I believe he was.

      Whether you count this experiment as a success or failure, I don't see how in good conscience you can forbid someone to advocate a solution to a problem they percieve.

      It depends on your definition of "advocate." Inciting a physical advocation is different from writing your congressman.

      --
      ***
      Radio Shack. You've got questions...we've got blank stares(TM).
    82. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Dausha · · Score: 1

      This case is a clear violation of the first amendment protection of political speech through intimidation of the defendant.

      Too bad he took the plea. If it was such a clear case, then his lawyers, or the ACLU, should have told him so, and given him incentive to take this to a jury of peers. Then he would not be a felon now. Perhaps, then there is more to this case than meets the public eye which obscures the clarity of the violation? Not being a lawyer, I'm not ready to jump to such conclusions, but it appears that the defendant thought he was guilty enough.

      --
      What those who want activist courts fear is rule by the people.
    83. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by whatch+durrin · · Score: 1
      Source???

      --
      ***
      Radio Shack. You've got questions...we've got blank stares(TM).
    84. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by HunterCat · · Score: 1

      I certainly do see how this is NOT protected speech. It could easily be construed as utterances in the furthering of a criminal act. These types of speech are not allowed. Example: If you are overheard plotting to kill someone, you can/will be arrested for a crime. Now, it was just speech, but I do not hear anyone saying that it should be protected. Even speech between a client and lawyer is not protected if said comments told of upcoming criminal activity. If you hear such speech, you cannot just sit and wiat for the act to happen before arresting someone. MMORPG FAN? Show your stuff!

    85. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      The articles make it pretty clear that he took the plea because the prosecutor and judge scared him by threatening to make it a terrorism case. What bullshit, like this kid was gonna join al Qaeda? (yeah, anarchy goes over really well with fundamentalist Islam). My point is that this is a means of using intimidation (threatening to put him away for 20 years for terrorism) in order to silence him. Yeah a good lawyer could have got him off, if he had money to afford good lawyers and a different judge. When the judge is more convinced of the kid's guilt than the prosecutor, you have a problem. Read some of the background to this case.

    86. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sherman said it in his narrative on the site:

      "Remember, fascism and a police state doesn't come all at once, it comes piece by piece. How far will we allow it go until we are all locked up in concentration camps."

      The government has basically forbid this guy from criticizing the system. I hope that this sends a message to everyone in the same situation to not plead down, and to raise as much hell as possible.

      When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to
      dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume
      among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of
      Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind
      requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

      We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are
      endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life,
      Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. --That to secure these rights, Governments are
      instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed,
      --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is
      the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government,
      laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to
      them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness
      . Prudence, indeed,
      will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and
      transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more
      disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing
      the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and
      usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them
      under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such
      Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.


    87. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Yet+Another+Smith · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Haymaker is unfamiliar to me right off the bat, so I can't respond on that one, and won't discuss it.

      Shays' Rebellion was not peaceful protest, but armed protest. They didn't need to make bombs because they had muskets and/or rifles.

      At Kent State, if you wanted to change the number of casualties from a handful to a statistic, the fastest way to do that would be to start lobbing bombs at the National Guard types. The ones who really were shooting over the heads of protesters would have started to take aimed shots, and if they didn't have someone holding a bomb in their sights, then they would have aimed at anyone not running away. And seeing a couple of guys down the line take shrapnel from a pipe-bomb, they probably wouldn't be to careful to check if they were running away.

      In the modern government age, a better self defense against government brutality is well-drilled non-violence. You want sympathy on your side, and adolescent displays of bravado don't go over well with the American public (unless you're president). Ultimately if you really feel you're in need of armed resistance, you'd need to do that with a large contingent armed with rifles, not a few guys hurling pipe-bombs or molatovs.

      Ultimately pipe-bombs, due to their indiscriminant area-of-effect nature, are most effective in instilling fear in the untrained, rather than breaking the ranks of well-trained police/military anti-riot groups. He's more likely to kill his friends than his enemies. Of course, his motives might be to demonize the cops by upping the death-toll at his rallies. If so, then

      You have the right to kill a police officer if they are killing your people, shooting at your protest groups

      I assume that you mean that the police officer in question is not being threatened with physical harm himself. There haven't been any fatalities in globalization protests since Italy, and in that case the officer in question was being threatened by a guy swinging a fire-extinguisher. When have live rounds been fired at protesters since Kent State?

      Ultimately, his desired methods are too reminiscent of Greensboro (you know, when the Klan managed to 'respond to fire' from some black trade unionists) to gain much sympathy from me.

      The 2nd Amendment is essentially the codification of the right to armed insurection, but bombs are bad tactics, and too likely to end up in innocent lives lost.

      By the way. If there had been casualties among the National Guard types at Kent State, do you think it weigh on the national conscience like it does? Most people would assume that the bombs were thrown first. The Kent State protesters would have lost the moral high ground, and their deaths would have had half the impact. And there'd be a lot more deaths.

      Never cede the high ground. You're out for popular opinion, and there's nothing like a ten-to-nothing casualty ratio to prove the cops shot first. If anyone had taken this guy's advice and started tossing bombs, he'd have gotten a bunch of protesters killed, and be seen to have justified the police brutality in the process.

      Still not 100% sure he should have gone to jail, but his words are close enough to an exhortation to violence - a punishible act commonly used by the reactionary right (Klan and Operation Rescue et al) - that good people could disagree on his sentence.

      --
      if ($it != $onething) {$it = $another;}
    88. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Alien_inc · · Score: 1

      I agree with you that there are situations where moderate restrictions to ones freedom are acceptable for the betterment of everyone. However all that this kid did was publish literature that was not favorable to the government, and have a link to information on explosives.

      Now I may not agree with his political views, but it seems to me that he hasn't done anything illegal. I don't think anyone here is going to argue that it should be a crime to publish your disapproval with the government. But the sticky situation is with the explosive information. This is not privileged information. Anyone can learn how to do it by hundreds of other web sites, or even by taking a first year chem class. It seems to me Sherman was arrested because he put these two subjects together on one page. Now if you look at it like that, does it change your views? I wonder if he only had explosive info on his site, would he still be in prison??

    89. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Zemran · · Score: 1

      America may have a terrorist past but that was hundreds of years ago. Now, the US is more tight than Russia. Dissent is not allowed. Old ladies can be arrested for critising the war in public and lawyers arrested for wearing t-shirts with critical slogans.

      I think that this guy was going too far and needed to be shut down but that does not make it right, as that means that I do not think freedom of speech is right. He did not do anything, he just said what he thought.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    90. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by ralphus · · Score: 1
      I don't blame him for taking the plea. I bet it was the only choice that made sense for him. Isn't anyone noticing that they can try you inside the system and get you to cop a guilty plea UNDER THE THREAT THAT THEY CAN TAKE YOU OUTSIDE THE SYSTEM and make things much worse? Outside the system you CAN'T fight. You don't have rights.

      How does the system work if the system itself can remove you from it, label you 'enemy combatant' and strip you of all your rights?

      Things that we held as guarantees and were told all our lives were guarantees are no longer in some cases.

      --
      Revolutions are never about freedom or justice. They're about who's going to be top dog. -- Kilgore Trout
    91. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Golias · · Score: 1

      I was commenting more on the "slippery slope" argument being less than valad, rather than on this particular case, which I am not very familiar with (nor are most of the people in this thread, truth be told.)

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    92. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by nursedave · · Score: 1
      The government has basically forbid this guy from criticizing the system. I hope that this sends a message to everyone in the same situation to not plead down, and to raise as much hell as possible.
      Yep. They're going after the media next. You idiot. Every media whore except Fox *hates* George Bush - and any Repub, for that matter. So, if criticizing the system were this guy's crime, then we'd better build more prisons. I think Mike Farrell and all the rest of the media folks will get their own special prison, but hey, that's the perc's of celebrity. Go read the article. The guy deserves more than one year in the pen, and its not for expressing his opinion.
      --

      The Democratic Party: We've been pussies since 1968!

    93. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      Haymaker (or Haymarket, I forget precisely), was a union meeting in the middle of boston where police shot at the unionizers after an agent provacateur threw a bomb (some eye witness accounts say that the shooting happened before the bomb was thrown) at police, and the unionizers (who expected the police to attack them, as most of them were hired police backed by corporations) shot back. Killed 19 police men I believe. As for Italy. If you've seen the photo-stills, the kid picked up the fire-hydrant and threw it at the APC as he ran, because he saw the guy in the APC had a gun pointed at him. He was shot in the back and then ran over by the APC. It's interesting to note that the responsible parties in Genoa were trained in the U.S. Associated Links: http://www.resist.org.uk/reports/archive/genoa/pol ice.html I would provide more links (and I will later.) But some fucking javascript error has just caused my mouse to go fucking haywire And live rounds have been fired at protestors since Kent State. If you don't think a Rubber coated steel bullet is "live" you haven't seen photos of people with them embedded in their skulls. And as for a better self-defense being well drilled non-violent protest: Yeah, that Iraq war never happened. Yeah, king got to finish his "Poor People's March". Speaking of King, both King and Gandhi said relatively the same thing on their particular issues: That it was the threat of armed insurrection that made their movements work. Also, Ghandi only used (and this is according to his own writings) non-violent means, because he adequately deduced that the Indians did not have adequate weapons to challenge the British on that front. The first thing he did after expelling the British, was arm the fuck out of the Indians. And, finally, his instructions were not for use at protests (reguardless of what he had to sign in his plea bargain). There is a very real knowledge in the mind of revolutionaries that the use of violence when a movement does not have wide-based support, would be counter-revolutionary. He had a program on his site called RACUN. Which was Revolutionary Activist Communities Uprising in Numbers. It called for people taking back their communities, especially in inner-cities, arming themselves both with knowledge and the means of arms, and instituting programs like Copwatch. He never advocated killing anyone, he did advocate a right to defend yourself against systemized brutality.

    94. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by fenix+down · · Score: 1

      No, he was not talking about defending the country from outsiders. "From time to time, the tree of liberty must be refreshed with the blood of tyrants and patriots." is the whole thing, I believe. He's talking about revolutions. More of a cool quote justifying a specific instance of revolution rather than a recommendation for regularly scheduled violence, but definitely not anything to do with national defense. I mean, Thomas Jefferson said it. The guy's idea of national defense was "shoot the Canadians if they show up on your lawn".

    95. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by goatan · · Score: 0
      Clause 15: To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions Clause 2: The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.

      Hypocrisy is what revolutions are all about they only want to change the ruler not the rules so they can become the elite. And hypocrissy is still here because its bad for Sadam to kill his own citizens but Bush can this one is nasty It looks like the main reson is that dead people don't sue for wrongfull conviction only diffrence between bush and sadam is that bush dosen't randomly spray chemicals on people and it wouldn't suprise be if he did at protests

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    96. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Hittite+Creosote · · Score: 1
      Exactly. Or, in other words

      Treason doth never prosper; what's the reason? For if it prosper, none dare call it treason.

    97. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Cereal+Box · · Score: 1

      Do you honestly think he couldn't be? You apparently haven't been paying attention.

      Well, the millions of liberals making accusations of the president being a Nazi and stealing oil haven't been carted off to jail yet, so I still have faith in free speech being respected.

      I don't recall anything in the First Amendment about "except for information about how to make weapons." (In fact, I think I even recall something a little later on in the Bill of Rights about a right to keep and bear arms, and no "except for weapons you make yourself".)

      Here's an idea: if you think free speech includes advocating the violent overthrow of the government, how about I make a website advocating the violent overthrow of you? I'll call for your blood on the website and oh, by the way, I'll link to Mapquest instructions to your house. I mean, after all, there's nothing wrong with linking to instructions to your house (publicly available information), right? Still think free speech should cover that?

    98. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by another_henry · · Score: 1
      I mean, after all, there's nothing wrong with linking to instructions to your house (publicly available information), right? Still think free speech should cover that?

      Yes! Go right ahead, I'll put my money where his mouth is.

      Henry Hallam
      Woodlands
      Walls Hill Rd
      Torquay
      TQ1 3LZ
      United Kingdom

      --
      "Studies have shown that people who eat peanuts live longer than those who do not eat."
    99. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by nanojath · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Austin said he took a plea bargain because he feared his case was eligible for a terrorism enhancement, which could have added 20 years to his sentence. The plea deal had called for him to serve four months.


      I have no sympathy for this individual, and this says little about the USA system of justice (please don't infer my feelings about general issues of justice or the direction our nation is heading, I'm only commenting on this case).


      The prosecutorial side of the USA justice system seeks to prosecute. This guy copped a plea. He said, I am guilty of this offense. That's that. If he believed he was innocent, that his actions were protected free speech, he should have fought it.


      The spectacle of a person who is advocating overthrow of the government by force complaining about his CHOICE to plead guilty to a minor offense because of his fear of what he might be successfully prosecuted for if he choses to defy the charges just makes me laugh. I love a person advocating actions when he is not even willing to RISK the heat for merely advocating them, let alone carrying them out himself.


      I consider myself an anarchist: that is, I advocate a system of government that strives for the absolute minimum of hierarchical control necessary to maintain the level of order demanded by individual communities. In practice this is a complex concept with many, many degrees of realization, and I recognize that on a national scale such an ideal could easily degrade into thinly (and ironically) disguised totalitarianism, as did attempts to nationalize Marxism in Communist nations. I have grave reservations about the USA government's actions througout the history of this nation. Despite this, I do not see the wisdom of advocating the violent overthrow of a government in a nation where fair, legal elections are possible (and happen on the community level all the time, though money and the two party system have certainly corrupted national and state level elections to some degree).


      Essentially, what this says is, we can't convince the majority of our views by peaceful means, so let's overthrow it by violence and FORCE them to see the truth. This point of view is identical to the ideology that resulted in the catastrophically corrupt system in the Soviet Union, a government unable to maintain order for even a century and thus by any measurement a failure.


      Austin told the judge Monday he "wasn't really thinking" when he created the Web site. "I'd be devastated if someone used this information to harm others," he said.


      Austin admitted posting links about bombs to enable people to build and use them during demonstrations against interstate and foreign trade.


      Sounds pretty clear to me. He admits that he was providing information to enable people to make illegal actions. This is all about this individual's choices. And can I point out, a person chosing to follow the information he provided could very well be facing an eternal sentence of being dead. I think he came out better than he had any right to expect.

      --

      It Is the Nature of Information to Transgress Artificial Boundaries

    100. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1
      But that's what your Second Amendment rights are for. It's not so you can have a 0.177 to shoot empty beercans in the back garden, it's so you can overthrow the government if they turn into evil oppressors.


      You need to all go and kill the Dubya. The world will not be a safe place until he, like Mussolini, is dangling by his ankles in a disused garage, riddled with bullets. It's up to you whether it's an American that does it, or someone else. You should probably make sure it's an American that takes over America.

    101. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by japhmi · · Score: 1

      Past radical ideas like the end of slavery, female sufferage, social equality for non-whites, unionized labour, paid vacation and abortion rights?

      So, you're comparing the end of slavery with killing unborn children? Not everyone sees 'abortion rights' as a good thing.

      Even if you think so, it's not a good rhetorical move in this situation to do that comparision, because people will see that statement and have their proof right in front of them.

      (I know, "IHBT. IHL. HAND.")

      --
      "Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys" P. J. O'Rourke
    102. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1
      Well, the millions of liberals making accusations of the president being a Nazi and stealing oil haven't been carted off to jail yet, so I still have faith in free speech being respected.

      'Cuse me while I find my clue-by-four...ah, here we go.

      WHAP! WHAP! WHAP!

      THE VERY FSKING CASE WE'RE TALKING ABOUT INVOLVES A "LIBERAL" BEING CARTED OFF TO JAIL FOR ENGAGING IN ACTS OF SPEECH.

      how about I make a website advocating the violent overthrow of you? I'll call for your blood on the website and oh, by the way, I'll link to Mapquest instructions to your house.
      If anti-abortion zealots can do that to doctors, you can do that to me.

      As the ruling in "The Nuremberg Files" case (no relation to the actual Nuremberg trials, see the article linked above) states, "Political speech may not be punished just because it makes it more likely that someone will be harmed at some unknown time in the future".

      If someone has a gun to my head and you yell "Shoot him! Shoot him now!", that might be be protected speech. But there's plenty of precedent that you can say "Someone ought to blow that guy's head off. Someone should go over to 2119 Arlonne Drive and put a bullet in that longhaired freak's skull," and fall well within First Amendment protection.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    103. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Kibo · · Score: 1

      I think we both share the same fantastic taste in music.

      --
      --Jimmy has fancy plans; and pants to match.
    104. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I went to Raise the Fist pre-arrest. He didn't advocate making bombs. He'd harp on things the government did that pissed him off, hype up rallys and shit, show some other things and he had links to site that told you how to make bombs. I've seen the anarchist cookbook linked about a hundred places. I once linked it as a historical reference, not to tell someone how to make a bomb or craft lsd in his kitchen. I think all the points you make are great, bombs suck, non-violent = good, rah rah, but I don't think this guy ever advocated using bombs, he didn't make them, he didn't use them, he linked to a page that told you how to make one.

      That's the injustice of this story. Giving the knowledge of where to go to find the knowledge of how to make bombs is now illegal. What the fuck?

      Here, I'll try it, just for fun. Google on "How to make a pipe bomb"

      I just provided the knowledge of where to go to find the knowledge to make bombs.

      Are they gonna arrest me too? I'll be AC just incase.
      AC is like locking your car doors. They can still know who you are, it just takes more work.

    105. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Our country, our government, was founded on the violent overthrow of our prior government. It wasn't that long ago folks. Look it up. There is no mention whatsoever of speech that is "not protected". Read the Amendments here. How appalling that so many are so willing to stand in line and not question the authority in Washington DC. Washington, Jefferson, and on down the line would be sickened by our current state of affairs.

    106. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      Source is Sherman himself. I see him every day, he'll be going to jail on the 3rd of September. The above post was actually me, under my Fiance's account. I didn't check to see if she was logged in.

    107. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by EddydaSquige · · Score: 1
      I always think that's its great how people will take parts of a sentence (especially that sentence) and purport it to be the whole truth when it is in fact not. (Another good example is Ann Coulter (sic?) claiming 'one of the top 100 intellectuals in america' which came from a book whose subtitle was something like 'a study in decline')

      There are a couple of comas in there and the first half of the sentence is just as important as the last, "A well regulated militia,".

      Section 8 of the Constitution covers militias, and it says: To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining the Militia, and for governing such Part of them as may be employed in the Service of the United States, reserving to the States respectively, the Appointment of the Officers, and the Authority of training the Militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress

      So it would seem that the right to bear arms is directly linked to the operation of a Militia, and Congress and the States have the final say as to the training and arming of said Militia, there for it is perfectly legal for the Congress or the State to determine what the Militia can or can not be armed with (and by extension every body else).

      To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions

      So to make the long story short, if you want a rocket launcher, convince your Congressman that you need said ordinance to effectively repel an invasion or to up hold the Constitution and we call all have Rocket launchers.

    108. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA..... by qtp · · Score: 1

      Shay's Rebellion was a call to end the current anarchy that was being permitted by a lack of will in the newly formed (not yet complete) government of the United States. The courts and local governments were permitting business owners and large land owners to act as defacto tyrannical governments. Large landowners and companies were issuing thier own currencies and hiring thier own "police forces" in disregard to the good of other citizens, but in keeping with the current attitude against centralized regulation of law enforcement and the government. Small farmers and factory workers wanted a consistant, strong currency backed by gold that would be honored as equal to the boulion that was being used by the large land owners and companies. Local courts ignored the pleas of the farmers and workers, mostly because they were being paid by the people who benefitted most from the inequality. The rebellion was crushed and the surviving rebels were sentanced to death for treason, but later pardoned because of the justness of thier cause. Look here for more info.

      The Haymarket Massacre occured after a peaceful labor rally at the Haymarket in Chicago was attacked by the police after the mayor of Chicago had given instructions for the police to stand down. The police captain on duty dissobeyed orders and instructed his men to disperse the crowd of 2500 people, and then to attack the men who refused to leave. There was one bomb thrown after the force of 176 armed police attacked the remaining crowd of 200 people. The bomb thrower was never identified. The police shot four protestors and six of thier own. Eight were arrested and tried, seven were sentanced to death, one of whom commited suicide, two were pardoned and four were executed. Read more here.

      The Kent State Massacre occured at a peace rally of at least 2000 people on the campus of Kent State University in Ohio after a group of protesters shouted insults and threw stones at National Guardsmen (no bombs were thrown or found). The guardsmen responded to the stones by marching on the crowd with bayonettes. The crowd was in full retreat when the guardsmen began firing on the fleeing protestors. Four were killed, nine were injured. Follow this link for an account of the events.

      You are right to counsel that bombs are bad tactics in a protest, I would go further and state that bombs have crossed the line beyond protest into guerilla warfare. But the allegations of bombs at Kent State have never been proven and have been disputed by several men who served with the National Guard on that day. The single bomb thrown at the Haymarket was the act of either a lone individual, or a small group of radically violent nihilists. In all of these cases the causes of the protesters were just.

      At the Haymarket it was the police disobeying orders that led to the massacre. At Kent State the Guardsmen shot people in thier backs.

      What is needed in these causes is well reasoned people to push forth the argument and to restrain the more unpredictable elements. The bombs need to be put away until it is clear that Democracy is lost.

      --
      Read, L
  3. Well duh. by desenz · · Score: 5, Funny

    I thought it was common knowledge that you don't disagree with the government.

    1. Re:Well duh. by maxor+snoodge · · Score: 2

      Especially now.

    2. Re:Well duh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'Land of the Free, Freedom of Speech' indeed.

      Doubleplusstandards seems more appropriate.

    3. Re:Well duh. by jd · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "You're either for us or against us" - President G. W. Bush.


      Unfortunately, I think the comment may prove more insightful. Or inciteful. Not sure which.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    4. Re:Well duh. by mausmalone · · Score: 1

      You can disagree with the government, just as long as you don't disagree with Bush. Don't mess with Texas!

      --
      -=-=-=-=-=
      I'd rather be flamed than ignored.
    5. Re:Well duh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Holy shit, you mean people are being held responsible for their actions? What is this world coming to!??

    6. Re:Well duh. by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      It's "fur" and "agin". Everyone knows that's how hicks from Texas speak. Oh, wait, the Bushes are actually from Conneticut. My bad.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    7. Re:Well duh. by keester · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That's a biblical reference. A quote from Jesus in one of the synoptic gospels. There is a related quote that goes a little something like this: "If they are not against us, then they are for us."

      --
      Take it easy? I'll take it anyway I can get it . . .
    8. Re:Well duh. by Pave+Low · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Unfortunately, that's not what he said.

      He actually said, "Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists." (one reference). By "with us", he was meaning with us against the fight against terrorism.

      So your subtle changing of his words completely distorts what he actually said and meant. That would qualify as FUD, or just outright fraud. I would have hoped readers and the moderators would have known better.

      --
      SIG:Slashdot: indymedia for nerds.
    9. Re:Well duh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bush has also said insightful things like:

      "I am not part of the problem, I am a Republican."

      "If we don't succeed, we run the risk of failure."

      "We have a firm commitment to NATO, we are a part of NATO. We have a firm commitment to Europe. We are a part of Europe."

      "Welcome to Mrs. Bush, and my fellow astronauts."

      And the kicker: "Public speaking is very easy."

    10. Re:Well duh. by Slack3r78 · · Score: 1

      Despite Bush's religious views, I highly doubt that that's the origin of that statement. By now it's clear that Bush sees the world in a very black and white manner - Good vs Evil, Right and Wrong, etc. There is no gray. That comment was just a manifestation of that perspective.

    11. Re:Well duh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems to me that those statements imply different things. Jesus's seems to state that only those who are activly against them are enemies, and the neutrals should be treated as friends. Dubya's implies that neutrals should be treated as enemies. Jesus might be Dubya's "favorite philosopher", but that still doesn't mean he was paying attention.

    12. Re:Well duh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The texts in question, from the King James Bible (not my favorite translation, but it is public domain):

      Mark 9:40 For he that is not against us is on our part.

      Luke 9:50 And Jesus said unto him, Forbid him not: for he that is not against us is for us.

      Matthew 12:30 He that is not with me is against me; and he that gathereth not with me scattereth abroad.

      As I read it, the biblical statements are all mathematically equivalent (if we take "me" to be the same as "us").

      The context of the saying in Mark and Luke is different from the context in Matthew. The connotation in Matthew is also different, but if you try to read the statements as being purely logical statements, then they only exclude the possibility of a person being 'not against us' and 'not with us'.

      Again in a purely mathematical sense, Bush's statement is a bit stronger, since it says a person cannot be 'not against us' and 'not with us', and it also says a person cannot be 'against us' and 'with us' at the same time.

      But practically speaking, the most people probably assume that the states of being 'with us' and 'against us' are mutually exclusive anyway. (It is only the possibility of a neutral state, neither with us nor against us, which is in question.)

    13. Re:Well duh. by EinarH · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Ok, your post is so flaimebait, but since some moderator on crack moderated you post as 4, Insightful and I have used my mod.points I will bite just to show that you are a Troll.
      He actually said, "Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists." (one reference). By "with us", he was meaning with us against the fight against terrorism.

      I'm not exactly Shakespeare when it comes to the English language but I fail to the political difference between this statement and the original "You're either for us or against us" expression.
      The direct consequence is still the same; he still tries to divide the possible positions in the "War Against Terror" into only two possible possitions, either with us(against the terrorist) or with the terrorrist(against us).
      I must say that Mr. Bush masters the art of speaking in a medieval rhetoric.

      [rant]
      But I guess that is not very disappointing, we all knew that this guy is not the brightest person. The really diappointing thing though; is that American voters probablly will elect him this time in the upcomming 2004 election.
      [/rant]

      --

      Melius mori in libertate quam vivere in servitute.

    14. Re:Well duh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "inciteful" isn't a word. There was a senator from New Jersey recently who made the same mistake with the unfortunate sound bite where he sounds like he's saying Bush's comments were "insightful" rather than that they were meant to incite.

      The proper word for something that incites is incendiary.

    15. Re:Well duh. by WNight · · Score: 1

      The biblical quote is saying that if you're not specifically against "us", you're for us. Bush's quote said that if you're not specifically for us, you're against us. If we assume that anything other than the polar opposites exists, then there is a large difference.

      Both views lump everything at one extreme or the other. The difference is that one is inclusive and the other, exclusive.

      If he's going to be religious, I wish he'd do it right.

    16. Re:Well duh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He actually said, "Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists." (one reference). By "with us", he was meaning with us against the fight against terrorism.

      I'm confused now. If I'm against terrorism, am I with him or against him?

    17. Re:Well duh. by Sky+Lemon · · Score: 1

      What? This should have been rated as funny. The original post had nothing made no mention of Bush or even faintly mimicked the comment "Eith you are with us, or are you are with the terrorists." If you were really trying to be serious then I wonder how you could have possibly hallucinated something completely different from what the original poster said.

    18. Re:Well duh. by jellybear · · Score: 1

      > That would qualify as FUD, or just outright fraud.

      You mean FRUD, then.

    19. Re:Well duh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, I agree with you completely -- the connotations are different, and while Bush's rhetoric echoes the biblical language, it is not really supported by it even for Bible-fans, since (in both contexts) Jesus is referring to the membership of the Christian church as a whole. (Which is not to say that Bush ever claimed such support, of course.) The question of who is on what side regarding a fight against terrorism seems totally different to me, so the quotation is more of a literary reference than anything else.

      I just think it's amusing that to note that "if X is not in A, then X is in B" is mathematically equivalent to "if X is not in B, then X is in A"...

      .. while if you actually say the statements, there is an added meaning that makes them quite different. (So for the second statement, there is a connotation that "Unless we've proven X to be in B, we'd better assume it's in A.")

    20. Re:Well duh. by whatch+durrin · · Score: 1
      Well run for office, Einstein!

      --
      ***
      Radio Shack. You've got questions...we've got blank stares(TM).
    21. Re:Well duh. by davebarz · · Score: 1

      I think if I try to write a reply to that comment, my head will explode.

    22. Re:Well duh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you must have a gun license too. republican scum.

    23. Re:Well duh. by panda · · Score: 1

      Actually, may I point out that the American voters did not elect him last time. Bush won the electoral college vote largely over the mess in Florida, when a majority Republican appointed Supreme Court refused to allow yet another recount of votes.

      The fact is, the majority of Americans voted for Al Gore.

      This isn't the first time in America that a President was elected who didn't get the majority of popular votes, but did win in the most populous states to become President.

      --
      Just be sure to wear the gold uniform when you beam down -- you know what happens when you wear the red one.
    24. Re:Well duh. by jd · · Score: 1
      Let X be an element of the set E

      Let A, B and C be subsets of E, where A union B equals E


      George Bush's statement: B intersection C = C

      Jesus' statement: A intersection C = C


      Of course, this being mathematics, we can argue that both are correct.

      In which case: A intersection B = either A or B


      Hmmm. This could be interesting. Take the various statements by significant historical figures and turn them into set logic.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    25. Re:Well duh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember some article that talks about how he views himself as gods warrior and apointed to government to further christian goals.

  4. Worries by spamchang · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm worried for a friend of mine who runs an informative site on Arab nations. It seems that excersise of First Amendment rights puts a big bullseye for Patriot Act and all sorts of unnecessary national defense matters.

    (maybe i should have posted as anon. coward...!)

    1. Re:Worries by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > I'm worried for a friend of mine who runs an informative site on Arab nations

      Well, you could be worried if he is advocating the violent overthrow of the U.S. (or posting DeCSS code).

      Otherwise, you appear to be overinflating your "fear" to make a point that is not-at-all analogous.

      BUT, (and that's a "but" even bigger than my own) I do agree with your point on a basic level.

      If the guy is breaking the law, fine, put him in jail. What enrages me (among other things) is that somehow he would be considered worse just because terrorists attacked us two years ago. That's bullshit. He either broke a law or didn't break a law, there shouldn't be excessively different ways to charge him or punish him for the same crime.

    2. Re:Worries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If your friend doesn't ask people to kill others there shouldn't be a problem. This bozo wanted people to make bombs and "use them during demonstrations against interstate and foreign trade". That's never been protected speach.

      --
      me

    3. Re:Worries by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 1
      I'm worried for a friend of mine who runs an informative site on Arab nations. It seems that excersise of First Amendment rights puts a big bullseye for Patriot Act and all sorts of unnecessary national defense matters.

      Unless your friend is a dumbass 5kr1p4 k1dd13 wannabe who goes around defacing web sites and claiming credit for it and storing Molotov cocktails in his home, I think he's probably alright here.

      --
      Why?
    4. Re:Worries by e_pluribus_funk · · Score: 1

      Why, is your friend who is running an 'informative site' on Arab nations putting in things like:

      "Top 10 Ways to Avoid Israeli Checkpoints on Your Way To Blow Up Babies?"

      or

      "Why Bid Laden Was Right?"

      Somehow, I think that if you are worried, this isn't your run of the mill Worldbook Encyclopedia type site.

      Note to the various revolutionary idiots out there: yes, putting out an site advocating the violent overthrow of the US government and the inflicting of mass casualties on US citizens will be regarded dimly by the US government and by US citizens in general.

      It's almost like you guys are back in French Guyana and wondering why people don't want to drink the flavored punch. Duh!

    5. Re:Worries by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      (maybe i should have posted as anon. coward...!)
      Or maybe.. You should understand something about First Amendment rights.
  5. If the FBI is reading this... by teamhasnoi · · Score: 4, Funny
    I believe a man named Darl McBride is the man behind this terrorist.

    You should probably go and shoot him in the head. Quickly!

  6. seriously screwed up action by saskwach · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Says the Constitution of the United States of America:
    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

    What the hell?

    1. Re:seriously screwed up action by Gibble · · Score: 5, Insightful

      key word being "peaceably";

      "links to bomb-making instructions, the site
      caught the ire of the FBI for advocating the
      overthrow of the U.S. government"

      Last I checked...bombs weren't peaceful.

      --
      Gibble: Descriptive of an emotional state in which one's mind is scrabbling for some purchase on reality
    2. Re:seriously screwed up action by IFF123 · · Score: 0, Redundant

      And yet you can't scream "fire" in a packed movie theater. Based on your observation, ANY speech should be free, even if it endangers others. But then again, this is slashdot (i.e. "information wants to be free") PS: I do think that this guy went up the river unlawfully...

      --
      Who took my tinfoil hat?
    3. Re:seriously screwed up action by Maul · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The federal government no longer believes in the "pesky" first ammendment any more. I'm surprised Ashcroft hasn't called for it to be repealed yet.

      --

      "You spoony bard!" -Tellah

    4. Re:seriously screwed up action by kannibal_klown · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think simply advocating the overthowing of the government is under free speech. And if that was all, then I'd be greatly offended at this act. However, if you're advocating the overthrow of a government AND posting links about how to make bombs, then that's another matter. Then you're saying "Let's overthrow the goverment and kill people, here's how...!" Sure, the author might not have been saying "let's blow up a bunch of congressman's houses), but people could have taken it that way. Enciting violence is iffy, but enciting violence and purposely providing the means to do such violence (such as handing out guns or describing how to make bombs to kill people) is another matter.

    5. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Supreme court has long limited freedom of speech in several ways. Shouting fire in a crowded theatre is illegal by the same means which speech that incites the violent overthrow of the government is illegal. The law has been clear on this for decades.

    6. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      come on, let's not be so naive. Congress has the ability and has exercised the power to restrain speech that is deemed injurious to the public.

      This includes the "fire in a crowded theater" where the consequences of the speech are a stampede. And it also includes restraint based on content -- for example threats directed towards people whether online or in real life (and courts have endoresed these restraints even when the speech was made in a private email, though I think an appellate reversed that decision), or threats directed against the government.

      And, all else fails, it'll go to appeal. that ban on political participation has got to be unconstitutional.

    7. Re:seriously screwed up action by Phillup · · Score: 2, Interesting

      isn't the word "peaceably" referring to the type of assembly?

      And... it is saying you can gather in a group to address your government... it doesn't have to be one-on-one.

      As long as the assembly is peaceful.

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    8. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government...
      -- Declaration of Independence

      Didn't the U.S. revolt against Britain and Kill People?
    9. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      First, it's LINKING. Not posting.

      Second, bomb-making instructions have been protected in the courts before. Instructions for building a nuclear weapon can be found online (Good luck with the plutonium though).

      The thought police are here. You say 'oh well he wants to overtrough the gov't, that's BAD(tm)'.

      So did your founding fathers. Fucking Americans.

    10. Re:seriously screwed up action by kannibal_klown · · Score: 1

      BTW, when I say advocating the overthrow of a government is free speech, I mean some guy suggesting it on a soap box/website.

      Personally, I'm against it, but a person is allowed to believe what he/she wants.

      Also, remember we have the rights to "Life, Liberty, and the persuit of Happiness." Notice how Life is mentioned first. This guy's website was advocating violence, plain and simple, which violates other people's right to live.

    11. Re:seriously screwed up action by Aadain2001 · · Score: 5, Informative

      But the word "peaceably" is not attached to the right to free speech or press. It is only attached to the right for the people to peaceably assmble (ie, it's ok to stand outside Congress and protest something, but not ok to start a riot over it).

      You could argue that the "you can't shout fire in a crowded theather" refinement the Supreme Court has added would also cover bomb making instructions, but I disagree. You can't shout fire because it would cause direct damage to people (stampeed). But knowing how to make a bomb and posessing instructions on how to make a bomb and even sharing those instructions/knowledge does not cause direct damage to other people. A person would have to choose to make that bomb and then use it to hurt others. Let me highlight that special word: choose. Having knowledge or sharing it is not the same as hurting someone directly.

      --
      Space for rent, inquire within
    12. Re:seriously screwed up action by aminorex · · Score: 1

      There is no peacable assembly issue. It is purely a freedom of the press issue.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    13. Re:seriously screwed up action by Phillup · · Score: 1

      He has.

      He just hasn't felt the need to get congress involved, since he runs the jail-em department.

      --

      --Phillip

      Can you say BIRTH TAX
    14. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Terrorists don't just have dark and olive skin. This guy was actively espousing attacks against the American government and by extension, the American people. I agree that freedom of speech is very important, but the 1st Amendment has never been a say-what-you-want free-for-all (i.e., "fire!" in a crowded theater.) If it is acceptable to shut down Christian websites that provide the addresses of doctors that perform infanticide, then surely it is acceptable to shut down left-wing websites that espouse violence against Americans?

      We've done our work to strike out against terrorism in Afghanistan and Iraq, but it would be a shame if we forgot to police our own backyard, from which (I would argue) the biggest threat comes.

    15. Re:seriously screwed up action by SuperDuG · · Score: 1
      "You're either with us or against us" - President George W. Bush.

      The United States "Patriot Act" is nothing more than a shit document that takes and nullfies the constitution we so love and cherish. The legislation was reactionary and we will be facing the horrors of its placement for years to come. Welcome to the American police-state.

      It's stated right there that if you are suspected of terrorism, you are screwed. YET, there is no definition of what a "terrorist" is or does in the entire document. Quite possibly for writing this post to slashdot I may be considered a terrorist.

      As a slashdot sig once said:

      "Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they aren't after you."

      Write your senator and congressman and hope and pray that we can once again call ourselves "Members of the land of the free and the brave" and not "Members of the land of the mostly free and scared".

      --
      Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    16. Re:seriously screwed up action by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 1
      BTW, when I say advocating the overthrow of a government is free speech, I mean some guy suggesting it on a soap box/website.

      Hell, Jefferson was all for this! Advocated it all the time.

      --
      "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
      Never been known to fail..."
    17. Re:seriously screwed up action by taernim · · Score: 1

      It does not include the freedom to make statements which can be construed as threatening.

      Providing information that could be used for terror (I.E. how to make a bomb) or saying "I'm gonna kill the prez" are not protected by freedom of speech.

      --
      "PC Load Letter? What the $@#% does that mean?!"
    18. Re:seriously screwed up action by Lord_Slepnir · · Score: 1
      Last I checked...bombs weren't peaceful. War is Peace.

      According newthink peace is destruction, anarchy. Bombs bring destruction. Therefore, Bombs bring peace.

      Citizen Gibble. Yes, you Gibble, number 514795. Learn Newthink Doubleplus speedwise.

    19. Re:seriously screwed up action by finallyHasANickname · · Score: 1

      There is precedent for limitations on free speech. There are a few main reasons that the courts will permit as the reason to sensor. Among the most important is when the censor prevents someone from issuing "fighting words".
      Half decent link
      Half decent link
      Half decent link

    20. Re:seriously screwed up action by kannibal_klown · · Score: 1

      Yes, and those responsible were viewed as criminals by the British during the time. Should we treat killers differently if they kill civilians because they feel they have a reason? If someone shot a bunch of people and said he did so because he felt the company they worked for was "evil" and a blight on society, should we let them walk? No. They are criminals, plain and simple/

      That guy should be lucky that nobody used his website to kill people. Otherwise, he'd be on death row (or get life imprisonment) instead of a year.

    21. Re:seriously screwed up action by DeckardJK · · Score: 5, Informative
      Please... RTFA's Quote:
      According to the FBI, Austin allegedly defaced at least five commercial Web sites since 1999 using the nickname "Ucaun." On three of the sites, Austin left behind a hacking program named troop.cgi that was designed to attempt to log in to a computer operated by the U.S. Army, the FBI affidavit stated. In the interview, Austin acknowledged that he vandalized the Web sites and that he knew it was illegal to do so. But he defended the act by saying it was necessary to get his message out.
      He is cracking websites and trying to log into US Gov't servers. He also ran this website that contained info on how to build bombs. The wording for the /. post is incomplete at best... very misleading.
    22. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Think for a second people - especially you high school and college uber-geniuses espousing your wisdom to us poor white collar workers from a parental funded bed of luxury.

      All speech is not free. Ever heard of libel? Though so.

      All speech is not free, just as 'freedom of religion' is not free. Imagine if I make a religion that says I need to rob banks to go to heaven, think the Gov would like that?

      If this guy was KNOWINGLY providing access to information that can ONLY be used to commit wanton acts of violence, then there is no difference from providing the information himself.

      -n

    23. Re:seriously screwed up action by Purificator · · Score: 1

      (no, i'm not a lawyer or poli sci teacher)

      the interpretation of "free speech" does not (nor has it ever, as far as i know) include making illegal plans, causing disasters (the "your freedom of speech does not allow you to shout 'fire' in a crowded theater" example), or plan violent overthrow of the govenrment (political asassinations included). my take on how most legal "rights" work is that they are meant to protect you without harming others.

      you CAN plan peaceful coups, like putting together your own political party to lobby congress and run for public office. you CAN publish a website/newspaper criticising government officials and policies (yellowtimes.org is still around, isn't it). you CANNOT suggest that people go shoot a particular politician because you disagree with a proposed law.

      in this case, he lost his right to do even that because of the type of "crime" (like kevin mitnick being unable to own or operate a computer for a while). felons lose other "rights" they have in america like owning firearms, travelling freely (at least while on parole), and voting.

      --
      "Mister Potato-head --MISTER POTATO-HEAD! Backdoors are not secrets!" (War Games, 1983)
    24. Re:seriously screwed up action by pete-classic · · Score: 1

      It doesn't say anything about peaceful speech. I guarantees the right to all speech. It also guarantees the right of peaceful assembly.

      But that little fact aside, he was linking not bombing.

      Last I checked . . . links weren't capable of violence.

      Furthermore, bombs aren't capable of violence. Though they do make spectacular instruments of violence. Links much less so.

      Finally, the Union government has no authority over the private possession of materials or substances, to include bombs.

      But thanks for your input.

      -Peter

    25. Re:seriously screwed up action by Homology · · Score: 1
      You are right to be concerned, as should all of us, what these new laws makes possible.

      One does not need to be a fringe paranoid to concede that professor Jim Cornehls in The USA PATRIOT ACT has a point :

      If another power were to occupy the United States and institute the policies provided for in the USA PATRIOT Act--secret arrests, secret trials, secret investigations, secret deportations--the United States would be considered a police state.
    26. Re:seriously screwed up action by bugg · · Score: 1
      Firstly speach doesn't have to be peaceful. Nobody said it did. Supreme court rulings talk about how advocation of violence can be illegal in some circumstances, when there's a clear and present danger (i.e. you're giving orders). But that's not the case here, is it?

      Also of note is background on the case, where if you scroll down you find out about all sorts of better bomb making knoweldge you can get from a library or amazon.com. Legally. What makes this case different, unfortunately, is that it was done by someone who had unpopular views. So apparently some things are only illegal if you're a dissident - and that should worry us all.

      --
      -bugg
    27. Re:seriously screwed up action by MarkGriz · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure he has. Now where the hell did I see that... (fumbles around)... Ah yes, here it is

      --
      Beauty is in the eye of the beerholder.
    28. Re:seriously screwed up action by Zutroy+Of+Earth · · Score: 1

      But shouting "FIRE" in a crowded theater will only result in a stampeed if people *make the choice* to trample people on their way out.

      But I still agree with you.

    29. Re:seriously screwed up action by Dog+and+Pony · · Score: 1

      But knowing how to make a bomb and posessing instructions on how to make a bomb and even sharing those instructions/knowledge does not cause direct damage to other people. A person would have to choose to make that bomb and then use it to hurt others. Let me highlight that special word: choose. Having knowledge or sharing it is not the same as hurting someone directly.

      Exactly. I know how to punch a human straight in the face. Does this mean we could put all of Hollywood in jail? I mean, they didn't only show where to find this information, they have shown me directly how to do this in uncountable movies.

      I choose not to do this however. Because it is the wrong thing to do, it is not polite, and well, I'm a skinny little shit so I would most likely get a dozen different kinds of crap beaten out of me for trying. But that is beside the point. ;-)

    30. Re:seriously screwed up action by bheerssen · · Score: 1

      Running a website does not come under the provision of peaceable assembly, but rather that of free speech. Advocating overthrow of the government is free speech. Linking to bomb making instructions is also free speech. Hell, publishing bomb making instructions is free speech.

      Fear colors perception, and is very insidious. The first ammendment must be protected, and at any cost.

      --
      (Score: -1, Stupid)
    31. Re:seriously screwed up action by wo1verin3 · · Score: 1

      >> bombs weren't peaceful.

      I learned my lesson quickly on this playing Atomic Bomberman

      +1 cool video game reference -1 troll

    32. Re:seriously screwed up action by danila · · Score: 1

      Last I checked, US govt successfully used the bombs in Iraq to establish peace there. Double standards?

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    33. Re:seriously screwed up action by zen00 · · Score: 1

      >That guy should be lucky that nobody used his website to kill people.

      If not his website, then it would be some other website. That's the great thing about the internet, the information can be found in more than one place. Does that mean that ALL the websites that have links to "questionable" or "un-american" content are going to be shut down and the people who host those websites should be jailed? Hell, you might as well jail publishers as well, since you can go to a library and get the same information. Or you could go one step further and shut down all the libraries in the country because they provide access to the information.

    34. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Advocating violence does not infringe upon your right to life. Taking part in a violent act against you would. There is a huge fricking differance. Which is part of the reason clan rallys are allowed. They may advocate unpopular views, and violence, but are allowed to do so without restraint until such time as they act upon those views in violence.

    35. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to America, where you have "Freedom of Speech" but you can't shout "Fire" in a crowded theater-- even if the theater actually is on fire.

    36. Re:seriously screwed up action by mausmalone · · Score: 1

      ... or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

      The Constitution grants us the right to peaceably assemble and petition the government. Every American has the right to free speech, but not in certain circumstances. You can't slander a person (which is to make deliberately false statements about someone for the purpose of hurting their reputation), and we accept that limitation just fine.

      We have to learn to come to terms with the 'clear and present danger' limitation, too. When speech is specifically used to incite violence, the government has legal cause to arrest the speaker. For example, a Vietnam protester who organizes a march and gives a speech is protected under the first ammendment. But a pro-lifer who organizes a march and gives a speech which could directly result in the death of an abortion doctor is liable for his/her speech.

      As with all ammendments, you're granted them on a probationary basis, and they are revoked or voided when they will infringe on the rights of another person. Ask a convicted felon, they'll tell you for sure that if you violate another persons' rights, you forfeit your own.

      --
      -=-=-=-=-=
      I'd rather be flamed than ignored.
    37. Re:seriously screwed up action by Coilgun · · Score: 1

      How does simply advocating violence violate anyone's right to anything? As far as I know, words can only kill if fed through a sufficiently powerful amplifier and very robust speakers. In order to violate someone's right to life, you have to ACT and kill them. If someone does this, punish them for committing an unlawful ACT, but you can't go after the person who put the thought in their head...unless you're one of those people who doesn't believe in personal responsibility.

      --
      That is all. Carry on. </transmission>
    38. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...if you call that peace

    39. Re:seriously screwed up action by NaugaHunter · · Score: 1

      I've read this and re-read this, and nothing in it says 'with no consequences whatsoever'.

      Essentially (and theoretically), everyone is allowed to say what they want and the legal system will decide whether it was appropriate or not. That's the guarantee - that voices won't be silenced BEFORE they are heard. Afterwards is a different story.

      'Petition' does not mean 'call for the overthrow of'. The system is not perfect (few things mankind has made are), but there are ways to affect change within it. How effective they are, and how long they take, are open to debate. But they are there and the can be used.

      Right now, voter turnout is atrocious. If in the next Congressional election every single person who thought the Republicans had gone to far in the war and the Patriot act voted, the shape of the House and Senate would be very different indeed. WITHOUT overthrowing the whole thing. Until voter turnout is higher, we're stuck with what we end up with.

      --
      R: That voice. Where have I heard that voice before? B: In about 365 other episodes. But I don't know who it is either.
    40. Re:seriously screwed up action by jocknerd · · Score: 1

      If left-wingers are the ones advocating the overthrow of the government, then are you saying that liberals are responsible for our independence from Great Britain?

      There's many more "right-wing" websites that promote violence than "left-wing". Militia groups are far right-wing just in case you didn't know.

      You have really jumped on this conservative bandwagon that labels anyone a liberal who speaks out against our government.

    41. Re:seriously screwed up action by notbob · · Score: 0

      The definition of a terrorist will be invented on the fly by the US Gov at it's will, they can add your name to the list any time you like.

      We lost our rights to freedom... we lost our economy to WTO & Free Trade & Exploitation of minor countries, the only thing we have left is life itself... and life without liberty is death.

      "Give me liberty or give me death... right after you pry my gun from my cold dying hands... mother f'er"

    42. Re:seriously screwed up action by mrquicknet · · Score: 4, Funny

      I used to manage a movie theatre and on occasion when I was locking up and no one was there I'd shout "fire" a couple of times.

      I'm such the rebel.

      Please don't tell on me.

      --
      --------- Steve Martin once said, "Sex is the most natural, most beautiful, most wonderful thing that money can buy."
    43. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Having knowledge or sharing it is not the same as hurting someone directly.

      Look up a legal definition of assault. All you have to do is threaten someone to be arrested and convicted for it.

      He threaten more than one person. End of discussion. If he had just had links to bomb-making sites, my guess is he would be contacted and monitored but not arrested.

    44. Re:seriously screwed up action by pogle · · Score: 1

      Ermm...which article would you be referring to? I don't see any such quote in the CNN link...nor on his webpage.

      --
      http://thechubbyferret.net - Ferret pictures and informative links.
    45. Re:seriously screwed up action by djrogers · · Score: 3, Interesting

      But the word "peaceably" is not attached to the right to free speech or press. It is only attached to the right for the people to peaceably assmble (ie, it's ok to stand outside Congress and protest something, but not ok to start a riot over it).


      Well, oddly enough, he WAS arrested for being involved in a violent protest. On top of that:

      Austin admitted posting links about bombs to enable people to build and use them during demonstrations against interstate and foreign trade.


      He specifically admitted that his purpose for posting the links was a VIOLENT one. Inciting others to riot is an offense any way you look at it...

      All that being said, the whole debate about legality, free speech, civil rights, etc. is a moot point - the 'gentleman' in question VOLUNTARILY gave up his right to a trial and plead guilty, so none of those questions could ever be addressed in a court of law. The punishment is based on what he plead guilty to, not the legitimacy of the charges. What did you expect the judge to do, force him in to a trial?
      --
      Think outside the... Hey, where'd the friggin' box go?
    46. Re:seriously screwed up action by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      WHY is it ok to publish info on making bombs on paper but wrong to publish the same info online?

    47. Re:seriously screwed up action by stripe · · Score: 1

      Does not take much to learn how to make bombs, simple chemistry. Easy to make detonator caps and explosives. Materials for which you can buy at any Orchard supply store. Far simpler to just go buy explosives our controls of explosives were so lax people used to buy them to blow up tree stumps. I do not know why he would want to advocate overthrowing our system of goverment. I thought that was what voting was all about. If you do not like our bums in office run yourself or kick them out. That is what California is doing. Kick out the bum you do not want and elect some other bum that will do as bad a job or worse.

    48. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, You sound like a terrorist!
      Imagine the unpatriotik-ness of actually quoting
      a document such as that "constitution"

      I'm calling Rumsfield,
      for the homeland.....

    49. Re:seriously screwed up action by kannibal_klown · · Score: 1

      GOd, I don't want to start/partake in an argument. But here:

      As mentioned in my original post (if you read it), I mention that I do not feel that him simply advocating the overthrow of a goverment was legally wrong. But he also posted links to instructions on building bombs. He might as well have said (here is where you can get a great deal on an AK47, no questions asked). Sure, the individual would have to go buy the ak47, but he would be aiding in an illegal act by knowingly helping him obtain weapons for crime.

      Sure, ultimately it is the actual person who decided to build the bomb and kill people that is guilty. But you can't tell me that legally and morally, the guy who told him how to build them bomb, and possibly encited the idea/rage to trigger him into doing it isn't AT LEAST SOMEWHAT responsible.

      And as for personal responsibility, I feel that too many people use the "I was beaten as a child" or whatever excuse they have to get away with a crime. However, in the end had soemone bombed innocents because of this guys website, he should be held accountable on at least some level, even if it were negligent homicide or grave indifference.

    50. Re:seriously screwed up action by LloydSeve · · Score: 1
      But knowing how to make a bomb and posessing instructions on how to make a bomb and even sharing those instructions/knowledge does not cause direct damage to other people. A person would have to choose to make that bomb and then use it to hurt others. Let me highlight that special word: choose. Having knowledge or sharing it is not the same as hurting someone directly.
      Let us compare this to MODERN law. The way you are assuming law works is, that if you provide something, and someone else uses it, you are not liable. Napster, a popular file swapping program. It provided millions of people the ability to share their files online. Now, granted, it was your CHOICE to download files and break the laws. But Napster was held liable for providing the means to do it. Now, if you are a bartender, serving someone beer at night. It is the other person's choice to drink or not. And it is your choice to drive after drinking. Now it may be against the law to drive while intoxicated, and it may not have been the bartenders wishes. But if that drunken man gets into a car accident and kills someone, the bar and bartender are liable for the death of the third party. Choice is no longer a term that exists in our law system anymore. Because the person who gave the chooser the choice to make that decision, is not ultimately liable in our law.
    51. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Peacefull assemby -- not peacefull speech. The US Constitution is very plain spoken. A citizen has an ABSOLUTE right to say any-damned-thing at all w.r.t. the Constitutional structure --- including destroying it by whatever means. Who sez the Nazis didn't win WW2 on the back of their Stalinist pals ??

    52. Re:seriously screwed up action by Cyno · · Score: 1

      So I guess a group of people who bear arms can no longer peaceably assemble in this country with all our political correctness.

      Last I checked bombs didn't cause terrorism and were also used by our peacekeeping forces to kill innocent civilians. In fact we killed more innocent civialians than the terrorists, if that's even possible. Seems rather hypocritical to keep calling them terrorists in light of recent events.

    53. Re:seriously screwed up action by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      More erosion of liberties, more contradictions of the plainly worded Constitution, particularly the Bill of Rights.

      We can get mad at the current administration for it, but really they are just carrying on a proud tradition that's been going on for many years... since the Civil War.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    54. Re:seriously screwed up action by k1llt1me · · Score: 1

      I always believe the FBI. They're my bestest buds...

    55. Re:seriously screwed up action by DeckardJK · · Score: 1
      http://www.pc-radio.com/FBI%20Raid%20Silences%20Te en%20Anarchist's%20Site.htm

      Sorry for the long link. This is a copy of the article that was in the original /. post on this.

      The creator of this post refers to the old /. post... it would've been nice if people would read this before the knee jerk reactions.

    56. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (disclaimer, purely hypothetical) So what if I get an old army combat manual, listen to Dubya's speeches, watch how our government is acting, and then use what I've learned and the ideas put in my head and go out and start killing everyone who's skin is more than three shades darker than my own? Would you hold the government responsible "on at least some level, even if it were negligent homicide or grave indifference"?

    57. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He wouldn't call for a complete repeal of it, instead he would work in new laws and change the way the DOJ enforces those laws and the constitution. At that point, a new amendment would be made as a new version of the first. The first would then no longer be in effect but still be listed and referenced.

    58. Re:seriously screwed up action by rossz · · Score: 1

      What most people don't realize is the "can't shout fire in a theatre" clause was originally used to surpress legitimate political pamphlets. It urged its draftee readers (first World War) to think about the message and then--if they so chose--to act on it in a lawful and nonviolent way. Of this horrid opinion, only the "fire" part remains, more out of being a snappy line than in being good law.

      You do, in fact, have a right to shout fire in a crowded theatre. If you do it falsely, you could be tossed in jail, but for reasons completely unrelated to free speech.

      With liberty comes responsibility. The government uses the abuse of liberty as an excuse to reduce rights. Don't accept this. Just because some people forget they must be responsible does not make it ok for the government to strip those rights away. Some people print racist articles, so laws are passed outlawing hate speech. You think that's ok? Did you know that in some places in the South it was illegal to advocate interacial marriage? You could get thrown in jail for advocating "crimes against morality". In a fundamental sense this is the same thing. One side advocating something the other side finds morally reprehensible. So who defines what is good speech and what is bad speech? No one. Let the ideas flow, both good and bad. You can't legislate intelligent thinking.

      --
      -- Will program for bandwidth
    59. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It does seem disingenous to me to advocate blowing people up, killing them whereever they stand cause "dey is evel" and then getting into a "hey, you're abrogating my rights" tizzy when they take you seriously.

    60. Re:seriously screwed up action by jtalkington · · Score: 1

      That guy should be lucky that nobody used his website to kill people.

      A major point is that none of the bomb making instructions were on his website. He simply provided links to other websites that provided the instructions. Those other websites are still up, and there are many other sources for this same information.

    61. Re:seriously screwed up action by pogle · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link. I do have to wonder though, why this isnt a factor in his sentencing. Seems like they'd want to throw that in there with the rest of the evidence.

      --
      http://thechubbyferret.net - Ferret pictures and informative links.
    62. Re:seriously screwed up action by kannibal_klown · · Score: 1

      I may be mistaken, but I THINK while a book that describes how to make a bomb might be legal, combining it with ideas on how to use it in a crime is probably not, ESPECIALLY when the theme of said literature focusing more on how to use against a group of people.

      Case-in-point, Book A says "this is how you build a bomb. It is dangerous and should not be used as a weapon."

      Book B says "Damn those , I think they should all die. I think someone should bomb the cr@p out of them. And PS, here's how you could do it."

      Then Book B is AT LEAST on the thin line of legal free speech and crime. However, if a person read the book, and decided to bomb whichever group by making a bomb using the directions in the book, then the author would probably be in hot water as far as the law was concered.

      Then again, I'm just a programmer and I'm really tired of this article. In the end, this guy only got a year in jail, doing something he must have known was probably not the wisest thing to post now-a-days.

    63. Re:seriously screwed up action by mandrakeroot · · Score: 1

      While I probably wouldn't want to be friends with this guy, I have to say that he wasnt breaking the law in any way. I got the implication that he didn't author the content, but linked to it just as google links to content. You don't see google employees being carted away to jail, do you? Anti-government sites should be counted as free speech just as burning a flag should be. Unlike cross burning which implies a threatened violence to certain people, an antigovernment site is antiestablishment not anti individual.

    64. Re:seriously screwed up action by DeckardJK · · Score: 1
      Apparently I can't handle the html... but anyway...

      Yeah, the cnn article isn't very fact packed either... not very clear on what he's been convicted of.

    65. Re:seriously screwed up action by LMariachi · · Score: 1
      So I guess this and this and certainly this are all unprotected.

      Anything "can be construed as threatening." Almost anything "could be used for terror." The test is whether it is an actual threat.

    66. Re:seriously screwed up action by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      He was not convicted of hacking at all. Whatever the FBI said in their affadavit here, that does not seem to be what he was officially charged with. At least, he pleaded guilty only to publishing links to bomb information.

    67. Re:seriously screwed up action by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 3, Insightful

      All that being said, the whole debate [...] is a moot point - the 'gentleman' in question VOLUNTARILY gave up his right to a trial and plead guilty...

      Well, voluntary is a funny word. If I hold a gun to your head and ask for your wallet, and you give it to me, I haven't actually hurt you. You voluntarily gave your wallet to me. Of course, that 'voluntary' action was made under serious duress, hence it's not actually voluntary.

      Now, if the FBI decided to charge me with a completely bogus crime, then said, "Plea now, or we'll make sure you get ass-raped by a rotating array of big, angry men every day for the next twenty years" -- well, suffice to say, I'd plea bargain.

      When the government's got your nuts in a vice, you don't have very far to run.

    68. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your idea of DIRECT damage is a little off...just saying one word ("FIRE!") doesn't DIRECTLY hurt anyone -- people hear what you say and decide (or not) to stampede. The fact is that either of these two things (bomb making instructions or yelling fire) provide the very real potential that someone will be harmed.

    69. Re:seriously screwed up action by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      "Inciting others to riot is an offense any way you look at it."

      Actually, this is not so. The phrase necessary to dissect the possible illegality of speech is, Clear and Present Danger. In other words, is it reasonable to expect that his speech would create an imminent danger to life and limb. The answer, in this case, is no. By shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theatre, you've directly caused a panic which is very likely to result in immediate injury or death within the theatre. By printing words calling for violent actions, he has commited no crime. Now, assuming this person marched a crowd of loyal supporters down to Capital Hill and started calling for them to burn the city to the ground, he could and should be arrested on the spot for inciting a riot. Why? Because his words and/or actions can be construed by a reasonable person to create a situation in which injury and/or death is imminent. There's nothing imminent at all about words posted to a web site.

      "The punishment is based on what he plead guilty to, not the legitimacy of the charges. What did you expect the judge to do, force him in to a trial?"

      How about, "take the deal or we'll declare you an enemy combatant, and you'll spend the rest of your life in jail."

      In today's justice system, the possibility of being labled a terrorist is sufficiently "terrifying" (pardon the pun) to bring just about anyone around on the idea of a deal. Whether directly or indirectly threatened makes no difference; the result remains the same. From this person's perspective, he could be looking at anything from a few years to 20+ years to enemy combatant (read: 'til the end of time) in prison. Suddenly, a deal for a year looks a whole lot tastier.

      The point is that it doesn't matter if you're innocent or guilty - right or wrong. It only matters what the accused believes will happen to them if they don't take the deal. If you lose, perhaps you'll spend 20 years in prison. If you start looking like you might win, then maybe the military comes to get you instead. In essence, once you're convinced there's no way to win, you start looking for any way at all to cut your losses.

      That's not "voluntary" in my book.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    70. Re:seriously screwed up action by Loki_1929 · · Score: 1

      " And yet you can't scream "fire" in a packed movie theater."

      Yes, and why is this? How is this different from posting to a web site? Read my above comment for details, but suffice it to say that yelling "Fire" is quite different from what this guy did, from a legal/Constitutional perspective.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
    71. Re:seriously screwed up action by zurab · · Score: 1
      He specifically admitted that his purpose for posting the links was a VIOLENT one.


      I agreed with you up to this point, but this is simply nonsense. If I say or write that Bill Gates deserves to have his head cut off, it would be a violent statement, but it is free speech. And Bill Gates can say same about me as well, not that he would care.

      Inciting others to riot is an offense any way you look at it...


      Nope. If I tell you to go ahead and kill Bill Gates, and you, without being paid, forced, or otherwise coerced, chose to go ahead and commit murder, you would be a criminal, not me. In the same way, If I told you to go riot in front of White House on July 4, and you chose to do it voluntarily, it is your fault, not mine.

      All that being said, the whole debate about legality, free speech, civil rights, etc. is a moot point - the 'gentleman' in question VOLUNTARILY gave up his right to a trial and plead guilty, so none of those questions could ever be addressed in a court of law. The punishment is based on what he plead guilty to, not the legitimacy of the charges. What did you expect the judge to do, force him in to a trial?


      First, the judge sentenced him to 1 year, when the plea bargain was for only 4 months.

      Second, here I was thinking that prosecution was about justice, not tilting, spinning, or threatening in any way so that they get a confession and a deal from a person government simply doesn't like or agree with.

      Third, he was arrested for disorderly conduct and unlawful assembly in New York with few others. I don't know all the facts but it seems like if the government doesn't like you, they can label you a terrorist and then they are free to do pretty much as they please. This is definitely unfair.
    72. Re:seriously screwed up action by Lokinator · · Score: 1

      As U.S. Citizens we are not bound to talk about only peaceful things that bestow warm fuzzy feelings upon our government officials. Talking or writing about bombs, guns, knives, bad lasagne recipes, and other less than pleasant objects is perfectly lawful.

      It is even lawful to suggest that it would be morally correct to inflict bad lasagne, bobs, guns, knives, and other unpleasantry on persons and/or organizations of which we disapprove.

      Where the line is crossed is when one takes a concrete action to serve bad lasagne(etc) unto the disapproved parties.

      As the case is described, it is a farce of intimidation and terror (if you don't find the threat of 20 years in a federal penitentiary terrifying, you need to seriously re-evaluate)implemented by persons either constitutionally clueless or so eager to be seen to be doing something to fight "terrorism" that they forget that the Bill of Rights exists...and a federal prosecutor more afraid of losing face than of inflicting injustice on an individual without the resources to do legal battle with the federal government.

      The sad thing is, that with the ridiculous powers we have allowed state and federal governments in ever larger increments over the last thirty years (as if, in fact, we learned NOTHING from the civil rights and vietnam eras) this sort of tale of rampant abuse of government authority (which ought never have been granted in the first place) are and will continue to become ever more common until another generation of angry youth drives the cowards and control freaks back into their caves.

      --
      "It is morally wrong to initiate the aggressive use of force.." Of course, defensive force is fair game...
    73. Re:seriously screwed up action by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1
      I agreed with you up to this point, but this is simply nonsense. If I say or write that Bill Gates deserves to have his head cut off, it would be a violent statement, but it is free speech. And Bill Gates can say same about me as well, not that he would care.
      Ah, but what if you put up a website calling for the beheading of Bill Gates, along with prominent links to guillotine schematics? Or demanding that he be keelhauled, and putting up information on building clipper ships. Worst of all, you could say he ought to die of a heart attack, and then link to instructions for making a Big Mac.

      In such cases, you would obviously be conspiring with the Internet at large in an attempt to cause mortal harm to Bill Gates. A year in federal prison is far too lenient a punishment.
      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    74. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Constitutional or not, threatening the presidents life, even jokingly, can be a very bad idea... there are federal laws penalizing the THREAT (as opposed to the action). I would hate to find myself on the heavy end of that prosecutorial hammer for some casual joking remarks in a bar.

    75. Re:seriously screwed up action by XnetZERO · · Score: 1

      A person would have to choose to make that bomb and then use it to hurt others. Let me highlight that special word: choose. Having knowledge or sharing it is not the same as hurting someone directly. Interesting... Last time I checked, someone has to CHOOSE to shoot somebody with a gun, but that doesn't stop the Left's continual assault on second amendment rights.

    76. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > does not (nor has it ever, as far as i know) include making illegal plans

      If plans to make bombs are illegal, we need to arrest the army, the navy, the dynamite industry, etc. Oh, you meant for individuals? It's ironic that you think that a government by the people and for the people should prevent the people from making bombs. I guess you believe most people are wackos who shouldn't have access to such information freely, since easy access is the major contributor to violent acts. A disposition to violence, attempts at violence, and a motivation to obtain the means through whatever channels necessary doesn't seem to matter. Are you the same sort of person who after illegalizing drugs would be startled that there's a higher crime rate directly related to the higher cost requires more expensive, and usually illegal, means of acquisition?

      > "your freedom of speech does not allow you to shout 'fire' in a crowded theater"

      Not unless there is a fire. But you can probably still be sued somehow, nowdays. Ironically, more people have been killed in fires than those stampeeded from false alarms by several orders of magnitude. It's not like a reported fire isn't checked out anyways. Sane people are able, most the time, to either exit calmly and/or verify the existance of a fire for their group/party. The fact that so many people are stampeeded in real fires or falsely reported fires is more the fault of individuals than anything.

      > you CAN plan peaceful coups, like putting together your own political party to lobby congress and run for public office. you CAN publish a website/newspaper criticising government officials and policies (yellowtimes.org is still around, isn't it). you CANNOT suggest that people go shoot a particular politician because you disagree with a proposed law.

      Yes and no. You can plan peaceful coups, and you can then get arrested for not having a permit. You can publish a website criticising the government and calling for an overthrow, and you can be called a terrorist since everyone knows that a peaceful overthrow is impossible. And you *CANNOT* suggest that people go shoot a particiular politician because you disagree with a proposed law. You can, however, overthrow the government as a whole through violent means if the government is unjust enough (ironically, a legal aspect of the constitution/decalaration of independence). Of course, the fact that people aren't trying to overthrow the government as a whole makes any overthrow attempt come out as a simple crime.

      But, the fact of the matter is, no matter his speach, he should be judged by his actions. He was accused of hacking websites. That'd be a much better reason for imprisonment than any claims to enciting violence.

    77. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When your talking about the biggest military in the world, what is?? rubber bands?

      Give me a break.

      Go find a shrub and hide you bully American.

    78. Re:seriously screwed up action by danila · · Score: 1

      Yeah, originally I wanted to put "successfully" and "peace" in quotes...

      --
      Future Wiki -- If you don't think about the future, you cannot have one.
    79. Re:seriously screwed up action by zurab · · Score: 1
      Ah, but what if you put up a website calling for the beheading of Bill Gates, along with prominent links to guillotine schematics? Or demanding that he be keelhauled, and putting up information on building clipper ships. Worst of all, you could say he ought to die of a heart attack, and then link to instructions for making a Big Mac.


      This is exactly what I mean. Anyone can express opinions the way they want to. Anyone taking action on some of these opinions may constitute crimes. Repeat again: expressing opinions - not a crime; acting on opinions to kill someone, commit murders, etc. - definitely a crime. That's the distinction.

      In such cases, you would obviously be conspiring with the Internet at large in an attempt to cause mortal harm to Bill Gates. A year in federal prison is far too lenient a punishment.


      I don't know where this came from. Unless I materially assisted the killer to commit his crime (the Internet at large? eh?) I did not commit a crime - it's just speech and expression of opinions. Take another example - a lot of people thought and still think OJ Simpson deserves a death penalty. They think he should die because he committed murders. These people will give you evidence on why he is a bad guy, how he committed murders, and exactly what methods are used to kill people on death row. They will literally describe to you what to do to put him to death, and link to all kinds of websites and other information about it. Now, if someone chooses to act on the opinions of these people and kill OJ Simpson the same way they have described it, then the only person responsible for crime is the person who committed it. In no way, are the people expressing opinions responsible for them, at least in the U.S., at least that's what the Constitution says.
    80. Re:seriously screwed up action by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      If the police show up with guns and APC's to Abridge your formerly peaceable assembly (which now has to be cast in free-speech zones)I'd think that the police have allready decided that the assembly wasn't going to be peaceable, and that depending on the relative violence the police commit, bombs might be an understandable response. Read: Haymaker Market Police Riot.

    81. Re:seriously screwed up action by Ideoscape · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It is also possible to peacefully assemble, fully armed. As Military Marches do all the time. It is possible to have peacefull assembly while armed, in preparation for police brutality. This is the main point, and what raisethefist advocated.

    82. Re:seriously screwed up action by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      I think Shouting Fire in a crowded theatre would mostly result in people running out the exits. Now shouting "nigger" at the Appollo is much more likely to cause imminent danger, but oddly, it's protected speech.

    83. Re:seriously screwed up action by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      Not much of an anarchist if he can't stand up to his principles is he?

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    84. Re:seriously screwed up action by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

      Essentially (and theoretically), everyone is allowed to say what they want and the legal system will decide whether it was appropriate or not. That's the guarantee - that voices won't be silenced BEFORE they are heard. Afterwards is a different story.

      Are you insane? So, it would be perfectly reasonable for me to have criticized Clinton back when he was in office for lying under oath, and being sentenced to Federal rape-me-in-the-ass prison for a year, just as long as the courts said it was okay?

    85. Re:seriously screwed up action by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you forget that americans are now considered "consumers" who will never think for themselves and must be herded like sheep. since we can no longer decide things, all bad ideas ( harmful to the shepherds) must be squashed.

    86. Re:seriously screwed up action by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      Second amendment says that we have the right to bear arms.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    87. Re:seriously screwed up action by Aadain2001 · · Score: 1

      I think another point that needs to be remembered is the intent of the expression of opinion. If I say "I wish someone would kill Bill Gates" and then someone, somewhere killed him, I would not be held liable for his death. Even if I said "I think Bill Gates should be kill", I"m still protected. Now, if I tell a psycopath to kill Bill Gates knowing that he is likely to actually try it, I then become accessory to the act. If a person is angry with the government and expresses his desire to blow things up or even says people should blow things up and provides instructions to how to make bombs, he still hasn't crossed that line where he knows that it will result in people making bombs and blowing things up. He is much closer to it, but until he knows that someone will, he hasn't committed any crime.

      --
      Space for rent, inquire within
  7. Well.. by kmak · · Score: 1

    I know, I know, censorship is bad.. but think of all the lives that could've caused..

    and then you look around at other countries, tons of them still censors more..

    of course, there are the liberal ones, but they aren't the ones where EVERYONE in the world hates...

    --

    I'm not the devil.. just his advocate.
    1. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      but think of all the lives that could've caused..

      You probably meant lives it could have cost, right? I don't think he's going around impregnating people....

    2. Re:Well.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I know, I know, censorship is bad." ...mmmkay.

    3. Re:Well.. by aminorex · · Score: 1

      Hey, there's nothing wrong with speaking English
      as a second language, but you really need to know
      that your post was a whole lot of fun to parse.
      If I were to interpret it according to standard
      English semantics, parts would mean the opposite
      of what I suspect that you intended.

      "Causing lives is a terrible thing to taste."
      --not dan quayle

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  8. i wonder.. by GreenCow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wilson said he also may not associate with anyone from a group that "espouses physical force as a means of change."

    does that include the US government?

    1. Re:i wonder.. by jd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No, because they don't espouse. They merely apply. Besides, they only attack windmills - sorry, typo, that should be "Weapons of Mass Destruction". Any change that coincidently occurs is purely, well, coincidental. Besides, if the US gets it wrong, it's all the fault of the [British|French|Germans|Russians]. (Delete as appropriate, but remember to blame Poindexter afterwards.)

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    2. Re:i wonder.. by mhore · · Score: 0

      I just gotta tell you -- good one! ;-0

      --

      Mmmm......sacrelicious.

    3. Re:i wonder.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, Technically it does include the US Government, And the police (part of the government). They accidentally kicked him out of any government controlled area, therefore putting him in an anarchy environment where he will become exactly what they wanted to stop him from being.

    4. Re:i wonder.. by SanLouBlues · · Score: 1

      That would also include anyone who advocates moving a chair using anything other than telekinesis. There's probably more detail in the actual decision that makes this clause a little less retarded.

      That, and I don't think the gov't really espouses force as a means of change. They just use it. So he could join a group of revolutionaries in self-denial. "Don't join our cause and fight the power like we are inexplicably doing!"

      At least he can still join the NRA.

    5. Re:i wonder.. by aminorex · · Score: 1

      People don't die when you attack windmills.
      I'd peg the deaths due to the invasion of Iraq
      no lower than 25,000. Mass murder, in fact.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    6. Re:i wonder.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sadamm's got the WMD. That's why we can't find them.

    7. Re:i wonder.. by Anonymous+Slacker · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but any country/government/group that sponsors factories for the manufacture of suicide vests in ALL sizes from infant to pregnant woman does not have my sympathy.

      I may be in the minority here, but even though I may not agree to all the excuses or methods involved, I do not terribly mind it when the world is rid of a bit more of the influences that would intentionally harm their fellow man for merely personal reasons.

      --
      "If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice!" -Rush
    8. Re:i wonder.. by Tackhead · · Score: 0
      > People don't die when you attack windmills. I'd peg the deaths due to the invasion of Iraq no lower than 25,000. Mass murder, in fact.

      So you're saying that considering Saddam's lifetime score of over 2,000,000 over 20-odd years, (100,000 a year) or about 8,000 a month, and about three months since the end of major combat operations, we reached the breakeven point in terms of death.

      And that, statistically, every month from this day forward, 8,000 people will live who might otherwise have died under Saddam Hussein.

      (Given the 50,000 bonus points scored during the months in 1991-1992 after we chose to leave him in power, my off-the-cuff figure of 8,000 lives saved per month of Saddam being out of power is just about right, actually!)

      Source: Planet Earth's High Score List, sorted by dictator: H: Saddam Hussein

    9. Re:i wonder.. by schmaltz · · Score: 1

      Do you ever wonder why the U.S. played buddy-buddy with Saddam during the first decade of that time? Why the U.S. allowed the sale of many of the components used to make WMD, and knew when foreign nations had sold biological WMD source material?

      Why, after the U.S. knew that Saddam had attacked the Kurds with chemical weapons, the U.S. continued to stand idly by, whistling and looking off to the side?

      Ah, just coincidence.

      --
      Big Daddy, Johnny, Burp, Aunt Zelda, Scott, Slurp, Big Momma ... where's Siggy?
    10. Re:i wonder.. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 4, Informative

      France, Germany and the Soviet Union also played nice with Iraq, actually the three of them had closer ties than the US did.

      The United States backed Iran through the 1970s, then Saddam took over at about the same time the Iranian Revolution happened so the United States started to back Iraq to keep them from falling to the Iranians. The whole goal of the West and Soviets in the Middle East at this time to keep no one from winning the upper hand.

      The vast amounts of Soviet and French equipment being poured into Iraq shifted the balance of power and the Iranians/Americans/Israelis and rouge Saudis cut deals to get new Hawk-I missiles and parts for the Iranian UH-1s and F-4 operating then both the Iranians and Iraqis start attacking tankers.

      When the Iraqis gased the Kurds there were two little things going on that limited a Western response to the gassing. The Cold War, Iraq is kind of close geographically to the Soviet Union and I'm sure B-52s and F-15s over Tikrit wouldn't fly in Moscow. And there was the Iran-Iraq war coupled with the fact that the Turks don't like the Kurds and they were an important part of the Southern Front NATO had to the Warsaw Pact. In short in the late 1980s international pressures and the Cold War paradigm kept anyone from acting out.

      Now the United States and the West does have some dealings with the Iraqis in dual-use chemicals and technologies, but shit, if you ship someone the instructions on how to make Prussian Blue dye you are giving them the ability to make Zyklon-B poison gas. You sell someone some packing peanuts and gasoline and they can make napalm.

      You know that in the 1950s the US and French were shipping nuclear reactors all over along with big tomes of stuff like "Atoms for Peace" is what gave Iraq and Pakistan the seed for thier nuclear programs?

    11. Re:i wonder.. by aminorex · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't advocate sympathy for any
      "country". But I do think that failure to
      have sympathy for every one of 25,000
      dead innocents puts one in a moral class
      with every demonized icon of barbarity
      in human history.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    12. Re:i wonder.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know that in the 1950s the US and French were shipping nuclear reactors all over along with big tomes of stuff like "Atoms for Peace" is what gave Iraq and Pakistan the seed for thier nuclear programs?

      A nuclear program in Iraq? Since when?

    13. Re:i wonder.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That number is way too low. It should be 290,000.

      No, wait. You are talking about the number of innocent people killed by Sadam aren't you?

    14. Re:i wonder.. by davebarz · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and that is why we're fighting this war, right?

    15. Re:i wonder.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since just before the IDF bombed it.

    16. Re:i wonder.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://soawatch.org
      actualy they do expouse.

  9. Talk about Political Correct Right Wingers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Make and example. Where is the ACLU and Common Cause when you need them

  10. From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting
    From a European viewpoint inciting the overthrow of a government is just asking for trouble.

    Sure, there must be a freedom of speech, but with freedom comes also responsibility. That's what you people over there seem to have forgotten. Inciting people into a violent revolt that thretens the stability of the entire society is not responsible. Talk like this should be dealt harshly with.

    1. Re:From a European viewpoint by Trigun · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Inciting people into a violent revolt that thretens the stability of the entire society is not responsible.

      Nor is inciting people into a passive complacency that threatens the stability of the entire society. Sometimes you have to throw out the baby with the bathwater, especially if the little runt is a Hitler-baby.

    2. Re:From a European viewpoint by saskwach · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But the US isn't European. It broke away from that through a violent overthrow of the current (European) government. The 1st amendment was put there because the people who wrote it knew that systems get stale and governments get corrupt. It's there specifically to protect the ability to criticise the government. While I don't personally advocate the overthrow of the whole system, I'm in favor of electing someone else to run the country right now. If enough people feel oppressed enough, they should be able to advocate that revolution. Meanwhile, this is the kind of oppression that does lead to a revolution.

    3. Re:From a European viewpoint by singularity · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I call troll...

      Europe has been home of dozens of violent revolutions over the years. Just talk to the French to start with. You can move on to other countries when you are done there.

      What is the end result of these revolutions? Social progress. The eventual overthrow of tyrants and the establishment of democracy has generally improved the quality of life.

      Yes, people die during violent revolutions. People are jailed. In the long run, though, if enough people believe that a violent overthrow of the government is called for, it almost always means that the people will be better off after the revolution.

      The U.S.'s freedom of speech was set up to allow all degrees of discussion, from political commercials to lobbying to advertising to calling for a violent revolution to overthrow the government.

      Remember - the same people that wrote the First Amendment just got done with a violent revolution.

      This does not mean that the government should stand idly by while people violently revolt. The government has a responsibility for self-preservation. However, talking about a violent overthrow should be completely allowed.

      --
      - (c) 2018 Hank Zimmerman
    4. Re:From a European viewpoint by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "From a European viewpoint inciting the overthrow of a government is just asking for trouble."

      Isn't the whole point of having the Right to Bear Arms to give the people the ability to overthrow the government should it falter from the Nation's Founding Principles?

    5. Re:From a European viewpoint by geekoid · · Score: 1

      no.
      Are fonding father expect a revolution to occur.

      As a government, it is a stupid thing to do. if the people are so frustrated with the government that advocate overthrowing it, then something is wrong and they need to do something about it.

      The advanteg we have, is that we can overthrow the government peacefully. The system allows for that, however when the people in charge begin changing the system against the intent of the contitiution, it need to be removed violently.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    6. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      But you can advocate the overthrow of the entire U.S. system -- just not the violent overthrow of it.

      It's perfectly all right to advocate that the U.S. Congress, on the application of two thirds of the States, call a constitutional Convention and rewrite the whole damn Constitution, or replace it completely. That's the legal method of doing it, as written in Article V of the current Constitution. If you want to organize people to petition their represenatives to call for said Convention, go right ahead. The feds can't touch you.

      It's when you start yelling for bombs and guns to do the job, that's calling for another revolution -- and all governments put down revolts against themselves. It's what they do.

    7. Re:From a European viewpoint by k1llt1me · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Just remember we came here to get away from ignorant dipshit's like you....

    8. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What is the end result of these revolutions? Social progress. "

      The problem is that most of the violent euro revolutions in the past century have been from democracy to fascism/stalinism, not a positve change.

    9. Re:From a European viewpoint by WankersRevenge · · Score: 1

      I love these arguments. Sure, you have the freedom of speech, but you have to take responsibility for the speech. Ok - so I say - "overthrow the government". You say, "fine. now go to jail".

      How is that freedom of speech? To me, that's not freedom. Freedom of speech does not take account for responisbility. You are free to express yourself without being killed by the authorities. Right? By your definitition, everyone in Soviet Russia had freedom of speech. Sure, they could excercise it. But if they did, they would be sent to some rat hole in Siberia being they didn't speak "responsibly".

      My favorite quote is this:

      Inciting people into a violent revolt that thretens the stability of the entire society is not responsible. Talk like this should be dealt harshly with.

      One man's violence is another man's peace movement. And any chump in power can label a peacenik a violent revolutionary. Look at Jesus. Ghandi. Martin Luther King. Maybe we should deal with everyone the same. Yeah. For the sake of society.

    10. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but celebrating the French Revolution is like celebrating Kristalnacht. It did not usher in "social progress" but rather paved the way for similar revolutions in Russia and China. Democracy, in and of itself, does not improve the quality of life and as the 20th & 21st centuries have proved, those who are elected are either morons (Bush) or monsters (Hitler). "One man, one vote", naturally leads to the tyranny of mediocrities, and that is why the founding fathers of the United States viewed democracy with suspicion and contempt.

    11. Re:From a European viewpoint by fearlessrogue · · Score: 1

      A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed. Meaning we have the right to keep our selves armed in order to overthrow a bad government.

      --

      Everything Zen;
      Everything Zen;
      I don't think so!!!
    12. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      umm - there are plenty of violent revolutions that bring worse conditions. Happens all the time. Ask the people of Cambodia about the Khymer Rouge.

      There is a fine line between speech/expression and action when it comes to criminal or violent activity. Guess what, if you go offer someone money to kill your wife and talk to them about a plan to do it - you're going down if you get caught. That's called conspiracy. The government does not have to sit and wait until you actually commit a crime - to do so is what we in the legal profession call "fucking stupid".

      Guess what fan boys, what if we get hard evidence that SCO sat down and planned all the bullcrap they are doing to pump their stock so that can dump it at a higher price? They'll get nailed for it - even though all they have been doing is exercising free speech. Now of course, most of the hippies will say it is not the same since they are a company and companies are evil, but the principle is not to much different.

    13. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If enough people feel oppressed enough, they should be able to advocate that revolution

      that's just it. people won't. the government has made so many people dependent upon the damn system for survival that these people can't have the government re-done correctly or they would starve and die.

    14. Re:From a European viewpoint by Twanfox · · Score: 1

      While I know this is a poor argument, what is the difference between this individual, posting bomb specs and attempting to entice revolt sounds very similar to overseas, where ranking religious members advocate Jihad against governments or something similar?

    15. Re:From a European viewpoint by Angst+Badger · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It is, however, illegal to urge people to break the law, and advocating the violent overthrow of the government certainly falls in that category. It is not incompatible with freedom of speech in any of the usual ways. Arguably, advocating the violent overthrow of a democratically elected government ought to be deeply, deeply repugnant to a free society in a way that advocating the overthrow of autocratic governments is not. Part of the point of democracy, after all, is the regularly scheduled non-violent overthrow of unpopular governments at the polls.

      Had the defendant in this case merely presented bomb-making information, he probably could have gotten off on First Amendment grounds, but by stepping outside of what the First Amendment protects, and being dumb enough to do so during a national panic, one year in prison is not all that outrageous.

      If enough people feel oppressed enough, they should be able to advocate that revolution.

      As a practical matter, if you are really being severely oppressed, advocating revolution is a great way to be unpersoned. In the event of real oppression, you need to fight a revolution, not cut-and-paste crap from the Anarchists' Cookbook to your website. At present, however, most real oppression being conducted by the US Government is happening outside of its borders.

      Meanwhile, this is the kind of oppression that does lead to a revolution.

      Piff. This is the kind of routine law enforcement that leads to stupid bumper stickers.

      --
      Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    16. Re:From a European viewpoint by mofochickamo · · Score: 1

      Did anyone else notice that the European viewpoint was written by Anonymous Coward? ;)

      --
      Honk if you're horny.
    17. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Look at Jesus. Ghandi. Martin Luther King. Maybe we should deal with everyone the same."

      Jesus - Crucified
      Ghandi - Assassinated
      Martin Luther King - Assassinated
      Saddam Hussein - Pending
      Osama Bin Laden - Pending

      Uh, you are....

    18. Re:From a European viewpoint by corporatemutantninja · · Score: 1

      "We people over here," all 300 million of us identical burger-chomping, oil-guzzling, right-wing Christians, really appreciate it when you highly diverse and free-thinking Europeans take the time to open our eyes to our homogeneity and provincialism. You Europeans all overgeneralize. Oh, wait....

      --
      Actually, I was trying to be Insightful, not Funny.
    19. Re:From a European viewpoint by schmaltz · · Score: 1

      Troll to match your troll- these people called their own revolution, including the U.S. Although I don't disagree with a good outcome in Iraq (if it comes), I do disagree with the means, and certainly with the fact that the U.S. spent so much time and money propping Saddam up over the years. Even after Gulf War I, he continued the atrocities. The U.S. ever give a shit? Of course not. Not until it became politically, geographically and economically expedient, not to mention feasible, thanks to manipulated intelligence and a product marketing campaign.

      Welcome to the Mideast's first forced democracy. Are these people ready for democracy and all that entails? Think women's suffrage will stand a chance in their culture? How about truly representative democracy, hmm? How will the Shiites and Kurds fare... one wonders.

      --
      Big Daddy, Johnny, Burp, Aunt Zelda, Scott, Slurp, Big Momma ... where's Siggy?
    20. Re:From a European viewpoint by Jason+Earl · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This kid was demonstrating illegally (not a big deal), and it turned out he was wanted by the FBI for his website (still probably not too big a deal). The kicker came when they searched his parent's house and found bomb making materials.

      Once you start caching explosives, the equation changes somewhat.

      Ghandi, Martin Luther King, and Jesus were all a) right :), and b) decidedly non-violent. This kid was a crackpot, pure and simple.

    21. Re:From a European viewpoint by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      I suppose you've never heard of the Whiskey Rebellion, the Nat Turner Rebellion, Nat Bacon's Rebellion, Shay's Rebellion, and countless others (including that whole revolution thing in 1776).

      We have a proud history of inciting violent revolts on this side of the pond!

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    22. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Even after Gulf War I, he continued the atrocities. The U.S. ever give a shit? Of course not. Not until it became politically, geographically and economically expedient, not to mention feasible, thanks to manipulated intelligence and a product marketing campaign."

      Not long after Gulf War I, the US maintained patrols in the "no fly zones" to keep down Saddam's war against these supposedly Iraqi regions.

      " thanks to manipulated intelligence and a product marketing campaign."

      All they did was present the actual facts (the bad bit from the dead British guy ended up mattering little)

      "Think women's suffrage will stand a chance in their culture?"

      That is one thing Iraq has had for a long time, actually.

      "How will the Shiites and Kurds fare... one wonders."

      The problem is that Iraq is something artificially forced together. Bush is making a mistake by insisting that it stay together even if the parts of it want to go their own way.

    23. Re:From a European viewpoint by plugger · · Score: 1

      Good luck, your government's military power is immense :)

    24. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh God, can't resist:

      ignorant dipshit's

      From a European viewpoint, I think you would do well to check your grammar before calling others ignorant.

    25. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it's that obnoxious bunch in the White House getting the rest of you a bad name.

    26. Re:From a European viewpoint by rocketfairy · · Score: 1

      Of your two examples of "elected" officials, neither was put in place by a majority. Hitler was appointed by the senile, embattled Chancellor; Bush received a minority of the votes of the minority of Americans who actually voted.

      And by the way -- any comparison of post-revolutionary France/China/Russia ought to be weighed against the crimes perpetrated by the Ancien Regime/KMT/tsar. Revolutions aren't perfect; they are bloody messes created out of desperate conditions. But ousting worthless monarchists is always worth it, even if the results cannot be predicted.

    27. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He wrote:

      From a European viewpoint inciting the overthrow of a government is just asking for trouble.

      And you wrote:

      I call troll...

      Europe has been home of dozens of violent revolutions over the years.

      Don't you think that he was posting from a European perspective because we've had a lot more experience with these things than other continents?

    28. Re:From a European viewpoint by cliffmeece · · Score: 1
      All they did was present the actual facts (the bad bit from the dead British guy ended up mattering little

      first of all, Kelly ( i assume the dead guy you are referring to ) was not responsible for the 'bad bit', but for blowing the whistle on the 'bad bit'.

      Plus, I require a little bit more from my president. Ever look at a newstand and see all the outrageous tabloid headlines? They get away with it because they have a source. They're not saying that there is a 'batboy'. They're just saying that someone told them there was. Does that make it right?

      Besides, this is hardly the only weak bit of evidence. How about those fictional aluminum tubes, or the mobile weapon factories that turned out be for filling artillery balloons, or the SCUDS that were never used or discovered, or the link to Al-Queda that seems to have been invented out of thin air? Or, the the 'hint' that Saddam had something to do with 9/11?

      Most people who were against the war were not saying that Saddam was a good guy, but that we wanted an international approach that was not thinly disguised coercion. It may have meant some compromise which is a hard pill to swallow for those drunk on the power of the US military, but in the end it leads to a more multilateral aproach that is good for everybody.

    29. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "In the long run, though, if enough people believe that a violent overthrow of the government is called for, it almost always means that the people will be better off after the revolution."

      One of the few americans that I know of that thinks that Russia was better with Stalin and Cuba with Castro :)

    30. Re:From a European viewpoint by fearlessrogue · · Score: 1

      But not as immense as the power of the people. The Federal Goverenment has ~1.5 million men actively under arms. Nominally the National Guard is owned by the federal government, but the Govenors have direct say over it 99.9 % of the time, so it is anybodies guess which side they would be on. There are something like 70 million households with ~250 million guns in this country.

      --

      Everything Zen;
      Everything Zen;
      I don't think so!!!
    31. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sure, there must be a freedom of speech, but with freedom comes also responsibility

      Indeed. But once that "responsibility" is imposed by an external force, it is no longer freedom.

      What this case illustrates is how the extreme penalties provided in new anti-terrorist legislation can be used to suppress freedom of speech by American citizens. In fact, the right to advocate the overthrow of the US government is protected by the US Constitution (you just aren't allowed to actually try to do it). So he very probably would have prevailed on free speech grounds (which is of course why the state was willing to settle). But they threatened to prosecute him under the terrorist law that were supposedly intended for people who actively attempt to commit mass murder (which this guy clearly is not by any stretch of the imagination). Had he lost, he could have been in jail for many years, so it's hard to blame him for accepting the plea bargain. And of course, he was then double-crossed and given a much heavier sentence than he was led to expect.

    32. Re:From a European viewpoint by Rayonic · · Score: 1

      Nor is inciting people into a passive complacency that threatens the stability of the entire society.

      When you talk of passive complacency, I assume you're talking about the leaving of mad dictators and terrorist regimes in power.

      After all, Russia, France, and Germany were perfectly happy smuggling Iraqi oil out from under the sanctions, using the massively corrupt Food-for-Oil program. The status-quo is profitable, who cares how many Iraqis die, right?

    33. Re:From a European viewpoint by Valar · · Score: 1

      Under Godwin's Law, I officially declare this thread closed. Trigun loses. Err... somebody else wins...

    34. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's funny, I read that as meaning the right to keep yourselves armed to defend the country against an outside threat.

      Something that I think is relatively pointless these days, since it's not like you are without a defence force any more.

    35. Re:From a European viewpoint by Dausha · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile, this is the kind of oppression that does lead to a revolution.

      You think this is oppression? In no assembly of humans is an individual abjectly free to do whatever. We agree to suppress some impulses for the greater good. If you think we Americans live in a truly oppressive society, then I encourage you to visit other countries and other times where oppression really is. Being imprisoned because you admittedly sought to incite violence against a government is not oppression. Having your family garrotted in their sleep by the government is. While I won't go so far as to say "until you've been oppressed, you don't know what oppression is," I opine that you don't.

      --
      What those who want activist courts fear is rule by the people.
    36. Re:From a European viewpoint by KjetilK · · Score: 1
      Well, I'm European too, and a pacifist. But the funny thing about the US, which I find kind of weird, is their 2nd amendment, which I interprete as being there just for this purpose, if the government becomes too corrupt the only way you can overthrow them is by applying organized violence in the form of a militia.

      Myself, I think this is wrong, as there is nothing a million armed men marching on DC can do that a million unarmed can't. The problem isn't arming them, the problem is go get people off their asses.

      But since the US has the 2nd amendment, they should at least realize what it means...

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    37. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Precisely.

      If I'm going to stand on the streetcorner and yell about overthrowing the government, and everything is fine and dandy in the nation, people will ignore me.

      The government will have no reason to arrest me because I'm obviously a loon.

      It's when I stand on that streetcorner and yell about overthrowing the government, and people listen, that the government starts to worry.

    38. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look up "clear and present danger", as a standard, for when you can advocate breaking the law.

    39. Re:From a European viewpoint by fearincontrol · · Score: 1

      Actually, That's incorrect -- the current standard for federal regulation of free speech, set by the courts in Brandenberg vs. Ohio, states, "speech must not only be advocacy to incite imminent lawless action, but also there must be a likelihood that such action will occur."


      Therefore, the mere advocacy of violent overthrow (a la the communist party, which advocates a violent revolution against the capitalist government) is not illegal -- it is the advocacy with the intent to incite imminent lawless action. Nor is "Damnit, that guy should be shot for being so stupid" unprotected -- because there isn't a likelihood that a reasonable person will actually follow the instructions.

    40. Re:From a European viewpoint by mfrank · · Score: 1

      So would you also think that a million unarmed Chinese marching in Tianamen Square can accomplish the same thing that a million armed Chinese can? How about a million unarmed Jews marching in Berlin in 1943? Since you're European, if you think that democracies can't become tyrannies, you're either old with a bad memory or young with bad history teachers.

      The 2nd amendment doesn't exist so people can overthrow the govt, it exists so the people can take it back if it's taken from them. America's got by far the strongest military in the world. Who in the hell will liberate America if it moves towards tyranny? You all should be *glad* the US has the 2nd Amendment.

    41. Re:From a European viewpoint by Alsee · · Score: 1

      The government has a responsibility for self-preservation.

      A government's sole purpose is the common benefit of it's citizens. Any government that considers self-preservation to be an important responsibility is a goverment that likely needs to terminated and replaced.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    42. Re:From a European viewpoint by KjetilK · · Score: 1

      Your shouting at strawmen. My history teachers were quite good, thank you, but yours doesn't seem to have been doing their job.

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    43. Re:From a European viewpoint by mfrank · · Score: 1

      Hitler was elected to power in an election: A) True or B) False.

      Actually, I'm not worried about the US becoming a tyranny, precisely because there are so many gun nuts in this country. BTW, I don't own a gun, have never owned a gun, and never plan on owning a gun.

    44. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'd like to know what the "bomb-making materials" were...plenty of common household materials, such as fertilizer, could be used for making bombs if you were so inclined. Does that mean you're caching bomb-making materials if you have some fertilizer?

      If you said that they found actual explosives in his house, that'd be a different matter.

    45. Re:From a European viewpoint by Jason+Earl · · Score: 1

      I'd like to know what the "bomb-making materials" were...plenty of common household materials, such as fertilizer, could be used for making bombs if you were so inclined. Does that mean you're caching bomb-making materials if you have some fertilizer?

      Remember, this is the sort of case that gets national attention. The Feds know that they aren't going to convince any jury on the planet that this "kid" is guilty because he had a few boxes of Miracle Gro (R). My guess is that our friend actually had tried out some of his recipes and had a few assembled pipe bombs.

      Growing up, about half my friends growing up assembled pipe bombs (or some other dangerous illegal artifact) at one point or another. Posession of small amounts of explosives gets overlooked all of the time. I personally never did get involved with this sort of stuff because my father was a defense attorney and so I grew up with plenty of stories about what happens to the perpetrators of teenage pranks. The legal system does not have much of a sense of humor. However, I also was able to see first hand how the court system is often very lenient with "good kids" that do something stupid.

      This kids problem was that he was simply involved in too much subversive stuff for his actions to go unnoticed and unpunished. If he would have stuck to having a web site, nothing at all would have happened to him. When you start mixing in violent protest (peaceful protest doesn't get you arrested), then things become more serious. The fact that he had actual explosives at his house was simply the straw that broke the camel's back.

      Even so, the Feds could have easily thrown the book at him. As he said himself they could have charged him under the new anti-terrorist laws which would have carried a minimum 20 year sentence. As it stands now he got a year sentence (probably in a nicer facility), of which he'll serve a couple of months.

    46. Re:From a European viewpoint by stephenbooth · · Score: 1

      The second ammendment to the US constitution, when read completely and bearing in mind the context of the times it was written, seems to be more talking about the right of the state's governments to raise militias to overthrow a federal government.

      Or, to put it another way, the second ammendment doesn't guarentee your right to overthrow the federal government but it does guarentee the right of your state to raise, maintain and train a militia to overthrow a federal government and your right to bear arms to participate in such a militia. The text of the second ammendment is:

      A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.

      Note that the first clause refers to the concept of a well regulated militia, implying a body of trained men under military style command. The second clause gives them the purpose of ensuring the security of a free state. It is only in the third clause that the phrase "the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.", the part that is most often quoted and many seem to believe is the totality of the second ammendment, appears. Comparisons of the actual text with what some claim it means is left as an exercise for the reader.

      Stephen

      --
      "Don't write down to your readers, the only people less intelligent than you can't read" - Sign on Newspaper Office Wall
    47. Re:From a European viewpoint by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, that would depend totally on who you were talking about shooting. Certain law enforcement agencies are mandated to take every threat posed at a few personages seriously and investigate.

    48. Re:From a European viewpoint by KjetilK · · Score: 1
      This question doesn't have a true or false answer. It was an extremely complex sequence of events.

      As for Berlin, well, a million jews would easily have outnumbered the nazis in that city. If you had read your history, you'd know that Berlin was one of the most anti-Hitler cities of Germany. OK, ok, I know, it was just an example, but it is all besides my point, really.

      It can indeed be used as an example at what you're aiming at, because the process leading up to Hitler's power-grab could happened in any democracy, and in fact, it happened again in recent years, when Milosevic came into power. Both were elected by a parliamentary democratic system.

      However, both had very little popular support in the elections that brought them to power.

      So, yes, democracies can become tyrannies, that happens.

      However, it is beside my point. And I think Tianamen Square illustrates my point very well, because it wasn't the lack of arms, it was the total apathy among the wast majority of Beijing's population. This guy stopping tanks, if he had been armed with something that could dent the tank, do you really think they wouldn't have gunned him down right away? It is really hard even for trained killers to kill someone that is no threat to you.

      It's the apathy that is the problem. Same think in Iraq, "It's all in Allah's hands" (and do dictators know to exploit that!).

      It all boils down to this: Are you going to kill your neighbour if he is strongly opposed to what you do? Some lunatics might, but they are small in numbers. Unless you think that your neighbour is armed, and somebody told you that he will kill you if you don't kill him. Then, you might be able to do it.

      BTW, I wouldn't want a gun-nut leading my country... :-)

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  11. First amendment... by upplepop · · Score: 2, Troll

    If only this damned thing would stop getting in the way of making this country a better and safer place.

    1. Re:First amendment... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't seem to be anymore

  12. you think that's linking dangerously? by Savatte · · Score: 5, Funny

    I once updated my web page while driving drunk and blindfolded accross landmines, all the while eating food from arby's.

    1. Re:you think that's linking dangerously? by nacturation · · Score: 1

      ...all the while eating food from arby's.

      Man, now that's hungry!

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    2. Re:you think that's linking dangerously? by corkhead0 · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the cell phone and screaming kids!

  13. Oops. Hindsight is 20-20. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I like this quote from the CNN article:

    Austin told the judge Monday he "wasn't really thinking" when he created the Web site. "I'd be devastated if someone used this information to harm others,"

    Well duh. But that's what the site, and those that frequented it were advocating. Dumbass, what did he expect?

    Protesting is one thing. Advocating the destruction of property and people is another. He got what he deserved.

  14. They can do that? by JakiChan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I didn't know they can just ignore the plea agreement. Won't that come in handy with terrorists? "I agreed to 1 year, your honor!" "But I don't feel like it. You get the chair!"

    Excuse me while I move to Canada....

    --
    "Where quality is like a dead stinking rat - you just can't miss it."
    1. Re:They can do that? by jratcliffe · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yup. The plea agreement is that the defendant will plead guilty to charge X, and (usually) the DA will recommend a particular sentence, or drop other charges. The judge has the final discretion, and he can (albeit rarely) overrule the plea agreement if he feels that it was unreasonable. In an extreme case, if a DA made a deal with a mass murderer where the murderer would serve 5 days for 100 murders, the judge could reject the deal and assign a different penalty. By the same token, the judge could reject a plea deal that carried a 50 year sentence for a jaywalking conviction. In this case, though, there doesn't really seem to be any reason for the judge to reject the deal.

    2. Re:They can do that? by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      But if the judge overrules the plea agreement, can't the defendant withdraw the plea?

      Granted, it was traffic court, but I once saw a prosecutor recommend that a woman charged with speeding and driving with a suspended license get ammended to driving in an unsafe manner. The judge rejected the request and asked the prosecutor and woman's lawyer to come up with something more reasonable.

    3. Re:They can do that? by Urd · · Score: 1

      The fact the judge can presume guilt without a trial (he did extend the term so he must presume guilt), well that would be my only comment against the legal system in this case. But it does go perfectly with the RIA directly sending people into the courts without police work or having done their own. I wonder what comes next...

    4. Re:They can do that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please do...

    5. Re:They can do that? by terrymr · · Score: 1

      It also possible for the judge to reject the plea agreement where he doesn't believe the defendent is guilty. People are often questioned about judges in some detail to make sure they know the detail of the crime they are pleading guilty to.

  15. It's a healthy reminder, though... by Sheetrock · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Today's Internet is no longer a free-for-all. I remember things like The Anarchist's Handbook or Jolly Roger or the like that were filled with dangerous or inciteful content.

    It's all fun and games until somebody gets hurt, though, and I've read about a number of cases of people injuring themselves or others by trying to do that kind of stuff. The mature thing to do is to preemptively avoid spreading that kind of content so that it doesn't fall into the hands of idiots.

    --

    Try not. Do or do not, there is no try.
    -- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.




    1. Re:It's a healthy reminder, though... by Eccles · · Score: 1

      Today's Internet is no longer a free-for-all. I remember things like The Anarchist's Handbook or Jolly Roger or the like that were filled with dangerous or inciteful content.

      Now you have to buy it through Amazon or the like...

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    2. Re:It's a healthy reminder, though... by bdowne01 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's all fun and games until somebody gets hurt, though, and I've read about a number of cases of people injuring themselves or others by trying to do that kind of stuff. The mature thing to do is to preemptively avoid spreading that kind of content so that it doesn't fall into the hands of idiots.

      Though I fully understand this argument for children surfing the web...

      I generally think the "dumbing" down of civilization--you know, things like coffee cups that say "contents hot"--will eventually result in laws requiring babies being surgicaly modified with helmets pre-attached and sheathed with bubble-wrap.

      Yea, it's a blanket statement and of course: it's all done because of legal liability. But come on, how are these people gonna learn if they don't get a few scars?

      Learning through mistakes is still how it works, right?

      --
      -brain
    3. Re:It's a healthy reminder, though... by Maul · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Another mature thing to do would be to ban knives, utensils, cars, cleaning chemicals, scissors, staplers, power tools, airplanes, etc. to preemptively avoid spreding those kind of things so that they don't fall into the hands of idiots.

      Guess what? No matter how much you ban or censor, idiots are still going to find a way to kill themselves or others.

      --

      "You spoony bard!" -Tellah

    4. Re:It's a healthy reminder, though... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      I know a lot of people that have gotten hurt working on there car, maybe we should outlaw automobile manuals?

      I own a copy of the Anarchist's Handbook. I recomend it to anybody who wants insight to how close we were to revolution.

      I figure we should let Darwin take care of the idiots.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:It's a healthy reminder, though... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is insightful like running with scissors to prove a point is intelligent...

      If your point is "just let people kill themselves and others cause trying to regulate it is pointless and besides, its not friendly to free expression" then I sincerely hope you are the first test case of your new, happy, brand of justice and social order.

    6. Re:It's a healthy reminder, though... by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      eventually result in laws requiring babies being surgicaly modified with helmets pre-attached and sheathed with bubble-wrap.

      Getting there - The effectiveness of wearing pedestrian helmet while walking from home to school in elementary school children

    7. Re:It's a healthy reminder, though... by bdowne01 · · Score: 1

      Getting there - The effectiveness of wearing pedestrian helmet while walking from home to school in elementary school children

      See, I knew it!!! :-)

      --
      -brain
    8. Re:It's a healthy reminder, though... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like Eden Strang? http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/2073623.stm

  16. I must be next. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I write a comic strip that frequently makes references to the evils of "W" and urge his impeachment.

    1. Re:I must be next. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Key Bit: Does it urge his impeachment through violent means? Perhaps you missed that little caveat in the discussion.

  17. Ahh the justice system ... by SuperDuG · · Score: 4, Interesting
    prosecution and fbi recommend 4 months in prison, so the judge sentences him to a year.

    Glad to see the REAL criminals being put where they belong, hey aren't ALL the Enron executives still free?

    --
    Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
    1. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by garcia · · Score: 1

      I still think that all those doctors prescribing mentally and physically addictive drugs to their patients are more guilty than those being sentenced for growing/distributing medical marijuana to those that are in dire need of it.

      Glad we have priorities in this country. Most of which include feeding more and more money to the drug companies. God forbid we allow drugs that are freely available over ones that are held back in quanity and priced out of the range of 95% of the population.

      yay for our justice system's priorities.

    2. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by Havokmon · · Score: 1
      prosecution and fbi recommend 4 months in prison, so the judge sentences him to a year.

      Err:
      "Austin was arrested with other protesters at the World Economic Forum in New York in February 2002 "

      How much time had he already served?
      You think they're just going to say, "Ok, you served enough time, you can go home now."?!?

      *sigh*

      --
      "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
    3. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by heli0 · · Score: 1

      "aren't ALL the Enron executives still free?"

      What?

      The following Enron execs have been indicted:
      Timothy Belden
      Andrew Fastow
      Lea Fastow
      Kevin Howard
      Michael Kopper
      Michael Krautz
      Jeffrey S. Richter
      Kenneth Rice
      Joseph Hirko
      Kevin Hannon
      Scott Yeager
      Rex Shelby
      Ben Glisan
      Dan Boyle

      Clifford Baxter was the Enron exec who splattered his braines all over the inside of his Mercedes.

      John Forney was an energy trader who has also been indicted.

      --
      Whenever the offence inspires less horror than the punishment, the rigour of penal law is obliged to give way...
    4. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by david614 · · Score: 1

      OK, but indicted doesn't mean in custody. How many convictions with hard federal prison time have been achieved on the Enron case? D

      --
      ELITISM: It's always lonely at the top. Uninvited company is rarely welcome.
    5. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by BHearsum · · Score: 1

      Please note that anarchy is not the same thing as chaos, nor is not synonymous with rioting.

      an-ar-chy:

      1. Absence of any form of political authority.
      2. Political disorder and confusion.
      3. Absence of any cohesive principle, such as a common standard or purpose.

      There's nothing wrong with anarchy.

    6. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a lot wrong with anarchy. Without political authority or cohesive principles the weak are terrorized and only thugs prosper. The rule of law protects us somewhat as it gives us a framework for a level playing field where the weak are protected and allowed to grow strong. Disorder is chaos, lack of purpose is chaos. Rioting is a gathering without order.

      Oh, and yes, he was involved in violent protests and was arrested, his anarchist chickens comming home to roost so to speak.

    7. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by ocelotbob · · Score: 1

      Prosecutions in cases like the enron situation take time. Got to make sure all the ducks are in a row before trial happens. Otherwise, you get situations where defendants are let off on technicalities, etc. The wheels of justice grind slowly, but grind those under them to dust. I have no doubt that enron execs are going to spend a good amount of time in federal pound me in the ass prison.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    8. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      prosecution and fbi recommend 4 months in prison, so the judge sentences him to a year.

      Considering the violent crime issue here, along with his previous statements, there may be a more practical reason why there is a 1 year sentence. I don't know if this applies to all states and commonwealths, but where I live if you have been sentenced to 1 year or more of jail time for a crime, you may no longer legally purchase a firearm. That may be an factor in the sentencing.

    9. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by Homology · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Glad to see the REAL criminals being put where they belong, hey aren't ALL the Enron executives still free?

      Snuffing out pension funds are more than compensated by campaign contributions, in addition to handsomely paid do-nothing retirement consultancy postitions.

    10. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, but indicted doesn't mean in custody.

      Usually only violent criminals and flight risks are remanded without bail.

    11. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, so how many of these people who are indicted are still in the U.S.? Seems easy enought to just hop in the old private jet and spend the rest of your life at some nice tropical resort.

      I remember reading about some rich kid that spent most of his life at some European ski resort after raping or murdering some girl in the states. Took them decades to bring him to justice. Condisering the crimes the Enron execs committed, it's not difficult to see them following a similar course of action.

      Then, of course, there is the kind of prisons they go to. White Collar Resort Prison. Office space was so right about it, it's not even funny. Some TV news group did a piece on one of the few execs to be sent to prison already. This place was like summer camp. In fact, the only thing that was bad about it was the food and even that could be worse. "Like military food". Hell, if it's good enough for our servicemen, it can't be that bad.

    12. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by KenSeymour · · Score: 1

      The Enron CFO, Fastow, was arrested.

      I think he posted bail. He had to hand over his passport as a condition of bail.
      I think his trail starts next January.

      So he is out of jail, but I would hardly call that being free.

      --
      "We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them." -- Albert Einstein
    13. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rubbish. The correct approach would be to make the weak strong, not prolong their weakness. You can do this by EDUCATION. One day, I hope to make a world where people don't kill eachother because it's just plain not nice, not because they need armed forces to make them stop.

    14. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by LetterJ · · Score: 1

      Step right up folks and see this marvel, this wonder, this rarest of rare exhibitions! What we have right here, right here in this tent, is the world's very last optimist!

    15. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He only served a week or two, then was released.

    16. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by heli0 · · Score: 1

      If they were indicted and are out on bail then all of their assets have been frozen and their passports have been seized.

      "I remember reading about some rich kid that spent most of his life at some European ski resort after raping or murdering some girl in the states."

      That was Alex Kelly and his wealthy parents were funneling money to him. Also I do not believe he murdered anyone, just rape.

      --
      Whenever the offence inspires less horror than the punishment, the rigour of penal law is obliged to give way...
    17. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      OK, but indicted doesn't mean in custody.

      Sherman Austin isn't in custody either. "Austin must surrender himself to the Federal Bureau of Prisons by September 3, 2003."

      It takes time.

    18. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by FireBreathingDog · · Score: 1
      There's nothing wrong with anarchy.

      True, there's nothing wrong with anarchy per se. The problem is with people; people tend not to exhibit the best behavior within a power vaccuum.

    19. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by canadian_right · · Score: 1
      I really like the idea of anarachy - on paper. In real life some form of government seems to be required to keep the thugs from abusing the weak. Most anarchists are peaceful, but it is the violent ones that get into the papers. In my opinion if you resort to force you stop calling yourself an anarchist as one of the key attributes of government is its use of force (government has a monopoly on using force actually).

      The parent deserves to be modded up, as he is making a good point.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    20. Re:Ahh the justice system ... by rbullo · · Score: 1

      Also, we all know that a state of anarchy could never survive. Within months, maybe weeks, somebody would be in a position somewhat like ruler of the people. An anarchy can provide no defense against this, other than a militia, which would eventually impose martial law- power corrupts. In short, anarchy begets despotism.

      --
      OH NOES!!! IT APPEARS YUO DO NOT HAVE ENOUGH MONEY TO PAY FOR DIS HERE PIZZA! WAHT EVER ARE YOU GOING TO DO!?!?
  18. Sounds fair to me... by Marx_Mrvelous · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I beleive his website was advocating violent action against innocent people. If his site said "Kill all racial group X" and linked to pages telling people how to make and deliver bombs, I'd want it shut down and the owner in jail, too.

    However, the webhosting provider should *not* be responsible, neither should his internet access provider. He should take responsability for his own actions.

    --

    Moderation: Put your hand inside the puppet head!
    1. Re:Sounds fair to me... by brooks_talley · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Any other opinions that you think should be illegal? Perhaps anyone who advocates breaking Microsoft up? Or SCO's assertion that Linux includes their IP?

      Or is it just people who verbally advocate murder that you'd jail? Like, say, anyone who says we should kill Saddam Houssein if we find him?

      Please post a complete list of the opinions that you believe it should be illegal to express.

      Cheers
      -b

    2. Re:Sounds fair to me... by Xerithane · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I beleive his website was advocating violent action against innocent people.

      He was also a violent protestor, and that was what he was originally arrested for.

      If his site said "Kill all racial group X" and linked to pages telling people how to make and deliver bombs, I'd want it shut down and the owner in jail, too.

      I wouldn't. People can spout of everything they want to. If someone uses the knowledge from him, he should be tried as an acomplice and also part of conspiracy to commit a crime.

      This kid is a dumbass suburbanite whose parents didn't love him enough so he rebelled against the gubbmint. If we're going to rally behind someone whose rights are trampled on, lets pick a better candidate.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    3. Re:Sounds fair to me... by Marx_Mrvelous · · Score: 1

      Consult the US legal system for that one. Our whole judicial branch has spent decades deciding what type of speech is legal and what isn't. I don't need to give you a list, we have a very, VERY well-defined and length set or precedents that are used in courts to decide this.

      --

      Moderation: Put your hand inside the puppet head!
    4. Re:Sounds fair to me... by k1llt1me · · Score: 1

      If they're anything like you they're far from 'innocent'....

    5. Re:Sounds fair to me... by EastCoastSurfer · · Score: 1

      If we're going to rally behind someone whose rights are trampled on, lets pick a better candidate.

      I tend to agree. I started reading the article thinking there must be more to it. It sounds like he was violent protestor himself and got burned for it. Taking stories out of context just makes us here at /. look like nutcases for supporting some people.

    6. Re:Sounds fair to me... by aminorex · · Score: 1

      The merits of this case are not the issue, and mentioning
      that Sherman is a dumbass suburbanite, etc.,
      regardless of its truth or falsity, is an
      irrelevant distraction. Sherman's advocates
      hold him in no less contempt than do his opponents,
      for the most part.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    7. Re:Sounds fair to me... by plugger · · Score: 1

      I thought conspiracy to commit a serious crime was an offence whether or not the crime actually took place. Serious question here, if someone who appears part of an organised group should be arrested for conspiracy after a crime takes place, why not before?

      Anyway, had he fought the case, this guy might have won. The case was not tested, he (understandably) backed down in the face of a possible 20 years prison sentence.

    8. Re:Sounds fair to me... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      I thought conspiracy to commit a serious crime was an offence whether or not the crime actually took place. Serious question here, if someone who appears part of an organised group should be arrested for conspiracy after a crime takes place, why not before?


      Conspiracy to commit a crime means a crime will take place, even if it is thwarted. Keep in mind, too, that many things are now crimes just be thinking about committing them. I think distribution of bomb making material is a horribly stupid crime, but it still is one.

      Anyway, had he fought the case, this guy might have won. The case was not tested, he (understandably) backed down in the face of a possible 20 years prison sentence.

      I seriously doubt he would have won. Just the protesting charges alone would have probably put him at 4 months. The judge deciding one year was a better sentence is a normal thing, though. I know of one case where he got 2 years on a parole violation for very minor things when prosecution suggested community service. It just happens.

      Only when it involves "online freedom" does it get headlined at Slashdot and people rally.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    9. Re:Sounds fair to me... by sudohnim · · Score: 1

      If we're going to rally behind someone whose rights are trampled on, lets pick a better candidate.

      So we should only choose the winners? The upstanding citizens of the U.S. of A? My question to you is: Who will be left to stand up for you when your "rights" have been trampled on?

      --
      Its pretty sad when a commercial OS ships a debugger with their system but no compiler.
    10. Re:Sounds fair to me... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      So we should only choose the winners? The upstanding citizens of the U.S. of A? My question to you is: Who will be left to stand up for you when your "rights" have been trampled on?

      Someone who doesn't abuse the system, advocate violence against the system, perpetrates violence against the system.

      I would never chose for someone to support me if I didn't respect them and thought they understood the cause. How many people here can advocate terrorism? If you don't, don't support this guy.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    11. Re:Sounds fair to me... by sTalking_Goat · · Score: 1
      If we're going to rally behind someone whose rights are trampled on, lets pick a better candidate.


      No thats incorrect. Being Black I have no love for the KKK but I was still pissed when our then hated and now seemingly beloved ex-Mayor Rudolf Guilliani did some highly suspect manuveuring to deny them a permit to march down Wall Street in NY.

      You see the piont is not how worthy the person/s are to be defended are. The point is that if the G-men can step on them, they can easily step on you.

      I have no doubt he's jerk. But does that mean he doesn't deserve to be protected by the law?

      --

      My days of not taking you seriously are certainly coming to a middle...

    12. Re:Sounds fair to me... by Xerithane · · Score: 1

      I have no doubt he's jerk. But does that mean he doesn't deserve to be protected by the law?

      What law was violated? What right was violated? I'm not seeing anything.

      He committed an established crime. He was sentenced to what the judge decided was a fair sentence. That's what judges do, they judge people.

      No thats incorrect. Being Black I have no love for the KKK but I was still pissed when our then hated and now seemingly beloved ex-Mayor Rudolf Guilliani did some highly suspect manuveuring to deny them a permit to march down Wall Street in NY.

      I don't blame him. The implications of such an act would have grave repercussions, as well as possible sentiments of condoning hate crimes. Also, the sheer possibility of a violent outbreak would deem it to be a poor political and municipal decision.

      Either way, I'll rally behind someone who is innocent and treated unfairly. Not a 2-bit jerk-off who got a year in prison.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    13. Re:Sounds fair to me... by brooks_talley · · Score: 1

      Sure -- so post a link to the list of opinions it is illegal to express, and please highlight where it says that it is illegal to advocate violent overthrow of the government. Sure, it's a stupid thing to say, and actually *acting* on it is illegal in a number of ways, but just advocatiung revolution didn't used to be illegal.

      Which is a good thing, or else poor old Benjamin Franklin would have been in the slammer ("Never trust your government. The price of freedom is eternal vigilance. A revolution is needed every twenty years just to keep the government honest.")

      I still think you're confused about the difference between words and actions. Historically, they have been treated differently. Sad to say, most of the country seems to be in your boat. I just wonder what thought will go illegal next.

      -b

    14. Re:Sounds fair to me... by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      This kid is a dumbass suburbanite whose parents didn't love him enough so he rebelled against the gubbmint. If we're going to rally behind someone whose rights are trampled on, lets pick a better candidate.

      You mean like these guys?

  19. What's the problem by Stanley+Feinbaum · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I remember there were some kids who advocated killing their classmates and were into bomb making and guns ect... If we threw them in jail it could have prevented a tragedy, and maybe one was prevented in this case.

    --

    Stanley Feinbaum, professional journalist and master debater! God bless the USA!

    1. Re:What's the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      right - and that's you saying in a country who has more weapons then IQ.

      But lets continue or your line of reasoning: If you where to 'remove' all people unlike yourself there wouldn't be any crime and things would be better for sure. Oh wait no that's what hitler said. And that is sorta fascistic. I'm sure your prez would love it (after consulting the dictionary on the word fascism) and he and his palls can go right ahead and make look america the country of the stupid and chicken. (which I'm convinced you are not - but remember 80% of world populous considers the US to more a bigger threat to world safety then ANY other country/organisation). America needs to work on it's image, coz what it's projecting now is downright ridiculous. Instead of bombing the shit out of defenceless countries perhaps they should initiate a new Marshall Plan. Probably be cheaper too...

    2. Re:What's the problem by Trigun · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And if we armed more students, they could have shot the bastards as they walked in.

      Maybe we could have made some laws to make their parents hold them more while they were children, or enroll them in little-league.

      How about all those people with websites that are against the current administration? Could we lock them up for crimes that they may commit? Let's lock up the entire democratic party! Or the green party, they're pretty strange. Who knows what they're going to do.

      In case you missed the sarcasm, the bill of rights is a blanket bill. Because of this, you have to take the good with the bad. If someone were to have made a bomb and blew up a government building, he could be an accessory, or essentially equally responsible, as in the case of Charles Manson.

      20 years is an abuse of power.

    3. Re:What's the problem by Stanley+Feinbaum · · Score: 1

      Look, someone who is a loner and is into guns and bombs and anti-government rhetoric IS A RISK. Everyone but the naive knows it, some of you don't want to admit it. McVey, the unibomber, the columbine kids, and most other psychos exactly fit the profile of this person in question.

      Sure most of the time those people are guilty of nothing but being weird but you never hear about people who are involved with their community, go to church, and participate in sports going on a killing rampage.

      If you hate the government, fight it the right way. Organize peaceful protests, write your representatives, get involved somehow. Going on about guns and bombs at the same time as you go on about hating the government is a very stupid thing to do. There is the right to freedom of speech but people also have the right to FEEL SAFE. Especially in these crazy, crazy times.

      --

      Stanley Feinbaum, professional journalist and master debater! God bless the USA!

  20. Think "RaiseTheFist.com" will get slashdotted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I sure am not clicking on that link .....

  21. Freedom of Speech anymore? by miradu2000 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This to me is just scary. Yes he was giving instructions on how to make chemical reactions work. Whoopdeedo! We live in America, and in the america i grew up in we don't censor information from the public. And he wasn't realyl even giving instructions - he never (AFAIK) disseminated the information, he just linked to it. It's like being arressted for telling people that you KNOW how to make bombs....

    But the most scary thing of all is this qoute from this website: "(5) he cannot associate with any person or group that seeks to change the government in any way (be that environmental, social justice, political, economic, etc.), "

    How can the courts do that? This guy has rights that cannot under any circumstances be taken away. Part of those rights are freedom of speech - expecially political freedom of speech - and policital freedom of speech again AFAIK is only when you want to try to change the government somehow.

    This guy got shafted by a horrible judge who shouldn't be allowed to work. If i were president, or governer i would pardon this man becuase he doesn't deserve to have his life ruined for such a simple thing as disseminating information.

    As a highschooler what am I to think growing up? Do we really have our Bill of Rights anymore? Every day i see more news about parts of it being chipped away - of course all in the name of protecting the country from terrorism. (since free speech, habius corpus, etc are an evil evil thing... ) BULLSHIT!

    1. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a highschooler what am I to think growing up? Do we really have our Bill of Rights anymore?

      Don't give them any indication you know about any of this. At least until you're out of highschool.

    2. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Twanfox · · Score: 2, Troll
      As a highschooler, perhaps you'd actually read the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. The First Amendment doesn't say that you have the right to advocate hate crimes, belittle or verbally abuse people, or tell people how and where and when to blow up a major government building/person.

      As someone else's post pointed out, the First Amendment gives you the right to peacefully speak your mind, petition the government on grievances, gather in assembly. You cannot entice riot, civil war, or anything else that seeks to start violence.

      One would think that the educated Slashdotter could actually read and tell the difference between violence and peaceful assembly. I guess not.

    3. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a "highschooler", you should be more concerned with grammer and spelling.

      You'll graduate, get into a better college, get a better job, and earn more money -- which won't buy happiness, but might help you avoid the internal rage which prompts people to link to websites containing questionable content.

      Think about it!

    4. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by dioxide · · Score: 1

      felons have no rights.

    5. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by EllF · · Score: 1

      Yes! Get more money, buy a louder and bigger TeeVee, and stop thinking -- because if it's flashy enough, you won't notice that you haven't done anything worthwhile with your waste of a life.

      --
      We who were living are now dying
      With a little patience
    6. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Jack+Auf · · Score: 1

      As a "highschooler", you should be more concerned with grammer and spelling.

      So should you there bright boy.

      --
      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - BF
    7. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by atomicdoggy · · Score: 1

      "How can the courts do that? This guy has rights that cannot under any circumstances be taken away."

      Ummm, so by what you are saying here, a judge can't sentence someone to prison since that would take away rights). This is simply another part of the punishment. Pay attention in government class....

    8. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by garcia · · Score: 1

      How can the courts do that? This guy has rights that cannot under any circumstances be taken away.

      felons (those convicted of serious crimes) lose their rights, plain and simple.

      As a highschooler what am I to think growing up?

      As a highschooler I didn't think, why are you any different?

      Do we really have our Bill of Rights anymore?

      Yes, and no one really listens to it or the Constitution. All in the name of protecting Freedom (Don't waive your rights while waving your flags...)!!!

    9. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by trashcanman · · Score: 1

      This guy has rights that cannot under any circumstances be taken away.

      This isn't entirely true. As a convicted felon, this person will lose many of his rights. He may lose the right to vote, to own a handgun, to become a police officer, to hold public office, etc. Other rights, such as the right to life or to due process are retained.

      --
      The Dread Pirate Roberts is here for your soul!
    10. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      perhaps you should read what our founding fathers have said about the constitution and government.

      I can have a peacefull assembly and discuss how to overthrow the government.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    11. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by dillon_rinker · · Score: 1

      How can the courts do that?
      If the little matter of limiting the freedom of association of a convicted criminal bothers you, you are going to be reduced to a quivering lump of flesh when you realize that the courts can have criminals locked up for life or even killed.

      Do we really have our Bill of Rights anymore?
      Yes. He didn't have to agree to this. He could have let it go to trial and proven his innocence. He feels that this limitation is better than imprisonment. He did a stupid thing; now he suffers the consequences.

    12. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by MikeJ9919 · · Score: 2, Informative

      While I disagree with the outcome of this particular case, I have to make a comment about your over-general statement regarding civil liberties. Civil liberties are a a God-given part of being human, and as citizens in a free society we have the right to demand them. Chief amongst these are free speech, freedom of assembly, and freedom of religion. However, many of these rights (though they cannot be taken away by the government acting of its own volition) can be taken away by the people as punishment for actions outside legal and societal norms. For example, if I've been convicted of being involved in a corrupt enterprise (the Mafia, for example), a jury of my peers has found (or I've plead guilty) that my association with these people endangers society. Therefore, as a result of my actions, the people (acting through the state) have the right to restrict my freedom to associate (assemble) with my former conspirators.

    13. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Night+Goat · · Score: 1

      Well, the guy was advocating overthrowing the government. It's not really surprising to me that this government decided to prevent him from doing that. If you're looking to start a violent overthrow of the government, you have to go all the way. When our forefathers fought in the Revolutionary War, they knew (at least most of them probably did) that if they lost, there'd be a world of shit brought down on them. This kid didn't think about the ramifications of what might occur. I think he got off rather light, to tell you the truth.

    14. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Call+Me+Black+Cloud · · Score: 1

      With freedom comes responsibility. Are you upset you can't walk into a crowded nightclub and start yelling "fire"?

      Perhaps you should put more effort into learning history, spelling, and grammar.

    15. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Christopher_G_Lewis · · Score: 2, Funny

      to hold public office

      Unless he moves to Chicago :-)

    16. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      felons have no rights

      Before a person should be considered a felon, it should be determined whether the person's rights were taken away before being considered a felon. If they were then it is always possible that an innocent person is labelled a felon when indeed they were exercising their 'legal rights'.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    17. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Agthorr · · Score: 1
      This guy has rights that cannot under any circumstances be taken away

      False. When you are a convicted criminal, you can lose some of your rights. How many rights do you think prison inmates have?

    18. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by ad0gg · · Score: 1
      It's like being arressted for telling people that you KNOW how to make bombs....

      I think its more like telling people to goto the library and check out the Anarchist cook book. Since all they were links which are just really directions to information.

      What I don't get is how one is illegal and one isn't.

      --

      Have you ever been to a turkish prison?

    19. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Linux_ho · · Score: 1

      But the most scary thing of all is this qoute from this website: "(5) he cannot associate with any person or group that seeks to change the government in any way (be that environmental, social justice, political, economic, etc.),"

      How can the courts do that? This guy has rights that cannot under any circumstances be taken away.


      Of course they can. Criminal proceedings are all about having your rights taken away. If you cop a plea to a felony, you lose all kinds of rights. For example, free speech, free movement, the right to vote, protection from search and seizure, the right to choose your food, reading material, companions, the right to a virginal arsehole... well, OK, that last one is technically incorrect. But the list goes on and on. If you've committed a felony in the eyes of the law, you have very few rights that can't be taken away by the court. And those rights that can't be taken by the court will probably be taken by your cellmate(s).

      --
      include $sig;
      1;
    20. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a highschooler what am I to think growing up? Do we really have our Bill of Rights anymore?

      You're in high school, presumably in the U.S. Which means that every day during the school year, you are forced (whether you wish it or not) to attend a government school, or a private school approved by the government, or be taught at home in ways the government considers appropriate. If you resist this, you and perhaps your parents will be jailed.

      During your stay in this brainwashing center, you will be taught that which the government has decided you will know. If you wish to publish a paper within the school, the Principal has the legal right to edit, censor, or shut down the paper entirely. Your manner of speech can be regulated. Your dress can be controlled. Your movements are subject to the whim of your controllers. Attending to your bodily functions may or may not be granted as your overseer wishes.

      If you resist this control over your body and mind, you can be punished in various ways, including being forced to stay longer (failing a grade and being "kept back") or being cast out. If cast out, the rest of society will participate in diminishing the opportunities you have available to you for the rest of your life.

      Additionally, if you're still under 18, you pay sales tax on all purchases, yet may not participate in the elections which help control how that money is spent.

      And you're concerned about "the America you're growing up in" not wholly respecting some other guy's right to free speech? WAKE UP. Your own "rights" have never been respected by the government at any point of your existence to date, and you apparently haven't even noticed.

      Still have the Bill of Rights? You have never had the rights therein... yet you're worried about them being chipped away? I submit that your priorites are somewhat misplaced.

    21. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by mthreat · · Score: 0
      When it comes to federal sentencing, the judges have broad discretion in imposing these conditions of supervised release. I was banned from the Internet for 3 years even though I had never been convicted of a computer crime. And this is after the U.S. Supreme Court has decided (when they overturned the Communications Decency Act) that the Internet "deserves the highest level of free speech protection".

      I encourage him to research the topic during his year in prison. Unfortunately, after looking at tons of case law, he will realize that it is unlikely he will have his sentence changed. At least his free speech limitations only last for one year.

    22. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Fesh · · Score: 5, Insightful
      The First Amendment doesn't say that you have the right to advocate hate crimes, belittle or verbally abuse people, or tell people how and where and when to blow up a major government building/person.
      No, no, no. You've got it backwards. The First Amendment doesn't allow me to speak, it forbids the government from abridging my speech. It doesn't say a damned thing about what I am or am not allowed to speak about. The Constitution is a restraint on government power, not a list of things we're allowed to do. This view that the Constitution enumerates our rights flies in the face of historical evidence on the intent of the founders of this country, and is only going to worsen the problems we're having.
      --
      --Fesh
      Kill -9 'em all, let root@localhost sort 'em out.
    23. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by mausmalone · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Whew! Calm down! Maybe I'm getting too old but I feel I should administer a minor reality check here.

      First, I agree. Restrictions on his joining groups devoted to changing any part of government is a total crock and shouldn't be in there. That's knee-jerk reactionary and, considering this man's cooperation with the police, totally unnecessary. His taking a plea-bargain shows that he is a reasonable person with serious grievances, not a psychopath who just likes to blow stuff up.

      But, you have to understand that he wasn't arrested for disseminating information. He was arrested because he was trying to incite a violent revolt. There's a fine line... You can tell someone how to make a bomb, as long as it's purely for non-violent pursuits. But, as soon as you package it along with anti-anybody messages and promote violence, you've become an instigator and an enabler, which are both very serious charges. The first ammendment gurantees us the right to "peacably assemble and petition the government for a redress of grievances." Listen to the wording. The framers of the constitutuion definitely intended for the ever-evolving government to be an intellectual and continuing revolution. Somehwere, the American public dropped the ball, though, and we forgot the fact that we have any say.

      Since you're a high-school kid, which probably puts you left of center, you've probably read at least something about Michael Moore. If you can cheaply get a copy of Stupid White Men, read about the section where he became school superintendent (or something similar) while still in high school. You can make change in government at the local level with little effort. Just get your friends to vote for you. That's how you peacably redress grievences. Or you could march on Washington. At any rate, telling people that they need to use violent force is out of the question.

      --
      -=-=-=-=-=
      I'd rather be flamed than ignored.
    24. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by rmohr02 · · Score: 1
      As someone else's post pointed out, the First Amendment gives you the right to peacefully speak your mind, petition the government on grievances, gather in assembly. You cannot entice riot, civil war, or anything else that seeks to start violence.
      No, the First Amendment gives you the right to speak your mind. "Peacefully" is only in reference to the right to assemble.
    25. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Civil liberties are a a God-given ..

      Don't invoke "God" in a civilized discussion, please. Even Slashdot has its limits.

    26. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by grunteled · · Score: 1

      Please for god's sake find another analogy. Please, we beg you, don't use "fire" anymore. It doesn't apply to every situation.

    27. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As an educated person who has read and used the amendments to the constitution in a court of law, I feel I can disagree with you.

      The First Amendment is intended to keep the government from making discussion of government change, including overthrowing by force, illegal. You *can* entice riot and civil war, if the system is not meeting the needs of the people.

      The complacency of the American people frightens me. Many speak, but I have seen no petitions to rescind the USA PATRIOT Act, or to impeach the president. Right now, direct action by organized groups of individuals seems to me the only viable way to elicit change in the parts of the government which seem to be damaged.

    28. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by rmohr02 · · Score: 1

      There are many rights that get taken away when someone becomes a convicted felon, but some cannot. For instance, I doubt there's any American who thinks the government does everything perfectly. Therefore, every American wants the government changed a little. So according to the deal this guy was forced to take, he cannot associate with any other American.

    29. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by wfberg · · Score: 1

      As someone else's post pointed out, the First Amendment gives you the right to peacefully speak your mind, petition the government on grievances, gather in assembly. You cannot entice riot, civil war, or anything else that seeks to start violence.

      That's what the second amendment is for, isn't it?

      --
      SCO employee? Check out the bounty
    30. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by guzzirider · · Score: 1

      "You're free to speak your mind my friend As long as you agree with me Don't criticize the father land Or those who shape your destiny 'Cause if you do You'll lose your job your mind and all the friends you knew We'll send out all our boys in blue They'll find a way to silence you" Steppenwolf - The Ostrich

    31. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by yakovlev · · Score: 1

      Hmmmm,

      So I can't say:

      We should all go drive the lawyers and people with green eyes off a cliff... I sure hate lawyers and people with green eyes.

      Lawyers and people with green eyes are dorks, and they're all short too.

      The best way to blow up a major government building/person is:
      a.) With explosives.
      b.) Where they are.
      c.) When they are there.

      Yup, I can say all of the above, and most would agree that I'm protected by the First Amendment, provided I DO SO PEACEABLY. (The last one is a little questionable, not because it is a government building/official, but because it can go beyond merely advocating criminal behavior to actually planning a specific criminal act.)

      The problem is that the govenment has made it such that there are certain groups that I can't say these things about. One group you mentioned was government officials, but there are many others. It just so happens that I CAN say it about lawyers (because they're generally disliked, even by my uncle who IS a lawyer) and about people with green eyes (because everyone can tell it's a joke.)

    32. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by cmiller173 · · Score: 1

      "How can the courts do that? This guy has rights that cannot under any circumstances be taken away."

      There are no rights that cannot be taken away. The constitution gives you the right to "Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" but we still have the death penalty(in many states) and imprisonment for certain criminal acts. Basically if you act against society (not the government per se), society (jury of your peers) has the power to strip you of some rights.

      Furthermore strict constructionists would tell you that the order of the rights granted in the constitution are the order of importance, i.e. Life is more important than liberty which is in turn more important that pursuit of happiness. The rights in the bill of rights are less important (not un-important mind you) than those in the constitution proper.

      It's one thing to disagree with the government (I disagree with many policies of both parties myself) but it is another thing altogether to incite violence.

      That said, I would in fact disagree with this sentence if all that was there was linking to bomb making instructions, they should have gone after the places he linked to not him. But perhaps he agreed to the plea bargain and the "bomb making" charge so that other charges would be dropped like inciting violence, etc. Maybe there were several charges pending that the prosecution dropped in exchange for the plea.

      One rather short article is insufficient to decide if justice was in fact carried out or abrogated.

      Disclamer: IANAL, but I do have 3 credit hours of business law and remember much of the study of the constitution in both that class and high school government class.

    33. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by aminorex · · Score: 1

      > felons have no rights.

      Well, there goes the whole concept of
      *inalienable* rights. Glad you
      cleared up *that* little issue!

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    34. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The First Amendment doesn't say that you have the right to...belittle or verbally abuse people...."

      You're an asshole.

      Now, I realize you are offended, and that you probably think I should receive a citation, do community service, or stuffed into solitary or some other sort of confinement, but I do not agree with you.

      btw, I also think you're a jerk.

      The first amendment is protection of citizens against the government. You have a problem with me, take it up in civil court.

      I also think you're of such little mind, you're a useless human being.

      See, the problem is, as an educated Slashdotter, you're still an idiot....wait, that's a belittling statement, not an argument. Here:

      I also think you're an idiot.

      While you may argue that there is a difference between violence and peaceful assembly (something I may agree with), I think you missed the distinct point--maybe it was too subtle for you. This individual was threatened with prosecution with law that runs around the 5th amendment--his right to due process. If his statement were elevated to that of terrorism, he could have been simply labelled a terrorist and shoved in a cell.

      That is the threat. I don't give a rat's ass about your wimpy first amendment talk; personally, you've got some wires crossed if you think belittling is not protected speech. In any case, the 5th amendment was about the process to find someone guilty. It was never meant to be handed a runaround where a person could be removed from the due process system and threatened with external prosecution as a combatant, terrorist, etc.

      I'll belittle you all I want, for all you do is whittle away at the rights we do have. Statutes of limitations are there for a reason. The Bill of Rights is there for a reason. Too bad you can't see the whole picture.

    35. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 1

      Yes he was giving instructions on how to make chemical reactions work. Whoopdeedo!

      For what it's worth, he stated under oath that he was giving out these instructions with intent to use them. It's disturbing that he was able to be coerced into making such an admission, but he did make it.

    36. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by http · · Score: 1
      A broken href tag, or perhaps you misquoted?
      From http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/internet/08/05/anarch ist.prison.ap/index.html:
      Austin must also pay a $2,000 fine and is barred for three years from using a computer without approval. Wilson said he also may not associate with anyone from a group that "espouses physical force as a means of change."

      Nothing about 'change the government in any way'. Which web site were you looking at? Link, please.

      But I'm in total agreement with you on the Bill of Rights thing. I'm so glad I don't live there. It must hurt to see your (collective) historical ideals being actively wafflestomped.
      "You got freedom of speech, as long as you don't say too much"
      Gil Scott Heron
      --
      If opportunity came disguised as temptation, one knock would be enough.
      3^2 * 67^1 * 977^1
    37. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The constitution gives you the right to "Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of happiness"

      Where the fsck did you hear/read that? Slashdot?
      IIRC The sentence you quoted comes from our Declaration of Independence, NOT the Constitution.
      I'm sorry but the ONLY "law" of the land is our Constitution. The declaration of independence is some people saying we dare you to cross this line.... and the constitution is what happened when the same people kicked the people's ass when they crossed the line. As someone more wiser than I has said (paraphrased) "To the victors go the spoils."

    38. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Cytotoxic · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The Constitution is a restraint on government power, not a list of things we're allowed to do.
      This is a brilliant comment that bears repeating. So many seem to have forgotten that the government does not have any rights at all to grant. Our rights are innate, the government gets its power (and its 'rights') from the consent of the governed. The only thing that any government can do with your rights is take them away (or perhaps help protect you from having someone else take them away).
    39. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right! Ditto with the rest of the original ten amendments.

      But, the NRA doesn't get it, nor does the ACLU. Why is this?

    40. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What doesn't the NRA get? That a government can't just willy nilly take away guns from private citizens?

      BTW reading the 2nd Amendment closely, you could argue that citizens should be allowed to have the SAME armament as a standing army (ie., sidewinders, daisy cutters, nukes).

    41. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by fisgreen · · Score: 1

      Unless he moves to Chicago :-)

      Obviously, you've never spent any time in Providence.

    42. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Saeger · · Score: 1
      The Constitution is a restraint on government power, not a list of things we're allowed to do.

      Or in geekspeek: "The Constitution is a government blacklist, not a citizen whitelist".

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    43. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by G-funk · · Score: 1

      No, the second amendment is meant for the establishment of a machiavellian government sponsored militia that acts in the percieved interests of the state, Basically the US army, but they own their weapons. This is simply due to the fact that hiring mercanaries and not having a standing army basically led various parts of 15th century italy to cop it balls-deep from ambitious neighbours.

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    44. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by todu · · Score: 1

      # mod below doubleplusfunny:
      s/Bill of Rights/Bill of Gates/g;

    45. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Soothh · · Score: 1

      How can the courts do that? because noone has challenged them yet.
      This is just like why we broke away from england. That was a revolution, and its what we need now, they keep taking rights away so slowly we get used to it, then they take some more, i highly recommend everyone read "the federalist papers" it was written by the founding fathers and what they REALLY meant in great detail when they wrote the constitution, among other great topics.

      its still "We the people..." right?
      it was supposed to be each state ran by the state by the people. NOT the federal government running the whole show! Im by no means a conspiracy theorist. Who was is, ben franklin that said we need a revolution every 200 years to keep the government in line? how old is this country?

      --
      We have seen that living things are too improbable and too beautifully "designed" to have come into existence by chance.
    46. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by chthonicdaemon · · Score: 1

      Our rights are innate...

      Actually, no. If you read the founding fathers and all that, you will find that man has no rights but thos granted by the society. So Society gives you rights, and government is restricted by the Constitution from infringing on these rights. On your own have no rights.

      --
      Languages aren't inherently fast -- implementations are efficient
    47. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by panda · · Score: 1

      The inalienable rights are mentioned in the Declaration of Independence, and not in the Constitution. The inalienable rights mentioned are "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."

      Plea bargaining to a felony crime is the same as being convicted by a jury of a felony crime. By law, convicted felons lose certain rights in the United States of America, even after they have served their sentence. IIRC, they lose the right to keep and bear arms, they lose the right to vote, and they lose certain other rights. It is not uncommon for judges to stipulate that a felon cannot associate with certain people or to use certain types of equipment after a conviction. Generally, though, these sorts of additional restrictions have a time limit on them, like 5 years or so after release.

      Being convicted of a misdemeanor will not cause you to lose these rights.

      I'm not saying one way or another what I believe on the above. I'm merely stating what is the case under the law today. I leave it as the proverbial exercise for the reader to determine what my personal stance is.

      --
      Just be sure to wear the gold uniform when you beam down -- you know what happens when you wear the red one.
    48. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Twanfox · · Score: 1

      Ya, while technically, that may be what the Bill of Rights was intending to say, rights are kind of funny beasts.

      Without the Constitution forbidding me to do so, I have the right to steal, rape, pillage, cause general mayhem. However, the Constitution forbids these things, so they are no longer rights. Is that about what you're saying?

      Whether or not you say "The Bill of Rights has given me the right to..." or "The Bill of Rights has expressly forbid the government from stopping me from...", effectively and practically, they are the same thing, even if the thought them is inverted. The Bill of Rights has given US Citizens the right to peaceful assembly, with the typically unspoken 'which the government cannot stop me from doing'.

    49. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Twanfox · · Score: 1

      Had anyone actually seen what this guy was advocating? I assume the pages have been removed, but how far of what he said was peaceful assembly, and how much of it was planning for a criminal act?

      Thing of it is, I'll bet most on Slashdot havn't a clue what it said, only that some guy who said something is going to jail.

    50. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by LanceTaylor · · Score: 1

      The founding fathers did not say that our rights are granted by Society.

      "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness." -- Declaration of Independence

      Your rights come from God. Also, notice that freedom to say anything that you want without repercussion is not listed.

    51. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Cytotoxic · · Score: 1
      Quoth chthonicdaemon:
      Actually, no. If you read the founding fathers and all that, you will find that man has no rights but thos granted by the society. So Society gives you rights, and government is restricted by the Constitution from infringing on these rights. On your own have no rights.
      You have put your finger on the entire distinction between the western democratic/libertarian movement and the socialist/communist movement that followed. The founding fathers you are quoting are the fathers of Marksism, not the American model. The notion of individual rights and liberties is anathma to the communist model, just as the notion of societal or governmental rights is completely contradictory to the democratic republic. Unfortunately, as your post painfully points out, this vital distinction is often lost in this era.
    52. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by yakovlev · · Score: 1

      I freely admit that I have no idea what he said. I was responding to the earlier statement about what types of speech the first amendment supposedly doesn't protect, and arguing that it should and in some cases does protect those socially unacceptable types of speech.

      <conspiracy mode on>
      As for this specific case, it looks to me like they were looking to set a precedent that hyperlinking qualifies as disseminating bomb-making information, and found this convenient defendant who they could say "hey, we won't charge you for hacking these web sites if you'll plead guilty to dissemination of bomb-making information."
      </conspiracy>

      Either that or the evidence might not have been enough to convict on the other charges, so they agreed not to try if he would plead guilty to this one.

    53. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by McFly777 · · Score: 1
      An AC commented:
      BTW reading the 2nd Amendment closely, you could argue that citizens should be allowed to have the SAME armament as a standing army (ie., sidewinders, daisy cutters, nukes).

      IIRC, the Supreme Court held that to be case, but notably that decision happened before WWII and the advent of nukes. How this jives with the prohibition on automatic weapons, etc., I have no idea.

      --

      McFly777
      - - -
      "What do people mean when they say the computer went down on them?" -Marilyn Pittman
    54. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by eddie+can+read · · Score: 1

      This view that the Constitution enumerates our rights flies in the face of historical evidence on the intent of the founders of this country, and is only going to worsen the problems we're having.

      But only some people advocate interpreting the Constitution according to "original intent". I do, but then I'm pretty conservative so that explains that.

    55. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> As a "highschooler", you should be more concerned
      >> with grammer and spelling.

      > So should you there bright boy.

      Actually there is one grammatical and one spelling error in the double-quoted posting excerpt above, which leads me to conclude that both were deliberate and that it was a not-so-subtle attempt at irony. Which appears to have passed you by completely. Lucky you!

    56. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by chthonicdaemon · · Score: 1
      I just said that the rights are granted by society. In the declaration of independence, I read
      That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed...
      So you cannot secure your rights without a governing body to appeal to. My post was not Marxist or anti-American, just pointing out that rights are undefendable without a community to recognize them.
      --
      Languages aren't inherently fast -- implementations are efficient
    57. Re:Freedom of Speech anymore? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The purpose of our government is to secure our rights, but that doesn't mean our government is the only way we could secure them, much less that the government granted them (which would mean we are actually merely property of our government, rather than the other way around).

  22. One Man's Opinion by niko9 · · Score: 1

    Im trying to balance my fears of terrorist threats to my respect other for peoples freedom of speech. It's an uneasy feeling.

    1. Re:One Man's Opinion by DigitalSorceress · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Even back on 9/11/01, My biggest fear was not "Oh God, they could get me or someone I care about" (yes, that crossed the back of my mind when they were still not sure if there were still more hijacked planes in the air) but that of "Our government is goig to WAY over-react to this and do some incredibly damaging things to our rights and freedoms under the illusion that they need to "Do Something"

      Today, I really don't want to fly anywhere... not because I'm worried about hijackings, but because I'm very reluctant to have to spend 2 hours going through security screenings that are more about putting on an appearance of security; because they want people to feel they are "Doing Something"; than about acutally stopping real terrorists.

      AlQueda got a lot of milage out of those attacks. One event, one (combined) terrorist incident and 2 years later, our government has held people as "enemy combatants", made taking a flight of less than 2000 miles take longer in the airport than in the air, and given us "total information awareness" and the PATRIOT act.

      I submit to you that our own government is (inadvertantly) supporting fear and terror. I haven't been worried about directly being the victim of a terrorist attack, but I DO worry about my rights to privacy, freedom, and the presumption of innocense until proven guilty. /rant

      --

      The Digital Sorceress
    2. Re:One Man's Opinion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What "FEAR OF TERRORIST THREATS"? Huh? Do *you* know anyone who was ever killed / maimed / attacked / bruised by a "TERRORIST" (or even *seen* one that wasn't on television?)

      • 1700 US citizens die daily from HEART DISEASE.
      • About 3000 US citizens were killed in the entire year of 2001 as a result of "TERRORIST ACTIVITIES" (less than 2 days worth of heart disease).

      And you seriously consider the THREAT OF TERROR to be something worth cowering in fear of. It's more productive for you to FEAR CHEESEBURGERS AND FRIES and DRIVING WITHOUT A SEATBELT. Because statistically, those will certainly kill you before the TERRORISTS do.

      UNSUBSTANTIATED FEAR is destroying your life, keeping you inline and not thinking, at home watching TV, snacking on artery-clogging chips while wondering if you'll die through TERROR.

      Coward.
    3. Re:One Man's Opinion by niko9 · · Score: 1

      Major troll, but I have to bite.

      What "FEAR OF TERRORIST THREATS"? Huh? Do *you* know anyone who was ever killed / maimed / attacked / bruised by a "TERRORIST" (or even *seen* one that wasn't on television?)

      I am New York City EMS Paramedic with 8 years of experience. Please click on this link. I knew every single person on that list. They were my co-workers.

      I was also at the World Trade Center after both towers collapsed.

      I was not speaking idly, like someone who tunes into CNN or Fox News (if you wanna call that news) and say to himself "Jeeze Louise, those people in NYC sure did suffer".

      Had I done a double shift that week, like i did every other Tuesday, I hosestly think I would be dead.

      "..at home watching TV, snacking on artery-clogging chips while wondering if you'll die through TERROR."

      I work anywhere from fifty to seventy hours a week in midtown or the lower east side ever week in Manhattan. My thigh attached gas mask reminds me just how "UNSUBSTANTIATED" my fears are.

      And you seriously consider the THREAT OF TERROR to be something worth cowering in fear of.

      Read my original post.

      I have one question for you sir, how did you manage to write such a passionate post with your head so far up your ass?

    4. Re:One Man's Opinion by PostConsumerRecycled · · Score: 1
      I submit to you that our own government is (inadvertantly) supporting fear and terror.

      I'm not one to be a conspiracy theorist, but I'm not so sure that it's inadvertant (that's not to say they are supporting terrorists).

      AlQueda got a lot of milage out of those attacks.

      Well, the hawks in government are also getting a lot of milage out of peoples reactions to the attacks, do you really think they want to calm our fears, when as long as they can keep us afraid, they can do anything they want in the name of "Homeland Security."

      I'm just glad to see that people are starting to realize what's happening, hopefully more people will before too many of our rights and freedoms are taken away.

      Personally, I think that we could fight terrorism with the laws existing pre 9/11/01, just the processes needed tweaking, but that would have meant admitting that they screwed up.

      --

      There is no dark side of the moon really, matter of fact it's all dark
    5. Re:One Man's Opinion by aminorex · · Score: 1

      I think I understand your viewpoint. Please correct
      me if my description is inaccurate:

      1) The number of people being significantly harmed
      by terrorists is large.

      2) The number of people being significantly harmed
      by the U.S. government is small.

      As a consequence (fill in the enthymeme) you
      prefer that the U.S. government be allowed to harm
      more people if that reduces the incidence of harm
      by terrorists.

      Oh - I forgot to mention one very important
      premise here:

      3) "The U.S. government" and "terrorists" are
      disjoint groups.

      There is a problem with these premises.
      The number of people being killed or mutilated
      or impoverished by the actions of the U.S.
      goverment is at least an order of magnitude
      larger than the number being similarly harmed
      by "terrorists". For that reason, I also
      question (3).

      There is an alternative interpretation which I
      can place on your views: That the balance between
      giving more power to terrorists versus giving
      more power to the U.S. government is not based
      on how much harm is being done by each of these
      groups, but rather on the basis of how much of
      a threat you think these groups are to you,
      personally.

      I will respect your moral sense enough to discount
      this interpretation, however, if only because
      anyone who considers their subjective sense of
      security to be worth the brutal deaths of thousands
      of "sand niggers" is so far beneath my contempt
      that I wouldn't think of engaging in a respectful
      discussion with such a person.

      Therefore, I think you should reconsider your
      viewpoint, in light of the counter-factual
      nature of the premises listed as (1) and (2),
      above.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  23. Well, that's just great! by The+Other+Nate · · Score: 2, Funny

    Linking dangerously, huh?
    Slashdot links to webpage in question...
    We read the article, now we're all terrorists!

    --
    The Other Nate

  24. Is it safe to read the article? by whorfin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I was going to go to the website to see what he went to prison for, but if it's illegal to aggregate the info, is it also illegal to read it?

    --
    Laugh while you can, monkey-boy!
    1. Re:Is it safe to read the article? by daveo0331 · · Score: 1

      You're right. This article is actually a sting operation by the federal government. Anyone who posts a comment that gets modded up to +5 will be assumed to have RTFA and should expect FBI agents at their door tomorrow morning.

      For the record: If anyone from the FBI is reading this, I have not RTFA.

      --
      Remember the days when Republicans were the party of fiscal responsibility?
  25. What was there? by heli0 · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.Raisethefi st.com

    The internet archive has the site archived from many dates over the past several years.

    --
    Whenever the offence inspires less horror than the punishment, the rigour of penal law is obliged to give way...
    1. Re:What was there? by Animats · · Score: 1
      You can see the front page of the site, which makes the main point "National security is the threat", clearly political speech deserving of First Amendment protection. There's nothing about weapons or bombs there. But there's quite a bit of material documenting police brutality around the US and the world.

      Most of the site content wasn't archived, because the original site routed clicks to the actual page via a CGI script, rather than standard links. The Internet Archive crawler only saves directly-linked web pages; it doesn't follow links that look like database queries.

    2. Re:What was there? by TopShelf · · Score: 1
      In addition to what was on the website, however, it's interesting to read what the raid on his house turned up:

      (MR. HOU) The Second Circuit has long held that items, destructive devices such as Molotov cocktails, simply have no legitimate purpose. They are, by definition, tools of violence. In this case, the defendant possessed Molotov cocktails. Pursuant to a search warrant which was authorized in the Central District of California on or about January 24th, the FBI searched the defendant's home. What did they find there? They found explosives. They found M-80s. They found remote control detonating devices. Again, these are items that have no legitimate purpose. They found bottles, over sixty bottles. They found the Molotov cocktails I mentioned.

      They also saw in plain view the defendant's silver Toyota 1981 car.

      THE COURT: Were there completed Molotov cocktails found?

      12 MR. HOU: There were two Molotov cocktails that were in various states of finality. There was one which actually had the wick in it, I understand, from the FBI agent, and it was tested. The materials were tested to determine what was inside, and it was later determined -- the FBI determined that it did contain etroleum products.

      The FBI agents asked the defendant at that time whether it contained petroleum products, whether it was, in fact, a Molotov cocktail, and he denied it.
      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    3. Re:What was there? by Saeger · · Score: 1
      National Security is a threat when taken too far, because security through obscurity breeds a false sense of security and a lot of resentment.

      Now obviously keeping some secrets is a matter of national security - like not tipping your hand to potential enemies about advanced military capabilities - but trying to bury information about building bombs, or potato guns, or the locations of your state's water resevoirs, wouldn't be.

      Ignorance is Strength ~= "National Security"
      Freedom is Slavery ~= Removing civil liberties in the name of safety until you've got a police a state.
      War is Peace ~= The "War On Terrorism" which is "a war that is not going to have any end for the foreseeable future."--G.W.Bush

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    4. Re:What was there? by Chelloveck · · Score: 1
      it's interesting to read what the raid on his house turned up

      And...? None of these things are evidence of crime (other than possibly thoughtcrime). A bunch of friends and I like to get together once a year out in the middle of nowhere to blow things up. Most years we have a large supply of hydrogen, liquid oxygen, and various explosives. We've made bowling ball cannons, huge magnesium bonfires, and blown up a toilet (specially trucked out to the middle of nowhere for the purpose) with metallic sodium.

      And why? 'Cause it's fun. And 400 pounds of burning thermite is a beautiful thing.

      It really annoys me when the mere possession of dangerous stuff is prima facie evidence of wrong-doing. Sure, if the guy's being investigated for blowing up a bank, possessing explosives is a good piece of evidence against him. But unless and until he's accused of some specific act of violence I'm not going to treat possession of explosives as evidence of being any nuttier than my friends and I are.

      --
      Chelloveck
      I give up on debugging. From now on, SIGSEGV is a feature.
  26. You don't like it, leave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Plenty of room avail in Russia, Afghanistan, Africa and other suck ass dictatorships. Bomb making guides? Lock his ass up.

  27. Freenet by HanzoSan · · Score: 0, Insightful



    This is why we need software like Freenet, the government is turning into the soviet union. These crazy maniac right winged pro mililtary republicans want to make government so big and so powerful that they can rob us of our freedoms and we can do nothing about it.

    I dont like terrorism, but I dont think being anti government is any more terrorism than running a nazi or kkk website, so why is our government selecting certain people to arrest and put in jail for 20 years?

    You have luis farakhan, david duke, all these others who hate large amounts of people and who hate the government.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:Freenet by pkling · · Score: 1, Troll

      If anybody is communists it's the socialist that poise as democrats. Republicans have never and will never believe in socialism. The patriot act doesn't take away American rights it more clearly defines them. Most people have never even read the patriot act, so I guess you are probably one of those fools that speak before they learn the truth. Just remember to quote something memorable "The truth is out there" for those willing to find it.

    2. Re:Freenet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Republicans. In thhis state, we beleive that every one of them should have the head severed from the body. The head should be placed on a pole at the eastern border of California, and the trunk should be burned, or unceremoniously dumped into the Pacific.

    3. Re:Freenet by Megaslow · · Score: 1

      And people wonder why California is such a fucked up place...

    4. Re:Freenet by Megaslow · · Score: 2, Troll

      I beg to differ about your insinuation that the "Republicans" are turning this place into the soviet union...

      If anyone, it's the damnned left-wing pieces of crap who insist on controlling what everyone sees and hears through the media, education, and other outlets.

      Why is it that CNN wouldn't ever show pictures of the injured of 9/11, yet as soon as theres a blown-apart Iraqi kid, it's all over the place?

    5. Re:Freenet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
      http://eff.org/issues/usapa/

      I invite you to read that page.

      Here's a quote that defines just how many of your rights have been looted from under your ignorant feet

      USAPA authorizes the use of "sneak and peek" search warrants in connection with any federal crime, including misdemeanors. A "sneak and peek" warrant authorizes law enforcement officers to enter private premises without the occupant's permission or knowledge and without informing the occupant that such a search was conducted.
      Fourth Amendment? Who needs it, certainly not the helpful Government. They'll never abuse this power, only use it to fight Terrorists! Oh, and Drugs! Oh, and they'll use it to Save The Children!
    6. Re:Freenet by dammy · · Score: 1

      > This is why we need software like Freenet, the
      > government is turning into the soviet union.
      > These crazy maniac right winged pro mililtary
      > republicans want to make government so big and so > powerful that they can rob us of our freedoms and > we can do nothing about it.

      Why those bastards! Don't they know that's the Democrat's job to steal our constitutional rights away to enslave us in socialism!

      Dammy

    7. Re:Freenet by Coilgun · · Score: 2, Insightful
      1. Among the people who did not even read the PATRIOT act (or at least not all of it) were many of the members of congress who voted for it.
      2. You say that it more clearly defines our rights. I contest that and say that it more narrowly defines them (esp re the 4th amendment), and if you keep narrowing the definitions, you eventually define our rights away to nothing.
      The Republicrats have all got it wrong. One side wants economic freedom but legislated morality. The other wants us to be able to do as we please with our bodies and minds, but not with our wallets and checkbooks. I say let people do as they please, so long as they are not actually causing harm to someone else. Don't prosecute the guy who teaches how to make a bomb; he isn't hurting anybody. The criminals are the ones who actually blow up the bombs and cause injury. Keep following this precident, and we're going to end up with the thought police
      --
      That is all. Carry on. </transmission>
    8. Re:Freenet by pkling · · Score: 1

      That is nothing new. The police have always been able to search with probable cause. It just defines what so many people have forgotten

    9. Re:Freenet by TamMan2000 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Why is it that CNN wouldn't ever show pictures of the injured of 9/11, yet as soon as theres a blown-apart Iraqi kid, it's all over the place?

      Maybe I am missing something, but what does that have to do with the left wing?

      Oh, I forgot, CNN has a terrible left leaning bias, is that it? It was really easy for me to forget that they were on the left while they were cheerleading for the war in Iraq. If CNN was really left leaning, they would have spent the entire time talking about why what we were doing was wrong.

      CNN did show pictures of the injured after 9/11, and they were no where near anti-war.

      Cry about the media bias all you want, It will not convince me that it exists until I find the things that they are saying to be to liberal more often than once a month.

      --
      "I'll have a Guinness, no wait, make that a Coors Light" -Grad student I work with, who shall remain anonymous...
    10. Re:Freenet by hesiod · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      > a quote that defines just how many of your rights have been looted from under your ignorant feet

      What that quote fails to mention, however, is that they could mostly do this before, without PATRIOT. It more clearly defines what, exactly, they can DO while conducting the "sneak & peak," but doesn't add too much power.

      I'm not saying it's right (I'd personally feel justified in killing a fucking pig if he came snooping around my house w/o my knowledge or permission & scared the shit out of me), just that the quote is very misleading.

    11. Re:Freenet by hshana · · Score: 1

      These crazy maniac right winged pro mililtary republicans want to make government so big and so powerful that they can rob us of our freedoms and we can do nothing about it.
      Umm, I think it's the democrats who want the large govt. The republicans want a small govt with a big shadow.

    12. Re:Freenet by PZona · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, the mythical liberal media. Last time I checked, the vast majority of the media outlets in the U.S. belong to a decreasing number of large corporate conglomerates--not known for their liberal viewpoints. Ask yourself this: what happened to the end-game coverage of the Florida voting scandal and subsequent recounts? Why isn't there any real coverage about the nasty environmental depredations brought on by large American corporate concerns? Why are there endless television commercials from auto manucturers and yet none from the consumerist groups who would love (and have tried on multiple occasions) to purchse ad time for opposing viewpoints? Why is talk radio largely dominated by ultra right-wingers? Education? Again, American education is rapidly being infiltrated by American corporate concerns such as McDonalds, Pepsi and Coco Cola in the form of donations in exchange for in-school advertising, distribution and the infamous, mandatory and comercial-ridden propoganda engine known as Channel One. Then of course there's the constant attack on modern science from the right-wing Creationist camp. So where's all this liberal influence?

    13. Re:Freenet by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > CNN wouldn't ever show pictures of the injured of 9/11, yet as soon as theres a blown-apart Iraqi kid, it's all over the place?

      Because he's not an American, and his family won't see that & sue their panties off. Plus, of course, he's an Iraqi, which makes him "inferior."

    14. Re:Freenet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "Why is it that CNN wouldn't ever show pictures of the injured of 9/11, yet as soon as theres a blown-apart Iraqi kid, it's all over the place?"

      Perhaps because the average american gets physically ill when seeing another dead american, while watching children dying in some part of the world that they can't even point to on a globe is seen as a better version of Survivor(tm)?

    15. Re:Freenet by Megaslow · · Score: 2, Informative
      It was really easy for me to forget that they were on the left while they were cheerleading for the war in Iraq.

      I'm sorry, just about every time I turned on the TV when the war started (and not just CNN) was:
      • The war is taking too long
      • Hi, I'm Geraldo, and we are at x longitude East, y latitude North
      • Hi, I'm Katie Couric, and I hope Saddam is OK!
      • This is CNN. Saddam's not so bad!

    16. Re:Freenet by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Firstly the US Supreme Court has established that Free Speech doesn't protect speech that advocates violence or doing shit like yelling fire in a movie theatre.

      Secondly the US Supreme Court, Federal Courts, State Courts, Federal Appeals Courts have established in cases relating to threating abortion/women's health clinics that you don't have a right to free speech when advocating or alluding to violence.

      Now saying the US Government is turning into the Soviet Union or Communist China or Nazi Germany not only shows a serious lack of understanding of those governments and what they did but it's also a slap in the face to the tens of millions who died because of those governments.

      From reading the stuff on the Raise the Fist website, I see nothing different with what happened to this guy with what's happened to those sweet folks who post the home addresses of women's clinic staffs and tell if they have gun permits or wear bullet-resistant vests.

      "Distribution of information related to explosives is not illegal.. What's illegal is the INTENT part. They have to prove you have intent to use the information to cause further crime of violence .. and how do they prove intent?"

      That is no different than this...
      "A federal appeals court, reversing its own decision, ruled Thursday that anti-abortion rights activists who created Wild West-style posters and a Web site targeting abortion doctors are liable because their works were illegal threats and not free speech."

      Patriot Act or not, what he did is in violation of Federal Law because of what the Federal Appeals Courts said.

    17. Re:Freenet by Megaslow · · Score: 1

      I'm talking about censorship via political correctness in the schools, providing a revisionist version of history, and not exposing students to an unbiased version of events that they can draw their own conclusions from. Nowadays, everyone is so worried about political correctness and not hurting anyones feelings that they are putting themselves and their country in danger. Teachers are being told what words they can and cannot say because they might "offend" someone.

      Here's some questions for you to ponder

      Lets say, a few months ago, you were on one of those trams at an international airport, and you see some guy standing close to you who happened to look Oriental (or is the PC term Asian?), with luggage tags from Beijing on his luggage. This guy is coughing up a storm and not caring about who's around him. Would you suspect him of having SARS or would that be "racist"?

      You see two Middle-eastern fellows with a rented U-haul truck pulling up to a farming store and buying dozens of bags of fertilizer. Would you call the FBI, or would that be "racist"?

    18. Re:Freenet by Megaslow · · Score: 1

      Because he's not an American, and his family won't see that & sue their panties off. Plus, of course, he's an Iraqi, which makes him "inferior."
      That may be what an intelligent individual may see, but don't you think that the constant barrage of wounded civilians serves to turn people against the war?

    19. Re:Freenet by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      If anyone, it's the damnned left-wing pieces of crap who insist on controlling what everyone sees and hears through the media, education, and other outlets.

      Like Fox News? ;)

      (I'll admit that left-leaning people have done a fair bit of damage to the free exchange of ideas--but left-leaning people also ended segregation, so it's not all bad.)

      Why is it that CNN wouldn't ever show pictures of the injured of 9/11, yet as soon as theres a blown-apart Iraqi kid, it's all over the place?

      Because we ALL saw the 9/11/01 attacks, and there weren't that many wounded?

      There were ambulances lined up on the freeway waiting to help the wounded--and they sat there until they were told to go home.

      Judging purely by their results, Al-Queada was a bunch of idiots. They struck too early in the morning to hit a full building, and the buildings that they did hit fell straight down instead of falling over--killing most of their victims.

      Simple military truth: deaths enrage the opponent, wounds cripple them.

    20. Re:Freenet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Probably made a nice counterbalance to Fox then.

    21. Re:Freenet by plugger · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily a bad thing. Would you have preferred homogenous cheerleading TV instead?

    22. Re:Freenet by Myuu · · Score: 1

      Oh wow, damn, you completely prove your point about by linking to stories about CNN and NBC. Guess what, Geraldo was FOX reporter (and remember FOX is fair and balanced ;)!

      And what a neutral new sight, I know every time I want fair news I go with a site with pop ups about Hillary Clinton Playing cards and ads about Ann Coulter's "righteous" fight to revive McCartyism.

      Shut up.

      --

      forget it.
    23. Re:Freenet by Megaslow · · Score: 1

      FYI, I wasn't singling out CNN... And I'm well aware who Geraldo works for. The sight[sic] that I linked to just happened to be the first pertinent one that google turned up. I know I'm fighting a losing battle in this mostly liberal technology industry, but hey, free speech is what it is all about right? :) It's all good.

    24. Re:Freenet by Myuu · · Score: 1

      Ya, searching google for "media bias" is to the right as searching for "bill o'reilly sucks" is to the left.

      I pulled one link that seemed decent though:
      http://www.fair.org/reports/journalist-su rvey.html #survey

      I support your right to agrue that there is a bias, so I have the right to say thats just a big crack-pot conspiracy theory.

      --

      forget it.
    25. Re:Freenet by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      Revisionist history? The Major history lobbies are conservative. They remove anything that might look bad on a particular president or administration from history textbooks. And anything that might be construed as "un-patriotic". Don't talk to me about liberal bias in history books.

    26. Re:Freenet by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      There's Tons of Liberal Media Bias. If you don't believe me, just ask Bill O'Reilly, Newt Gingrich, Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Michael Savage, Pat Buchanan, Monica Crowley, Ann Coulter, Ollie North, G. Gordon Liddy, Joe Scarborough, Robert Novac, Bernard Goldberg, Brit Hume, John Stossel, William Kristol, Laura Ingraham, and John McLaughlin.

    27. Re:Freenet by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      Bull. And. Shit. I've got a copy of the the 600+ page act. It does take away rights, and is a stepping stone to bridge and define alot of other questionable legislation. It provides the police with more *federal* power. It allows a police officer to get a search warrant from any judge. This means that a police officer in new york could get a warrant from a judge in Texas, to investigate a crime in new york. He can do this infinite times, thus if he fails to get a warrant in both new york and texas, he can keep going to another state. Or just another judge. It allows roving wire-taps with no real oversight, it allows use of secret evidence, and gives the government the authority to deny rights to anyone declared an enemy combatant (which it can do rather arbitrarily), and prosecute anyone who provides any support to a terrorist group (which it can define arbitrarily: Case in Point, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Elaam. A Group involved in Guerrilla Warfare with the government of Sri Lanka because they were cut out of representation in the government. They target military targets, with only as much blowback onto the civilian population as any war causes. They're on the list because of our diplomatic ties with the government of Sri Lanka.) Among many other things. Combine that with the Deutschland Security Act, and you have a very well reinforced Stasi. It is interesting to note (something that isn't noted in the news articles) that Sherman is the first U.S. Citizen/Activist to be tried under the patriot act. This is a case to test the waters of the legislation, which means it will likely be used again, under even more flimsy circumstances.

    28. Re:Freenet by Timothy+Brownawell · · Score: 1
      I say let people do as they please, so long as they are not actually causing harm to someone else. Don't prosecute the guy who teaches how to make a bomb; he isn't hurting anybody. The criminals are the ones who actually blow up the bombs and cause injury. Keep following this precident, and we're going to end up with the thought police
      But what about the guy who spread propaganda in order to convince the other guy that it was OK to "actually blow up the bombs and cause injury"?

      Sure, he didn't actually light the fuse, but he still caused the fuse to get lit.

      Tim

    29. Re:Freenet by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      Actually, from a tactical point of view, they were smart. It's interesting to note, that they didn't commit terrorism in how we usually define it. (The intentional targeting of civilians). They hit military and economic infrastructure, the civilians were "collateral damage" to use the favorite term of the news media and administration. Thus over-all, they used a great tactical plan. And considering we still haven't destroyed Al-Quaida, they seem to have got away with it too.

    30. Re:Freenet by Rayonic · · Score: 1

      *ahem*

      I believe the whole "liberal media" thing has more to do with allegedly neutral news sources, rather than obviously biased ones.

    31. Re:Freenet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Oh god, if you think CNN is on the "left"....

      Wow. You need to get out more. And stop listening to Rush Limbaugh.

    32. Re:Freenet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two newsmax links? Please, newsmax is an ultra-right wing mouthpiece funded by some very wealthy people with an agenda. Its highly ironic you use it as a source for, you guessed it, exposing media bias.

      Might as well clip something from the old Pravda to make a point about American politics. They're both about as credible.

    33. Re:Freenet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fucked up place? California remains the greatest state in the union. Our system of higher education is second to none, we're wealthier than any other state (per capita, not just because we have more people), we're more diverse than any other state, and we have an excellent supply of Mexican weed. Frankly, our policy of putting the heads of Republicans on pikes has worked pretty well for us.

    34. Re:Freenet by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      Actually, from a tactical point of view, they were smart.

      Come again?

      Since 9/11, Al-Quaeda has seen the USA activly seek them out like the USA has sought out no foe since Vietnam. We deposed their biggest support-government, toppled a terroist-supporter (Hussein may have not supported Al-Queada, but he did support suicide bombers in Israel) in center of the Arab world, and generally got far more engaged in Al-Quaeda's world than we were on 9/10/01.

      It's interesting to note, that they didn't commit terrorism in how we usually define it. (The intentional targeting of civilians). They hit military and economic infrastructure, the civilians were "collateral damage" to use the favorite term of the news media and administration. Thus over-all, they used a great tactical plan.

      A plan that causes your enemy to become determined to engage your territory and hunt you down is a horrible tactical plan; if the 9/11 attacks had actually demoralized America, the Taliban would still be in power today.

      (Now, _POLITCIALLY_ Al-Quaeda may have had a great plan, and if their goal was "get the USA to stop sitting on its ass and acking like jerks", they've succeeded... but I doubt that was what they were going for.)

      And considering we still haven't destroyed Al-Quaida, they seem to have got away with it too.

      It's hard to destroy a movement--but we seem to have been rather effective in coming very close. Before the invasion of Afghanistan, we expected loads of Al-Quaeda attacks--but there hasn't even been as many as frequently as there were before 9/11.

      Remember: Al-Quada is the agressor in this conflict. By any historical standard of win/loss, the west is easily succeeding in its "war on terrorism." The enemy's home is under siege, our home is all but immune to attack, and the enemy's reasons for fighting are slowly but surely disappearing.

    35. Re:Freenet by whatch+durrin · · Score: 1
      These crazy maniac right winged pro mililtary republicans want to make government so big and so powerful that they can rob us of our freedoms and we can do nothing about it.

      Yeah, better to let the Dems have control so we can totally disband the military and outlaw firearms. That way we can have foreign invaders rob us of our freedoms and really not be able to do anything about it.

      --
      ***
      Radio Shack. You've got questions...we've got blank stares(TM).
    36. Re:Freenet by DarkZero · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Lets say, a few months ago, you were on one of those trams at an international airport, and you see some guy standing close to you who happened to look Oriental (or is the PC term Asian?), with luggage tags from Beijing on his luggage. This guy is coughing up a storm and not caring about who's around him. Would you suspect him of having SARS or would that be "racist"?

      No, I wouldn't, because I would think logically and realize that SARS, even at its peak, was several hundred or thousand times less common than the common cold in Asia. It's called the "common cold" for a reason. The same reason why SARS was not called "common SARS".

      You see two Middle-eastern fellows with a rented U-haul truck pulling up to a farming store and buying dozens of bags of fertilizer. Would you call the FBI, or would that be "racist"?

      Why would I call the FBI? Two brown guys buying fertilizer, as well as having easy access to fertilizer, is a daily occurrence. The vast majority of the lawn care guys in my entire state are either dark Hispanics (usually Mexicans), Arabs (which, from my perspective, look a lot like dark Hispanics), or some other form of immigrant trying to find cheap work to support their families. Do you call the FBI every time you see a Middle Eastern man at a gas station, because he has access to large amounts of flammable materials that could be used to set fires all over town? I hope not.

      SARS and terrorism are both very rare things that don't happen nearly as often as an Asian man having a cold or a Arab buying some fertilizer. Only through the eyes of media hype, racism, or stupidity does a man buying some fertilizer become an act of terrorism. I also find it somewhat suspect that you assume that two Middle-Eastern men buying dozens of bags of fertilizer is suspect, since the last man to commit a terrorist act in the United States using fertilizer was Timothy McVeigh, a white man who was assisted by other whites. Should we worry whenever ANYONE buys fertilizer, or just calm down and understand that ordinary occurrences like people buying fertilizer don't suddenly become abnormal or terroristic acts just because of September 11th?

      Nowadays, everyone is so worried about political correctness and not hurting anyones feelings that they are putting themselves and their country in danger. Teachers are being told what words they can and cannot say because they might "offend" someone.

      Instead of being told not to say it, did you ever consider that maybe they just think differently from you? I know that some people would like to think that they're in some sort of oppressed, secret majority that thinks that racism is alright and that the racist answer is always a more logical one than an Asian man just having a cold, but a lot of us really don't think that way. We don't jump to race as the first answer, and instead of not wanting to offend anybody by saying it, we just don't even think about it in the first place.

    37. Re:Freenet by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      We evidently havent toppled their biggest support government: Saudi Arabia is still standing. The taliban are being offered a place in the Afghani Government on the provision that they hand over Mullah Omar. And we haven't really destroyed Al-queda, they have made more attacks, you assume we are their only, or even their biggest target. We aren't, traditionally most of their targets have been corrupt Muslim Regimes and their supporters, or suppressors of muslim movements and religion. We're a relatively new target, they'll get us again. Mostly however, they're counting on fallout from us over-reacting from their attacks and thus shooting ourselves in the foot, which our government seems to be doing nicely. Which means that the enemy's reasons for fighting are *increasing*. The Taliban are still in power in parts of Afghanistan by the way, along with various fueding warlords, and they could regain power (indeed they have much popular support, compared to the Northern Alliance, they seem not-half-bad to many people) at any moment. Thus, currently: Al Queda is winning, they've carried off a sucession of spectacular attacks (conventional terrorist attacks) since then. They'll learn how to deal with our new methods soon, and they'll recover from their structural losses soon.

    38. Re:Freenet by Snake_Plisken · · Score: 1

      I noticed you didn't discuss your lower education system (wow a two-fer on that), your financial crisis that the rest of the states need to bail you out of, the pollution, or your crime. Yeah - great place.

      --

      Eat recycled food - it's good for the environment, and OK for you.
    39. Re:Freenet by Placido · · Score: 1

      > > We don't jump to race as the first answer, and instead of not wanting to offend anybody by saying it, we just don't even think about it in the first place.

      Someone's point got lost somewhere. If there's a higher percentage of incidents against one race than another then you're more likely to associate that race with the incident. Simple.

      It also works with stereotypes. Of all the women I meet the ones who wear large hoop earings, too much makeup and wear sports clothes when clubbing also tend to come from low income households and have a poor education. They're also very likely to end up single moms in their teens.
      So if I see a girl fitting that description then I make assumptions about her background. Simple dimple pimple.

      --

      Pinky: "What are we going to do tomorrow night Brain?"
      Brain: "I would tell you Pinky but this 120 char limi
    40. Re:Freenet by TamMan2000 · · Score: 1

      Congratulations,
      You have shown conclusively that there is news material from the point of view of the left, I think having info from both sides is necessary to have a balanced view, don't you?

      My take on this whole issue, is that you are on the right, I am to the left. To me the news looks too far right, to you it looks too far left... I think that means it is likely in the center...

      --
      "I'll have a Guinness, no wait, make that a Coors Light" -Grad student I work with, who shall remain anonymous...
    41. Re:Freenet by aziraphale · · Score: 1

      Liberal tech industry? You seen the kind of opinions that crop up whenever someone mentions the letters H1-B around here? Not being american, I'm not always sure which political opnions you guys think of as 'liberal' or 'conservative', but I'm pretty sure liberal thinking doesn't generally encompass moaning about foreigners coming and stealing your jobs (although I could certainly see proper socialists taking that view, I think that species has pretty much died out in the US, hasn't it?)...

      I think you'll find the tech industry has just the same spread of opinion as society in general. What I have noticed is that politically-inclined Americans (few though they are) all tend to see the world around them as a conspiracy of the political wing they oppose - so to lefties, everything they see is a neo-con plot, and right-wingers see liberal PC bias in everything.

      I think you guys all need to chill out a little; complaints about media bias are really just thinly disguised patronising assertions that the average joe is too dumb to make up his own mind and see propaganda for what it is.

    42. Re:Freenet by Hentai · · Score: 1

      Obviously, no government is ever going to truly have your best interest at heart, no matter how much they try to convince you that they do.

      The only person that can reliably protect you is YOU. The police will not protect you. The government will not protect you. Hell, often your parents won't even protect you. It's you against the world, baby.

      --
      -Hentai [in vita non pacem est]
  28. And where the fuck is Osama? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great fucking government we have.

    We can arrest and detain our own citizens for excercising their 1st ammendment rights, but we allow terrorists fair haven.

    Great.

  29. "...he also may not associate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    with anyone from a group that "espouses physical force as a means of change."

    You mean a group like,

    THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA?

  30. The wrong way by TroyFoley · · Score: 1

    While I don't feel that what he did warrants a year in jail, I do feel that actively pursuing the violent enactment of eliminating the US government, when creating and voting in a party to constitutionally legislate the same end product is at any non-felonious citizens abilities, is an act against the people itself. How silly is it to attempt to, in the name of the people, overthrow a government "of the people, by the people, and for the people"?

    --
    After I have received the wisdom of good teaching, I will untiringly teach all people. - The Teachings of Buddha
    1. Re:The wrong way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's only for keeping his webpage, it's not actively pursuing the violent enactment of eliminating the US government. Merely talking about something like this is passive. Active pursuit would involve attacking government facilities or personnel.

    2. Re:The wrong way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hello, where have you been? When was the last time "the people" had control over the US government? 1) To legislate changes like you propose, you'd have to have majority over the democrats and the republicans who run the legistrative branch 2) It would then have to be approved by the supreme court judges who are appointed by the democrat or republican president currently in charge of the status quo of the US. 3) You'd have to survive a presidential veto. Yeah whatever, like the people have a chance to change the system through the system. Not gonna happen. That's one of the reasons we had the American Revolution against the British.

    3. Re:The wrong way by TroyFoley · · Score: 1

      Yeah whatever, like the people have a chance to change the system through the system.

      Your sarcasm is duly noted, and I'd like to point you in the direction of the US Constitution. In spite of what any given administration is up to, the basic functions of democracy are still in your own hands. There's pricks in the way, but they ultimately can't stop a good movement that rings true with the people.

      --
      After I have received the wisdom of good teaching, I will untiringly teach all people. - The Teachings of Buddha
    4. Re:The wrong way by aminorex · · Score: 1

      How silly is it to think that a government which
      claims the ability to designate any living individual
      on the planet an "enemy combatant" and kill
      them,
      without legal process, is "of the people, by the
      people, and for the people"?

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    5. Re:The wrong way by aminorex · · Score: 1

      I do not believe that the actual vote is relevant,
      for three reasons:

      1) The last election was decided by 5/9 of the
      Supreme Court.

      2) Electronic voting machines are used, overwhelmingly,
      as a vehicle for unauditable election fraud.

      3) Democracy assumes a free press, and an informed
      electorate (enabled thereby), but neither of these
      conditions obtain -- hence there is no meaningful
      democratic process in the U.S. at the national level,
      even in the absence of fraud or junta.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  31. Gubment? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Wilson said he also may not associate with anyone from a group that "espouses physical force as a means of change." -- How does one disassociate oneself from ones own government?

  32. He should consider himself lucky by kraada · · Score: 1

    If he had posted the same website 6 months ago, he would be in prison right now, without access to a lawyer. He would probably never see a real court, being subject to a military tribunal, as an "enemy combatant."

    Yes, today's political climate is scary. However, you have to be aware that the government is trying to protect its own ass.

    I completely agree that there shouldn't be censorship. However, I have the good sense to realize that the poeople with power disagree right now because they got burned. So I'm going to try real hard not to do anything inflammatory and hopefully in another few years this will have blown over, and will just be referred to as another "McCarthyist" age in our history.

  33. Right penalty, wrong reason by LordZardoz · · Score: 1

    That this person got jail time is in my own opinion a good thing, but I dont think that a year is appropriate. This is because I think that this individual is just stupid, and that stupidity on that magnitude should carry a criminal penalty.

    Posting bomb instructions online is just stupid. Doing so within a site that openly advocates violence against the authorities that you are subject to is even more so. Freedom of speech does not give an individual the right to make death threats.

    END COMMUNICATION

  34. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, kiddies, guess what? It's bad and wrong to tell people how to blow stuff up!

    This is news... why? Common sense, people. Common sense.

  35. Who's in charge of this Internet thingie anyway? by PIPBoy3000 · · Score: 1

    I've been following this Salon story as well, which seems similar.

    Essentially, the web site involved had links to another site. That site had links to a porn site. Since this all involves bishops in the Episcopal Church, people have been getting quite excited about it.

    It's getting so that someone has to police not only your own web site, but all of those that you link to. I'm one of the web admins for a healthcare site, so I suppose I have to check through a few thousand web links to make sure there's not a link to a penis enlargement treatment that kills someone.

  36. Just watch what you are thinking.... by Sevn · · Score: 1, Insightful

    and the thought police won't throw you in jail for
    a year. Don't assume you have the right to say
    just ANYTHING. You have the right to free speach as
    long as the powers that be are cool with it. For
    example, it's not ok to yell "OVERTHROW THE GOVT!
    BUSH IS AN ASSHOLE!" in a crowded theater because
    you might cause a panic that could result in loss
    of life. Justice is great if you can afford it, but
    most of us can not. You have to have a lot of money
    to stay "innocent" of most things you can be accused
    of. But that's part of the reward of being
    successful. You do get to be in an exclusive club
    where you have more and better rights than those
    with less money. That's how the system works.

    PS: Jesus votes republican. Everyone knows that.

    --
    For every annoying gentoo user, are three even more annoying anti-gentoo crybabies. Take Yosh from #Gimp for example.
    1. Re:Just watch what you are thinking.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus only votes republican because as a party they don't support abortion.

    2. Re:Just watch what you are thinking.... by rmohr02 · · Score: 1
      Jesus votes republican. Everyone knows that.
      So that's how Bush won--he's using names of people who died long ago as voters for him, like in Black Sheep.

      Seriously, I hope I never see another comment of yours again because of that line.
  37. Free speech is one thing, treason is another by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Free speech is one thing, treason is another.

    Not only that, but this guy was inconsistent. He claimed to be an anarchist, but advocated replacing the United States government with one that would be much more oppressive and totalitarian.

    1. Re:Free speech is one thing, treason is another by njdj · · Score: 3, Insightful

      He claimed to be an anarchist, but advocated replacing the United States government with one that would be much more oppressive and totalitarian.

      Advocating political change is what freedom of speech is all about. If you haven't got that, then your current government is not worth preserving.

    2. Re:Free speech is one thing, treason is another by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not only that, but this guy was inconsistent. ok now here's a reason. Jail him !

    3. Re:Free speech is one thing, treason is another by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      seems to me that the point in anarchy is to keep destroying governments so they stay pure

  38. Re:This is *no* bullshit by rastakid · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is the problem with censorship.

    No, your comment is bullshit. You think freedom-of-speech allows you to say whatever you want, but that's untrue, fortunately. If I write a document about how to kill the president, then that's not within the freedom-of-speech. Your freedom ends, when you danger another one's. Or else, it would be *very* hard to silence neo-nazi's and such, just because what they do is spreading their word (of freedom). So, be happy we've got limits for freedom-of-speech.

  39. It was more than just speech by egg+troll · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As I recall, this individual wasn't prosecuted for what he said. It was because he was trying to break into military computers. What did he expect to happen?

    --

    C - A language that combines the speed of assembly with the ease of use of assembly.
    1. Re:It was more than just speech by jbottero · · Score: 2, Informative

      Where did you find this information? CNN: "Austin, 20, pleaded guilty in February to distributing information related to explosives."

      No place do I see anything about breaking into government computers. But you're probibly a troll anyway.

    2. Re:It was more than just speech by mcwop · · Score: 1

      Wrong dude. Here is a link to the warrant, and other relevant info on what was actually found in his apartment. Things like bomb making materials. Link to Info

      --

      "I don't think it's selfish, to eat defenseless shellfish." -NOFX

    3. Re:It was more than just speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the article I read at CNN there was no mention to breaking into computers. Just mention of links on a website and being arrested at a convention in New York for disorderly conduct and unlawful assembly. Now how does that get you a year in the Fed Pen?

    4. Re:It was more than just speech by interiot · · Score: 3, Informative
      Actually, several websites say that he pled guilty to 18 U.S.C. 842(p)(2)(A) which reads:
      • Distribution of information relating to explosives, destructive devices, and weapons of mass destruction with the intent that such information be used in furtherance of a federal crime of violence.
    5. Re:It was more than just speech by interiot · · Score: 1

      Err, the original poster was correct. His search warrant says in the summary at the bottom (sections 49 and 50) that he's charged both with distributing explosive info as well as website defacement.

    6. Re:It was more than just speech by amadeusb4 · · Score: 1

      he probably pled guilty to only a subset of all charges against him.

    7. Re:It was more than just speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are mistaken. he was prosicuted for and convicted of " felony; distribution of information related to explosives with intent, and sentenced to 1 year in federal prison with 3 years supervised release."

  40. Revolution, anybody? by grasshoppa · · Score: 2, Informative

    You know, our founding fathers fought the revolutionary war for less that this, you'd think we ( as a nation ) would stop being sheep and fucking standup for what is right.

    But then, the TV doesn't tell us to, so we aren't allowed to think for ourselves.

    --
    Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    1. Re:Revolution, anybody? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if this happend in the times of your "founding fathers" and he started a newspaper with the same content he would be hung for treson no questions asked

    2. Re:Revolution, anybody? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It will be a cold day wrapped around my dead fingers
      before I stop fucking sheep and start being standup
      for rutting rights.

      Singed,
      We

    3. Re:Revolution, anybody? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah...and only you are soooo smart to see through it all. Lead us wise one!

      You fucking arrogant asshatted fucktard. What are you? 15? 16? I seriously wish you geek wannabes' parents would kick your dumb asses offline and give you a good old fashioned fucking encyclopedia so you might grow up to have a clue about the founding fathers, and learn just how much everyone around you is a 'sheep'.

      Believe it or not, some smart people think you are completely fucking wrong. Even ones who know more about what is going on in the world than you. Please allow this to sink through your skull.

      Next lesson...your 'academics' tend to lean way freakin' left. Yes...they can be completely fucking wrong. My advice - think for youself.

    4. Re:Revolution, anybody? by grasshoppa · · Score: 1

      ...

      I'm not even sure this deserves a response, but what the hell, right?

      My advice to you ( besides removing your head from your ass, but I felt that goes without saying ): Check out what our government is doing. There are reasons, very valid reasons, why a sizable percentage of the world doesn't like us, or at the very least, doesn't trust us.

      To think that our government only does that to "the other guys" would be nothing short of moronic ( or to translate for you, "fucking stupid" ).

      As to your flame, well, keep trying, good flamers didn't become good over night. They had to smoke a lot of pole to get where they are today.

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
  41. Actually, Doubleplusgood. by Tackhead · · Score: 1, Interesting
    Advocating change - good.
    Advocating change through violence - bad.

    But this kid didn't just advocate change through violence, he also cr4x0r3d websites, which is how he got himself caught.

    Advocating change through violence and being a skr1pt k1ddi3 - bad and stupid.

    For once, I say good on the FBI for nailing the twerp. At least one skr1pt k1dd13 will finally find a whole new meaning to the term "raise the fist".

    (Now if only I were sure that a certain executive of a certain Stupid Corporate Operation was gonna end up the same way, this woulda be a perfect day ;)

    1. Re:Actually, Doubleplusgood. by BWJones · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Advocating change - good.
      Advocating change through violence - bad.


      Beyond advocating change through violence, this kid was also advocating hate and rasicm. Now while I am all for change and advocacy, this kid is a jerk and belongs in jail for a little while for being a script kiddie, being an advocate for violence and racism and hate, and being criminally stupid.

      --
      Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
    2. Re:Actually, Doubleplusgood. by NiceGeek · · Score: 1

      Read your history books...most change has occured due to violent action. Sorry, but harsh language usually isn't very effective when trying to bring about major changes.

      Note to FBI/CIA/insert your favorite acronym. I am not advocating violent action to overthrow a goverment...after all, that's what you boys do.

    3. Re:Actually, Doubleplusgood. by skaffen42 · · Score: 1

      Beyond advocating change through violence, this kid was also advocating hate and rasicm. Now while I am all for change and advocacy, this kid is a jerk and belongs in jail for a little while for being a script kiddie, being an advocate for violence and racism and hate, and being criminally stupid.

      Wow, except for being a "script kiddie" this guy could be the US president. :)

      --
      People couldn't type. We realized: Death would eventually take care of this.
    4. Re:Actually, Doubleplusgood. by TamMan2000 · · Score: 1

      So he deserves to be locked up for advocating:
      Hate:
      Violence: Gulf War II (among many other acts)
      Racism: Requiring men of certain national origins, here legally, to register.

      Hmm... Sounds like the prosecuting authority (US government) is guilty on 2 out of 3 counts... Do they get 8 months in prison?

      --
      "I'll have a Guinness, no wait, make that a Coors Light" -Grad student I work with, who shall remain anonymous...
    5. Re:Actually, Doubleplusgood. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Violence: Gulf War II (among many other acts)"

      No, he responded to end Saddam's violence and attacks. Things are less violent, people are getting killed there at a much lower rate than before Saddam took power. Bush took action to end the violence.

      "Racism: Requiring men of certain national origins, here legally, to register."

      Most of these are of the same "race" as Bush. No racism here.

      Besides, foreigners have no rights as citizens.

      "Hate:"

      Wrong here too.

  42. It is sad to watch ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a country that once stood out as a bastion of freedom and justice, implode into a paranoid police state that will lock up it's own kids for being young, and mouthing off. How long before other democracies are accepting American refugees? Not long at this pace.

  43. Thought crime? by Grendol · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why is it, that when someone describes in layman terms some basic exothermic chemistry, they are public enemy number 1? Should we hang the acedemics for teaching this chemistry? I am concerned about the wider scale of such generalized concepts in which people are categorized as criminals for learning and retaining knowledge that makes other's feel threatened. From cell phone cloning, to virus generation, to installing NOS on a car, and flying a non FAA Wright Flyer replica. People are increasingly punished for creativity, when they should be punished only for the dangerous and harmful actions they commit. I do not care that I was hit with a rock tied to a stick (tomohawk)only that I was attacked and hit in the first place.

    1. Re:Thought crime? by Zooka · · Score: 1

      "...when they should be punished only for the dangerous and harmful actions they commit."

      So all information is harmless, and only a harmful action should be punished... after the fact? Rubbish. Intent to cause harm is punnishable, as it should be. And it's quite clear here that the intent was not just an innocent sharing of information and knowledge... nice try.

    2. Re:Thought crime? by _bug_ · · Score: 1

      Why is it, that when someone describes in layman terms some basic exothermic chemistry, they are public enemy number 1?

      When that someone tells you to take the bomb-making knowledge you've just been given and use it in a harmful manner against ANYONE, including police officers as is the case here, then you are committing a crime.

      18 USC 842 (p)(2)(A): There it is in black and white.

    3. Re:Thought crime? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Thought crime?:... should be punished only for the dangerous and harmful actions they commit. "

      You can thank liberals for this. If I punch you because I hate your hat it is assault, if I punch you and am thinking certain thoughts(I hate gays, and you are gay) then it is a 'hate crime' and my sentence is extended.
      There you go, prosecution for thought crimes.

    4. Re:Thought crime? by RevMike · · Score: 1

      Why is it, that when someone describes in layman terms some basic exothermic chemistry, they are public enemy number 1? Should we hang the acedemics for teaching this chemistry? I am concerned about the wider scale of such generalized concepts in which people are categorized as criminals for learning and retaining knowledge that makes other's feel threatened.

      Don't be silly. This guy is guilty because of two actions which, though individually are non-criminal, taken together become criminal. It is ok to have a discussion about making explosives. It is ok to advocate removing the government. Placing both discussions in the same context is not.

      The reason he took the plea is that he didn't believe that he could convince even one of twelve people that his intent was not to promote murder and mayhem. Inciting violence is a crime, and that was clearly his intent.

    5. Re:Thought crime? by Grendol · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hypothetically, if a person performs a historical analysis of sedition, rebellion, guerilla warfare, populistic uprising, and the like, for the methods used, the effectiveness of the methods, and suggests that certain modern tools might find application based upon the findings of the analysis. And then publishes this as a guide for the defense against tyrranical governments oppressing their citizenry. Where or what threat is this sort of document to a government for by and of a people? My arguement is based in the censorship aspect of this article (not that the subject individual may have wanted to cause problems). Censorship of ideas because a government feels threatened raises fundamental questions about efficient application of laws and justice. The government whose sole task is to serve the citizens can have conflicting interests when it chooses to censor concepts from the citizens it serves. This sets up the general mode that the government is smarter than the citizens who it serves. Often such situations have in the past evolved into controlling and freedom robbing regimes the citizens regret to have created. Again, my arguement is not to justify the said individual's behavior, but to discuss the government's approach and tools. Censorship is a dangerous thing. I just ask for a vigilant citizenry.

    6. Re:Thought crime? by Saeger · · Score: 1
      Why is it, that when someone describes in layman terms some basic exothermic chemistry, they are public enemy number 1?

      <condescending devil's advocate>

      Because stupid people tend to be more violent than the educated, so making "dangerous information" easily accessible is like giving a child a matchbook? :)
      </condescending devil's advocate>

      --

      --
      Power to the Peaceful
    7. Re:Thought crime? by KiahZero · · Score: 1

      This is a false argument - a "hate crime" (God, I hate that term, since it's really not accurate) is essentially a minature form of terrorism.

      Let's use what happened after September 11th. People were going out and beating up Arabs (or even people that looked like Arabs), simply because they were the wrong ethnicity. The effect was a fear of going out in public, because you never knew when a person felt like venting.

      The crime is punished more harshly, not because of your motivation, but rather, because of the additional effect of your crime.

      --
      I'm a lawyer, but not yours. I wouldn't represent someone who thinks taking legal advice from Slashdot is a good idea.
    8. Re:Thought crime? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So all information is harmless, and only a harmful action should be punished... after the fact? Rubbish.

      You're right! Ya know what we should do? We should make a time machine, and go back in time to before crimes are commited, and kill the people that commit those crimes! That way there will be no crime!!!!!!!!!1111

    9. Re:Thought crime? by optical_phiber · · Score: 1

      Hey, hey!!! What is the intent of making a bomb? Christmas party? Or...? I believe in legal sense forming an *intent* to commit a murder is a step closer to actually doing it... And... How many people are going to get the idea and actually do it?

    10. Re:Thought crime? by Skye16 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So all information is harmless, and only a harmful action should be punished... after the fact? Rubbish.

      Exactly. That's the point he's making. Just because it's dangerous doesn't mean it isn't morally right.

      There are certain dangers that you undertake being an American. All of the rights that you are given by the Bill of Rights can be easily turned against you by someone with malicious intent. The Founders knew this, yet they decided it was worth the risk. I, for one, agree with them.

    11. Re:Thought crime? by leek · · Score: 1
      Don't be silly. This guy is guilty because of two actions which, though individually are non-criminal, taken together become criminal. It is ok to have a discussion about making explosives. It is ok to advocate removing the government. Placing both discussions in the same context is not.

      In other words, guilt by association?

      The reason he took the plea is that he didn't believe that he could convince even one of twelve people that his intent was not to promote murder and mayhem. Inciting violence is a crime, and that was clearly his intent.

      I don't know what his real reasons were for taking the plea, but even if he could convince a juror to find him innocent, he still might not want to go through the process, for financial, emotional, or other reasons.

      I personally think inciting violence should be legal. Only actually engaging in violence should be illegal, and not for the ones encouraging it, but those committing it.

      I've often thought of putting up a website titled "how to make a bomb", just to see who it attracts. It wouldn't actually have bomb-making instructions, but would be a commentary on our society. We build "bombs" every day in our social system (schools, prisons, etc.), and every once and a while they explode (as in Columbine, Oklahoma City). Here's how to make a bomb:

      • Mix and egg and sperm. Allow mixture 8 months to develop.
      • Punish organism's auditory disturbances with physical stimulation.
      • Ignore organism's prodding.
      • After organism has been exposed to the environment for 5-6 years, subject it to behaviorial conditioning for at least 8 hours a day for 12 years.
      • If organism does not remain docile, force it to injest Ritalin.
      • Beware that organism becomes volatile 15 years after creation, due to internal chemical reactions.
      • After 18 years, throw organism into an abyss and expect it to survive on its own. If it doesn't, breed some more and try again.
      • If organism is ever caught injesting the wrong substances, physically confine subject immediately and administer emergency behaviorial therapy.
      • If organism is ever caught expressing behaviors or thoughts inconsistent with the program, apply religion.
      • Keep organism away from other organisms which transfer memes inconsistent with the program.
      • If an organism is caught transferring memes inconsistent with the program to other organisms, segregate it from the rest of the organisms.
      • Be very careful, as the organism has a tendency to explode.
    12. Re:Thought crime? by Bingo+Foo · · Score: 1
      I personally think inciting violence should be legal. Only actually engaging in violence should be illegal, and not for the ones encouraging it, but those committing it.

      Whew! I guess that lets Osama off the hook.

      Idiot.

      --
      taken! (by Davidleeroth) Thanks Bingo Foo!
    13. Re:Thought crime? by TamMan2000 · · Score: 1

      I can not speak for the original poster, but I have similar beliefs and would like to offer a responce (amendment)...

      Osama provided material support in addition to the motivation for specific acts of violence, not the advocasy of rebelion in general.

      I also have one question for you: Where would we be today if George Washington had thought that it was wrong to incite violence against the government?

      --
      "I'll have a Guinness, no wait, make that a Coors Light" -Grad student I work with, who shall remain anonymous...
    14. Re:Thought crime? by Bingo+Foo · · Score: 1

      I'll bet you think you are being very clever to have seen that "parallel" with the American revolution. The fact that you are even tempted to equate the founders of America, who were escaping a tyranny, with the Islamofascists, who have a stated goal of imposing a tyranny, shows that you have been brainwashed by postmodernism, another force worth taking up arms against.

      --
      taken! (by Davidleeroth) Thanks Bingo Foo!
    15. Re:Thought crime? by TamMan2000 · · Score: 1

      You are putting word in my mouth, I never equated the founders with the 'Islamofasicists' (I was thinking of the guy in the story). Guaranteeing the right to discuss revolution is what makes revolution possible, not just good revolutions, like the American one, but bad revolutions too, like the 'Islamofacicst' one.

      You can't have it both ways... So, do you want freedom for all, or freedom for none?

      --
      "I'll have a Guinness, no wait, make that a Coors Light" -Grad student I work with, who shall remain anonymous...
    16. Re:Thought crime? by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      Where or what threat is this sort of document to a government for by and of a people?

      In any sufficiently large population, there is a dangerous minority that will project their own personal failings onto the population's government. And in any democracy, there will be a minority that feels it can go against the will of the whole.

      To defend against this tyranny of rebellious minority, certain ideas may be censored. The best judge of these is the parts of government closest to the people--or, rather, those most removed from political whim. Juries and/or judges of the law.

      (Oh, and in many ways the government IS smarter than the populace--espeically when taken as an aggrivate.)

  44. More terrorism "enhancement" by robogun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The guy pleaded out for fear of an additional 19 years in the Pen. So the FBI gets their conviction, because of terrorism leverage.

    Meanwhile, here in San Diego, enviro freaks burned down a $20 million condo project, and the owner is not going to get insurance because the policy didn't cover "terrorism." Probably 400 people out of work.

    When gov't or anyone for that matter plays the terrorism card to its advantage, we ALL lose.

  45. Barrment from using computers? by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 2, Informative
    Austin must also pay a $2,000 fine and is barred for three years from using a computer without approval.


    Excuse me, but didn't the Supreme Court say that such penalties were unconstitutional, coincidentally just days after Mitnick's similar restrictions ended?
    --
    Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    1. Re:Barrment from using computers? by saturndude · · Score: 1

      And isn't this unenforcable? A paper tiger?

      AFAIK, the fear of getting caught without a license does not stop most US drunk drivers from driving. But at least you can be caught.

      Forbidden from using computers w/out approval? Move the computer to your neighbor's house, use your wife's slashdot account and email box, and welcome back online. How could they possibly know? I won't tell anybody!

  46. It's nice to see . . . by pete-classic · · Score: 1

    . . .the first amendment starting to get the kind of respect that the second has enjoyed for so long.

    The irony, of course, is that the fact that he was prosecuted by the government is a stronger indictment of that government than whatever was on his page.

    -Peter

  47. Further recourse / protests? by msuzio · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Is anyone going to protest this or try to lobby to get this guy's sentence overturned? Or well, *something*? I had no idea this was going on, but I'm pretty pissed now that I know. This seems totally out of question as a ruling and a punishment, how can they even argue he committed a *crime*?

    If anyone knows of something others can do, please post here. I'm too unorganized in my personal life at the moment to spearhead anything, but I'd like to participate if anyone else has gotten the ball rolling. This whole thing makes me feel unsafe in my own country.

    1. Re:Further recourse / protests? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, no one cares about anarchist fuckwits. This is as it should be.

    2. Re:Further recourse / protests? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "how can they even argue he committed a *crime*?"

      They don't have to. He agreed to go to prison and forgo his right to trial.

    3. Re:Further recourse / protests? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you could protect yourself by moving to a non-police state for starters. Europe's got plenty - for now. That might change what with the EU and all that... we'll see. Canada also seems to not wear their underwear on their head too much.

    4. Re:Further recourse / protests? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In canada you will go to jail for using the word nigger or jew. There is even less of the notion of "freedom of speech" in canada, by far.

      Do the feds jail the KKK? Nope. Free speech. Do canadians jail open racists? Yep. Hate speech.

    5. Re:Further recourse / protests? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He committed a crime - participating in unlawful assembly. That's why he was arrested. Even if we ignore the previous cracking stuff, we can still look at it like this (and other ways, I'll agree):

      1. He posts/links to information on building explosives.

      Rights come with responsibilities. The right to free speech means that you can say what you want but you also have to take responsibility for it. That's why you can't yell "Fire!" If you did yell it and people were trampled and died, you'd be responsible for the deaths of those people. This is similar - now I realize that it's not exactly the same, but follow me - if you give people a way to hurt themselves and others, and they do it, you are at least partially responsible for that damage. The idiots that abuse the info should be responsible mostly, but the idiot that provided it ought to be held accountable.

      2. He advocates overthrow of the government.

      This is not exactly a crime, but it's pretty ridiculous. Why does he want this? Is it to have a government that's better than the one we have now, or is it to eliminate government altogether? (I haven't read the archives of his site.) If he just wants a better one in place, perhaps he should adjust his ideas of how to get one. Eliminating this one and building a new one in its place may not be possible/feasible/practical/etc. Maybe he ought to think of improving the existing government in order to have the type of system that he feels should exist.

      The real point is that if he believes that violence should be used to make change then he's an idiot. If he acts on it, then he's a criminal. A year in jail might be just right for him.

    6. Re:Further recourse / protests? by CracktownHts · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If anyone knows of something others can do, please post here. I'm too unorganized in my personal life at the moment to spearhead anything, but I'd like to participate if anyone else has gotten the ball rolling. This whole thing makes me feel unsafe in my own country.

      My thoughts exactly. If anyone else is willing to spearhead the effort, I'd be quite happy to side with whoever wins.

      On second thought I'm too lazy to follow up on this, and you can't have my email address because anonymity is an important aspect of democracy. So when the coast is clear, would you please make sure your efforts get posted on Slashdot so I can claim my share of moral triumph?

    7. Re:Further recourse / protests? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you interpolate and take your two points together, they add up to a death threat aimed towards me and every other citizen.

      Death threats are not protected speech.

      BTW, for all the slashbots overreacting that its 'illegal to know how to make an explosive'. It's not. It's illegal to teach the use of explosives in a context that involves killing or maiming other humans.

      If you want to talk about demolition or getting rid of a beaver problem, you aren't going to go to jail.

      There's absolutely no critical thought here on slashdot. Sheesh, these guys talk about government brainwashing and shit, can they not see their own idiotic groupthink?

    8. Re:Further recourse / protests? by msuzio · · Score: 1

      I put that note in there because I knew some smart-ass would say "well, why don't *you* do something?". I really *can't*. I'm way too disorganized and in pieces at the moment due to personal problems in my life. I'd be a piss-poor leader of this efforts. I was admitting *that*, but also saying hey, I am interested if anyone could provide more info on possible *existing* efforts/commentaries on this case. Usually, the EFF or ACLU has comments on cases like this, and some useful information on how they see the case... something besides the pro-government perspective.

      *Anyway*... as I read more info on the case, I'm unsure how I feel. I think the cracking charges are solid on him, and I don't defend those actions. Still, I think he got ramrodded through in his case due to the 'terrorist' card *and* the terms of his after-sentence behavior seem harsh and outside the bounds of what is generally considered "OK". I know felons loose some freedoms of association, but the broad terms quoted in the article seem ridiculous!

      I am less concerned about this guy and what happens to him than I am the *next* step of this slippery slope. If this case stands as it is without some protest of some aspects of it, what comes next? I think that's a legitimate question to at least ponder.

    9. Re:Further recourse / protests? by MobileDude · · Score: 1
      >>Canada also seems to not wear their underwear
      >>on their head too much

      Canada? maybe
      Quebec? NUTSO language nazis


      I think I'll stay south of the Canadian border....

      If any of you take the time to actually read Austin's response, he took a "pre-indictment" plea.

      Allow me to restate for the idiot crowd: HE AGREED TO IT! My take? Austin agreed to it so he could have a "badge of honor" to further his rhetoric.

      Now, the judge actually tripled the four month suggestion to one year. His discretion. Bummer, dude.

      Get over it, people. This is not another "FREE KEVIN" cause nor is Austin worth the trouble.

      Anarchy? Yeah, that's so 70's Sex Pistols (which, I must add kicked butt back in the day). Think up something new, kids......
      --
      10 MD .\crash 20 CD .\crash 30 GOTO 10
    10. Re:Further recourse / protests? by ChannelX · · Score: 1

      I'd suggest reading the court document which talks about just what they found at the guy's house - none of which he mentions in his little tirade on the website.

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    11. Re:Further recourse / protests? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guilty plea's cannot be appealed.

    12. Re:Further recourse / protests? by Kinetix303 · · Score: 1

      Don't be so sure about what you hear about language nazis in Canada. True, Quebec has repressive laws against signage in English, however, I'm a french speaker in Toronto. I can't get court services or directions in French, and public institutions which used to have French language printed on them (The zoo, the subway, CN tower, discovery walks) are now solely in English, removed by the loyalist conservatives in the mid 1990s.

      Even the new subway line, Sheppherd, commisioned in 2002, originally had trilingual signage.... English, Cantonese, and French. The subway was opened for three days until some vandal spray painted 'FROGS GO HOME' on the signage at Yonge-Shepperd transfer. The signage was replace within 48 hours with Anglophone signage.

      English speakers in Canada frequently comment on the inaccessibility of English in Quebec. They should know that they've done the exact same thing.

    13. Re:Further recourse / protests? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Portrait of Dorian Gray must be a banned book in Canada then. They say "Jew" numerous times and not in a positive way either.

    14. Re:Further recourse / protests? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but we can still protest this so it doesnt happen to others.

    15. Re:Further recourse / protests? by mhlandrydotnet · · Score: 1

      You could always vote. A right so many seem to forget. Many, however, do not forget their right to complain.

    16. Re:Further recourse / protests? by MobileDude · · Score: 1

      >>Don't be so sure about what you hear about language nazis in Canada.

      Excellent point as I have only 'heard' and not 'experienced' Quebec.

      Then again, I've avoided Quebec due to what I've heard. Kind of a vicious cycle, eh?

      I do, however, wish I was capable of speaking a second language.....

      --
      10 MD .\crash 20 CD .\crash 30 GOTO 10
  48. This is what I was afraid of. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is why the Nuremburg Files thing scared me.

    I agree that inciting to murder people and posting their names and addresses and a checklist is beyond speech and into conspiracy to murder, since you are actually mediating for murderers.

    Inciting to overthrow the government and providing public discussion of how this can be done, however, was the exact purpose for which the First Amendment exists. It scared me that once you could be legally smacked down for *some* speech, no matter how dangerous, the door is open to be attacked for just about any speech...

  49. You are forgetting something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "These crazy maniac right winged pro mililtary republicans want to make government so big and so powerful that they can rob us of our freedoms and we can do nothing about it."

    The left-wingers want to make government even bigger than what these Republicans want. Socialism is far worse.

    1. Re:You are forgetting something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The left-wingers want to make government even bigger than what these Republicans want. Socialism is far worse.
      Bullshit. This government is growing just as fast (if not faster) with the republicans as with the dems. I find it funny that republicans say that they are for balanced budgets, shrinking government, and our rights, while at the same time they ran up the deficits over the last 25 year, have grown it faster than ever before (raygun's being the worst), and are actively taking more rights away than anybody since Roosevelt.

    2. Re:You are forgetting something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The right wing wants to turn the corporations into the socialist government, because corporations have a more facist organizational structore.

    3. Re:You are forgetting something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fucking Cheap-Labour Conservative.

      You just want to keep others for earning money, so you can keep what power you have.

      Go back to worshiping ceaser

    4. Re:You are forgetting something by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      the left-wingers want to make government even bigger than what these Republicans want.

      That would be true, except for the fact that it is false:

      USA Today: "GOP outspends Democrats in states Both far outpace rate of inflation"

      Republicans, who pride themselves on being frugal with taxpayers' money, were bigger spenders than Democrats in state legislatures over the past five years, a USA TODAY analysis shows. State legislatures controlled by Republicans increased spending an average of 6.54% per year from 1997 to 2002, compared with 6.17% for legislatures run by Democrats. State spending rose slowest -- 6% annually -- when legislatures were split, and each party controlled one chamber. Inflation averaged 2.55% annually 1997-2002.



    5. Re:You are forgetting something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it funny that the democrats yell that the republicans are going to take away the social programs when Bush the younger is increasing them 50% faster (see cbo.gov) than Bill Clinton did.

      If you value your social programs, vote republican. It is the democrats who actually cut them.

    6. Re:You are forgetting something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ho boy, I work in the nonprofit sector, and that is the most blatant lie I've heard yet. The only thing that Bushie is doing is making it easier for churches to get government money. They get multi-hundred thousand dollar grants for "encouraging marriage." (I thought that was a pretty established social institution, myself...)

      Meanwhile, funding for refugee/immigrant employmentprograms (such as the place where i work) is going down the crapper. Which is better to you: helping immigrants stay healthy/get jobs, or giving already-wealthy churches hundreds of thousands of dollars of taxpayer money to "promote marriage"?

    7. Re:You are forgetting something by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      Is it? Mildly socialist governments like Netherlands have a much higher standard of living, and relatively equal freedoms to the U.S. Thus the term: Democratic Socialism (Bourgeoise socialism) Which in itself is a misnomer, because the nations have a mixed economy anyways. Perhaps you are thinking of nations like the USSR and Cuba? Those nations are actually state-capitalist. But reguardless, neither the left-wing politicians nor the right wing politicians want the government bigger than the other one wants it. The truth is, they both want it bigger, albiet in a few different ways. The differences between the two predominant parties are trivial, Clinton voted in the 1996 Anti-Terrorism Act, Now Bush with the PATRIOT ACT (which hardly any democrats or republicans voted against). They play popular myths to set you against one false ideology, and to be for another false ideology, so they can fleece you. American politics are a racket.

    8. Re:You are forgetting something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you value your future, your children's future, and your rights, vote libertarian.

      It is both Dems and Republicans who are screwing you.

  50. Tough shit by The+Bungi · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I don't know about everyone else, but I'm getting a bit tired of the stupid empathy these stories generate. The poor spoiled kid that wants to overthrow the US government and provides blueprints to build small thermonuclear devices on his website. The poor thing, he got 1 year in jail. Oh my, where is this society going? How can we possibly do something like this to such a nice boy?

    PC niceties are fucking killing this country. Racial profiling is evil, so let's submit 90-year old caucasian women to strip searches, just like that nice Saudi gentleman over there. All in the name of social equality.

    9/11 changed the rules. The sooner everyone realizes that, the better we'll all be off. Perhaps this kid would have been just another weirdo with a badly designed website in a past life. But this is another world. Our insistence of making believe that everything is OK and should remain exactly the same is pointless and stupid. Let's get with the program. No, it's not nice to send nice youngsters to jail because of what they said in their website. OTOH, if he wants to overthrow the fucking government perhaps he'd like to move to Liberia or Burma. Those governments provide great infrastructure, defense and civil liberties.

    1. Re:Tough shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You bunch of pussies, a government is no more then a selected body of the population which governs the rest of said population.

      Boil that down to human nature and you have man against man. The government titles will matter not when the bodies hit the floor.

      If you don't like something, as with everyone, you have the power to change it.

      a war, within a war, within a war...

    2. Re:Tough shit by ocelotbob · · Score: 5, Insightful
      No, asshole, 9/11 didn't change the fucking rules. The fucking rules still say that freedom of speech shall not be infringed unless it poses a clear and present danger. Period. Some kid in his bedroom is hardly a fucking clear and present danger to the country, thus the prosecution is a farce. I happen to disagree with what this kid says, but I realise that quashing speech I happen to disagree with is much, much more dangerous than some infinitessimal increase, if any, in security the arrest of this kid has provided. As for your support of racial profiling, what's your response to the paper that shows that it doesn't work?

      It's pseudofascist morons like you that are ruining this country, not the kid in his basement. So, I must ask you, if you don't like the laws of this country, such as the first ammendment, why don't you move to a country that has a legal system more to your liking? I hear that Iran doesn't allow any of that pesky questioning of authority, I'm sure you'd fit right in.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    3. Re:Tough shit by saskwach · · Score: 1

      9/11 was an attack against America and its ideologies. Do you want to change those ideologies just to pacify the terrorists? I don't want to live here if I can't say that my President is an idiot because someone threatened Democracy. What's the point of a society where rights are taken away under the premise of protecting them?

    4. Re:Tough shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      9/11 changed the rules. The sooner everyone realizes that, the better we'll all be off.

      Maybe some of us don't like the new rules?

      Maybe some of the whining is because some people do not think the rules should have been changed?

      Maybe some of us do not particularly see why 2000 people dying in a horrible manner automatically means that the individuals currently in office have the right to remove the automatic assumption of civil liberties that many, many more than 2000 people died to bring into being?

      Maybe some of us feel no more secure under the "post 9-11" rules than we did before, because we see 9-11 as less of a reason and more of an excuse to do things that those temporarily in power wanted to do anyway, and the "post 9-11" rules do not fundamentally or actually do anything to increase the security of the life or property of the citizens of the United States of America?

      Maybe some of us feel LESS secure under the "post 9-11" rules than we did before, because we are far, far more afraid-- and find it far far more likely-- that we will be targeted by the U.S. government, rather than by "terrorists"?US, not the other way around, and as the representatives of the will of the citizens of the United States of America, the government has an obligation to bow to the rules WE want, rather than arbitrarily defining some rules and stating this is the New Order?

      I for one don't remember being given any opportunity to vote on any of this.

    5. Re:Tough shit by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 1
      "The poor spoiled kid that wants to overthrow the US government and provides blueprints to build small thermonuclear devices on his website. The poor thing, he got 1 year in jail."

      In my senior physics class, it was always a tradition that the teacher would provide instructions on how to make a crude nuclear device that would level half a city. The main ingredients are a couple kg of plutonium and some dynamite. I still have the instructions at home in my old physics binder.

      Now this was not in the USA and overthrowing anything was not part of the discussion. Seriously, all you need to make a crude nuclear device is a physics grad student and the ingredients. I wonder how long it will be before there is no distinction between knowing how to make a nuke and actually making and deploying one. It certainly would make practically every university level physics graduate a 'terrorist.'

      "Racial profiling is evil, so let's submit 90-year old caucasian women to strip searches, just like that nice Saudi gentleman over there. All in the name of social equality."

      Evil it is. I am from a brown skinned family (west indian) and whenever my cousins come through Pearson Airport (Toronto,) being sent to the the up-close-and-personal security room has been time-honoured tradition since 9/11.

    6. Re:Tough shit by SaucyWrong777 · · Score: 1

      This society isn't going anywhere--This is slashdot. The rules of society don't apply here.

      From what I can tell there are only two rules:

      If you in any way try to infringe on constitutional rights (which are interpreted very loosely here) you are EVIL.

      If you are in any way trying to stop this infringment of rights, you are GOOD.

    7. Re:Tough shit by The+Bungi · · Score: 2, Flamebait
      No, asshole, 9/11 didn't change the fucking rules.

      Wait - let me guess: you are one of those fucked up leftie extremists that think the constitution is a suicide pact, right?

      As for your support of racial profiling, what's your response to the paper that shows that it doesn't work?

      I don't understand how "it doesn't work", since it's not supposed to be happening, hmmm?

      It's pseudofascist morons like you that are ruining this country, not the kid in his basement.

      I'd say the problem is actually fucking liberal hippies like yourself. But that's just me.

      why don't you move to a country that has a legal system more to your liking?

      Actually, I like it just fine. What was your point again?

    8. Re:Tough shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dunno about you but I didnt vote for a change. I didnt agree to have my liberties and freedoms taken away at the price of security. Nor did I vote for a leadership that would be openly racist.

      *sigh*

    9. Re:Tough shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you cannot tell him to leave the country because of his opinion...that's avoiding the issue and being petty. He has a right to desire change for the better in an already *good* system, and just because you might be a sheep does not imply he must be as well. It is time for our country to realize the potential for improvement. A government that defends its actions through these methods should not be allowed to proceed. His bombing ideas are not right, but his outlook on our rapidly diminishing freedoms is worth paying attention to.

    10. Re:Tough shit by The+Bungi · · Score: 1
      just to pacify the terrorists

      Pacify? Last I looked we were killing them wholesale.

      What's the point of a society where rights are taken away under the premise of protecting them?

      The history of this country is full of examples where this happened. This is nothing new, except that now we have the internet to bitch and moan about it. Things right themselves eventually, because society tends to be elastic in its acceptance of tradeoffs in its civil liberties.

    11. Re:Tough shit by Necrobruiser · · Score: 1

      Last I looked, we couldn't find one guy in a cave, so we invaded another country to keep everyone from noticing.

      --
      "I planned within my means and got a fixed rate mortgage, so where's MY bailout?" -cafepress
    12. Re:Tough shit by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      Our insistence of making believe that everything is OK and should remain exactly the same is pointless and stupid.

      Then how can you complain about someone wanting to overthrow the government because they want change? It's the government that works to keep everything exactly the same. Their endless creation of laws and unfair taxing keeps the status quo. They were racial profiling before 9/11, they were removing civil liberties before 9/11, they were committing acts of war without popular support before 9/11. The world hasn't changed. 9/11 has just changed the perspective of many people.

      You don't seem to understand that the problem is the hate, not the spread of information. If a person wants to make a bomb, they'll find out how, with or without the internet. Removing civil liberties in the US would have had absolutely no effect on the occurrances of 9/11. Without e-mail or web sites they could have used just phones. They all had valid papers. If you let fear make all of your decisions you'll end up in a tight police state. When that happens you'll change your view and advocate destruction of the government. People are complaining now because they're not as short-sighted as you are and see where things like this lead.

    13. Re:Tough shit by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      I hear you... I am white-skinned (actually, closer to a very unfetching blueish / pinkish colour), Irish and got the latex encased finger up the ass every time I flew through the UK in the 1980s. Did it piss me off? Yes. Did I think they shouldn't do that? No. I was mid-20s, Irish, male, and flying around Europe in what would appear to be erratic patterns -- perfect profile for a IRA activist. Once the troubles up north died down, British police stopped doing that to me. That's life. At least they were always polite and courteous and practically apologetic about it (and even more embarrassed than I was, I think).

    14. Re:Tough shit by ratfynk · · Score: 1

      If this character really was interested in social change he would have done things differently, or perhaps his anger made him stupid.
      Hopefully after 9/11 we will still see constructive criticism as a social responsibility. The number of wrongly convicted Blacks in Texas is a testament to a lack of real democracy in parts of this country. Corruption in government is what needs to be exposed. Advocating violent overthrough is just plain stupid and a waste of talent. Perhaps what we need is a whistle blower web site, moderated by government appointed ombudsmen to take out the fake and vengfull crap that is sure come. Giving whistle blowers real protection. Blowing the whistle on things like false evidence used in Court, where individuals have been wrongly convicted could make a big difference in places like Texas. There is anger at government yes, but if there is something smells then the only to fix it is to fire the corrupt officials and bureaucrats, or make their lives hell by exposing the truth.

      --
      OH THE SHAME I fell off the wagon and use sigs again!
    15. Re:Tough shit by aminorex · · Score: 1

      No particular empathy for Sherman is required in
      order to recognize that this is a failure of the
      system of law which has historically protected
      the people of the U.S. from totalitarian repression.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    16. Re:Tough shit by ocelotbob · · Score: 1
      Was there a fucking formal declaration of war? No. Was there a fucking ammendment to the constitution stating that certain kinds of speech are now unprotected? No. Thus, the rules didn't fucking change, except for narrow-minded halfwits such as yourself who are wetting yourselves in fear over the Eeeevil terrorists. If you were a real American, you'd be saying fuck the terrorists, period. Not mewling for unconstitutional laws such as the laughably named "PATRIOT" act. I believe in liberty, and have qualms against the left as well. I just think that acts such like this are wrong.

      As far as your support of racial profiling, did you even bother reading the paper I linked to? Taking a simple statistical analysis shows that racial profiling is statistically more dangerous than not profiling. What's to stop a terrorist cell from recruiting a caucasian person to commit the acts?

      Quit sucking Dubya's dick on these matters. Was 9/11 horrific? Absolutely. Have certain parties gone overboard in their measures? Absolutely as well. Use your brain for once for something other than keeping your skull from caving in.

      --

      Marxism is the opiate of dumbasses

    17. Re:Tough shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (maybe double posted)
      Exactly. What did Franklin say?
      "Those who give up libery for security deserve neither liberty nor security".

    18. Re:Tough shit by The+Bungi · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If you were a real American, you'd be saying fuck the terrorists, period

      I hope you can see the stupidity inherent in your rant - first you claim you believe in liberty and then tell me that I'm evil because I don't conform to your idea of what excercising that liberty means.

      Use your brain for once for something other than keeping your skull from caving in.

      You show an unfortunate propensity to insult people when they disagree with what you think is The Truth. I wonder if I'm expected to be awed or intimidated by that? Here's a bit of advice: only zealots see the world in black and white. There's a lot of grey out there. So stop being a zealot - and stop being Mr. Big Mouth. I very much doubt you'd use such colorful language if I was sitting in front of your sorry ass.

    19. Re:Tough shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, 9/11 DID change the rules. A lot. According to this nice flyer: http://www.diamag.net/flyer1.jpg and http://www.diamag.net/flyer2.jpg , it is now ILLEGAL for you to defend the U.S. Constitution, which makes doing so and OFFENSE by the U.S. Patriot Act. The fight for your rights is over, my friend. You lost. It has already become a fascist stae, gaining more and more power from your belief in the system's working for you. Unfortunately for you, it does not work for you any longer, nor has it needed to from the day the United States Federal Reserve was founded(or should I say the United Kingdom's Federal Reserve - The UK officially OWNS it[ask your Congressman to get you the official deeds and charters of ownership of the Federal Reserve if you actually care so much about this country to find out]).

    20. Re:Tough shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bungi - This is america -- love it or leave it.

    21. Re:Tough shit by ChaosDiscord · · Score: 1
      9/11 changed the rules.

      No, no it didn't.

      9/11 just woke up a bunch of idiots who had been blissfully ignorant of the world situation. Terrorism has been an ongoing problem for a long time, the United States is just lucky we avoided most of it for so long.

      As for changing the rules, the rule in question is the Bill of Rights. "Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press." PATRIOT Act be damned, it's still mostly a free country. I'm free to hate the government and pass out bomb making instructions. The Constitution doesn't end with "unless it's really hard, then you can ignore all this."

      OTOH, if he wants to overthrow the fucking government perhaps he'd like to move to Liberia or Burma.

      If you're so keen on wiping your ass with our Constitution, maybe you'd like to move somewhere like China where they'll happily abridge your freedom of speech.

      Me, I'll stick around. Sure, it sucks that our freedoms make it harder for police to bust criminals, let hatemongers spread their message, and let just about any wacko get a gun. But the tradeoff is that I know I'm protected from police abuse, I can spread good healthy messages, and I can purchase a gun to defend myself. Our forefathers knew that freedom was dangerous, but decided that it was worth it.

    22. Re:Tough shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      9/11 changed the rules.

      When the hell did Americans turn into such cowards? Is this a Baby Boomer thing? Though the act was itself cowardly, vile and inexcusable, let's be absolutely blunt: 9/11 cost your country two buildings full of people, not all of whom were American. This isn't a tick on a donkey's ass compared to what your country has wreaked on the world in its wake. Prior, America in the last 50 years has put citizens of foreign countries through hundreds of times worse than 9/11, to see such pathetic whining and a blind rush to escape the burden of all those liberties and freedoms your ancestors suffered through so much more to preserve is disgusting. You dishonor them.

    23. Re:Tough shit by Digital+Autumn · · Score: 1

      Amen.

    24. Re:Tough shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are so fucking pathetic , it is scary.

    25. Re:Tough shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      When the hell did Americans turn into such cowards?

      Coming from an AC, I don't know whether to cry or laugh. Go spew your pathetic Eurotrash (or Canuck?) rants somewhere else.

    26. Re:Tough shit by alfredw · · Score: 1

      It's pseudofascist morons like you that are ruining this country, not the kid in his basement.

      I have to object to your use of the word pseudofascist. Anyone who honestly believes that the actions of nineteen men justify the removal of rights from anyone based solely on their opinions or their race is a REAL BONE FIDE fascist. No prefix necessary.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, sig types you!
    27. Re:Tough shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      first you claim you believe in liberty and then tell me that I'm evil because I don't conform to your idea of what excercising that liberty means.


      He didn't say you're evil, just not a real American. This is a more accurate description than saying war protestors are unamerican, as you're advocating a type of response to terrorism that undermines the foundation of this country.



      And no matter what one's "idea" of freedom is, supporting laws that unreasonably take away liberties is obviously anti-freedom. So a person who holds his liberties dear WOULD disagree with you, naturally.


      Plus, repetition of stupid soundbites like "9-11 changed everything" or whatever bullshit you heard on the tube or radio is worthy of ridicule.


      Dumbass.

    28. Re:Tough shit by FurryFeet · · Score: 1

      9/11 changed the rules.

      Then the terrorists have won.

    29. Re:Tough shit by The+Bungi · · Score: 1

      Here's a word of advise, asswipe. Your writing patterns give you away faster than I can say "paranoid". So fuck off and go troll someone else.

  51. Oh no! by Sylvestre · · Score: 1

    I'm involved in the BoomerShoot and there's a whole website about making explosives there. I wonder when all of this will be illegal?

  52. It's still a free country by l0ungeb0y · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As long as you speak the new speak and waive your flag.

    1. Re:It's still a free country by k1llt1me · · Score: 1

      That's freakin' beautiful... Make some bumper stickers and i'll buy a hundred....

    2. Re:It's still a free country by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      Waive your flag -- unintentionally funny and accurate.

    3. Re:It's still a free country by IIH · · Score: 1
      As long as you speak the new speak and waive your flag

      I think you mean wave the flag, and waive your rights

      --
      Exigo spamos et dona ferentes
    4. Re:It's still a free country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      To conform appropriately, you must have:


      One (1) 5"x8" flag attached to the rear right passenger window, with trailing edge frayed to at least 1.5" back.


      Two (2) 48"x67" flags attached to the front and rear entrances to your home. Each flag should be hung at no more than a 15 degree incline from the horizon and should not be lit up at night or taken down for any reason whatsoever.


      Remember kids, only you can keep Old Glory a meaningless, jingoinstic symbol of ignorance and obnoxiousness. To do otherwise would be equivalent to desecrating the graves of those who died in 911. Let's roll!

    5. Re:It's still a free country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot that one of the "flags" has to actually be the insert in the 9/12/01 newspaper of a flag taped to the back window (and almost completely faded to white).

    6. Re:It's still a free country by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 1

      By new speak, I suppose you mean such things as calling black people "African American" even if they're British, or spelling the word "Womyn" or referring to racial advantage systems as "Affirmative Action" or perhaps eliminating the following word from your vocabulary: "Fat", "heavy", "blind", "niggardly", "terrorist", "bald", "Mexican", "retarded", "crippled", "deaf", "poor", "queer", "dirty", "perverse", and "asshole", and replace with "Plus size", "big boned", "vision-impaired", "frugal", "freedom fighter for the other guys who suck", "hair deficient", "hispanic person who happens to hail from the olde land of Mexico and that's o-kayyy", "special person who just so happens to have a severe case of Down's Syndrome which happens to render him or her incapable of proper decision making", "without walkingnessitude", "hearing impaired", "person without capital or assets but probably having debt", "alternatively sexual", "sexually experimental", and "person of unusually antagonistic nature which leads others to believe incorrectly that he cares only for himself and not others which is in fact not the case at all since he only has difficulty properly articulating the fact that he deeply cares but sometimes things come out of his mouth which are plainly aggravating and insensitive but he can't help it because he's really kind of an a-s-s-h-o-l-e if you get my drift but I am not really saying that he really is one but kind of looks that way most of the time don't you know because he isn't concerned with other people's impressions of his character and it shows real bad once in a while like the time he casually mentioned to his aunt Janet that she had a serious case of body odor that in his words melted his eyebrows off when he hugged her and you see he says these things which may lead others to believe that he cares not for polite conversation but would rather cause you discomfort or even anger because the things he says are so inflammatory such as the time he told Mister Jackson that his lips were fucking gigantic and that he thought only negroes and jews and angelina jolie had lips like that and that maybe the lip fairy came by more than once in their house but that's just his way and you shouldn't take it personally I heard that his father was kinda like that you know?"
      I kinda hate PC too.

    7. Re:It's still a free country by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      Oh please. It's still a free country and you can disagree with the government all you want. There are ways of doing so that are more effective than others.

      Telling people how to make bombs and overthrow the government, putting on your pretty black bandanas and shouting "Hail to the thief"... do not count as effective ways.

      I can rail against stupid regulation, stupid laws, stupid restrictions on my speech, my right to own a gun, my right to be the equal of every other man and woman no matter what our respective colors, without having to burn shit down, offer advice on how to build bombs, and so on.

      You and all your little friends who think the U.S. is some kind of fascist police state ought to wake up and smell the coffee. Go live in one for a few years then come back and tell me how shitty you think America is.

      Wnat proof: The gang at the Sierra Club and MANY other left wing groups are still perfectly free to do their thing.

    8. Re:It's still a free country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or, maybe, he was making a reference to the novel 1984, in which the English language is being pared into a useless tatter called newspeak for the purpose of restraining the thoughts of the proletariat by means of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis.

      Not that it would have worked, of course, Sapir-Whorf's a crock.

    9. Re:It's still a free country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You and all your little friends who think the U.S. is some kind of fascist police state ought to wake up and smell the coffee. Go live in one for a few years then come back and tell me how shitty you think America is.

      Maybe you should take a look around a little more, Sunshine.

      I'm sure with such deeply rose colored contacts in, the blood will be easier to miss.

      Don't be a fool. We're being lied to left and right now, and people like you are eating it up whole. You're the kind that are giving these rat bastards the power.

      Wake up. You're only as free as the leash you're on.

    10. Re:It's still a free country by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      You are such a fucking moron, it's not even funny.

      Of course there are liars at the head of state. There always have been and there always will be. And you know what, IN AMERICA YOU HAVE THE POWER TO SAY SO!!

      That, my pathetic little coward, is what makes you free.

      The PNAC happens to be the gang in charge now, WHEEEEE OH NO, the country is doomed! Fucking get your friends to pay attention and vote next time. And before you whine and say "voting doesn't matter" because the machines cheat and put X party in power... give me a freaking break. If the people didn't like what was being sold to them, and enough people voted, someone different (libertarian, green, anyone) would win now and then.

      Moron. I'm the kind who doesn't listen to anything "they" say, because I'm too busy with my own daily life to give a shit. You, apparently, have too much free time on your hands and a conspiracy theory in your craw.

    11. Re:It's still a free country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amazing.

      You addressed nothing except making broad sweeping statements, rather than actually tackling anything addressed.

      This isn't 'stain-on-the-dress' cocksucking fluff shit here.

      You spewed fairy tale bullshit concerning people "paying attention" and "voting next time" to blow off the rather pressing concerns at hand. And then there's this genuinely amusing stuff about "maybe the (libertarian, green, anyone) party would win now and then". Alice would get some serious flashbacks if she was reading this.

      If you actually believe 'voting' will work, maybe we should try sending a few Hallmark cards to the neocons with a little note inside saying "Please don't annex out the countries and groups that don't say 'how high' when we say jump, ok? Thanks much! Luv, Earth.".

      These guys have plans that don't include "me and my friends" voting and then getting a pat on the head for being good citizens.

      And then I notice this at the end, here: "because I'm too busy with my own daily life to give a shit". So in other words, you're too 'busy' to actually have been able to form a solid opinion on what's going on right now, and the things I presented (which, honestly, are each slivers in a Redwood of fucked-upness), so you're going to throw the Red Blooded American Patriot "the system is flawed but it works" type crap that you've been indoctrinated since birth to react with.

      Busy people watch CNNFoxABCCBSMSNBC news and only get that side of the news. Busy people also, apparently, blow off other people they can't properly discuss things with, with cutesy cliches like "too much free time on your hands".

      Just go back to your busy little life where it's apparently acceptable to lie in office and not be held accountable. Surprise, fucker: it's not okay. It never will be. And the only reason people get away with it is because of fucking attitudes like that. "Well, he's a politician, so it's okay!"

      I like this bit here, too: "IN AMERICA YOU HAVE THE POWER TO SAY SO!!"

      Sure, until someone decides they don't like what you're saying and suddenly you're not a disgrundled citizen, you're a 'terrorist conspirator enciting others to riot', or something equally colorful. And if you think that's 'conspiracy nuttiness' or whatever you'll call it, WHERE THE FUCK HAVE YOU BEEN IN THE PAST 3 YEARS?

      Oooh, right, right, I forgot. Just vote 'em out. Good call.

    12. Re:It's still a free country by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 1

      Yes, I am familiar with George Orwell. I was merely giving examples of how ludicrous it is to engineer the various human languages so that no offense can be conveyed between people. I am saying that calling a fat person "generously cut" is a patronizing and gratuitous use of newspeak.

  53. Re:LOUD SUCKING SOUND EMANATING FROM BUFFALO, NY by Eric+Ass+Raymond · · Score: 1
    offshore American High-Tech [tata.com]!

    Ever thought about that if you can offshore American "High-Tech", then maybe it's not such high tech afterall.

    Maybe it's you who've fallen behind the times and should learn another occupation that's really high tech and cannot be (yet) moved abroad?

  54. You're absolutely right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Very few over here understand our constitution. It's not required reading, except for the preamble where we tell the naughty British to bugger off... :p The first amendment protects freedom of speech and by extension thought, not freedom to do whatever we desire without consequence...

  55. Oh you mean... by MKalus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... like the guys who put up the websites with a hit list for abortion doctors and celebrating everytime someone nuked one of them?

    --
    If you want to e-mail me, use my PGP Key.
    1. Re:Oh you mean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, this country is on its way to a civil war, stand and fight or cower and run.

  56. One Thing I found Interesting by Unknown+Relic · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I don't know if anyone else picked up on this, but one thing that is mentioned by CNN is that the sentence given was actually more than the prosecution recommended. I don't want to read into it too much, but I do find it interesting.

  57. Danger, Will Robinson! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder how many potential posters to this thread will not reply, due to the high probability of all these posts being "investigated" by the feds?

    Be sure to word your comments quite carefully, folks... could save you thousands in legal fees.

  58. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by Havokmon · · Score: 3, Informative
    This is the problem with censorship.

    WTF are you talking about? Oh yeah, you didn't RTFA. I'll summarize:

    Not only did he have an anarchist's web site that linked to bomb making sites, AND he advocated overthrowing the goverment, but, and here's the kicker...
    "Austin was arrested with other protesters at the World Economic Forum in New York in February 2002 on charges of disorderly conduct and unlawful assembly. "

    He wasn't just preaching.. he was practicing what he preached. Therefore, he posed a REAL threat, not a virtual one.

    --
    "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
  59. Seriously! by JWyner · · Score: 2, Funny

    The first amendment clearly states we should not be held accountable for our actions... ...no, wait, nevermind -- you're an idiot.

    --
    "Owning a computer is like having your very own TV -- with a built in radio!" - Ed Helms
  60. Sounds fair by CopperDream · · Score: 2, Interesting

    People seem to like to quote the Bill of Rights, but none of the ammendments added since. The Bill of Rights is not a noose. Our country's founders knew they could not foresee every possible need of this country in the future. Our laws may not be perfect, but they are there for our protection.

    People who promote violence against the innocent as a means of freedom are nothing more than disturbers of the peace who deserve their punishments.

    I support anyone's right to complain about our government and call for change, but not the promotion of fear and violence.

    1. Re:Sounds fair by humanerror · · Score: 1
      People who promote violence against the innocent as a means of freedom are nothing more than disturbers of the peace who deserve their punishments.
      You mean, like Operation Iraqi Freedom, the US Government's war of aggression against a sovereign nation, which has resulted in over 7000 civilian deaths in pursuit of regime change?
      I support anyone's right to complain about our government and call for change, but not the promotion of fear and violence.
      You mean like the US Government's exploitation of a national tragedy in much the same way the Reichstag fire was exploited to suspend civil liberties?
      --
      "We're an apex predator with the fecundity of a base level herbivore... We're a virus with shoes..." RazorJAK
    2. Re:Sounds fair by redzebra · · Score: 1

      People who promote violence against the innocent as a means of freedom are nothing more than disturbers of the peace who deserve their punishments.

      While I completly agree on the fact that fear and violence are not an acceptable mean to achieve freedom, I would like to make 2 observations :

      looking at history, freedom is almost never achieved without violence

      when talking about violence against the innocent, a government surely doesn't match that profile. (especialy no government which recently declared war on other countries)

      Your quotes would only have any meaning if you would agree an trialing and punnishing your own government for not only promoting but actualy doing the actions you accuse this guy of. So if these are the only reasons why the guy gets emprissoned, I would simply call it an abuse of your rights. Silently approved by a by fear blinded public. The same fear which is cultivated by its own government.

      (note that I consider these statements as a moderate opinion. A.C.Clark suggested once to kill anyone declaring war and got away with it )

  61. Remember boys and girls.... by Picass0 · · Score: 1

    (cue Mr. Rodgers music)

    "Always remember that Republicans and gun owners are scary. And the NRA is Evil. But Anarchists who run websites pointing at bomb making instructions are just practicing free speech! Vote for Dean!"

    Fuckin' beam me up Scotty! Am I seriously expected to feel sorry for this guy? This isn't exactly Free Kevin stuff here. The guy points to websites on HOW TO KILL! Not phone phreaking! Not Overclocking! Not DVD ripping! He's advocating violence and sedition. And if he really wants to live in an anarchist contry, he should go to Liberia. He'll be begging for social order in about ten minutes.

    1. Re:Remember boys and girls.... by aminorex · · Score: 1
      Here's a link to a website on HOW TO KILL: U.S. Army Field Manuals. I think Cmdr Taco should now spend a year in Leavenworth.

      This Reductio is brought to you by Absurdum.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  62. This is not about freedom of speech... by Alton_Brown · · Score: 5, Informative

    Four minutes after posting 10 replies are crying that the government has violated his first amendment rights... let's not forget that the dumbass cracked into several sites (including the army), defaced them, inserted nasty little cgi scripts and happily posted DoS tools. On top of all this he admitted that he did all this. He even said, "If I go to jail, then I will go to jail not based on my actions, but based on what I think..." The moron got what he wanted. They're sending him away on his actions, not what he thinks.

    As for the scare bit about "an extra 20 years for the terrorism..." that's a troll for getting the story picked up. Even if he had gone to trial, the extra 20 years isn't a mandatory thing - it's a maximum sentence of up to 20 years. In the end he probably would have ended up in the same spot or gotten an extra year. I can't belive this is even worth digging up again, but hey, it's a slow newsday.

    1. Re:This is not about freedom of speech... by mcwop · · Score: 1
      Agreed. Furthermore, he took the plea bargin. Perhaps the real reason for doing this is that he had no case, and was guilty. The stories seem to have the slant that this guy was railroaded, and completely innocent. He could fight it (from the warrant to the charges) in court with his lawyers, that is his choice.

      The ironic part is that this anti-governemnt/globalist person got noticed through the Internet, which got its start from an institution I am sure he oppooses (government military project - ARPANET).

      --

      "I don't think it's selfish, to eat defenseless shellfish." -NOFX

    2. Re:This is not about freedom of speech... by TopShelf · · Score: 1

      Even if he had gone to trial, the extra 20 years isn't a mandatory thing - it's a maximum sentence of up to 20 years.

      You won't see that or the mention of the explosives found in his home on CNN, either - it makes a better story just to pitch the ideological angle. This isn't a case of the government silencing a free thinker. This is a case of a really dumb kid playing with fire and getting burnt.

      --
      Stop by my site where I write about ERP systems & more
    3. Re:This is not about freedom of speech... by Sanity · · Score: 1
      Furthermore, he took the plea bargin
      Only because of the massive risk involved due to the 20 year terrorism extention to his sentence. You would be surprised how many innocent people take a plea bargin because they are scared shitless of what could happen if they lose. Additionally, he didn't actually get the sentence he bargined for - the judge doubled it after the agreement had been made!
  63. So What Did He Do? by cc_pirate · · Score: 1

    Did he get sentenced for speaking freely about where to find info on how to build bombs, or was he sentenced for HAXORing someone else's computer?

    If the former, then it is time for all of us to petition the US government to burn the US Constitution, because it is clear that it no longer is being enforced, so they should stop pretending it means anything.

    If the latter, then CNN's website is grossly misleading if not outright lying.

    Which is it?

    --

    "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

  64. Boot him out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Advocating political change is what freedom of speech is all about."

    Political change is one thing. Advocating mass murder and genocide and obliteration of democracy and rights in his "better" America is another.

    Boot him out. All we lose is another nazi.

  65. What kind of a dumbass... by fearlessrogue · · Score: 1

    Gets arrested at a demostration after getting his house raided. Ever hear of laying low?

    --

    Everything Zen;
    Everything Zen;
    I don't think so!!!
  66. Re:This is *no* bullshit by saskwach · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Hell no! If you want to silence neo-nazis, who else do you want to silence? If I write a document about how to kill the president, who's to say that I don't want to improve the security system? That's some of what's wrong with the DMCA (I want to improve security, not break copyright law). I agree that harassment is not protected speech, but that's because it is actually a crime that hurts people. If this is the kind of limit we have for freedom of speech, then it really is time for a revolution.

  67. Pre-emptive strikes on free speech by sciper · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I would find it disturbing if this guy was arrested for posting the information himself. Regardless of the information posted, he hasn't actually committed a crime, nor from what I understand was he in a position encouraging others to perform violent acts. I'll draw a parallel to the likes of the Ku Klux Klan - what they believe and stand for is reprehensible, and they most likely discuss desires to physically harm others of racial minority status. However, talking and doing are two different things. There's a distinction between having a violent impulse and acting on it. If the government launches pre-emptive strikes on our freedom of speech in order to prevent future crimes, they have effectively set a precendent for the erosion of personal freedoms and liberties; once the rust has an 'in', it's only a matter of time before it consumes the body of its host in its entirety. Now, without a doubt, such pre-emptive strikes do indeed prevent crimes and save lives. It comes down to a choice of the society we wish to live in. Would one rather exist in a country where the government keeps a tight fist on all of our actions and communications, secure in the knowledge that violence has been reduced to near-non-existant levels? Or does one value freedom over life and live in a country where occasional acts of violence occur, but the dissemination of information and unhindered distribution of ideas reign free? In this age of the Ashcrofts and Patriot Acts, our historic battle cry of 'Give me Liberty or give me Death' seems to have already rusted away.

  68. Re:This is *no* bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Actually, you are the one full of (insert animal here) shit. Freedom of speech means exactly that. You are free to speak whatever the hell you want. Don't fool yourself into thinking that this freedom exists in the United States. A famous quote (forget which president) paraphrased was "I may not agree with what you have to say, but I will defend your right to say it to the death."
    So all the bull about hate-speech being a crime and that words are dangerous is an attempt to limit the power of an individual because it might upset the balance. Do I think that neo-nazis, et. all are morally wrong in what they say? Sure I do. Do I think it should be illegal for them to say it? Hell no! It is no less safe to have a website that tells you how to make a bomb (or in this case to LINK to a website with that info) than to allow chemistry teachers to explain re-dox reactions. Hell, we made thermite as our final lab in high school chemistry. You think that's safer than a bunch of wackjobs saying non-whites are inferior or protesters alleging that maybe the government is corrupt? Slippery slope my friend. Slippery slope.

  69. censored by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jeepers, for someone who's been so completely and
    totally silenced, censored, and whatever, he sure
    has put an awful long diatribe on raisethefist.com

    Oh, sorry, I guess we're not supposed to think it
    out that far.

  70. Sure you can... by Cyno01 · · Score: 1

    Go ahead and scream fire in a crowded theater, people just look at you weird. Luckily yelling fire is less annoying than your cell phone going off.

    --
    "Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
  71. stupidity is criminal by rodentia · · Score: 1

    Oi.

    Aren't the jails already full of college-boy, pot-pushers? Now you want to make stupidity a criminal offense. Who is going to pay for the bottom half of the bell-curve watching TV all day?

    . . . violence against the authorities you are subject to . . .

    Kinda gets right to the heart of the matter, don't it? Violent revolution is always a crime and sometimes necessary. Read any American history, you Tory bitch?

    --
    illegitimii non ingravare
  72. FIRE!!!! by GreenCrackBaby · · Score: 1

    You can't yell "Fire" in a crowded movie theater. There's a grey line between speech and stupidity, and based on the article this guy was pretty stupid.

    That being said, I feel sorry for the guy. He enters into a plea bargain and agrees to plead guilty and receive 4 months in jail, but the judge gives him a year.

    "What the hell?"

    What the hell indeed.

    --

    "The market alone cannot provide sufficient constraints on corporation's penchant to cause harm." -- Joel Bakan
  73. Hmm... by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1
    I'd say something about this, but I'm am afraid the FBI might come knocking on my door.

    Last time I checked it was okay to openly advocate the overthrow of the government? I even thought it was okay to write and speak about it. The problem is when you start acting on those feelings...

    I seriously think the government overstepped it's bounds on this. Ironically enough, our civil liberites are here mainly to protect people acting in ways that the rest of us don't approve of...

    What's even more tragic was that instead of standing up for his civil rights, this kid got bullied into to a plea bargain because of his fear that he'd be treated like a terrorist and it would increase his sentence from 1 year to 20...

    --
    Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
    1. Re:Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who do you know he was "bullied" as you put it.
      He chose to act on his beliefs when he hacked into goverment owned compuuting systems. He is gettting off with a hand slap and he knows it. He confessed and gave a guilty plea. I have no pity for his stupid ass.

    2. Re:Hmm... by Mysticalfruit · · Score: 1

      I didn't know that he hacked into any government computer systems. I thought he was just running an anti government website. In that case, then it was probably for the best that he plea bargained.

      --
      Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
  74. Freedom of speech by stratjakt · · Score: 1

    Is not freedom of action.

    You cannot incite a riot in a public place, like screaming "fire" in a crowded theatre.

    Authors have long gotten in trouble with the feds for writing "how to" books and manifestos on bombmaking, murder, child molestation, etc.

    This isnt new or a sign of the times. This idiot, through his ACTIONS, not his words, seeks to threaten the safety of other citizens. He can believe whatever he wants, but when he starts telling people to put pipe bombs in my mailbox, he crosses a line.

    So sad too bad, here's hoping he's raped mercilessy by people with even less respect for the law than he.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  75. Thomas Jefferson by Jack+Auf · · Score: 5, Informative

    the site caught the ire of the FBI for advocating the overthrow of the U.S. government.

    Let's see what Thomas Jefferson, one of the Founding Fathers on this nation, had to say about the subject.

    "I hold it, that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing, and as necessary in the political world as storms in the physical." Letter to James Madison, January 30, 1787.

    " . . . forbid we should ever be twenty years without such a rebellion. . . . And what country can preserve its liberties, if its rulers are not warned from time to time, that this people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. . . . The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure." Letter to William Stephens Smith, Nov. 13, 1787.

    --
    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - BF
    1. Re:Thomas Jefferson by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      This the same Jefferson who raped his black slave and started a line of illegitmate mulattos?

      Just because some long since dead guy said something doesnt make it correct or wise or insightful.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:Thomas Jefferson by easter1916 · · Score: 1
      I am heartily sick of the cult of personality that surrounds the founding fathers. I recommend that you read the article in current issue of The Atlantic Monthly to disabuse yourself of the notion that they were infallible. I am even more tired of this quote:
      The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants
      which is bandied about as if it were an absolute truth. Explain to me; why is automatically necessary to use violence every now and then? Does that really seem reasonable to you? How would it do good for 'liberty' (another overused word)?
    3. Re:Thomas Jefferson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Honestly, if you can "peacefully" assemble in any manner the goverment deems "lawful" how effective would your protest be if they did not want to hear about it?

    4. Re:Thomas Jefferson by BigBadBri · · Score: 1
      Given your nick, this has got to be satire.

      Or are you another Plastic Paddy?

      --
      oh brave new world, that has such people in it!
    5. Re:Thomas Jefferson by li99sh79 · · Score: 1
      Let them take arms. . . . The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants.

      Wasn't this part of Tim McVeigh's justification for blowing up the Murrah building in Oklahoma City?

      I'll be honest, both sides in this case bother me. People who advocate the overthrow of the govt are, in my mind, dingbats. However, the gov't throwing one of these dingbats in jail for simply spouting off -- though apparently there is more to it than that -- i find equally noxious, and goes to prove the dingbats right. Wnat to say how to build a bomb? Fine, Tom Clancy made a mint doing just that in Sum of All Fears. Want to say the gov't is whack and change is needed? That's ok too, everybody has an opinion. Want to say the attack takes place at dawn and we're going after so-and-so? That's not cool, incitement to violence is where I draw the line.

      -sam
      --
      I was just here, where did I go?
    6. Re:Thomas Jefferson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jefferson WAS the original troll.

    7. Re:Thomas Jefferson by napdawger42 · · Score: 1
      Also salient, from the friggin' Declaration of Independence:
      We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. --That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, -- That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

      So, yeah. Mr. Jefferson (I go to the University of Virginia, where he's mentioned as if he was in the next room) was all about overthrowing an unjust government.
    8. Re:Thomas Jefferson by Jack+Auf · · Score: 1

      Explain to me; why is automatically necessary to use violence every now and then?

      It's not automatic, but unfortunately sometimes necessary because people in power almost never want to give it up voluntarily. Furthermore they will do the most unethical things to hold onto it. Committing election fraud, harsh prison sentences for dissidents, the slow erosion of rights (free speech, speedy trial, the right to be confronted by your accuser, not being held without charges filed, the right to see a lawyer, etc etc).

      You know, all those things that we used to accuse the communists of. And we supported the forceful overthrow of those communist regimes any way we could in the name of Democracy. If we've lost our Democracy shouldn't the people that *are* this country, the people that are the *rightful owners* of this country be allowed to take it back by any means necessary? Just like the US Gov't advocates in other countries all over the world.

      --
      "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - BF
    9. Re:Thomas Jefferson by Hatta · · Score: 1

      The government is allowed to use violence. Since the government is an agent of the people, it can have no power that is not already posessed by the people. There is NOTHING more dangerous than granting a monopoly on violence.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    10. Re:Thomas Jefferson by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Tim McVeighs problem was that popular opinion would not support a revolution. If violence is used against the will of the people, those responsible deserve what they get. If Tim McVeigh only advocated blowing up federal prisons I'd have no problem with it. If Tim McVeigh blew up a federal building which inspired a revolution backed by the people, I'd also have no problem with it. It is the will of the people that is important, whether it's you using violence or the government.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    11. Re:Thomas Jefferson by kenthorvath · · Score: 1
      Just because some long since dead guy said something doesnt make it correct or wise or insightful.

      But the fact that he wrote the Declaration of Independance might give him some credibility, no?

    12. Re:Thomas Jefferson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then leave

    13. Re:Thomas Jefferson by RevSmiley · · Score: 1

      No Thomas Paine was.

      --
      As you can see I don't care about my karma.
    14. Re:Thomas Jefferson by RevSmiley · · Score: 1

      Well since we are a Republic and not a demoracy.
      Nothing worse than being governed by a mob.

      --
      As you can see I don't care about my karma.
    15. Re:Thomas Jefferson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you know it was rape? Were you there. I see you are just a biggot against interacial couples.

      I reality of slavery is long resigned to history unless you are a Muslim then it's still OK. Most Africans were enslaved by Arab Muslims not white europeans. You want reparations sue a Arab not me. My people came to this country before the white man brought his horses and guns.

    16. Re:Thomas Jefferson by li99sh79 · · Score: 1

      Tim McVeigh's problem was that he thought blowing up a building full of people was a good idea.

      -sam
      --
      I was just here, where did I go?
    17. Re:Thomas Jefferson by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      Well spotted. Not plastic at all -- born in Cavan, grew up in Cork.

    18. Re:Thomas Jefferson by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      Given your use of the pejorative term "paddy", I'm guessing you're a Brit. Why do so many people mistakenly think that "easter1916" means "IRA wanker"? I chose it because I happen to agree with the ideals laid out in the Proclamation of the Republic, not because of any warm feelings towards violent types.

    19. Re:Thomas Jefferson by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      That's nonsense. The government is elected by the people to represent them, and is given specific powers to use on their behalf. Violence, legislating, tax collection... The people don't do any of these things.

    20. Re:Thomas Jefferson by hachete · · Score: 1

      "patriotism is the virtue of the vicious"

      Oscar Wilde

      h.

      --
      Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
    21. Re:Thomas Jefferson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If anybody should leave, it should be the people who don't believe in the principles this country was founded upon.

    22. Re:Thomas Jefferson by BigBadBri · · Score: 1
      Sorry, I'm Welsh and an admirer of the Chartists myself.

      You have to admit, though, that easter1916 does have connotations. Personally, I agree with what the IRA was doing then - fighting on the barricades against the troops is a lot different than bombing shopping arcades.

      I'd assumed you were an American - my bad.

      --
      oh brave new world, that has such people in it!
    23. Re:Thomas Jefferson by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      They were as nasty then as they are now. I hail from Macroom, Co. Cork. One of my primary school teachers parents were local IRB activist during the War of Independence. His claim to fame was to have shot three British Army officers, the local taxi driver who ferried them and the taxi driver's dog when the IRB ambushed them as they were unarmed and on a fishing trip at the nearby river Sullane.
      The "Free State Army" (i.e., what became the Irish Army) was no better... the Ballykelly massacre is infamous in Ireland for its brutality and pointlessness.
      BTW, "Paddy" is offensive to us.
      I'm all for republicanism in the classic French sense -- liberty, equality, fraternity. But the sociopaths have hijacked the ideals of Wolfe Tone for a long time now.

    24. Re:Thomas Jefferson by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      I actually do live in the US now, in St. Louis since 1998. Is there much support in Wales for republicanism? There's Alex Salmond and the SNP up north, and I've heard of Plaid Cymru (spelling?), but nothing much is reported -- at least on the BBC.

    25. Re:Thomas Jefferson by easter1916 · · Score: 1

      Damn it, this post is riddled with typos and other errors. The place name should be Ballyseedy, Co. Kerry, not Ballykelly.

    26. Re:Thomas Jefferson by BigBadBri · · Score: 1
      There's still a hardcore (~20%) nationalist vote in Wales, but South Wales is now so Anglicised that Labour tend to win in elections, and since that's where most of the population is, there's little hope of a proper Welsh state now or in the future.

      Still, we Celts can dream.

      Up North, the Scottish Socialists are as good a bet for future success - they are nationalist, but have more attractive policies for the urban areas.

      --
      oh brave new world, that has such people in it!
  76. European viewpoint? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    What does this have to do with a European viewpoint?

    I'm European myself and I think promoting change in society is legitimate. I also think promoting it in a way that raisethefist does it is legitimate also, such as giving tips on how to best evade police repression during protests etc.

    They're making a hysterical example of Sherman that'll teach many to shut their mouths and think twice before engaging in political activity.

    Yours is a kneejerk opinion you learned from someone else. And it has nothing to do with a European viewpoint whatsoever.

  77. how to learn by mblase · · Score: 1

    As a highschooler what am I to think growing up?

    For starters, you shouldn't advertise yourself as a promoter of the use of explosives in order to undermine your government. Free speech notwithstanding, your leaders don't look kindly on that sort of thing. Neither do conservatives. Neither, broadly speaking, does any sane human being.

    1. Re:how to learn by Eccles · · Score: 1

      For starters, you shouldn't advertise yourself as a promoter of the use of explosives in order to undermine your government.

      Go to the internet archives (already linked in this discussion) and show me where he did this. I looked fairly thoroughly, and saw nothing of this sort, just lots of bits about police brutality, etc.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    2. Re:how to learn by mblase · · Score: 1

      Go to the internet archives (already linked in this discussion) and show me where he did this. I looked fairly thoroughly, and saw nothing of this sort, just lots of bits about police brutality, etc.

      It's impossible to look thoroughly through the archived site, because most of the links don't work. I didn't see any links on the homepage saying "Build a pipe bomb and send it to a judge! Here's how!", true, but that's hardly enough proof for me to doubt the FBI.

    3. Re:how to learn by davebarz · · Score: 1

      So, YOU, are assuming guilt... till proven innocent... Why does it take proof for you to doubt the FBI? Shouldn't it be the other way around?

  78. How dare you criticize! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm a neo-facist, you insensitive clod!

  79. Another Lost Freedom? by ShwAsasin · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's interesting that his website was not covered under the 1st amendment. Although the material is something of a desired nature, why was he charged for his thoughts on overthrowing the US?

    It's interesting that the people in the enron/worldcom/adelphia/etc cases screw people out of millions, yet only some will get jail time. This guy creates as website based on the 1st, yet he's put in jail.

    Why is it that in the US only rich white people can get away with murder (with the exception of O.J. simpson), yet the average person who doesn't believe in their government is a "terrorist" or anti-american citizen?

    1. Re:Another Lost Freedom? by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      No, he was charged for having instructions on how to make a bomb side by side with comments that somebody should kill cops.

      Instructions on how to build bombs is perfectly safe. Instructions on how to build bombs, with intimations, statements, or requests to use said bombs to hurt people, on the other hand, is illegal.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  80. Your America by nuggz · · Score: 1

    and in the america i grew up in we don't censor information from the public

    Care to tell me where this magical fantasy land is.

    The America I know of (USA, in North America, between Canada and Mexico). Has ALWAYS kept secrets from the populace. Like every government has hidden details, and some unethical people within it.

    This si the way it is, and that is why you should vote, and protest and work to change.

    On this case, he plead guilty to the charges. The other thing is that if he actively worked to promote violence and attacked government computers he was committing a crime.
    Protesting and working against the government is fine, just do it legally.
    Cracking computers, making bombs and advocating violence is wrong.

    A convicted criminal does not have the same rights a citizen, that is the way our justice system works.

    (I'm not a US citizen)

    1. Re:Your America by Dog+and+Pony · · Score: 1

      and protest and work to change.

      Didn't you follow the links? That is apparently illegal in the US.

      (5) he cannot associate with any person or group that seeks to change the government in any way (be that environmental, social justice, political, economic, etc.)

    2. Re:Your America by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "...Cracking computers...."
      That in and of itself is not a crime. I advocate cracking computers, hell I've been paid to do it. I have a network that I like to try and crack into.

      "...making bombs..."

      why? just like somepeople like to work on the Linux kernle for a hobby, some poepl like to make bombs. there is nothing wrong with making and detonating explosives. Now using them against people, thats a dfferent matter.

      And if you think advocating using them against people is a crime, then everybody at every company that sells weapons to the government will need to be locked up.

      "...advocating violence..."

      no, violence is need it some cases. Many people advocated violense against Iraq. I advocate our police officers reacting violently in some cases, like when there life is in jepordy.

      "A convicted criminal does not have the same rights a citizen, that is the way our justice system works."
      only in a narrowly defined way. no voting, no gun ownership, etc...

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:Your America by Dog+and+Pony · · Score: 1

      some poepl like to make bombs. there is nothing wrong with making and detonating explosives.

      Dilbert: What could a bunch of hillbillies that drink beer and use dynamite possibly have to say?

      Dogbert: Well, usually something like "Sorry about your trailer, Joe Bob".

      (Quoted from memory, probably not correct :)

    4. Re:Your America by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 2, Interesting
      "A convicted criminal does not have the same rights a citizen, that is the way our justice system works."


      only in a narrowly defined way. no voting, no gun ownership, etc...

      I can understand why someone who has demonstrated a willingness to abuse weapons (I guess that would be abuse people with weapons) should be denied from having them, but I've never understand why they should be denied a vote. It seems like the right to vote should be one of those "fundamental" rights that cannot be denied to anyone.

      To me, being able to deny law-breakers the right to vote seems like a perfect way to disenfranchise a big chunk of the lower "class" of society. You don't want someone to have a voice? Define sets of laws that it is almost impossible for them NOT to break, then take away their right to vote. Justify it as punishing "bad" people.

      Why not let convicts vote? If society is healthy, then there shouldn't be too many convicts, and their votes won't make a bit of difference in the first place. If there _are_ so many convicts that their votes regularly make a difference in voting results - well, that indicates more of a problem with society's legal system rather than an "unexplained rash of criminal activity". Requiring that convicts be allowed to vote would provide a form of electoral feedback which would keep legislators from passing ever-restrictive legislation which only benefits a smaller & more well-off part of the society.

    5. Re:Your America by revscat · · Score: 1

      It seems like the right to vote should be one of those "fundamental" rights that cannot be denied to anyone.

      There are no fundamental rights. Haven't you heard? We have to fight terrorists, now. And the Republicans know what's best. So don't you go talking about "fundamental" rights. There are only rights for fundamentalists.

  81. We Are Just Livestock On CorpGovMedia's Ranch by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    ...when will the sheeple awaken?

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:We Are Just Livestock On CorpGovMedia's Ranch by Laplace · · Score: 1

      ...when will the sheeple awaken?

      Many people enjoy being sheep. Some don't. Those who don't have two choices:

      1) complain about being a sheep and keep eating the grass,
      2) become one of the herders.

      What's your choice?

      --
      The middle mind speaks!
  82. No freedom to harmful speech!! by Marx_Mrvelous · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    His speech was deemed harmful, something we haven't had the right to (and shouldn't!) before. To say something just to hurt someone is the same as hurting them.

    This isn't the case of a political extremist giving a public speech to express his views. Enough people thought he was dangerous, and promoting violence, that he got a year in jail. So don't go waving the "All censorship is evil and bad" banner too much. You end up looking foolish.

    --

    Moderation: Put your hand inside the puppet head!
    1. Re:No freedom to harmful speech!! by k1llt1me · · Score: 1

      It's because of shitheads like you that there are websites like his...

    2. Re:No freedom to harmful speech!! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      All censorship is bad.

      as long as someone is not acivly inciting violence, they should be allowed to speak there mind.

      by your logic, If I said, "George Bush Jr. is an asshole who should be impeached, and ugly to boot!" I am hurting the president. therefore I should go to prison.

      In case you doubt it we can get together, you can call me a bad name, then I get to kick you in the head. Then we will see who is hurt.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:No freedom to harmful speech!! by Marx_Mrvelous · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nope, your speach is not harmful. If you said "George Bush gave me a hummer and then cheated on his taxes" that would be harmful speach (assuming it were not true). I suggest doing a search on goole for "slander" and "libel" and you'll learn the difference.

      --

      Moderation: Put your hand inside the puppet head!
    4. Re:No freedom to harmful speech!! by Marx_Mrvelous · · Score: 1

      And it's people like you who give liberals (and the internet in general) a bad name. But at least I don't have to resort to name calling :))

      --

      Moderation: Put your hand inside the puppet head!
    5. Re:No freedom to harmful speech!! by k1llt1me · · Score: 1

      You sound like a 10 year old. Did mommy teach you that trick? Get some opinions of your own you brainwashed clod. (btw.. it's people like you who give Purdue a bad name)

    6. Re:No freedom to harmful speech!! by mblase · · Score: 1

      as long as someone is not acivly inciting violence, they should be allowed to speak there mind.

      According to the article, the reason he was punished was because he was actively inciting violence. Just because he couldn't hear the rallying cries of his audience doesn't mean he wasn't looking for one.

    7. Re:No freedom to harmful speech!! by Marx_Mrvelous · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Sorry, I don't argue with cowards. Give me your e-mail address, name, etc. Then I'll be happy to talk with you more :) Otherwise, keep your ignorant opinions to yourself :)

      --

      Moderation: Put your hand inside the puppet head!
    8. Re:No freedom to harmful speech!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      To say something just to hurt someone is the same as hurting them.

      I'm not sure I agree with this. If someone says something to me to hurt me, and I know that's what they are trying to do, I can choose to ignore it. You don't have to take every comment at face value, you know. You actually can choose which comments are valid and which ones are not. The problem lies when the person is ignorant of the subject matter (ie: someone says "Bush is a wanker") and doesn't know enough beforehand to make up his/her mind.

  83. RTFA First, Spout off Second. by Whizzmo2 · · Score: 1

    From the FA...

    Austin admitted posting links about bombs.

    He is going to prison for an "<A href", not for hosting the information himself.
    This is the kind of thing that makes Ashcroft spooge his pants, no doubt.

  84. This isn't about freedom of speech or linking... by _bug_ · · Score: 5, Informative

    Warning: IANAL.

    First take a look at the search warrant issued against the home of Austin.

    What we see here is that he's being suspected of breaking two specific laws.

    18 USC 1030 - Computer Fraud

    Austin is charged under this because he was suspected of being responsible for several defacements which are detailed in the warrant. Looking at what's in the warrant there seems to be more than enough evidence to support this charge.

    18 USC 842(p)(2) - Unlawful Distribution of Information Relating to Explosives, etc...

    In the search warrant are several quotes from raisethefist.com in which information about explosives is provided along side some comments that encourage this knowledge be used against police officers.

    Here's the exact quote from 18 USC 842 (p)(2)(A):

    to teach or demonstrate the making or use of an explosive, a destructive device, or a weapon of mass destruction, or to distribute by any means information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the manufacture or use of an explosive, destructive device, or weapon of mass destruction, with the intent that the teaching, demonstration, or information be used for, or in furtherance of, an activity that constitutes a Federal crime of violence;


    Clearly what Austin did, provide information about explosives within the context of causing harm to others with said knowledge, falls under this law.

    From the information that I have available it seems very apparent that Austin did commit crimes under current US law.

    Now had Austin removed suggestions for use of this bomb making knowledge and just presented it in a separate, straight-forward format, he could not be charged under 18 USC 842.

    However, he still defaced some sites and thus is still in violation of 18 USC 1030.

    Remember, IANAL, but this seems pretty straightforward to me. No freedom of speech issue here.

  85. Dear being of lesser intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's high school. That's two words. If you use only one word, everyone will already know that you are in high school.

    1. Re:Dear being of lesser intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're saying it's impossible to use "er" on the end of the term? For instance, I visit Slashdot, so I am a Slashdotter. Would the correct term be "high schooler"?

  86. Doubleplusungood by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe the reference is Larry Niven's Inferno when some guy is trying to get issued some new clothing or something and has to wait in a line.

    However: America! Love it or leave it, pal!

  87. I could understand... by Daniel+Baumgarten · · Score: 1

    ...if he had been warned that the Feds were not down with his site's content in advance, but from what I hear, he was just raided with no forewarning whatsoever. That's unfair.

    Furthermore, if the government was so concerned about the bomb-making sites he was linking to, why didn't they just shut down those instead? They sounded a lot more dangerous than an excersize of the First Amendment.

    --
    "Screw slashdot." -- Linus Torvalds
  88. raisethefist.com archived by mblase · · Score: 4, Informative

    Naturally, raisethefist.com is pretty much devoid of content now. Fortunately for thos of us who like to know firsthand what the news is about, the Internet Archive has several backups of the site and what it's about.

  89. A legal perspective. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IAAL and just so you know: 1) You cant yell "fire" in a theater, and 2) Advocating the violent overthrow of the united states government or belonging to a group that advocates it may get you in serious criminal trouble, unless 3)you move. Try Cuba or Iran. They dont speak english and the advocacy is a big plus! Interestingly, after you take and pass the bar exam but before your admited you have to fill out a questionaire and one of the questions is, you guessed it, 'do you now or have you ever advocated or belonged to a group that advocates the violent overthrow of the US Govt?'

  90. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by Tungbo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So you think that a Disorderly Conduct and Unlawful assembly charge warrants a ONE YEAR sentence?

    Do you believe that the US WEF protesters were trying to commit sedition?

    There is a huge difference between opposing certain policies of a government and attempting to overthrow it. ( A ridiculous possibility in the case of the US ).

  91. sometimes I feel like moving... by EZmagz · · Score: 1
    And this is one of those times. Honestly, yes the kid probably didn't make the BEST decision in his life by posting *links* to bomb-making HOWTOs and related "terrorism" stuff. If you want to criticize the US and enlighten people about subjects like police brutality, IMO a well-written essay with lots of evidence is probably a more effective course of action than building a Draino bomb and screaming "FUCK THE POLICE!" (coming straight out 'da underground...).

    However, from the article it sounded like he didn't try to actually make a bomb. Instead he just posted some hyperlinks. The fact that he got arrested for posting LINKS to material like that is beyond scary. I'm not one of those "information wants to be free at all costs" zealots, but I mean this is shit that any college chem major could figure out on their own. The government shouldn't have a right to arrest and convict this kid just because of his website, no matter HOW offensive or big of a threat the US gov't perceives it.

    Now, back to slacking off at work...

    --

    "Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned for SEGA. ..."

    1. Re:sometimes I feel like moving... by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      Slashdot is now linking to raisethefist.net. Does that make Slashdot guilty by the transitive property? And if a CNN article does not directly link to raisethefist.net but merely mentions the name (allowing someone to find it with Google), is CNN also guilty?

    2. Re:sometimes I feel like moving... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn, I wish I had a dollar for every time one of you candyass Alec Baldwin wannabes promised to leave the country. F*ing go, man, what's stopping you?

  92. Quote from raisethefist.com: by Sune+Posselt · · Score: 1

    one motive
    one market
    one desire

    one mind
    one order
    one control.

    free country?
    one lie.

  93. MOD PARENT UP by Waab · · Score: 1

    It's always nice to see /. mods who don't read the articles.

    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      its also FUCKING ANNOYING when people dont wait until they have mod points to express their appreciation of a post. dumb bastard.

  94. Canada's How Far? by faust13 · · Score: 1

    I hope all of us can show support for Mr. Austin, as this direct affront on the U.S. Constitution transpires. It is wrong to jail anyone for being a revolutionary (didn't Stalin and Hitler do this?). Sherman, I'll play some Atari Teenage Riot loud and hard. Throw your fist up!

    1. Re:Canada's How Far? by BitHerder · · Score: 1

      Just up the road aways. Bye-bye.

    2. Re:Canada's How Far? by faust13 · · Score: 1

      BitHerder,

      It doesn't trouble you one bit that Mr. Austin is being jailed for running just a simple website that has never served up anything more dangerous than ideas. I can't think of a single, better way to "peaceable assemble," which is another Constitutionally guaranteed freedom.

      It is our Constitution which makes the United States of America the greatest country, I don't understand why you would want to make fun of an American, who is for some reason, not protected by our fundamental American freedoms.

      For anyone who cares, CNet has a follow-up and interview here:

      A Webmaster's 25th hour

    3. Re:Canada's How Far? by BitHerder · · Score: 1

      It doesn't bother me in the least. This interview is hysterical. If I had two days to fisk this sorry waste of carbon, I couldn't do it justice. I love the irony of an "anarchist" with a public defender, though. Begging for help, no less.

  95. Wrong about corporations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " The right wing wants to turn the corporations into the socialist government, because corporations have a more facist organizational structore."

    You are wrong on two counts: conservatives are doing nothing to make corporations into government.

    Also, corporations do not have any sort of fascist structure: all participation is voluntary. This negates any idea of force, which is central to fascism.

    1. Re:Wrong about corporations by hesiod · · Score: 1

      > You are wrong on two counts:

      *Troll feed! Get your troll feed here! Just 2 bucks a box. Get 'em while they're hot. Going fast! ... Troll feed here!*

  96. Why stop here? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are dozens of sites like this and In my optinion even worse kind, the hate sites (mostly nazis propaganda). I belive in freedom in speach, but there has to be a limit.

  97. not according to the article by mblase · · Score: 1

    Sez right near the top: "Austin, 20, pleaded guilty in February to distributing information related to explosives."

  98. dont like it? hmmm? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you don't like the rules by which this country choose to govern itself, then get the hell out....

    Move to Canada, or Mexico, or Rwanda....

    No?? I didn't think so.....

    1. Re:dont like it? hmmm? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, STFU. So we are no longer allowed to criticize our government? It is either love it or leave it. Blindly follow it and agree with it or get out. Our country right or wrong.

      I always thought that love it or leave it sounded like something that the brownshirts would have said.

    2. Re:dont like it? hmmm? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I love your logic. I can't get Jelly Babies here in the states, so BY GOD I'd better move to a place I CAN get them!

      Think of the "rules" you're talking about. Dammit, I can't drive on the left side of the road because of our government's "rules". I'm movin' to London!

      However, if the rule was "Homosexual marriages aren't recognized by the government" then I bet you a lot of folks leave (and HAVE left) because of it.

  99. Prohibiting sedition: A fine American tradition by swb · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ahh, a fine tradition. Our Founding Fathers, the guys we're supposed to be so in love with and who supposedly knew so much about liberty, passed the Sedition act in 1798.

    I can't remember the name, but I think there was another act prohibiting advocating the violent overthrow of the government passed during the Red Scare, around 1917.

    The Patriot Act is only the latest iteration of this.

    1. Re:Prohibiting sedition: A fine American tradition by aminorex · · Score: 3, Interesting

      > Our Founding Fathers... passed the Sedition act...

      They also found it unconstitutional.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    2. Re:Prohibiting sedition: A fine American tradition by Cyno · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's it.

      Pass more laws. That'll make us free.

    3. Re:Prohibiting sedition: A fine American tradition by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      Right. 'Cause the Patriot Act does things like lets the FBI check into our library records without obtaining judicial consent, right? Everyone knows that.

      Except it's wrong. The Patriot Act doesn't do what a lot of /. kiddies seem to think it does. Go here for a pretty good explanation of this.

    4. Re:Prohibiting sedition: A fine American tradition by Galvatron · · Score: 1
      I can't remember the name, but I think there was another act prohibiting advocating the violent overthrow of the government passed during the Red Scare, around 1917.

      That's not all you can't remember. The Soviet Union only dates back to October, 1917! The "Red Scare" is commonly used to refer to the period from the late 1940's to the mid 1950's when McCarthyism was rampant. Assuming such an act was passed in 1917, it was no doubt due to WWI, not the Soviets. Indeed, my own Great-Grandfather changed his last name (removing the second n in "-mann") to make it appear less German, due to rising anti-Germanic sentiments in America.

      --
      "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
    5. Re:Prohibiting sedition: A fine American tradition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it's the typical Liberal reaction. Pass more laws. Make it illegal. The biggest supporters of the Patroit act were Liberal Demms. Now it's not convenient. It was a fucked law then, it's fucked law now.

    6. Re:Prohibiting sedition: A fine American tradition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the Red Scare was just after the first world war.

    7. Re:Prohibiting sedition: A fine American tradition by swb · · Score: 1

      As the AC poster noted, the first "Red Scare" was just after WW I and politically had more to do with Anarchists (which I believe are more accurately referred to as "Radical Syndicalists") than with Soviet Communism, which as you point out didn't exist. But the socialist *movement* easily predates WW I; remember, Marx & Engels wrote the Manifesto in the mid 19th Century!

      The Anarchists were considered dangerous because they advocated the violent overthrow of the entire system, replacing it with a Syndicalist economic and political structure. Or at least that's how they were labeled. The infamous picture of the "mad bomber" (dark hair, holding a bowling-ball style bomb) comes from popular imagery of the Anarachist at this time.

      The anti-German sentiment was more a result of WWI itself and the virulent anti-German propaganda at the time. Germany was quite unpopular, not just for the war and the sinking of the Lusitania. It was also fairly easy to couple anti-Anarchist sentiment to the Germans, since German intellectuals had a rich connection to then Socialist/Communist movements -- Marx and Engels were German, Lenin had been exiled in Germany. Socialism was THE socio-political movement among intellectuals everywhere, and Germany was the leading intellectual center of the western world at the time. The popularity of socialism in Germany even influenced Hitler, even though he was opposed to communism, who labeled his party NDSAP (German abbreviation for National German Socialist Worker's Party).

      The "Red Scare" also led a number of important American intellectuals into self-imposed exile in Europe in the 20s -- Gertrude Stein, Henry Miller, and to some extent Ernest Hemingway (although more as a traveller than a socialist) as well. Many of these intellectuals ended up staying to fight the fascists in the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s.

      Well, I remember more than you think...

    8. Re:Prohibiting sedition: A fine American tradition by Cyno · · Score: 1

      I wonder how many of them even read the law before voting on it.

  100. Hypocritical judgement by southpolesammy · · Score: 1

    If this judgement is to hold up in court, then Smith & Wesson need to be held accountable for publishing their
    owner's manual to the S&W 22A pistol online. Otherwise, this is hypocritical.

    Showing people how to do something does not equate to them actually doing it. Yelling "Fire!" in a crowded theater does not equate to telling others what would happen if you did such a thing. There's a difference between intent and deed, and it's being trampled on here.

    --
    Rule #1 -- Politics always trumps technology.
    1. Re:Hypocritical judgement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " If this judgement is to hold up in court, then Smith & Wesson need to be held accountable for publishing their owner's manual to the S&W 22A pistol online. Otherwise, this is hypocritical. "

      Can you explain how this is the same thing.
      It's not so you can't. So your hypocritical. You just hate guns, anyone who owns them and can't pass a chance up to vent your bulshit. Last time I looked S@W wasn't calling for the overthrow of the U.S. or any other government. This stupid litle fucj head was calling for the violent overthrow of the government AND linking to explosives. Putting them togeher is considered criminal. He is lucky he didn't attempt to construct a device and get busted. He would be looking at 20 years for sure then.

  101. What really bothers me about this? The hypocracy. by JayBlalock · · Score: 1

    Could someone explain to me why linking to bomb-making instructions is a prison-worthy offense, while standing up on a pulpit and praying for God (or one of his little helpers) to smite specific members of the Supreme Court is perfectly acceptible? One could make a real Constitutional argument for the former by combining the 1st and 2nd amendments. The latter is a lot harder to justify, except of course, "Well, HE'S popular and too many people like him."

    --
    Bush: He's Liberal in all the wrong ways.
  102. The dems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Bullshit. This government is growing just as fast (if not faster) with the republicans as with the dems"

    Yet, each of the Dems running for President want to increase the size of government even faster.

    "and are actively taking more rights away than anybody since Roosevelt."

    I've not lost any rights lately. Have you? Of course not.

    ((raygun's being the worst)"

    Who was that? We've never had anyone in office with that name. If you are thinking of Reagan, Clinton actually increase the national debt by a few millions more than under Reagan.

    1. Re:The dems by Thu+Anon+Coward · · Score: 1

      I've not lost any rights lately. Have you? Of course not.


      how about the right to travel freely around the country on an airplane without having my bung-hole searched for things that might actually help terrorists cause the plane to crash? like nail clippers or tweezers (which is why I carry a knife made of ballistic nylon; totally undetectable w/o sticking your hand in my underwear waistband and grabbing my sack). either that or the TSA is just a bunch of queers who inherited the moron mindset from their big-brother butt-buddies at the FBI. his name wasn't Hoover for nothing.....

      --



      I'm good with numbers - .45, 7.62, 9.....
    2. Re:The dems by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      It's also interesting to point out that it's unconstitutional to require that you provide Identification in order to travel by air.

    3. Re:The dems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've not lost any rights lately. Have you? Of course not
      Actually, you have. You just do not realize it. In your mind, it is just others who are are rightlfully losing their rights.

  103. It' Called Treason, Folks by pjdoland · · Score: 1

    Says the Constitution of the United States of America:

    Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort. No person shall be convicted of treason unless on the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act, or on confession in open court.

    The Congress shall have power to declare the punishment of treason, but no attainder of treason shall work corruption of blood, or forfeiture except during the life of the person attainted.

    You could probably make a good claim that 1) linking to bomb-making instructions and 2) advocacy of the ovethrow of the government constitutes "aid" to enemies of the United States.

    Treason is explicitly defined as a capital crime. The dude is pretty lucky he only ended up with a year in jail--not to say that he should have.

    --
    -- "The reward of suffering is experience." - Aeschylus
    1. Re:It' Called Treason, Folks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And misleading the people of the United States in order to misappropriate a billion dollars a month isn't treason? How about paying the Taliban $40 million dollars in 2002 and then decrying them as "one of the most tyrannical regimes on Earth"? Maybe allowing Osama Bin Ladin to escape rather than sending in SpecOps teams to get him?
      I'd say there are much bigger criminals to fry than some idiot cracker.

  104. we don't have these freedoms by chocolatetrumpet · · Score: 1

    The constitution is a bit of a .. well.. an untruth.

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
    Try being a mid-easterner after 9/11!

    or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press;
    Try saying that you want to kill the present some time, and mean it. See what happens.

    or the right of the people peaceably to assemble,
    As long as you have a government sanctioned permit.

    and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
    Now, don't go being unpatriotic! You're with us, right?

    --
    Spoon not. Fork, or fork not. There is no spoon.
    1. Re:we don't have these freedoms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Try being a mid-easterner after 9/11!

      Congress made a law outlawing the practice of Islam? So why are there so many Mosques near me that have throngs of happy worshipers?

    2. Re:we don't have these freedoms by Erwos · · Score: 1

      "Try being a mid-easterner after 9/11!" [presumably in America]

      The fact that you blame the government for the rise in hate crimes against Arabs is stunning. Isn't this the same government which was constantly urging the public to NOT retaliate against people of Middle-Eastern descent after 9/11?

      The fact of the matter is this: some people are bigoted idiots, and always will be. Blaming the government for their existence is foolish.

      "Try saying that you want to kill the [president] some time, and mean it. See what happens."

      No argument here that the president gets some special protection that is constitutionally dubious, but I question why freedom of speech gives you the right to advocate violence against people. I'm not sure if the founders of our nation had that particular use in mind - in fact, I'm pretty sure they did not.

      "As long as you have a government sanctioned permit."

      Freedom of assembly does not mean you have the freedom to assemble anywhere at any time. What's unconstitutional is for the authorities to never grant you a permit because they don't like what you're saying. This is pretty rare - even the KKK can march down main street these days.

      In other words, a strictly literal interpretation of the constitution doesn't happen, but I believe we are still (mostly) within the spirit. Every presidency makes a mistake with it - remember the Alien and Sedition Acts during the Civil War? The Patriot Act is the same thing. A mistake, but not one that'll destroy the Constitution, IMHO.

      -Erwos

      --
      Plausible conjecture should not be misrepresented as proof positive.
    3. Re:we don't have these freedoms by Tongo · · Score: 1

      It is not the consititution that is an untruth, it is the fact that we have willingly elected officials into office that are willing to tread all over the Constitution. I'm not only talking about the Patriot Act (put forth by conservitives), but also the limits that goverment is trying to put on gun rights (put forth by liberals). Another problem our country is facing is thef act that the judicial system is now MAKING laws, not interpreting them like they should be doing. Only the Legistlature (be it local, state, or federal) is supposed to make law. Enough of my rant.

  105. 1st Amendment = Responsibility by SportyGeek · · Score: 1

    I am not familiar with the site, nor the person in question. Advocating the overthrow of the US government is not tolerable by any means. Advocating a change in politics and policies would fall under freedom of speech. When lives are threatened, yes they are threatened by an overthrow, that freedom of speech is abused. Like the person who looked at the situation from a European POV, freedom of speech comes with responsibility. I know I am going to get flamed for this but: for all those who think this is a violation of the 1st amendment, do you agree that arresting a muslim-american on the basis that they created a website that advocates overthrowing the US government is a violation of their rights granted by the 1st amendment?

  106. Link this bastards! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wilson said he also may not associate with anyone from a group that "espouses physical force as a means of change."

    I guess this means that he won't be able to associate with the U.S. government either?

  107. It is spelled labor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " Fucking Cheap-Labour Conservative."

    No. I am a "real value of the work" conservative. If the labor is cheap, pay cheap. If it is worth more, pay more.

    "You just want to keep others for earning money, so you can keep what power you have"

    No, I want everyone to earn the value of their work, and keep more of it by lowering taxes.

  108. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by c718333 · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Austin was arrested with other protesters at the World Economic Forum in New York in February 2002 on charges of disorderly conduct and unlawful assembly. "

    WTF are you talking about? Oh yeah, you didn't RTFA. [snip] He wasn't just preaching.. he was practicing what he preached. Therefore, he posed a REAL threat, not a virtual one.

    It has become increasingly difficult to practice our freedom of peaceful protest, so don't be so quick to write this guy off as a "real threat".

    I was at the WEF protest in NYC, too. Cops were turning some people away from the protest, pinning other people behind barricades and not letting them leave the protest, packing hundreds into some pens while leaving other pens with only a handful of people. Numerous people who disagreed were arrested. One cop nearly pushed me over when he hit me in the back with his club when I stopped to ask another cop for directions (politely) as we were leaving. . .

  109. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Disorderly conduct and unlawful assembly (ie being in a protest) is a REAL threat ?

    now WTF are YOU talking about ?

  110. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by _bug_ · · Score: 1

    This is far from being about overthrowing the government.

    This is about teaching how to make explosives with the intent be that those who learn how to use that knowledge against the government.

    But the real kicker is that, according to the search warrant, Austin was flying under the radar until he defaced a couple web sites. Then an FBI investigator started looking into Austin and found his site raisethefist.com.

    From that site Austin secured himself a second charge under 18 USC 842 (p)(2)(A) which makes it unlawful to provide information about explosives when the intent is that such knowledge be used to committ a crime.

  111. Why did everyone change their minds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    A few years ago, the majority of people commenting on this story were in favor of putting this guy in jail. Now we've got people commenting about "free speech" and how The Man is to blame.

    The reality is that this case hinges upon a "clear and present danger". Here's a reprint of a comment posted when the story first broke:

    Well, regardless of what Sherman expects, for the past half century the Supreme Court has routinely expected the government to do just that. The phrase that applies here is "clear and present danger".

    The phrase first came about in 1919 from the Schenck v. United States case. But it didn't really have any teeth until 1957 and Yates v. United States, when the Court ruled that, to quote my old book on the law of public communications, "a conspiracy to advocate the overthrow of the government was too far removed from immediate danger to be punished."

    The real precedent used nowadays is Brandenburg v. Ohio, (1969) in which the Court overturned the conviction of some KKK members for advocating "unlawful methods of industrial or political reform", then a crime under Ohio state law. To be constitutional, the Court said, a statute can only ban speech that "is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to produce such actions."

    The Court backed this precedent up in 1973 with Hess v. Indiana, in which an antiwar demonstrator had been convicted for shouting "We'll take the fucking street later." The Court ruled that this "amounted to nothing more than advocacy of illegal action at some indefinite future time".

    So, unless what Sherman put up on the Web was really both meant and likely to produce immediate illegal action, or the current Supreme Court is ready to overturn this precedent (very possible, given its obvious partisanship and corruption), he hasn't broken the law by advocating overthrowing the federal government.

  112. What about? by ianjk · · Score: 1

    Chemistry departments, class notes posted online, etc... Should be the same info in a more detailed form.

  113. Bzzt! Wrong about sneak and peak by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    "A "sneak and peek" warrant authorizes law enforcement officers to enter private premises without the occupant's permission or knowledge and without informing the occupant that such a search was conducted."

    Nope. The situation still REQUIRES that the occupant be informed. You got it wrong, no surprise.

    " Fourth Amendment? Who needs it, "

    We do. And it stays intact, with "reasonable" and "warrants" still required.

  114. How to make a pipe bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First, you're going to need a steel pipe and two end caps. (I suggest not buying these items at the same store.) The pipe shouldn't be longer than six times its diameter. Put on some rubber gloves and wash all the pieces (especially the threads) with rubbing alcohol and let them all dry.

    NEVER handle the pipe with your bare hands, or you'll go straight to jail. If you haven't been watching the Discovery Channel lately, forensic scientists are getting pretty damn clever, and they'll bust your ass on the real.

    Drill a hole into one of the end caps - this is where your fuse goes. You can get a fast, reliable fuse at your hobby shop for about 5 bucks per 10 feet. They use it for model rockets. If you want to make one yourself you can (carefully) grind up about 1000 of those white headed strike-anywhere matches, and glue the granules to a piece of durable cord. Make sure you coat it really well, or it will just burn half-way and stop. Give yourself a good 6 to 8 inches, or you're going to blow yourself in half...HAHAHAHAHA!
    Screw on the end cap without a hole, and fill the pipe with your favorite fast burning black powder. If you don't have any thermite on hand, just empty out a shitload of shotgun shells. Hell, toss in the buckshot also. Fill it up leaving some space at the top, about 1/8 of the length of pipe.

    Now, take your fuse and stick it into the powder roughly 1/3 of its length. Pack the remaining space in the pipe with non-moisturized kleenex or toilet paper, allowing the fuse to hang out the top of the pipe. Thread the fuse through the hole in the second end cap, and then screw on the cap. Make sure there are no granules of powder in the threads - the friction and pressue of twisting on the cap may ignite the powder, and you'll blow yourself into a million pieces. Once the second end cap is in place, you have yourself a pipe bomb. Light it, and run like hell.

  115. and we should feel sorry for this guy because?? by dh003i · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If he wants to argue against the government, fine. I agree with him there -- our government is pretty fucked up. Stealing from the people under the euphemism of taxes and inflation is wrong. If he wants to link to pages on making bombs, fine, so long as he does not actively encourage people to kill others (it is illegal to try to persuade others to take illegal action, or to incite a riot).

    However, this guy did quite a bit more than that. He hacked into people's computers. He hacked into military computers. This constitutes a clear and obvious case of what is analagous to tresspassing -- violating another person's property (in the case of the military computers, violating the property of the US taxpayers).

    This guy is clearly a danger to those around him. If he doesn't like some government policy, or the governmnet itself, fine. He can criticize as harshly as he wants. However, unless his rights are directly threatened, he can't take up force. What if this nutcase reads something one of you wrote, and decide that he doesn't like what you believe in, or doesn't like you, so that -- he thinks -- gives him the right to hack into your computer and fuck up your data?

    So, why exactly is it that we're supposed to feel sorry for this guy? Maybe the punishment is a little out of line with the crime. 4 months in prison was recommended; the judge gave 1 year. But justice is an inherently subjective, not objective, matter. Trying to nail down the "just" sentence to within a couple of months -- or maybe even years, in the case of more severe crimes -- is a matter of art, not science.

  116. CNN is leaveing some things out here by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    First off, back when he was arrested (check the link) it was also because he'd defaced websites and was inciting people to violence. This, I believe, is what he actually got nailed on. They dropped the bomb materials charge since that is BS and is protected free speech. However threats against people and against the government are not, likewise calling peopel to violence is not.

    If I stand around and yell about what an idiot you are, and how much I hate you I am excersizing my right to freedom of speech, if in a retarded manner. However if I call you up and make death threats that is NOT prtected and I can be arrested for it. Also if I stand around and try to get people to act violently towards you, that is not protected and I can be arrested.

    You can't use your right to freedom of expression to try and infringe on my rights (in this case the right to life).

  117. There are no Republicrats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are no Republicrats. You are lumping together two parties that differ across the board most issues that matter to Americans.

    "The Republicrats have all got it wrong. One side wants economic freedom but legislated morality."

    Both sides legislate morality, since every single law ever passed dows that. However, the Republicans want to do this less, so I will prefer them for the time being.

    1. Re:There are no Republicrats by Coilgun · · Score: 1

      I bunch them together because they both share the same fatal flaw in their platfoms. Democrats are for personal/social freedom but against economic freedom. Republicans are for economic freedom (to a certain extent at least), but against personal/social freedom. Neither one of them is consistant in their philosophy, and as I said, they share the same inconsistancy, hence I group them together.

      --
      That is all. Carry on. </transmission>
    2. Re:There are no Republicrats by DrFrob · · Score: 1
      Both sides legislate morality, since every single law ever passed dows that. However, the Republicans want to do this less, so I will prefer them for the time being.

      Laws have little to do with morality outside of a theocracy. For example, it's unlawful to speed on an open highway; however, it's in no way immoral if you're not doing it wrecklessly. Laws provide a framework for people to live under in relative peace. Morals get mixed up with laws when people belonging to a dominant religous attitude start governing based on their own personal morals.

  118. this reminds me by minus_273 · · Score: 1

    of the time the clinton admiistration had a anti abotion website shut down for listing abortionsts names and cossing them out when killed... free speech.. but liberals belived it incited volence.. sowrd cuts both ways

    --
    The war with islam is a war on the beast
    The war on terror is a war for peace
    1. Re:this reminds me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So then, you are saying that hit lists are supported by free speech?

      Careful what examples you use to support your opinions because the same assumptions you make to reach your destination, they are equally potent in the reverse direction.

      And has the liberal cartel even commented on this yet? You assume that freedom of speech is a liberal ideal, and by implying that only liberals would defend free speech you are saying that conservatives would not support it?

      And BTW: People who include the statement "Liberal" or "Conservative" in an argument rather than identify a specific source or party, look like idiots.

    2. Re:this reminds me by minus_273 · · Score: 1

      no stupid AC, i am saying, there is a double stanbdard in definition of free speech here on /. and yes libreals were very vocal about how the website was terrorsit

      --
      The war with islam is a war on the beast
      The war on terror is a war for peace
  119. Re:The guy is a fascist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    " I may disagree with what you have to say, but I shall defend, to the death, your right to say it." Voltaire (1694-1778)

  120. Well by Upright+Joe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Keep in mind, before we jump all over the potential violation of his right to freedom of speech, he chose not to defend himself. It was his decision to go for a lighter sentence in a plea bargain rather than take the risk of being found guilty. You can't fault the government for that. Perhaps you can fault his publicly appointed defender or the judge but in this case, the law wasn't even tested.

  121. Personally, I'm GLAD he got in trouble! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am sure there's lots of kooky liberals out there which are going to burn me for this, but I am telling it how it is. These "rights" everyone here is talking about is just a bunch of balogna! Everyone acts as if they mean more than anything, but the fact remains, they were "granted" by a troup of Godless men, 200 years ago.

    Only Christ the Lord can give you rights. He gives you the right to be a good, obedient servant of His, and in return, He gives you the right to Heaven. If you do not obey Him, then you earn the right to an enternity of death in hell. If God had seen fit that this young man should go free, God would have come into the judge and told the judge to go easy. But He didn't, Christ knew this boy had to be punished, so He directed the judge to lay down the law.

    Trying to go off and do your own thing is only going to get you destroyed! All you leftist goons are only going to get yourselves sent to hell by concerning yourself with free speech and these so-called "rights" that have only lead towards more immorality and ungodliness in the United States of America.

    The United States of America is a wholesome, Christian nation with a good Christian man at the helm! (Sadly, there are some women in the government, but eventually The Lord will see to it they are put down and replaced with good men. Women cannot be godlike because they are women and the source of sin.) By virtue that the government is lead by Christians, ergo The Lord, it cannot do any wrong because Christ the Lord is perfect and without sin. So, if the government of the United States of America says: "this is how it is", then you had best accept it as Gospel!

    So hopefully, you liberals, libertarians, whatever you call yourselves, will see the light and realize there's only three ways you can have "rights":

    1) Obey The Lord and the Word of the Lord (so read the Bible!)
    2) Obey those who The Lord places into power, like George Walker Bush, a good Christian man
    3) Stand up and fight back against people who go against The Lord's nation: America

    And if you're a woman, you can must also remember that the man who took you as his wife is your closest link to God, so be sure to remember steps 1 and 2. Obey the man who took you as his wife as you would obey Christ the Lord!

    Don't forget that you should join the military (if you're a man). God needs soldiers in His spirtual war against the evil of the world. It's a holy battle we, as Americans, are fighting. It's good to know the army of God is marching against all those Muslims and other nonbelievers.

    Now, would you all please get off your liberal high-horses and forget this atheist, constitutional nonsense. The only document you need for good, Christian living is the Bible!

    1. Re:Personally, I'm GLAD he got in trouble! by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 1

      A masterful troll. But a troll nonetheless. As ingenious as you may think it is to take the side of your opponent and hyperbole it out of the park, there are some who will see it for what it is. BTW- I grew up with a Christian Conservative family and I know how they think and this just ain't it- it's more like a silly caricature of all the wacky beliefs usually found buried beneath the surface all rolled into one guy. That almost never happens. When it does, people die. Usually so does the wacko.
      But, again, masterful troll. fucker.

  122. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by Havokmon · · Score: 1
    So you think that a Disorderly Conduct and Unlawful assembly charge warrants a ONE YEAR sentence?

    He got 4 months. Either he already served 8 month being a pain in the ass, or the rest is probation.

    Do you believe that the US WEF protesters were trying to commit sedition?

    I have no idea. Do you believe abortion protestors are there to kill the doctors?

    Everybody has their own agenda. If he was 'REALLY BAD' I'm sure he would have gotten more time.

    --
    "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
  123. This is a precipice we may have already crossed by FreeUser · · Score: 1

    But the word "peaceably" is not attached to the right to free speech or press. It is only attached to the right for the people to peaceably assmble (ie, it's ok to stand outside Congress and protest something, but not ok to start a riot over it).

    That is exactly right.

    Not only is 'peacably' applied solely to the right to assemble (i.e. you don't have the right to assemble with an army outside the whitehouse and threaten, or attempt, a putsch), the notion of even trying to apply the word peacably to speach or the press is doomed to catastrophic failure (either for the one trying to create the definition or, more likely, the no-longer-even-remotely-free society to which it is applied).

    We're not talking about a slippery slope here, folks, we're talking about already being in the nadir of the valley if we attempt such a thing.

    Ask yourself, what exactly is "peaceful" speach?

    Is advocating the murder of a president peaceful speach?

    How about advocating the overthrow of a government?

    How about advocating the removal of a congressman? From office, that is.

    How about advocating mass protests to raise public awareness of an unjust, preemtive war?

    How about shouting obsceneties to the cops beating your friends with billy clubs during the protest you participated in?

    How about particularly colorful descriptions of corrupt government employees or politicians, such as Senator "Disney" Hollings, particularly a description wishing ill upon such for the harm they've caused society and/or millions of innocents.

    How about screaming obscenities to your spouse in during one of your more colorful fights?

    Limit speach to only "peaceful" speach, and you go well beyond 'Disneyfying' human discourse, you eliminate it altogether. Even by reasonable definitions of 'peacable' Elmer Fudd, Bugs Bunny, and the rest of the Looney Toons would fail.

    As soon as we impose that constraint on our speech, or our press, we have lost the freedom completely. There will be no slippery slope, merely an unscalable cliff we'll be at the bottom of, indefinitely, until less than peacable action corrects the injustice (be it in 10 years or 100) and restores the constitution.

    If we haven't lost this fundamental freedom (along with all the others the Drug Warriors and Nationalists have already shredded over the last two decades), we are on the brink of doing so, and undoing that loss will be extremely costly and take many, many years, perhaps decades, of struggle (peaceful and otherwise).

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
    1. Re:This is a precipice we may have already crossed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Inciting people to violence is not a protected form of speech. "Free speech" is not an absolute stone wall upon which you can support every comment without limitation. So, going to your list:

      advocating the murder of a president
      Murder, being violent, removes this from protected speech.

      advocating the overthrow of a government?
      Depends-do you mean 'vote the bastards out of office' (ok) or 'kill em all' (not)

      advocating the removal of a congressman? From office
      Just fine. Witness Califonia.

      advocating mass protests to raise public awareness of an unjust, preemtive war?
      Just fine, assuming you're not also advocating they bring their window-breakers and car-bombs.

      shouting obsceneties to the cops beating your friends with billy clubs during the protest you participated in?
      Obscenities, ok. It turns out that racial slurs though are a grey area that many US states may prosecute as some kind of hate-crime.

  124. Apology of Terrorism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This reminds me of a few years back when Spain was being critiziced from the US because of having "apology of terrorism" classified as a crime. "Free speech should never be a crime" was the argument then. Well, sadly it took 9/11, but it seems that finally reality is winning over naive idealism.

    Free speech is a nice ideal but it needs to be exercised within certain limits. For example, a criminal group should not be allowed to publish a "hitlist" and have it protected as "free speech".

    The right to life needs to be protected, also within reasonable limits. When there is a clash between different "rights" that both need to be protected, you just have to draw the line somewhere.

  125. This loser goes wayback .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone interested in determining for themselves can take a look at the wayback machine. (http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://raisethefist. com) IMO, It looks like a lonely kid with not enough friends, and a personal vendetta with authority. Conspiracy laden, garbage. In my judgement, this guy seems to put enough time into this; that in light of the surrounding world events - you'd be a fucking idiot to publish this stuff and not think that it will bring much attention to ones self.

    Sorry bud, you're a moron. Rott for 4 months. Be thankfull you're not dead. (In another country - you probably would be)

  126. Reds under the bed? by NewtonsLaw · · Score: 2

    When I was in the USA last month, a surprising number of people admitted to me that they were very concerned about the way their civil rights and liberties were being eroded in the name of the war against terrorism.

    The same people also told me however, that they would not go on the record with their comments because they feared being labeled unpatriotic.

    It seems that issue of patriotism has been raised to such importance in the USA that the government is now able to use it as an effective tool to silence any anti-government (pro constitution) sentiment by the people.

    It's about time US citizens woke up and realised that they've been suffering the "thin end of the wedge" for some time now and if they don't remind the government (in a non violent manner) that they are elected to SERVE and not to rule then a powderkeg situation will result.

    Surely the USA can learn from its own history -- doesn't anyone remember (or care to remember) the McCarthy years? Replace "communists" with "terrorists" and you'll find that, 50 years on, there's very little difference.

    1. Re:Reds under the bed? by Warlover · · Score: 1


      Replace "communists" with "terrorists" and you'll find that, 50 years on, there's very little difference.
      ====
      I don't recall very many communists pledging to kill our civilians in the streets. And then, successfully making good on that pledge.

      There's the difference.

      Admittedly, "Terror" will be used in any case that may further the government's aims and such blatant political hackery must be watched and denounced. But does anyone remember Tim McVeigh? The point was never whether or not he had valid political opinions. The point was that he was an extremely toxic individual. If he had a website advocating the use of fuel-fert bombs on his political enemies, I would hope the feds would have had enough common sense to haul him away by his ankles before he got nice and ambitious...

    2. Re:Reds under the bed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well I for one am glad I live in a country that will defend it's self unlike 99% of Europe. After the Islamic peoples have taken over your homeland and enslaved you under Shira law you will lament that you wished you had been more aware and defended yourselves. But Europe is mostly left wing pussies. You are afraid to "offend" some other nation by using your soverign right to self defense. But you can't expect much from the Old Europe. The US could overthrow it's government it has the guns. Europe however has no such history.
      Most US citizend don't like comunists or islamisists no matter what our goverment says or does. Now you know why teh government and the socialists want to get all the guns. Popular revolution doesn't equal the acts of a Tim McVey or some anarchist looser who belongs in jail.

    3. Re:Reds under the bed? by cs668 · · Score: 1

      I would have to say that those people are wimps.

      At work we have heated discussions where many people make the point that the Patriot Act is eroding their rights. They can be overheard by all of their co-workers and by their employer. None of them have been persecuted for being un-patriotic yet.

  127. Freedom does have it's limits by akiaki007 · · Score: 1

    You are not allowed to say "I am going to kill the president." Why? Because it will get you arrested. According to the law that is a threat.

    As is asking for people to gather to overthrow the government. You will get silences, while this isn't quite the same as a threat to the 'Leader of the Free World' it is a threat.

    If you want to do this legally, do what most other people have done. Join The Green Party. That's a legal political movement, instead of something like a cu.

    Also, giving out information on how to construct illegal devices will flag you. Weather you like it or not.

    So, in short, all you over zealous /.'ers think that this case should be thrown out of court and him set free. Gimme a break. You do something that is going to get you arrested, then don't be surprized when it happens. There are many ways to go about doing things. Often the same thing can be accomplished using their own tools (politics) instead of something rash.

    --
    "Time is long and life is short, so begin to live while you still can." -EV
    1. Re:Freedom does have it's limits by Dr.+Sp0ng · · Score: 1

      That's a legal political movement, instead of something like a cu.

      Coup, not cu. For cryin' out loud.

  128. Who was this guys lawyer... by edanshekar · · Score: 1

    Lionel Hutz?

  129. BUCK GILL FATES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    BUCK GILL FATES!!!

  130. Uh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's one thing to say the sytem sucks and needs to be changed an another to say "HAY GUYS LETS BLOW UP THE GVT AM I RITE?" It's very much illegal to threaten the life of the President and what he was advocating wasn't much different. I don't see the problem with the ruling.

  131. Anarchist Cookbook is still avaiable by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    In print, and from at least one major distributor, Amazon.com.

  132. Law about advocating overthrow by whorfin · · Score: 1

    This is not in the constitution itself, but is the US Code covering advocating the overthrow of the US government.

    http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/casecode/uscodes/18/ parts/i/chapters/115/sections/section_2385.html

    I don't know about you, but all my quibbles with life here are relatively minor, compared to what they would be in most other places in the planet, and I don't think it's a good idea to let people run around taking up arms in revolution against the US.

    I think that it's perfectly reasonable to jail those who advocate violent overthrow of the government, and I hardly believe that doing so makes the US a 'police state'...It simply makes us a nation of laws.

    --
    Laugh while you can, monkey-boy!
    1. Re:Law about advocating overthrow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see it as reasonable to jail those that advocate the overthrow of the Government. You can jail people that attempt to overthrow the Government. Punishing someone for speech, that isn't even remotely harmful, is rather much like any third-world dictatorship.

      I don't know about you, but I'd rather have a nation of laws, for and by the people, that do not violate the spirit of the words of the Constitution. And police state can simply be a nation of laws.

  133. These rights are hogwash. by Faithful+Believer · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I am sure there's lots of kooky liberals out there which are going to burn me for this, but I am telling it how it is. These "rights" everyone here is talking about is just a bunch of balogna! Everyone acts as if they mean more than anything, but the fact remains, they were "granted" by a troup of Godless men, 200 years ago.

    Only Christ the Lord can give you rights. He gives you the right to be a good, obedient servant of His, and in return, He gives you the right to Heaven. If you do not obey Him, then you earn the right to an enternity of death in hell. If God had seen fit that this young man should go free, God would have come into the judge and told the judge to go easy. But He didn't, Christ knew this boy had to be punished, so He directed the judge to lay down the law.

    Trying to go off and do your own thing is only going to get you destroyed! All you leftist goons are only going to get yourselves sent to hell by concerning yourself with free speech and these so-called "rights" that have only lead towards more immorality and ungodliness in the United States of America.

    The United States of America is a wholesome, Christian nation with a good Christian man at the helm! (Sadly, there are some women in the government, but eventually The Lord will see to it they are put down and replaced with good men. Women cannot be godlike because they are women and the source of sin.) By virtue that the government is lead by Christians, ergo The Lord, it cannot do any wrong because Christ the Lord is perfect and without sin. So, if the government of the United States of America says: "this is how it is", then you had best accept it as Gospel!

    So hopefully, you liberals, libertarians, whatever you call yourselves, will see the light and realize there's only three ways you can have "rights":

    1) Obey The Lord and the Word of the Lord (so read the Bible!)
    2) Obey those who The Lord places into power, like George Walker Bush, a good Christian man
    3) Stand up and fight back against people who go against The Lord's nation: America

    And if you're a woman, you can must also remember that the man who took you as his wife is your closest link to God, so be sure to remember steps 1 and 2. Obey the man who took you as his wife as you would obey Christ the Lord!

    Don't forget that you should join the military (if you're a man). God needs soldiers in His spirtual war against the evil of the world. It's a holy battle we, as Americans, are fighting. It's good to know the army of God is marching against all those Muslims and other nonbelievers.

    Now, would you all please get off your liberal high-horses and forget this atheist, constitutional nonsense. The only document you need for good, Christian living is the Bible!

    --

    I'm presenting my viewpoint. If you disagree, discuss it, don't moderate.

    1. Re:These rights are hogwash. by litewoheat · · Score: 1

      Satan Rulez Doode. Iron Maiden sez so and that's good enough for me.

    2. Re:These rights are hogwash. by eweiland · · Score: 1

      "troup of Godless men"

      From the Declaration of Independence:

      When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

      We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness...

      Godless, I think not.

    3. Re:These rights are hogwash. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod this up...

    4. Re:These rights are hogwash. by goatan · · Score: 0

      WOW that is either the buggest pisstake ever (in which case well done v. funny) or your absolutley insane

      --
      Saying Apple is better than MS is like saying Botulism is better than rabies.

    5. Re:These rights are hogwash. by Faithful+Believer · · Score: 0

      Nothing involving The LORD God is "funny", son. You had better wake up and see the Truth before you wind up in hell!

      --

      I'm presenting my viewpoint. If you disagree, discuss it, don't moderate.

    6. Re:These rights are hogwash. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, he's just from Missouri

  134. The Founding Fathers on Violent Overthrows by Napalm+Boy · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The thought police are here. You say 'oh well he wants to overtrough the gov't, that's BAD(tm)'.

    So did your founding fathers. Fucking Americans.


    That's actually not true at all. The Founding Fathers were all for violent overthrow of governments, so long as the government in question wasn't a good one. Remember, they actually went and did that. In the Declaration of Independece, they wrote:
    We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. --That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.
    This is why they included the second amendment in the Bill of Rights of the Constitution; in the minds of the Founding Fathers, the people should be able to take up arms against an oppressive government if necessary.
    --
    Well, the door was open...
    1. Re:The Founding Fathers on Violent Overthrows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at the last hundred and fifty years of worldwide violent military despotism, combine that with the steady and relentless repression of rights, civil and human, in your own country, then tell me the Government of the United States of America is not oppressive.

      Can you honestly say that the stolen government of George W. Bush is a good one?

      Yes, I expect to be modded into oblivion as a troll. No, I don't give a fuck. I am sick to death of patriotic idiots displaying willful ignorance about the actions of their own government and its consequenses. Again.

      Your founding fathers, as you say, set up those provisions for a reason. If this is not a good time to be asking whether this is a good time for rebellion or not, then when will be?

      You have had your Kristallnacht, guys. History repeats itself, the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce.

  135. Oh Shit... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Without thinking, I clicked the link. Oh man...

    Who wants to be that in thirty minutes, a giant police force will knock on each of our doors, taking away our precious computers, and sentencing us to jail? :)

    Relax, it's a joke.

  136. You're WAY off. by jbottero · · Score: 0

    The government has basically forbid this guy from criticizing the system.

    No, the government has forbid his to show people how to blow things up and kill people.

    The newspapers and WWW are full of people criticizing the government, very few of which are in jail. People who advicate murderous violence (you know, bombs that kill people?) have stepped over the line, and are a dnager to everyone.

    When your mother / boyfriend / child / drinking buddie get smeared all over a sidewalk, come back and blab some more on the "freedom" to blow things up.

    1. Re:You're WAY off. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People who advicate murderous violence (you know, bombs that kill people?) have stepped over the line, and are a dnager to everyone.

      No they haven't. People that engage in murderous violence have crossed the line. Telling people how to make bombs out of shit around their house is perfectly fine. Advocating violence is fine. Engaging in violence is where the line exists. Laws that attempt to preempt violence by promoting fascism are retarded, and the people that support them more so.

    2. Re:You're WAY off. by jbottero · · Score: 1

      Telling people how to make bombs out of shit around their house is perfectly fine. Advocating violence is fine. Engaging in violence is where the line exists. Laws that attempt to preempt violence by promoting fascism are retarded, and the people that support them more so.

      So show people how to build something that has no other purpose than to kill and destroy is alright? Show this to people who are inclined to actually carry out such things? No. No, no.

      You ideas are strictly those of an unrealistic ideolog and nearly sociopathic in how little empathy they give to possible victims of the violence this young man espouses and encourages.

    3. Re:You're WAY off. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Telling people how to make bombs out of shit around their house is perfectly fine. Advocating violence is fine.

      What??? Are you kidding? Did you even look at that before you typed it? Was it fine for the people who died in Oklahoma City? Give me a break. No matter what your cause is that doesn't make any sense whatsoever.

    4. Re:You're WAY off. by joFFeman · · Score: 1

      > People who advicate murderous violence (you know, bombs that kill people?)
      > have stepped over the line, and are a dnager to everyone.

      do i have to even mention how much that sounds like the current president?

      --
      "Life is great; without it, you'd be dead." -Harmony Korine
    5. Re:You're WAY off. by searchr · · Score: 1

      Yes. Yes, yes. Talk is supposed to be protected. Instructions are supposed to be protected. INFORMATION is SUPPOSED to be PROTECTED. INFORMATION is dangerous. denying access to information is way, WAY more dangerous.

  137. No sympathy by rjamestaylor · · Score: 1
    Disagreeing with the government is a time-honored tradition in this country. Promoting and enabling the violent overthrow of the government is wrong and should be punished.

    If you really think the government needs to be violently overthrown, as in the American Revolution of 1776, don't expect the current government to assist your efforts.

    Speak your peace (not "piece," by the way), change minds, reform the system, vote your conscience, protest, seek redress for grievances -- but do not expect sympathy for promoting violent acts.

    --
    -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
  138. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    EXACTLY! This guy is a shitbird and up untill now, the law had no way to deal with this new kind of threat. Good riddence to some obviously bad rubbish.

  139. For all the people looking for the hacking angle. by bons · · Score: 4, Informative

    Google on Sherman Austin and Hacking

    Pick your own site.

    "According to the FBI, Austin allegedly defaced at least five commercial Web sites since 1999 using the nickname "Ucaun." On three of the sites, Austin left behind a hacking program named troop.cgi that was designed to attempt to log in to a computer operated by the U.S. Army, the FBI affidavit stated."

    "Austin has also admitted to hacking into a number of websites to post anti-government messages."

    For those claiming this is a free speech issue alone, last I checked freedom of speech didn't include freedom of breaking and entering someone else's computer system in order to speak from their platform.

  140. Free Speech For All! by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Unless you say something we dont agree with...

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Free Speech For All! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the issue here is the link to bomb making instructions. After all, that is what he is being grilled about. Now I'm all for free speech and everything, and perhaps this judgment is a bit too extreme.

      However, there is something to be said about responsibility with freedom. Perhaps it would be better to illustrate this point to Sherman by setting up a website dedicated to free speech and his life.

      What better way to express responsibility and power then to have a 'harmless' website that gives 'harmless' instructions of when Sherman is home or not, what kind of locks and how secure his home is, documented instructions and pictures of where he goes, perhaps through the site of a targeting telescope. 'Instructions' on how easy it would be to anonymously 'pick' him off, steal his stuff, determine the maximum distance between he and EMS/Police services, etc. etc.

      Privacy rights? Screw that, its all about free speech baby...Freedom!

  141. See prior Slashdot Stories by JohnDenver · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here and Here

    The kid was hacking websites (and attempted to hack military computers according to logs on his computer) JUST AFTER congress passed the PATRIOT act which equated:

    Politically Motivated Hacking = Terrorism

    Stupid kid was asking for trouble.

    --
    "Communism is like having one [local] phone company " - Lenny Bruce
    1. Re:See prior Slashdot Stories by jbottero · · Score: 1

      The kid was hacking websites (and attempted to hack military computers according to logs on his computer) JUST AFTER congress passed the PATRIOT act which equated...

      Sorry, no... None of those links nor their source talks about hacking... Yet another troll, Mr. Denver!

    2. Re:See prior Slashdot Stories by blibbleblobble · · Score: 1

      "JUST AFTER congress passed the PATRIOT act which equated:

      Politically Motivated Hacking = Terrorism
      "

      That'll be an assignment, rather than a test of equality

  142. George Bush Jr does not exist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If I said, "George Bush Jr. is an asshole who should be impeached, and ugly to boot!" I am hurting the president. therefore I should go to prison."

    No, you are not. Such a person does not exist. President Bush does not have the same name as his father and is not a Jr (Interestingly enough, Albert W Gore, the loser of the last election, IS a Junior).

    Feel free to insult "George Bush Jr", "Will Clinton", "Rick Cheney", "Senator Bess Dole" and all the other non-existent politicians you want to.

    "as long as someone is not acivly inciting violence, they should be allowed to speak there mind."

    This man actually was actively inciting violence.

  143. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by Tsunamio · · Score: 3, Insightful

    EVERY anarchist supports overthrowing the (and every) government. This establishes precedent for supressing all of them (more; did you know it's illegal for a foreign anarchist to enter the country?).

    And as for protesting, well, one, it says he was arrested, not convicted, and two, there's a bit of a difference between civil disobedience and throwing bombs.

  144. From the peoples republic by cluge · · Score: 1

    News From The Peoples Repbulic of California:

    Crisis has been averted, and a dangerous man is behind bars. He will serve as an example to all those that would dare critisize our way of life. This criminal was also involved in terrorist activity and bomb making.

    Our successful re-education of that silly baseball player and countless of other examples prove that we can help people think the way they should. After all we know whats good for you, and we know how you should think.

    cluge

    --
    "Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
  145. Re:This is *no* bullshit by anarcat · · Score: 1

    The problem with this is that the authorities are not hunting for neo-nazis, they're hunting for environmentalists, anti-globalization folks, anarchists, communists, in other words, political bodies which sometimes have valid concerns and challenges to the society.

    Anyways, is knowledge on how to kill someone a danger in itself for that person? Is *knowing* how to make a nuke or how to kill the president a danger that should be neutralized? If so, then we're all potential murderers that must be put behind bars, because everyone knows how to kill a man, especially in the US: grab a gun, aim, pull the trigger. Pretty simple.

    BTW, it's ironic that you mention neo-nazis, because the first article that you can read on raise the fist actually talks about neo-nazis being *protected* by the police when doing a demo at the capitol.

    --
    Semantics is the gravity of abstraction
  146. CNN: Clinton News Network by NEOtaku17 · · Score: 1

    This looks more to me like a CNN screw up then anything else. They said it was for information of bomb making but other sources say it was hacking military computers. Oh yeah and did he say to use those bombs against the government anywhere?

  147. Professor Touretzky's Page by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Professor Touretzky of Carnegie Mellon University maintains a web page with much detailed information on this case. Apparently, he doesn't agree with Sherman's acts, but is at odds with the free-speech component of this case.

    http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/raisethefist/

    1. Re:Professor Touretzky's Page by heli0 · · Score: 1

      He also has all of the scientology documents that slashdot is afraid to leave posted.

      --
      Whenever the offence inspires less horror than the punishment, the rigour of penal law is obliged to give way...
  148. Re:This isn't about freedom of speech or linking.. by russotto · · Score: 3, Insightful

    18 USC 842 (p)(2)(A) IS a violation of the first amendment. The fig-leaf of "with the intent that..." is a bunch of hooey.

  149. Call to arms! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Attention to Robot elders!

    This is kooky Liberal drone #OU812

    Our plot as been found out! Execute Control Alt KILL!!!!

  150. Re:This is *no* bullshit by Thing+1 · · Score: 2, Funny
    If I write a document about how to kill the president, then that's not within the freedom-of-speech.

    Here you go:

    1. Buy gun.
    2. ???
    3. Dead president!

    Come get me.

    --
    I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
  151. Linking dangerously? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Darl C McBride 1799 Vintage Oak Ln Salt Lake City, UT 84121-6539 (801)424-2006

    1. Re:Linking dangerously? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      tacos flavored kisses for you!

  152. Title 18 by dcw3 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm all for free speech...and gladly advocate protecting people's right to make opposing viewpoints. That said, Title 18 has been around for a long time, and if you didn't know that it was illegal to advocate the violent overthrow of the government when you did it, then it sucks to be you.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  153. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  154. Can't associate with groups that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Wilson said he also may not associate with anyone from a group that "espouses physical force as a means of change.""

    Aaah, well I guess that means he can't associate with republicans or people in the military.

  155. Darwin Award Candidate? by alchemist68 · · Score: 1

    Let's nominate this guy for a Darwin Award. I mean, c'mon, if the guy is stupid enough to do ALL THESE THINGS and land a rather cushy 1 year federal hard ass-pounding prison term, I'd think he's rather damned fortunate he didn't get the all expenses paid 20-year vacation/sabatical from daily grind of whatever it is he calls work.

  156. Link to warrant - this was more than just a link by mcwop · · Score: 2, Informative

    Link to warrant/affidavit and other info. Here

    --

    "I don't think it's selfish, to eat defenseless shellfish." -NOFX

  157. The powers do nothing to control information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " I think most Americans are simply too uneducated; in order to keep people uneducated, the powers-that-be do their best to control the flow of information"

    No, they do almost nothing to control information. Even this case is one web site out of tens of thousands of anti-government sites.

    "Just imagine some news network--any news network--headlining this case as "Fascist Government Wins Another Round.""

    I've seen similar headlines about many different governments.

    " "Terrorist" is just new nomenclature for what used to be "Communist" or "Nazi" ...."

    Those two groups killed tens of millions of people between them. Geez, they might be just a little dangerous?

    1. Re:The powers do nothing to control information by Nuge · · Score: 0

      And the US has only killed, um, let's see, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, present day Iraq, etc. etc.

    2. Re:The powers do nothing to control information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same tired old shit.
      Trot out some WW2 necessity and lable it as a act of terror. To bad that dog don't hunt. Most of these /.ers wouldn't be here if the US had invaded
      140,000 Japaneese died at Hiroshima. The Soldiers of Japan killed far more Chineese citizens just for fun. It appears Saddam killed at least 100,000 so what the fuck is your point? Ask the Chineese if they think dropping the A-bombs was unwarrented. Are you suggesting the US and Britan killed 100,000 Iraqi civilains in the act of liberating them from the criminal government of Saddam and the bathists? Are you suggesting that any were killed on purpose? You compare this to a government like the WW2 Japan and Saddam that murdered childern on purpose? Any accidental death caused by the US can't compare to the criminal acts of Japan prior to and during WW2 or to the outlaw government of Iraq.

  158. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by replicant108 · · Score: 1

    This is flamebait?

    Protesting the WEF deserves a prison sentence?

    "Land of the Free"?

    LMFAO!!!

  159. THE SLASHDOT TROLL HOWTO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    This is version 0.6 of a troll HOWTO, sort of a companion piece to jsm's excellent troll FAQ. As a draft, comments and criticism are always welcome, if not appreciated :)
    Section 1 - Trolling techniques

    There are techniques used by successful trolls to elicit the maximum amount of responses from unthinking /.ers. This section is dedicated to explaining how to use these in the course of your trolls. Remember though, a great troll can break any or all of these and still be successful...

    * Timing

    Because you're posting as an AC, your troll will generally be ignored in favour of posters using their accounts, and so getting in early is essential. A good guideline is to get into the first 20 posts, so that people reading the article will see the troll before it is swamped out. One way of increasing the speed with which you get your troll into play is to prepare them beforehand, and then quickly customise them for the current article. This is easier than it sounds since /. typically repeats stories with small variations and runs lots of similar stories.

    Note that this is why Jon Katz stories are pretty worthless as trolling material - by the time you've found the article and prepared a troll there's already 50+ posts on it, most of them flaming Jon Katz anyway :)
    * Exposure

    Once you've got your troll in, you need people to actually read it. You also want replies - /.ers are more likely to read your troll if it starts a large thread. You also want to remember that some people have set their comment thresholds to values higher than 0 - to get the attention of these you either want to get your post moderated up (see Style, below) or get a reply which gets moderated up to 4 or 5, in which case your troll becomes visible to all.
    * Accounts

    An alternative to the time-honoured tradition of AC trolling is that of creating a troll account. This gives you the advantage of posting at 1 rather than 0, and slashbots are more likely to take you seriously, especially if you at least sound reasonable. If you do this, try to avoid posting stuff where it is obvious you're a troll under the account - post it anoymously instead - some slightly more canny readers actually check your user info before they reply. Not many though :)

    The ultimate goal of the troll account is to secure the +1 bonus, which is currently received once you hit 26 points of Karma. To get there, employ the techniques of karma whoring that we see every day on /. and watch the karma roll in. And of course once you get the +1 bonus, the world is your oyster in terms of /. Posts made at a default of 2 hit even those people with the threshold of 2, are more likely to get moderated up even further if they are at all coherent, and people tend to lose their critical thinking abilities in the face of the +1 bonus. Milk it for all it's worth.
    * Layout

    To get people reading it a troll needs to be easily readable. Make sure you break it down into easily digestible paragraphs, use HTML tags where appropriate (but always make sure you close them properly) and use whitespace appropriately.
    * Size

    Generally a troll shouldn't be too short, otherwise it'll get lost in the crowd. A workable minimum is a couple of medium paragraphs. Conversely, it shouldn't be too long, or no-one will bother to read it. Keep it to a happy medium.
    * Spelling

    Whilst spelling is important if you want the troll to be taken seriously, key spelling mistakes can draw out the spelling zealots, especially if you mis-spell the name of a venerated /. hero, like Linus Torveldes or Richard Strawlman (thanks dmg). Related to this is the use of the wrong word, explaining an acronym as being something it isn't or making a word into an acronym even when it isn't.
    * Subject

  160. Re:This is *no* bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please learn how to spell "hyphen".

  161. I lost my rights! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "how about the right to travel freely around the country on an airplane without having my bung-hole searched for things that might actually help terrorists cause the plane to crash? "

    hmmm. Come to think of it, I had to throw my jacknife away. This is truly a Constitutional Crisis!

    "ither that or the TSA is just a bunch of queers who inherited t"

    Aren't you glad Justice Scalia is defending you from the gays?

  162. Re:For all the people looking for the hacking angl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Austin allegedly defaced at least five commercial Web sites since 1999"

    All after his arrest....

    "Austin has also admitted to hacking into a number of websites to post anti-government messages."

    While being @$$ #%cked with a stun gun.

    ps. he also "confessed" to inciting the prison gang rape of himself.

  163. Things change over time.......... by MeThOdXxX · · Score: 1

    I think you need to go back under that rock you crawled out from under and go back too bed. How old are you man, like 200. This is the millenium, things change, such as: women have had equal right now for a pretty good while and its most likely to stay that way for a long time so get used to it. Another thing, the constitution was made up and signed by quite a few "good christian men", and if im not mistaken the constitution grants the free people of the United States of America Free Speech, and i'am very grateful for that. You need to get with the program and realize things change over time.

    --
    HaHaHaHaHa
  164. Re:This is *no* bullshit by usotsuki · · Score: 1
    Source

    I disapprove of what you say, but will defend to the death your right to say it.


    A remark attributed to Voltaire, notably by S.G. Tallentyre [a nom de plume of E. Beatrice Hall] in The Friends of Voltaire (1907). But Tallentyre gave the words as a free paraphrase of what Voltaire wrote in his Essay on Tolerance: 'Think for yourself and let others enjoy the privelege to do so, too.' So what we have is merely Tallentyre's summary of Voltaire point of view.

    Then along comes Norbert Guterman to claim that what Voltaire did write in a letter of February [6,] 1770 to a M. Le Riche was: 'Monsieur l'Abbe, I detest what you write, but I would give my life to make it possible for you to continue to write.' So, whether or not he used the precise words, at least Voltaire believed in the principle behind them.

    -uso.
    --
    Dreams, dreams, don't doubt dreams, dreaming children's dreaming dreams. Sailor Moon SS
  165. Feds publishes bomb making manual.. by mysterious_mark · · Score: 1

    Ironically I have a book on making bombs and explosives published by the the us federal government, that has detailed instructions on how to make explosives form commonly available materials. 'Improvised Munitions Handbook' Dept of the Army Technical Manual TM 31-210. I guess the lesson is only the government can publish bomb making materials. I purchased the book legally from a civilian publisher several years ago. I guess guys in flak jackets will be breaking down my door any minute.. MM

  166. Re:ACLU is out trying to remove rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also, they are out defending government policies which punish people for having the wrong skin color. Every time there is a CRI (Civil Rights Initiative) in any state to make government less racist, the ACLU is there with the reactionaries arguing that sometimes it is OK to deny people rights because they have the wrong skin color.

    Remember, its OK to discriminate against people based on skin color, as long as they are white. After all, affimative action is still alive and well, so much for equality.

  167. No, it is true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "the left-wingers want to make government even bigger than what these Republicans want.

    That would be true, except for the fact that it is false:"


    No, it is true when referring to the national scene, where the Democrats paint the Republicans as being miserly on social programs, and they want to increase spending much more.

  168. You Have Freedom for All Speach or You have None by FreeUser · · Score: 3, Interesting

    His speech was deemed harmful, something we haven't had the right to (and shouldn't!) before. To say something just to hurt someone is the same as hurting them.

    Nonsense. Until fairly recently Americans did have the right to speech, harmful or otherwise. The 'fire in the theater' decision did not preclude, nor was it intended to preclude, discussions on setting fire to a crowded theater, or even discussions on how to orchastrate the event for maximum entertainment to bystanders (perhaps by playing a flute?), but to address a particular, very narrowly defined, immediate cause of immediate harm.

    Attempting to extend that narrow (and at the time very contraversial) exception to include any speech that might, possibly, incite harm at some point in the future (as has been done here) is not just exceptionally harmful to freedom of speech in general and political discussion and dissent in particular, but absolutely lethal.

    Are you engaging in harmful speech when you come out in support of Al Q'aeda?

    Are you engaging in harmful speech when you support president Bush's foreign policies?

    Don't be too sure about the answer to either of those ... it may well turn out that supporting Bush's foreign policies will have been to support policies that result in far more American deaths than Al Q'aeda could ever achieve in its most ambitious dreams. Just think of the potential consiquences of his failures in North Korea and Iran, or the possible consiquences of a regime change in Pakistan.

    Ban 'harmful speech' and you will have essentially banned any and all speech, at the whim of whoever happens to be wielding authority at that point in time. Regardless of who that is (Bush, Chaney, or Howard Dean) you will have completely gutted the freedom the first amendment was intended to protect, in a way that will probably require 'harmful' actions in order to restore (if restoration is ever even a possibility).

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  169. The good old days by siskbc · · Score: 1
    Today's Internet is no longer a free-for-all. I remember things like The Anarchist's Handbook or Jolly Roger or the like that were filled with dangerous or inciteful content.

    Actually, I kept all that shit figuring it would go away. I have the collected Jolly Roger works and the Anarchist's Cookbook. Does that make me old? ;)

    It's all fun and games until somebody gets hurt, though, and I've read about a number of cases of people injuring themselves or others by trying to do that kind of stuff.

    No doubt. I knew I was in trouble when I saw, repeatedly, the symbol for calcium referred to as "C" (instead of "Ca"). Whoever wrote most of that thing was a complete poseur. But it was still fun when I was 15. ;)

    The mature thing to do is to preemptively avoid spreading that kind of content so that it doesn't fall into the hands of idiots.

    You're probably right, although I really don't like the sentiment there, though. I mean, this is the damned first amendment here. Spreading information is now illegal if the gov. doesn't like it? What the hell is that? I really wish hte ACLU or someone would have taken this up. Remember, we don't *need* the 1st Am. for protection of speech no one finds offensive. We need it to protect speech that is attacked, like this.

    As mentioned previously, advocating the overthrow of the gov. is a right and privelege granted to us by the Declaration of Independence, assuming that wasn't just a bunch of crap. So what did this kid do wrong? It's not like he actually did any of this stuff. And didn't the abortion group that posted doctors' names on its website get off? Or am I wrong?

    --

    -Looking for a job as a materials chemist or multivariat

    1. Re:The good old days by plugger · · Score: 1

      Start even looking like a threat to the existing order and you'll find out just how free you really are.

  170. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by replicant108 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Which of those offences merits a custodial sentence, in your opinion?

    Or do you think that people can either:
    a) have free speech
    b) protest peacefully

    but if they choose to exercise both they should be arrested?

  171. He was accused of a lot of things... by RationalAnarchist · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...But, tellingly, he was only indicted on the count of sharing information on the construction of incendiaries.

    Do you really think that, had they had *real* evidence to link Sherman to some of the other crimes he's been accused of here (vandalising websites, trying to incite racial violence, hacking military computers, etc etc), that the FBI and prosecutors would have only been recommending 4 months in prison, especially in the current political atmosphere? Doubtful, highly doubtful. I've read the complete sentencing recommendation information - if half of what they *thought* he *might* have done had been remotely provable, they would not have accepted a plea bargain.

    Its also extremely easy to be charged with "disorderly conduct and failure to disperse" when you're at a political protest, whether you are committing a violent act or merely exercising your *right* to freedom of assembly and freedom of speech. It happens all the time, and not just to "unwashed anarchists".

    I have to admit, I'm biased - I'm a friend of Sherman's and know him to be not a frothing violent-tendencied lunatic, but one of the most gentle people I've ever known, who advocates self-defense against an increasingly-oppressive government. Considering his beginnings as a political activist (getting shot with rubber-coated steel shot while filming a MayDay parade turned police vs. civilian riot), I can't blame him.

    No, I do not advocate violent overthrow of the state. My anarchism is simple idealism, a hope for utopia tempered with the knowledge that utopia means "no place" in Greek. But still - a girl can dream, right?

  172. Problem with argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "So what if I get an old army combat manual, listen to Dubya's speeches, watch how our government is acting, and then use what I've learned and the ideas put in my head and go out and start killing everyone who's skin is more than three shades darker than my own? "

    The big problem with your argument is that Bush and the current government are rather anti-racist. No reason to act that way.

    You might have more reason to have gone nuts under the Clinton administration, where people had special rights (affirmative action) based on skin color a lot more, giving rednecks more reason to go nuts.

  173. You're a wussie. by raehl · · Score: 0

    If you wanted REAL danger, you'd have been eating food from Steak and Shake.

  174. forbid we run the way the const. said to run by Soothh · · Score: 1

    my sig says it all...

    --
    We have seen that living things are too improbable and too beautifully "designed" to have come into existence by chance.
  175. No, no... by Safety+State · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They're not concentration camps; they're freedom camps. I'm sure the government was just trying to correct this mistake on Austin's part. Your hesitation to agree is understandable -- and even permissible as long as you don't take it too far -- but unofficial terminology will only serve the enemy.

  176. Re:The French don't count. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    And George Bush plays with himself, because he doesn't have any other friends.

  177. Sherman rather pro-oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I have to admit, I'm biased - I'm a friend of Sherman's and know him to be not a frothing violent-tendencied lunatic, but one of the most gentle people I've ever known, who advocates self-defense against an increasingly-oppressive government."

    Yet, in the case of his violent protests against free and fair trade, he advocates oppressive government controls to negate the economic decisions of invididuals.

    1. Re:Sherman rather pro-oppression by RationalAnarchist · · Score: 1

      "Yet, in the case of his violent protests against free and fair trade, he advocates oppressive government controls to negate the economic decisions of invididuals." He has not personally participated in violence at protests. We're not pro-capitalism - but at the same time, do you *really* think the average joe is the one making economic choices? The WTO and the IMF aren't the friends of the countries they get involved in. Sorry to burst your bubble.

    2. Re:Sherman rather pro-oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why the fuck do you worry about the WTO and IMF?
      Only 3rd world dictatorships and military dominated governments suffer under them. Oh I see yo want dictatorships and military doninated goverments to dominate the governance of the world. Stupid fuck.
      You sit fat and happy in your western democracy and seek to destroy it over shit that is half true and stupid. Grow up or move to Peru.

    3. Re:Sherman rather pro-oppression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The WTO and the IMF aren't the friends of the countries they get involved in. Sorry to burst your bubble."

      Burst my bubble ?
      What next, are you going to tell me that earth is flat ?
      You are too stupid to burst anything.
      What is your accomplishment ? What do you know about economy ?
      Shut the fuck up and go back to your daily mundane tasks.

    4. Re:Sherman rather pro-oppression by qtp · · Score: 1

      Only 3rd world dictatorships and military dominated governments suffer under them.

      Actually, it's the citizens who suffer the most uner WTO agreements, and not only those who live under oppressive governments.

      The WTO forbids restrictions of trade based on envirionmental and health policty risks, such as banning the importation of produce that was treated with known toxic insecticides (think DDT) and weed killers, or the requirement that usage of such products be clearly and truthfully labled on such produce.

      The enforcement clauses for WTO regulations (yes, the WTO is an org that regulates trade, not one that eliminates regulation) are the international equivalent to civil lawsuits with the only penalty being that the wronged country is granted 5the right to enforce tarrifs and embargoes on the agreement violator. This means that the only countries that have effective enforcement power are those with the largest markets and the strongest economies, such as the U.S.

      WTO supporters like to present the WTO as eliminating unecessary and unfair regulation, but the reality is that it only serves to ensure that the currently dominant economies can enforce thier own regulations against smaller nations and the smaller nations have no power to enter the world markets at a pace that ensures that thier own economies and local industries can remain competative.

      --
      Read, L
  178. What is implicit encouragement of violence? by Jadrano · · Score: 1

    Once these folks start encouraging violence (either explicitely or implicitely,) it's a different story.

    I know what explicit encouragement of violence is (there are borderline cases, as well, of course), and I think it is right that this is illegal (just not 20 years of imprisonment, that would be extreme).

    But what should "implicit encouragement of violence" mean? Isn't that something like "anti-Soviet activities", the favorite charge against opponents in the USSR? A whole principally fair and democratic constitutional order can be destroyed if there is one such muddy charge with which opponents can be sent to prison.

  179. Republicans arent conservative, liberaterians are. by HanzoSan · · Score: 1


    The republicans spend more money than the left wingers, Bush has spent more money in these 4 years than Clinton did in 8, Clinton balanced the budget, cut down spending, sure he did spend money but the money that was spent was at least spent on this country.

    Bush has us providing welfare for the whole third world!!! Afganastan,Iraq,Africa, Who is next? North Korea? Iran?

    We are spending money building schools, paving roads, and providing healthcare for people WHO ARENT EVEN AMERICANS!!!

    I'd rather at least benefit from the spending.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  180. What an idiot! by firstkillallthelawye · · Score: 0

    Regardless of the supposed freedoms this moron possesses...how stupid do you have to be given the political climate to pull a stunt like this. Nothing suits me more that to see the Freedom of Speech-ers finally pay the price for what they say when it endangers the rest of us. Feel sorry for this asshat? He'll have lots of time to read the Constitution while he's sitting in prison. I say give him the twenty years!

    --
    "The first thing we must do is kill all the lawyers" - Henry VI, Wm. Shakespeare
  181. Color me amazed by TheBeardIsRed · · Score: 1

    As a follower of media trends and sympathizer of anti WTO, IMF, and Globalization trends i must say that I am surprised to see this kind of support from /.ers This is normally the kind of discussion shared with my punk rock friends and the like. Kudos to everyone for well thought political discussion.

    1. Re:Color me amazed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you give me your address I want to come over and pound the fuck out of you for casuing me to be out of work due to the lame ass ideas you suppport.

  182. Fortunately, The government is smarter than you. by JohnDenver · · Score: 1

    First of all, advocating voilence against anybody and providing links to bombs instructions is not a crime. Slashdot would like you to think it is, but the missing element of truth to this story is the kid got caught HACKING. (See prior slashdot stories)

    Despite all its invasive provisions, EVEN the PATRIOT Act doesn't criminalize advocating violence and bomb making instructions.

    Sometimes I'm glad that people are disenfranchised from their governments, because people like you would run this country into pure tyranny at every knee jerk reaction.

    So far, we've done a great job building a free and prosperous society WITHOUT interfering with free speach and due process.

    Somehow, we've manage to control the KKK, Neo-Nazi's, Militias and other crazies without resorting trampling on everybody's bill of rights, so why the sudden urgency now?

    --
    "Communism is like having one [local] phone company " - Lenny Bruce
  183. I like this... by blunte · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I submit this story hours ago, and it's rejected.

    Meanwhile there's very little news appearing on /.

    Now hours later that same story is approved, and appears. /. needs a change of editors. The /. community is ok, and the OSS/Linux-centric stories are often valuable, at least for OSS/Linux advocacy. It's a good digest.

    But over the last year I've noticed the rate of new stories has gone down, while at the same time /. is promoting its supremely lame subscription service. Brilliant.

    Now, mod me down. Some of the moderators are as useful as the editors.

    Enjoy.

    --
    .sigs are for post^Hers.
  184. Off-topic Warning by thePancreas · · Score: 1

    Yeah I hate those kids they send out these days just before the movie starts and they are there to tell you about the refreshments or upcoming simulcasts of WWe events. No one asks me if I want to hear them... wait we were talking about some jerk who was offering links to bomb-making equipment, he is a jerk, but I don't know if he needs to be sent to "become a really big criminal super jerk" prison.

    --
    I went to battle MC Escher, but drew a blank
  185. how the hell is that informative? by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    Reread the post you're responding to. The question here is whether the judge has the right to ban this kid from associating with anyone who advocates for change -- not only the violent ones.

  186. Wasting money spending it at home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "We are spending money building schools, paving roads, and providing healthcare for people WHO ARENT EVEN AMERICANS!!!"

    In these countries, we can get things done since we don't have to deal with greedy and corrupt unions and other "Red tape" which has brought such infrastructure improvement and maintenance in the U.S. to a standstill.

  187. Re:This isn't about freedom of speech or linking.. by Dr+Rick · · Score: 1

    Fine and that may be the case (but then, I'm not a constitutional lawyer) but he is still a script kiddie who caught defacing web sites. He took the plea bargin because he was guilty. And of course while it's all 'correct' to support this guy for his 'thoughts', he clearly does advocate using violence to reach his ends and thus I'm happy to have him off the street.

    --

    Dr. Rick
    - "It's such a fine line between clever and stupid" (Nigel Tufnel)
    - Zort! (Pinky)
  188. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by gorbachev · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Disorderly conduct or unlawful assembly are not felonies.

    He was convicted for a felony.

    Nothing I read in the CNN article said he was convicted for anything else but providing links to sites that, among other things, had bomb making instructions.

    The CNN article did NOT say he was advocating the use of bombs against the federal government.

    Now, in typical hack-journo way, the CNN article might have failed to mention all the facts about this case, but if I have to go with the information provided by the CNN article, he was convicted of expressing unpopular thought.

    There's probably more to the story, but if you RTFA, as you instruct, one can only assume John Asscroft is yet again managed to stiffle the freedom of speech in the name of national security.

    [I will resist the temptation of putting my usual .sig in here now, I could be arrested and convicted to 20 years in prison]

    --
    In Soviet Russia, I ruled you
  189. Its not just in state, federally as well! by HanzoSan · · Score: 1



    Listen to actions not words. Is the government bigger now than it was under Clinton? YES!

    Are we spending more now than we spent under Clinton? YES!

    The military is about 100 billion dollars bigger, then you have trillions of dollars that Bush spent, then theres the money to bailout the airline industry twice, which equals to about 40 billion dollars, plus our troops are spread all around the world as we build infastructure for other countries. The new department of homeland security another 80 billion dollars at least, the missle defense system, the new spy technology created to take advantage of the patriot act.

    Tell me how anyone can say the Republicans dont want big government, Look at how big government got when Reagan was in charge during the cold war.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  190. This is NOT a free speech issue by moby11 · · Score: 3, Informative

    We are still free. As proof, you can still buy the Anarchists Cookbook from Amazon. The law this guy broke reads as follows (emphasis added):

    It shall be unlawful for any person-
    (A) to teach or demonstrate the making or use of an explosive, a destructive device, or a weapon of mass destruction, or to distribute by any means information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the manufacture or use of an explosive, destructive device, or weapon of mass destruction, with the intent that the teaching, demonstration, or information be used for, or in furtherance of, an activity that constitutes a Federal crime of violence; or
    (B) to teach or demonstrate to any person the making or use of an explosive, a destructive device, or a weapon of mass destruction, or to distribute to any person, by any means, information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the manufacture or use of an explosive, destructive device, or weapon of mass destruction, knowing that such person intends to use the teaching, demonstration, or information for, or in furtherance of, an activity that constitutes a Federal crime of violence.

    We can teach how to blow each other up OR violently overthrow the government - just not both at the same time.

    1. Re:This is NOT a free speech issue by MeThOdXxX · · Score: 1

      "We can teach how to blow each other up OR violently overthrow the government - just not both at the same time"

      I like that. Nicely stated.

      --
      HaHaHaHaHa
  191. We're safe. No one RTFA by docbrown42 · · Score: 1

    This is SlashDot, after all...

    --
    Ed Wedig
    Graphic design services
    docbrown.net
  192. That is FUD by riptalon · · Score: 3, Informative

    The conviction is for not deleting links to information on explosives that were posted to his site by someone else:

    Raisethefist.com, Sherman Austin will be convicted on Monday, Sept 23rd as he pleads guilty to felony count: 18 U.S.C. 842 (p)(2)(A): Distribuion of Information Relating to Explosives, Destructive Devices, and Weapons of Mass Destruction with the Intent that such Information be used in Furtherance of a Federal Crime of Violence.

    All this crap about hacking is obviously fake or they would certainly have convicted him of that too.

  193. Dictator list not much use by sapped · · Score: 1

    The Dictator list linked by Tackhead ... Source: Planet Earth's High Score List, sorted by dictator: H: Saddam Hussein isn't very comprehensive at all.

    We are missing some very friendly people like Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe who regularly throws his political opponents in jail where they often simply die.

    We are also missing other prime tourist destinations like the very aptly named "Democratic Republic of the Congo" which was name thusly after a very bloody coup and continues to have thousands of its citizens massacred every year.

    Oh, but I forget these countries don't have OIL^H^H^H WMD so their problems don't really count.

    1. Re:Dictator list not much use by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > We are missing some very friendly people like Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe who regularly throws his political opponents in jail where they often simply die.

      Give the guy a few months for Mugabe's scores to be tabulated. Seriously - I link to the Atlas because its maintainer cites multiple sources from the left, right, and in between - and the need for up-to-the-minute (or even up-to-the-month) stats is rare.

      The maintainer of the site is about as apolitical as I've ever seen anyone be when describing these sorts of things. Give him time, and Mugabe'll get his scores tabulated. (For now, try the country index, which should have at least some of the regional massacres, regardless of which side of a line on the map they happened. Particularly handy for scoring African tribal conflicts.)

  194. Immigrants and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Meanwhile, funding for refugee/immigrant employmentprograms (such as the place where i work) is going down the crapper. Which is better to you: helping immigrants stay healthy/get jobs,"

    If there are no jobs, the immigrants should not be coming over. It would be better to ship them back then to have them laze on the public hammock.

    1. Re:Immigrants and jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're all friggin' immigrants, Jeez.

    2. Re:Immigrants and jobs by VGR · · Score: 1

      Yes, but my great-grandparents were legal immigrants. And despite being poor, they were never on welfare, and never committed any violent crimes. They learned English and they respected the society that had taken them in.

      --
      The Internet is full. Go away.
  195. America; love to leave it. . . by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
    America! Love it or leave it, pal!


    My sentiments exactly.

    Only problem is that leaving the US fascist state will become increasingly difficult as the months progress. If you are the sort who doesn't like what is happening in the US, then your name is probably on a list. If your name is on a list, then there is an increasing probability that you will be stopped at a border crossing or airport.

    It's only a matter of time before being stopped turns into being re-directed to a barbed-wire facility. --In Denver, perhaps?


    The time to get out is NOW.


    -FL

    1. Re:America; love to leave it. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is way beyond paranoia, this is just plain old stupidity.

      Make life easier for future generations, don't procreate.

    2. Re:America; love to leave it. . . by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
      This is way beyond paranoia, this is just plain old stupidity.

      People were telling me I was stupid and paranoid when I was yelling about the US plans for world domination and fascist lock-down through a killing of the economy, through fake excuses for war, through rigged elections. --That was before Shrub got in power, before 9-11 and before Afghanistan. And Iraq. Before Patriot. Before Homeland Security.

      Nothing has slowed down, my ostrich friend. Indeed, it's speeding up.

      Wait, watch and learn. And try not to get shot.


      -FL

    3. Re:America; love to leave it. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Make life easier for future generations, don't procreate.

      Doh! Too late. You people have no sense of humor...

  196. in other news, by discogravy · · Score: 1

    chocolate rations are up!

  197. The Republicans want a police state. by HanzoSan · · Score: 1



    I dont think all Democrats are socialist, some are, but not all of them, yes they are left wing, yes they like to spend, but Republicans like to spend as well.

    The only difference is in where the money is spent, Democrats spend the money on our people, Republicans spend the money overseas on Africa, Iraq, and anywhere but over here.

    If you compare the budgets, Republicans actually spend more trying to have this police state, than Democrats spend providing public schools, and other programs.

    I dont have a problem with spending, I mean the rich pay most of the taxes right? Thats what all you republicans love to say, so if the Rich pay most of the taxes it means I benefit when they pay taxes which support Public Schools, Police, and other federal programs, in fact these taxes often help me get a job.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  198. Reason why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " How silly is it to think that a government which
    claims the ability to designate any living individual
    on the planet an "enemy combatant" and kill
    them,"


    Show one designated as such that was not guilty as hell. You can't.

    1. Re:Reason why by TroyFoley · · Score: 1

      He can't because they don't give out names. But he's right, there were two Gitmo prisoners that were beaten to death. However, that doesn't mean that things CAN'T be turned on there held come election year. Even a tyrannical president can be held accountable with the right legislation.

      --
      After I have received the wisdom of good teaching, I will untiringly teach all people. - The Teachings of Buddha
    2. Re:Reason why by aminorex · · Score: 1

      I was thinking specifically of the American
      citizen who was assassinated in Yemen for
      suspicion -- nailed by a CIA chopper with a
      Sidewinder.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  199. Re:Terrorism and Fascism by BitHerder · · Score: 1

    You forgot the obligatory "Wake up America!"

    Reynolds +0.46

  200. Shoulda got the twenty years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    at least it's comforting to know he'll be grabbing his ankles nightly.

    Nice to see so many slashdotters defending what is basically a domestic terrorist in the making, or already completed if we were to discover more about his anarchist past.

    What next, support for EarthFirst!?

    At least now I know which slashdot posters to mod down regularly.

  201. How can ANYONE be against UNIONS!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    Without UNIONS you'd be making minimum wage you stupid fucking idiot, oh wait you are an upper class CEO!! This is why you like the Bush admin so much, those millions of dollars they bribed you with in tax cuts really helped you form your opinions.

  202. 1984 by oohp · · Score: 1

    So much for freedom of speech.

    Yesterday I've been browsing a freesite (on Freenet) called Subversive Bookwarez which had a nice logo depicting a human upside down with the words smash your state written underneath, distributing books like Ray Bradbury's Farhrenheit 451, Orwell's 1984, some Philip K. Dick books, etc. Very nice stuff.

    I think sites like raisethefist.com should not be taken down, regardless of bomb making instructions, etc. Next thing you know, they're gonna shut google down for returning search results on "home made bombs".

    1. Re:1984 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I think the issue here is the link to bomb making instructions. After all, that is what he is being grilled about. Now I'm all for free speech and everything, and perhaps this judgment is a bit too extreme.

      However, there is something to be said about responsibility with freedom. Perhaps it would be better to illustrate this point to Sherman by setting up a website dedicated to free speech and his life.

      What better way to express responsibility and power then to have a 'harmless' website that gives 'harmless' instructions of when Sherman is home or not, what kind of locks and how secure his home is, documented instructions and pictures of where he goes, perhaps through the site of a targeting telescope. 'Instructions' on how easy it would be to anonymously 'pick' him off, steal his stuff, determine the maximum distance between he and EMS/Police services, etc. etc.

      Privacy rights? Screw that, its all about free speech baby...Freedom!

  203. Union thugs! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Without UNIONS you'd be making minimum wage you stupid fucking idiot,"

    I'm one of the 90% of Americans who says "Union No!" and, well, do you think all of us are CEO's?

    The main problem with unions is that they are illegitimate organizations: most of the members are forced to join.

    "This is why you like the Bush admin so much, those millions of dollars they bribed you with in tax cuts really helped you form your opinions."

    The amount spent on tax cut bribes? $0. No money was given. You can't "bribe" someone with something they already own to begin with.

    Besides, 50% - 60% "like the Bush admin". Are all of them CEO's as well?

  204. Re:Republicans arent conservative, liberaterians a by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
    Bush has spent more money in these 4 years than Clinton did in 8

    Last time I checked, Clinton didn't have a war going against terrorists. Wars tend to be expensive. Given the advanced law-fu he whipped out to get out of one scandal after another, I'm sure he could've come up with some legal pretext with which to detain Osama bin Laden when Sudan offered him up on a platter. That would've saved us the expenses we're racking up now. Because he was too busy getting BJs in the Oval Office, though, we're stuck with the present situation.

    Clinton balanced the budget

    s/Clinton/The Republican-controlled Congress/

    From 1993 to 1995, non-defense spending was accelerating out of control. There was even a pie-in-the-sky plan (never fully implemented, fortunately) to socialize one-seventh of the economy by having the government provide womb-to-the-tomb health care.

    I'm not claiming that Bush or the current Congress are perfect. (Putting you and me on the hook for Bill Gates' prescription meds once he passes a certain age is a dimwitted idea I would've expected from card-carrying Democrats.) I shudder to think how much worse off we'd be if Al Gore had won in 2000...the Democrat party is enough of an impediment to progress as it is, even as the minority party.

    --
    20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  205. Re:The guy is a fascist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities." Voltaire (1694-1778)

  206. Its a search warrant! by riptalon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In case you don't realise, this is where the police make up some plausible sounding stuff, go to a friendly judge and get him to rubber stamp it. Then they execute the warrant in an attempt to find some real evidense that will stand up in an actual court. In this case despite removing all the computers, books, and documents in his house they found nothing. Which is why he wasn't immediately charged with anything. In the end they were forced to fall back on the linking to information on explosives (18 USC 842) and scare him with threats of 20 years in jail into pleading so they never had to present any evidense at all. He has only been convicted under 18 USC 842 and therefore I think we can safely assume that the computer fraud stuff was just something they used to pad out their search warrant with. This is purely an issue of free speach (linking to information the US government doesn't like) since that is the only thing he has been convicted of.

    1. Re:Its a search warrant! by enjo13 · · Score: 1

      Which makes sense until you read the article and raelize that he ADMITTED to to the cracking episodes he was charged with.

      --
      Turn s60 photos into awesome videos with mScrapbook for all S60 3rd edition phones!
    2. Re:Its a search warrant! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares about cracking? Prison? Police officers murder innocent victims and get off with out hitch all the time. Crack a corporate website face 20 years. Admitted? Have you ever been in a interogation room? Have YOU? no. Thought so. 19 years in horizontal black & whites or ADMIT to balling your sister?-hmm tough choice; I think my sister would understand.

    3. Re:Its a search warrant! by bagman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It is not just a search warrant. It is also a guilty plea. When a guilty plea is taken in federal court, the judge is required to determine that there is a factual basis for accepting the plea. The defendant is sworn in and takes the stand. The judge asks the defendant various questions to ensure that he has been competently represented by counsel, understands his rights, and understands the elements of the offense with which he has been charged.

      Then, typically, the prosecutor summarizes the evidence that would be presented at trial. The judge then asks the defendant, who is still under oath, if the summary is accurate and if he committed the charged offense.

      So, in this case, Sherman Austin swore, under oath, in a court of law, before a federal judge, that he not only told people how to make explosives, but that he did so either (a) intending that his "student(s)" use that information to commit one or more crimes of violence; or (b) knowing that his "student(s)" intended to commit one or more crimes of violence.

      So, unless Austin lied, he basically tried to help someone commit a crime of violence with an explosive device.

      Explain to me again why this should be protected behavior.

    4. Re:Its a search warrant! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      reading through the the search warrant used for searching his house carefully leaves room for another story

      FBI agent from the national infrastructure protection squad investigates defacements.

      The agent (who specializes in weapons of mass distruction investigations like "the bombing of the United States Embassy in Tanzania, Atlantic Olympic bombing, and the latest New York City World Trade Center bombing" (When I grow up I wanna write my own history books to)) notes the defaced pages link to raisethefist.com, then he notes "On or about May 3, 2001, I conducted a review of publicly available information on the Internet website RAISETHEFIST.COM and learned that it was an anarchist website [No shit sherlock], This website contained numerous organized webpages, which contained anti-government (primarily the United States), anti-capitalism, and militant messages that promoted communism and advocated violence. This website had a section for the UNITED GRAFFITI FRONT, also known as UGF, which had the motto, "spraypaint as weaponry against the corporate lies."" No bombs and not even any weapons of mass destruction... but this officer kept searching not becouse of the contents of raisethefist scare him, but becouse of the defacements cracking and bragging on irc about of this kid.

      Now note the order of the items to be seized part of the warrant, first all computers, exploits and crypto stuff, then the bomb making stuff

      So the whole bomb making part of raisethefist.com was mostly a pretence for getting a search warrant to investigate the U.C.A defacements and the irc bragging of cracking DoD systems (for which simply wasnt enough proof even while the kid was stupid and made his troop.cgi script report back on its progress of messing with dod systems to his home dsl connection....) And then in court when no real evidence has been found linking this kid with the defacements and cracking (irc logs and hearsay as evidence...aparently good for a warrant, probably not for a conviction), they interview him claim they will just call him a terrorist and get it over with, the kid freakes out scared of the patriot act and goes for a plea bargain, which the judge doesn`t like and ignores end of story.

      One sad paranoid script kiddie who may have needed help less for a year, After that if you got what it takes (like " Intelligence in alien based technology ( anti-matter ...etc.. ) ") just sign up for the u.c.a. And join the exciting life of using the time tested method of changing the world by copy-and-pasting bomb recipies and smashing star bucks windows.... or perhaps just redrawing that red star at the left side of the raiseyourfist.com so it doesn`t look like a childrens drawing..... reading up on politics before pretending you understand them and getting some fresh air.....

  207. Right issues aside... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Somehow I always get the feeling from these radical types that Joe Nobody like me would be the first up against the wall in their little dreams of Revolution, that it would be *MY* property and rights that get "taken back" when their version of utopia takes hold.

    1. Re:Right issues aside... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know what you mean. I have acquaintances who go on and on about how they are anarchists, and don't believe in any form of government.

      "You don't want anarchy," I say.

      "I don't?"

      "No, because the minute they declare anarchy, I'm going to reach over and stab you in the throat. And take your wallet."

      Usually shuts them up.

  208. Not only that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but lets remove all references to Christianity while we are at it. Not some of those other religeons though. They are cool. I especially like the goddess Themis holding the scales of justice all over the place...I really hear the Christians complaining about it too. When is the ACLU going to do something about this?

    And stop imposing your godlessness on me you intolerant suckweasels.

    All sarcasm aside, all I want to do is take a peperidge farms summer sausage and beat the living crap out of some of these left wingers. All this story needs is some conspiracy theory about Clearchannel being behind this, and linking them to the Bush administration (who hates women, minorities, and wants to kill you all!)...then we can have a big 'ol left wing circle jerk and put some born-filthy-rich man (but for the people!) in office and go on towards the end of our fucking existance.

    Ok...some sarcasm in that last one...but not much. :)

    I am going to be really really happy if being associated with the right doesn't mean that you are a tyrant loving racist rich white man one day...but I don't think that concept fits in the small minds of most of the wannabe geniuses here.

  209. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by gantrep · · Score: 2, Informative

    Slashdotters judge for yourself whether the content of his webpage was grounds for imprisonment:

    archive.org mirrors back to September, 2000.

  210. Validity Failure by virg_mattes · · Score: 1

    > You're in high school, presumably in the U.S. Which means that every day during the school year, you are forced (whether you wish it or not) to attend a government school, or a private school approved by the government, or be taught at home in ways the government considers appropriate. If you resist this, you and perhaps your parents will be jailed.

    Wholly incorrect in this one. The government does not force him to go to high school. Compulsory schooling in the U.S. goes through grade 8. He can drop out of high school if his parent/legal guardian allows him to do so. Nobody gets jailed for this. More telling, if his parent/legal guardian tells him he cannot go to high school, there's very little that government can do to force them to let him go.

    > During your stay in this brainwashing center, you will be taught that which the government has decided you will know...If cast out, the rest of society will participate in diminishing the opportunities you have available to you for the rest of your life.

    Again, misplaced. All of those things are put in place not by the government, but by communities themselves. No public school in the U.S. has ever successfully implemented a dress code without popular parental support, and more parents complain that schools graduate students who don't succeed than ever complain about high failure and holdback rates. In all of the situations you cite, the school derives its policy and authority from the community, which is comprised of the parents/legal guardians of the student body. It may be true that the students themselves don't have "rights" in the legal sense, but that's solely and completely because of their status as minors. High school students above the age of eighteen do indeed hold all of the rights ascribed to any adult, and one such adult student successfully campaigned to eliminate a dress code at his high school, and voted in the referendum to remove it.

    > And you're concerned about "the America you're growing up in" not wholly respecting some other guy's right to free speech? WAKE UP. Your own "rights" have never been respected by the government at any point of your existence to date, and you apparently haven't even noticed.

    Still have the Bill of Rights? You have never had the rights therein... yet you're worried about them being chipped away? I submit that your priorites are somewhat misplaced.


    Again, not valid. He does indeed have rights, he just can't defend them on his own because he's not recognized by the government as an adult. It's the responsibility of his parent/legal guardian to defend those rights, and this has been done quite often in the past. Besides, it's very bad form to compare his "lack of rights" to the guy convicted in the article, as the commentor will gain all of the rights he discusses when he reaches majority, and at no time does the government hold control of those rights, except as allowed by his parent/legal guardian.

    Virg

    1. Re:Validity Failure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The government does not force him to go to high school. Compulsory schooling in the U.S. goes through grade 8. He can drop out of high school if his parent/legal guardian allows him to do so.

      That might be the case in some state, but not all. I went to a school district where the school employed a part-time sheriff's deputy for the sole purpose of rounding up truants. First time truants got a warning, second time you usually spent the night in jail. Parents received fines if their children were repeatedly truant; there was no option to simply say their children didn't have to go, nor a way to file such with the school or the courthouse. And yes, this went up to high school level.

      All of those things are put in place not by the government, but by communities themselves.

      The community IS the government. Having a right means that the community can not impose its will upon an individual in the area the right covers. A student does not have the right to wear what they freely choose, and must abide by what the community deems appropriate, or face punishment.

      Yes, at age 18 they gain such rights, but that was the point I was attempting to make to the original poster -- if he's under 18 he has no rights, so faced with that reality, why was he so concerned about someone wanting to overthrow the government?

      He does indeed have rights, he just can't defend them on his own because he's not recognized by the government as an adult.

      To me, a right that you can not defend as a free individual is not a right at all, it's a priviledge to be given or denied at the whim of whomever you are controlled by. I concede that my interpretation is considered somewhat radical by most adults, but I stand by it nevertheless.

  211. The irony is so thick by FreekyGeek · · Score: 1

    It's hilarious to me that "advocating the overthrow of the US government" is illegal. The people who founded this country overthrew their government. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Ben Franklin, all the founders were revolutionaries who spent years advocating the overthrow of their government. Some of them, Jefferson especially, wrote extensively about the need, the right, and the DUTY to overthrow governments when they became oppressive. They also wrote this little thing known as the First Amendment. Now we are told "well, it was OK for them, but you can't do it to us..."

    "The tree of liberty must from time to time be refreshed with the blood of tyrants and patriots"
    - Thomas Jefferson

    So go ahead, criticize the government, it's your consitutional right to do so... unless "They" decide that people might be actually listening to you. Then, it's "treason".

    Not that I'm advocating such things, of course. Though I'm sure that my record, "enshrined in some little folder somewhere in Washington" is now a bit bigger, I guess.

  212. GWB quotes Catch 22 by ultraslacker · · Score: 1

    "That's right," Colonel Catchart cried emphatically. "You're either for us or against us. There's no two ways about it."
    "I'm afraid he's got you," added Colonel Korn. "Your either for us or against your country. It's as simple as that."
    "Oh, no, Colonel. I don't buy that."
    Colonel Korn was unruffled. "Neither do I, frankly, but everyone else will. So there you are."

    1. Re:GWB quotes Catch 22 by desenz · · Score: 1

      I love that book. Now, I'm going to have to read it again. (not that its a bad thing)

  213. Simple... by TygerFish · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This thing is reductible to a few simple points:

    1. With few exceptions, all information (speech) is licit under our constitution--including things that would let you blow stuff up or overthrow the government.

    2. So long as you do not get together with other and plan to *perform* a set of *actions* like assassinating someone at a given place at a certain time, you can talk about overthrowing the government to your heart's content.

    3. Our notion of government is one where the people and the nation are in some sense the property of a ruling body; the ruling body serves the people and not vice versa.

    In a population with a diversity of ideas, there will always be a number of people who will want not reform but revolution, and it is one of the functions of government to keep their numbers low by providing a free and prosperous society that is immune to revolutionaries because there are no viable, convincing arguments for a grass-roots revolution in such a society.

    With this in mind, what the government did is like a crime against nature and it shows a sickening lack of understanding. In most cases, a few years of working a decent job and getting laid semi-regularly beats the anarchy right out of young men, instead, the government's activist stance here works to demonstrate that the kid's Anarchist, revolutionary philosophy is spot-on correct.

    It says that our government can and does punish the dissemination of information it dislikes (mis-)using anti-terror laws to suppress free speech just like every modern dictatorship, from Hitler's Germany to the People's Republic of China. The only difference is one of extent--the placement of the threshold of action--and a prosecution sweetened by judicial blackmail does a lot to lesson the difference.

    Another thing to consider is what it's going to do to the kid in the long run. It hard to imagine how much the kid is going to hate the system after spending what should be his sophmore year in college in a federal prison. Before, the kid wanted to talk about throwing bombs, in a year's time, maybe he'll end up wanting to do Timothy McVeigh one better.

    You've gotta love it.

    --
    To mail me, remove the 'mailno' from my email addy.
    "Yeah. It smells, too..."
    1. Re:Simple... by BitHerder · · Score: 1

      "In most cases, a few years of working a decent job and getting laid semi-regularly beats the anarchy right out of young men..."

      Yeah, but what are we going to do with all these Slashdotters?

  214. This isn't about hacking by Homburg · · Score: 1

    Here is a copy of the plea bargain Austin signed. It doesn't mention any of the hacking allegations the FBI included on the warrent they used to search his house. Whether or not Sherman is a hacker, he was sentenced to prison for providing information - not conspiracy or incitement, but simply speech. Whether or not you agree with Austin's politics, that's quite simply terrifying.

  215. Anarchists cookbook??? by isotope23 · · Score: 1

    So the anarchists cookbook is now in a grey area?

    here is the legal code:

    "(2) Prohibition. -

    It shall be unlawful for any person -

    (A)

    to teach or demonstrate the making or use of an explosive, a destructive device, or a weapon of mass destruction, or to distribute by any means information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the manufacture or use of an explosive, destructive device, or weapon of mass destruction, with the intent that the teaching, demonstration, or information be used for, or in furtherance of, an activity that constitutes a Federal crime of violence; or

    (B)
    to teach or demonstrate to any person the making or use of an explosive, a destructive device, or a weapon of mass destruction, or to distribute to any person, by any means, information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the manufacture or use of an explosive, destructive device, or weapon of mass destruction, knowing that such person intends to use the teaching, demonstration, or information for, or in furtherance of, an activity that constitutes a Federal crime of violence"

    I would say just the Title, "Anarchist's Cookbook" would make it illegal to print or sell.

    Can't wait till the Boy Scout's start singing "Amerika Uber Alles"

    --
    Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    1. Re:Anarchists cookbook??? by frost22 · · Score: 1
      Can't wait till the Boy Scout's start singing "Amerika Uber Alles"
      Ooops. They already do.

      The thing is called 'Pledge of Allegiance'

      The text doesn't matter anyway - neither did all the nonsense matter that old Adolf made people sing and swear. The key is the common rite, the act of public submission which tries to instill loyalty and obedience into you on a subconcious level.

      (FWIW - you quote the wrong song, and also have a typo there. The original Nazi party song was "Die Fahne hoch!" and this is also what you heard the HJ singing frequently. The Deutschlandlied you quote was the old democratic national anthem which they did not manage to abolish entirely for its populartity - but they forbade all but the first verse to be sung. It is to this day the national anthem of Germany, though we sing the third verse on official occasions, which is better suited for that anyway. )
      --
      ...and here I stand, with all my lore, poor fool, no wiser than before.
  216. That'll Do it by reallocate · · Score: 1

    >> ...the site caught the ire of the FBI for advocating the overthrow of the U.S. government.

    Yeah, that'll do it. Fomenting revolution is usually against the law.

    Where do these people come from?

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
    1. Re:That'll Do it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, not an American, are you?

    2. Re:That'll Do it by reallocate · · Score: 1

      I am.

      What's your point?

      Inciting revolution is not protected speech.

      --
      -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  217. Re:What really bothers me about this? The hypocrac by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Um... because one of these can actually get people killed?

    You CAN figure out which one, right?

  218. Historical Pattern by uberdood · · Score: 1

    Let's examine history.

    1) Feel oppressed by government.

    2) Overthrow the government. (No such thing as a PEACEFUL overthrow. No one voluntarily gives up running a country.)

    3) First act as new government - make it illegal to overthrow the government.

    Rinse and repeat.

    --
    "Population 1,656"
  219. I think you prove the case well... by cliffmeece · · Score: 1
    I thought it was funny that you seem frustrated with stereotypes of conservatives while enforcing said stereotypes with your name-calling, insults and threats of violence.

    There are a lot of people out there that would like to see more emphasis placed on diplomacy and multilateralism abroad and more concentration on social programs like health care at home. I don't see how this makes them suck weasels, circle-jerkers, or small-minded.

    You are the one here being intolerant.

  220. Wrong by ultraslacker · · Score: 5, Informative

    GWB has used the phrase "with us or against us" several times.

    Q Mr. President, does it appear that Iran is flexing its muscles in Western Afghanistan, and does that threaten the U.S. war on terrorism in that region?

    THE PRESIDENT: Well, first of all, Iran must be a contributor in the war against terror; that our nation and our fight against terror will uphold the doctrine, either you're with us or against us; and any nation that thwarts our ability to rout terror out where it exists will be held to account, one way or the other.

    Source - vote-smart.org presidential speeches page
    1. Re:Wrong by Pave+Low · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Glad to see you just proved my point.

      The parent quoted Pres. Bush saying "for us", where I pointed out that he actually said "with us", a subtle but signficant difference. Your comment only reinforced what I said. I could have quoted yours too, but that would have been redundant. I'm sorry some people can't buy a clue.

      Next time, read more carefully before so boldly saying somebody is wrong, because it only made you look like a bigger idiot.

      --
      SIG:Slashdot: indymedia for nerds.
    2. Re:Wrong by ultraslacker · · Score: 1

      Your quibbling over prepositions may seem significant to you, but you are grossly missing the point. The prothesis/apothesis is a succinct expression of fascism.

    3. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      good god, get a fucking life.

    4. Re:Wrong by Halo1 · · Score: 1

      I'm fairly certain he has also explicitly said "Either you're with us, or you're with the terrorists". I got that quote from this movie (at 1 minute 27 seconds). Although that movie is one big cut-and-paste job of a ton of fragments (and most definitely created by a person who is very much against GWB's actions), that particular quote seems to be one single fragment (although they left 0.1 second or so out of it to keep up with the rhythm of the music; you can see the text at the bottom suddenly slightly jumps after "Either you're with us", but it's still the same scroller and text).

      --
      Donate free food here
    5. Re:Wrong by Fjord · · Score: 1

      You are probably right that he never said "for us" in that phrase, but unfortunately there is a lot of press that claims he said it. Considering that the difference is more subtle than "I invented the internet" vs "As a Congressman, I took the initiative to create the Internet," and that the phrase is being repeated by both pro- and anti-Bush articles, it'll probably be as difficult to erase from the collective minds as Bogart supposedly saying "Play it again, Sam" in Casablanca.

      Not that I'm stopping you, this kind of thing irks me too.

      --
      -no broken link
  221. The Truth according to Wendell Holmes by rocketfairy · · Score: 1

    "I know it when I see it."

  222. Go to the library to learn how to make bombs by peteo · · Score: 1

    The anarchist cook book is available in most libraries and shows you Exactly how to make bombs Ah crap will I go to jail for telling you this?

  223. Re:Republicans arent conservative, liberaterians a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We are spending money building schools, paving roads, and providing healthcare for people WHO ARENT EVEN HUMA^H^H AMERICANS!!!

  224. Re:The French don't count. by cliffmeece · · Score: 1

    yeah because that Napoleon guy was a real loser...

  225. WARNING: OFFTOPIC by Sevn · · Score: 1

    What an awesome slashcode idea. Regardless of how
    offensive you seemed to feel about my obvious
    scarcasm, I think there is some mechanism you can
    use to permanantly block my messages. I've never
    used it myself, but I remember there used to be
    this "troll" list you add to your foes list or
    something, then chose to not see posts from those
    people. As my comments are highly rated at times,
    when I'm on slashdot which is rare, you are probably
    going to be subjected to more of them. You might
    want to pursue this blocking gimmick you can set
    up with your account because I genuinely wouldn't
    want you to feel discomfort by accidentally
    reading my posts. :) When I'm spewing forth my
    rhetoric, I'm almost always playing a heavy
    devils advocate with a kernel of truth theme
    and it rubs a lot of people the wrong way.

    --
    For every annoying gentoo user, are three even more annoying anti-gentoo crybabies. Take Yosh from #Gimp for example.
  226. Time to seek asylum in Canada... by HermanAB · · Score: 1

    At least there is still one country in the Americas that is not a total police state.

    --
    Oh well, what the hell...
    1. Re:Time to seek asylum in Canada... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



      Yeah, from your analogy, with canada opening its arms to illegal arabs, and refusing to guard its borders from terrorists, it's a polar opposite.

      And canadians need to look in the mirror first before trashing others.

      With friends like canada, who needs terrorists?

    2. Re:Time to seek asylum in Canada... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Buh-bye, now. Thanks for stopping by. Visit soon, but not too soon. Arrivederci. Vaya con dios. Aloha. Take off, eh?

  227. The Purpose of Government ... by Lucas+Membrane · · Score: 4, Insightful
    is to protect the rights of the people. When it does not do that, it is the right and duty of the people to alter or abolish the government. Thomas Jefferson said that. (cf Declaration of Independencs)

    It is not against the law in the U.S. to advocate the overthrow of the government. REPEAT: It is not against the law in the U.S. to advocate the overthrow of the government.

    1. Re:The Purpose of Government ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea better make sure you got plenty of people who agree with you before you get public about it. You otherwise will ensd up in jail or worse, dead.
      .

    2. Re:The Purpose of Government ... by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 1

      It is not against the law to succeed in overthrowing the government either. It IS, however, illegal to attempt to do so and fail.
      Ironic, isn't it?
      no, that's not irony (learned that from /.)

    3. Re:The Purpose of Government ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >It is the right and duty of the people to alter
      >or abolish the government.

      Okay. So, in order to DO that, you need a fair part of the military command, and the people who follow their orders, to agree with you that the government needs abolishing or alteration.

      As it happens, pretty much everybody is either satisfied with the status quo, or is at least comfortable enough to live another day under it. Certainly no-one with the ability to turn a military division or two against the current authority seems to be doing it, not in the US at least.

      I'm afraid it's going to have to get A WHOLE LOT worse before revolutionary scenarios begin to play out. Because no matter how bad you think things are today, generally speaking people have never lived better. Even the most desparate, poorest person in the US will probably outlive starving in the street. And most people have expectations far beyond their next meal. In a word, we are *prosperous* even with the "economy" in the toilet. And, in general, people don't regard the current government as particularly limiting their freedoms or infringing their rights. Those who do constitute either an insignificant minority, or else, they are being rather quiet about their beliefs.

      Which brings us to the alternative to revolution: The democratic process. A pathetic few consider themselves to have enough of a stake in government to participate. That means, voting, working for a campaign, joining a political party, corresponding with representatives on a regular basis from the beginning of their career to the end, not just when you have a pet peeve that you think worthy of an email! Even running for office.

      Until you have the average, reasonable person outraged enough to admit they aren't blissfully happy, all the talk about the "right and duty" to alter or abolish the system is useless, and falls on deaf ears.

      When the time does come, and the average soldier is forced to choose between loyalty to the State and loyalty to the People, and is willing to put his own life at risk and even kill his own brother for justice... and when his commanders also are faced with the same dilemma, and when some choose Justice over Nationalism, then the spirit you express may take on some meaning. This has happened in the past, but the lens of history severely distorts both the causes and the outcome.

    4. Re:The Purpose of Government ... by Armbrust84 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It is not against the law in the U.S. to advocate the overthrow of the government.

      It is against the law if you advocate the overthrow by means of violence or assassinations. It is fairly obvious as to why, when you realize that we are based on a democratic system, not a militant pissing match of who has a larger militia so they can bend the laws to their advantage.

      The way to change or even overthrow a government is through a gradual democratic movement supported by a majority, not a violent minority.

      But I still think that other than the computer law-breaking, what he did is free speech.

    5. Re:The Purpose of Government ... by Kirth · · Score: 1

      Yes, would you please overthrow your government then?
      --

      --
      "The more prohibitions there are, The poorer the people will be" -- Lao Tse
    6. Re:The Purpose of Government ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *lol* most underrated funny comment EVER

    7. Re:The Purpose of Government ... by Alphi1 · · Score: 1

      Shhhhh! Don't let the government hear you say that!! The government thinks that it's the PEOPLE that are there to protect the rights of the GOVERNMENT, not the other way around! ;)

  228. Re:This isn't about freedom of speech or linking.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I think asking people to make bombs and kill people should be illegal. Acording the the article his site told people to "use them during demonstrations against interstate and foreign trade".

    I think he should rot in jail. I also think that bomb making instructions should always be protected by the first amendment. Just be sure to ask people to be safe with them, not kill people.

    The courts have never ruled against 18 USC 842 (p)(2)(A) when there is intent. --
    me

  229. Ok, outlaw all the Nazi and KKK sites. by HanzoSan · · Score: 1



    Lets outlaw these sites first since both these groups have proven records of actually doing what they say in text.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  230. they can do anything they like. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    of course there is a reason.
    politics.

    that is how the judicial system of any government works. gang members are allowed to basicly run free, murdering, raping, selling drugs etc. but the second they become political there is a huge crack down by the government.
    look at the black panthers versus any black street gang and the government resonce.

    having nonpolitical gangs around gives te government an excuse to have tons of cops out on th streets to control the masses. they dont want to take care of the gangs.
    but when a group comes along that is a threat to the government, the government will use any means nessacery to destroy this group.

  231. how ironic by cr@ckwhore · · Score: 1

    The ultimate irony in this whole thing is the US Patriot Act itself ... it will eventually take away the very freedoms it purports to protect. How ironic.

    --
    Skiers and Riders -- http://www.snowjournal.com
    1. Re:how ironic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to fart on something you enjoy so much.
      Your vaunted Liberal Democratic Party allowed the Patriot Act to be passed. Liberals don't love freedom. They talk a good bit about it but in fact they hate freedom.

      I am betting the Patriot act isn't renued. To many conservatives dislike it and will fight against it.

  232. Re:Republicans arent conservative, liberaterians a by plugger · · Score: 1

    Hell yeah, once they had grabbed Bin Laden, the rest of them would have forgotten their hatred and gone home to their villages.

    As to universal health care, with the economy looking as shaky as it does right now, I'm glad to be in Britain with it's much derided National Health Service.

    It's funny how much national outlooks differ. Over here, the people are most definitely against the removal of universal health care. Deregulated markets and winner-takes-all economics are not the only way to help people to be prosperous, secure and happy.

  233. Yeah, and Al Capone was only guilty of tax fraud by sideshow · · Score: 1
    All this crap about hacking is obviously fake or they would certainly have convicted him of that too.

    It's not about what he did, it's about what the Feds can easily prove.

    --

    Hollow words will burn and hollow men will burn.

  234. Re:The guy is a fascist by Temsi · · Score: 1

    Actually, it wasn't Voltaire who said that, even though it's been attributed to him for nearly a century.

    It was written as a commentary on his character.

    The origin of the quote has been traced to a book first published in 1906 entitled Life of Voltaire, written by S. G. Tallentyre, the pen name of Evelyn Beatrice Hall.
    Questioned about it in 1935, she explained: "I did not intend to imply that Voltaire used these words verbatim, and should be much surprised if they are found in any of his works."

    You can look this up in the book They Never Said It

    -
    Personally, I wholeheartedly agree with the quote.
    Unless you're willing to support the right of your enemy to speak his mind, you do not truly believe in free speech.

    When the government fears the people, it's a democracy.
    When the people fear the government, it's a dictatorship.
    When a citizen is locked up for being against the current administration, it's fascism.

    Thus, by definition, based on this event and many others, we already live in a fascist dictatorship.

    This guy should absolutely not be in jail.

    He has the right, under the First Amendment to the Constitution of these United States, otherwise known as the first article in the Bill of Rights, to say what he wants, where he wants and when he wants, without fear of goverment action.

    If that includes telling people how to make bombs, that's fine. If anyone chooses to use that information and actually make a bomb and use it, it is 100% the responsibility of that individual, not the person who told him how to make it. If it was, Einstein would have died in prison for being responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people. After all, he gave the scientists the information they need to learn how to make an atomic bomb.

    If what the person says includes suggesting that the government be overthrown, he also has the right to say that. He even has the right to scream it from a mountain top. If someone takes him up on that, it's a different issue. Most people use their right to Vote as the means to replace a rotten government.

    I think the FBI is extrapolating here. He had bombing info AND anti-establishment info on the same site, so they conclude he must be a threat to national security.

    So, be careful what you link to.

    If I tell my friends that I can't stand George W. Bush and his policies, does that make me a threat to the country?
    No.
    To Bush himself?
    No.
    To his reputation?
    No, he seems to be perfectly capable of ruining that himself.

    --
    -- This sig for rent.
  235. Yeah by Back_Bacon · · Score: 1

    How many of us get angry when after your compulsory weekly shooting spree, a lawyer of one of the little twerps being brought up on charges claims that GTA inspired the killing and thus his client should be allowed to go free and the game company should get sued and held accountable?

    All of you? Ok so now how about when some little twerp in a bid for attention creates a website detailing bomb building and other potentialy sensitive pieces of infomation, then whines and crys about freedom of speech?

  236. black cross by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the anarchist black cross http://www.anarchistblackcross.org/ is probably the best group to get in touch with if you want to help out Sherman.

    the ACLU said they are not interested in the case.

  237. Punish actions not thoughts by HanzoSan · · Score: 1



    I hate thought crimes, I hate when people punish thoughts.

    Look, I dont like the KKK, the Nazis, and so on, and they should be public enemy #1, but they have every right to make a website and teach hate because this is what freedom is all about, its what our country is about.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  238. Re:This isn't about freedom of speech or linking.. by GooberToo · · Score: 2, Informative

    That doesn't have to be true. People take a plea bargin because they know that some large percent of the legal system is completely broken and they never know which side of the percentile they are on. Taking a plea bargin has absolutely nothing to do with guilt or innocense. It's called mitigating your risks, plain and simple.

    Give a coin to a stranger, ask that person to flip it for you. If it's tails, you go to jail. If it's heads, you go free. Furthermore, if it's tails, flip again. If it's tails again, add on tens years to your stay. Believe it or not, going to court is more or less just like that. Don't believe me, ask any reasonable lawyer.

    This is why many people plea bargin and even in some extreme cases, confess to something they didn't do. There are studies that actually support something like a large single digit of confessions are false. In these cases, they still go to jail. This is spite of the fact that evidence actually shows they didn't commit the crime. In fact, some of these cases have enough evidence to convict someone else, however, they are still not freed from jail.

    The legal systems are nothing but a crap shoot, with the winner often being the person with the biggest wallet. Remember, courts have ZERO to do with justice!

  239. Re:What really bothers me about this? The hypocrac by JayBlalock · · Score: 1

    The fanatical religious leader, obviously. History, recent and ancient, bears that one out without much need for thought. It's not like it takes more than a few minutes of searching to come up with instructions on making a homemade bomb, regardless of how many people the Feds lock up for posting links.

    --
    Bush: He's Liberal in all the wrong ways.
  240. Idealism not practical by MisterMook · · Score: 1

    By your own 'silver rule' I should feel justified removing your essential liberties and rights to free speech. Good thing someone thought idealism was practical once, huh?

    1. Re:Idealism not practical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to do better. You would only feel 'justified' in removing his 'essential liberties' should he be advocating your violent death and showing people how they can do it.

    2. Re:Idealism not practical by Kibo · · Score: 1

      Not really, "Do unto other as they would advocate doing unto you."

      I don't advocate anything regaurding your speech other than you pay for it like everyone else. Simply, you stand by what you say and I'll stand by what I say. See, it's symetric. By that same token I would like him to stand by what he said, and did. Which of course he didn't because far from being a hardcore anarchist, he's just a disenchanted pussy. He should have rolled the dice, or fought the government's attempts exert any influence over him. But he didn't. He talks big, but at the first sign of any challenge he folds like the Flash at an oragami contest.

      If he thinks murder is so great, he should just go get himself murdered and see if it's everything he thinks it is.

      I think it's a great rule. Sort of Zen. Everything and nothing at once. But back to people who are pro random bombings, yeah, not a lot of people would show up to that pity party for a number of reasons, and those that do, are doing so simply to make a point (badly). Being that he's around 20, an MRI might not be a bad idea. Wonder how good he is at math. You know?

      --
      --Jimmy has fancy plans; and pants to match.
  241. Well... If History Is Any Lesson... by istartedi · · Score: 1

    "Remember, fascism and a police state doesn't come all at once, it comes piece by piece. How far will we allow it go until we are all locked up in concentration camps."

    Well, if history is any lesson... this guy will use his time in prison to write about his struggle. Then when he gets out he'll fall into the welcome arms of his supporters, form a political party with no respect for the institutions of the old Republic, and exploit an opportunity to sieze power.

    So. To answer your question, how far will we let it go? Until guys like this actually start to look like a reasonable alternative to the current Republic. You didn't ask how long, but I'll throw that in as a bonus: 1933-1923=10 years.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  242. Two things to remember in a raid... by nacturation · · Score: 4, Informative

    First, if you're ever arrested and read your rights, the person reading them will conclude with something like "Do you understand these rights as I have read them?" The correct answer to this is always, "No, I don't." This isn't being facetious either -- without a background in law and how the exercise (or not) of those rights will affect your legal position, you are in no way capable of understanding the full ramifications.

    Secondly, if you're ever in a position where you're being interrogated, the answer to any question is always, "I want my lawyer." Never, under any circumstances, agree to anything unless you have first spoken to your lawyer. Oh, and here's a freebie... even if you have 25 heavily armed agents in riot gear storming your house, remember this piece of advice: right after you shit your pants, always ask to see their search warrant. No warrant, and they'll need to take that double-barrel shotgun elsewhere, thank you very much.

    --
    Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    1. Re:Two things to remember in a raid... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Search warrants are not needed now that the 4th ammendment has been abolished, thanks to the Big Brother Act (AKA The Patriot Act)..

      They can get the warrant up to THREE DAYS after the search, plenty of time to make sure they fill in the blanks with the correct information.

      And they don't sign them anymore, they claim that they can not display the judges signature because of security concerns and because someone may forge it.

      Yes, it's a brave new world.

    2. Re:Two things to remember in a raid... by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      A layman's (read: Slashdot punk's) guide to misconceptions about the Patriot Act.

    3. Re:Two things to remember in a raid... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There are plenty of misconceptions about the PATRIOT act, but that article isn't the one to clear them up. What a poorly argued piece of tripe. Just to make a few examples:

      Rutherford president John Whitehead denounced the Bush administration's characterization of the terror strikes as "acts of war by foreign aggressors," without however offering a single argument to support his view. In fact, of course, the 9/11 bombings were classic decapitation strikes [...]. Had a state carried them out, no one could possibly deny that they were acts of war [...]. Recognizing that the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks were acts of war entails certain consequences.

      Whoa, whoa. We never "recognized" that they were acts of war - you just said they would be, if a state had carried them out, as well they would. If Finland robbed a 7-11, that would be an act of war too.

      First, the campaign against al-Qaida and other Islamic terror organizations is really war, not a metaphor, like the "war on drugs."

      Proceeding under the unproved assertion that the attacks were "acts of war", now we decide that it's a genuine war. So much for "had a state carried them out"; now there's no need for a state to have a war against. A few sentences later:

      [C]ritics refuse to recognize the reality of the war and thus won't accept the need for expanded powers to prosecute it.

      Well, so much for the argument; now the war's a foregone conclusion.

      The charges they have brought against the War on Terror have been so numerous, impugning every single administration action since 9/11, that it would take hundreds of pages to refute them all.

      Hehehe. "I could refute them all, but it would take too long."

      The chance that the FISA court will approve a 215 order because the FBI "doesn't like the books [a person] reads . . . or because she wrote a letter to the editor that criticized government policy" is zero.

      Ah. Zero. This assessment is based on the claim that "The bureau must first convince the court that oversees anti-terror investigations (the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA, court) that the documents are relevant to protecting 'against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities.'" This assertion supposes that the chances of the FISA court making an error are zero; they can and will never err.

      What's different in the section 215 provision is that libraries or other organizations can't challenge the FISA court's order and can't inform the target of the investigation, as they can in ordinary criminal proceedings. [...] The battleground is not the courtroom but the world beyond, where speed and secrecy can mean life or death.

      Organizations can't challenge the FISA court, because that court can't move quickly enough to make a decision in time to prevent the evil plot. They can decide quickly enough in the initial thorough review you claim they take, but taking the time for a second review would mean death, it seems.

      I don't want to make this comment overly long, so I've cut it off here. If there are any other points in particular from the article you'd like to reference, please let me know; I'd be happy to refute those too.

      I'm not knee-jerking for or against the PATRIOT act here, now, just against the frothing, argumentless 'guide' you link so glibly. Please apply some critical thinking; the articles you speak so highly of reflect on you.

    4. Re:Two things to remember in a raid... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God really I don't need a search warrant.
      I'll be right over to bust the door down and drag you away to the Gulag.

    5. Re:Two things to remember in a raid... by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      1. You wasted at least half your long post babbling about this:

      a. The administration termed the attacks "acts of war by foreign aggressors"
      b. Some critics didn't like this characterization, because they arbitrarily defined war as something only states do.
      c. The author of the article says no, the administration is right, because whether or not the "aggressors" were states is irrelevant.

      Want to waste lots and lots of words dickering over this semantic point? Fine; do it with someone else. It doesn't affect the main points.

      2. THE AUTHOR SAID: "The chance that the FISA court will approve a 215 order because the FBI "doesn't like the books [a person] reads . . . or because she wrote a letter to the editor that criticized government policy" is zero."

      YOU RESPONDED: "This assertion supposes that the chances of the FISA court making an error are zero; they can and will never err."

      Brilliant analysis, Sherlock, except the "assertion" doesn't "suppose" this anywhere. If you intend this to be criticism, then I take it you believe the FBI should be prohibited from seeking warrants to search the houses of murderers; after all, the judge in question might "mak[e] an error."

      3. You seem to have completely failed to grasp the author's two simple points:

      a) Our current laws were designed to investigate and punish criminal activity, not prevent international terrorism. Therefore, they do not do a very good job of coping with the different challenges terrorism presents. Rigidly trying to cram terrorism into our preconceived ideas about criminality will just end up getting people killed.

      b) All the rhetoric surrounding the issue is obscuring some basic points of fact (for example, that LEA's are still required to obtain judicial approval).

      Now, you say: "Organizations can't challenge the FISA court, because that court can't move quickly enough to make a decision in time to prevent the evil plot."

      I'm not exactly sure what this non-sequitur means. How quickly the court can move is irrelevant. The point is that we want to avoid this scenario:

      i. FBI gets credible information that Abdul is plotting some sort of terrorist attack.
      ii. FBI goes to a judge and says, "Here's the information we've received. On this basis, we'd like to find out what books Abdul has checked out. We believe that might give us some insight into what he's planning."
      iii. The judge looks over the information and says "I judge this to be credible, and to relate to terrorism. OK, go ahead and check out his library record."
      iv. The FBI does so. It finds out Abdul has checked out books on poisons and the locations of major reservoirs in the area (I'm obviously exaggerating here, but you get the point).
      v. Right after the FBI leaves the library, Mabel the librarian calls Abdul. "Say, young man, I just thought you ought to know some G-men were snooping around here asking about your library record. I'm sure there's some misunderstanding - perhaps you should call them and get it sorted out."

      To recap: WITH REGARDS TO CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS, the FBI has *always* had the authority to get a warrant and snoop into your personal life. But there was and is nothing preventing a third party from alerting you to the fact. WITH REGARDS TO TERRORISM, the Patriot Act makes it against the law for a third party to alert you; HOWEVER, the FBI must convince a FISA court that it does in fact relate to terrorism. As the author notes, they can't just tell the judge they didn't like your last letter to the editor.

      Really, *my* only point was about the misconceptions. From my own experience, it is indisputable that some people vehemently opposed to the Patriot Act (and usually, this seems to mean people who are vehemently opposed to the Bush Administration, despite that fact that the "Act" was an act of Congress) aren't aware of the judical review provisions. My co-worker insists - I am not making this up, I actually had this conversation with her - that right now, the U.S. Government is locking away large numbers of U.S. citizens for indefinite periods of time, with no judicial review, under the authority of the Patriot Act. Uh-huh.

    6. Re:Two things to remember in a raid... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I question the value of FISA judicial review. The FBI has been getting wiretap approvals for quite a while from a secret "court" that allegedly has never refused any request.

    7. Re:Two things to remember in a raid... by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      Yes, I admit that is a problem. I'm not sure what we can do about it though. The whole point is to get somebody outside the LE community (i.e., someone with nothing personally at stake in the investigation) to review requests. Beyond that, I'm not sure what kind of guarantees we can make.

      I do have two points though. First, I strongly suspect the "allegedly never refused any request" info is bogus. It's a secret court -- the fact is that we just have no way of knowing this, so it strongly smells like a made-up rumor.

      Second, it wouldn't surprise me to learn there have been very few requests turned down. I guarantee you that the LE agents involved are constantly harangued to make sure their information is solid before they act. Contrary to what one may think, LEA culture is actually very corporate and risk-averse; CYA is the first rule of business.

      You know, let me add one more thing. I didn't mean any of my posts to come across as a knee-jerk defense of the government. For example, this whole Hawash thing really concerns me. If anything, you could classify me as a reasonable (i.e., non-wingnut) libertarian. I only posted because so many /. kiddies clearly don't understand the Patriot Act, or the reasons behind it.

  243. Hey, I remember this from last time it was possted by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As I recall, last time it was posted there was a great deal of outcry and outrage about how the police had raided him for the content of his website - only it turned out that hey, they raided him for cracking and defacing a number of (government) web sites. And they found explosives. But that wasn't mentioned, in the original story cause that would screw up the image of the government stomping on some poor, innocent anarchist who was only espousing his political beliefs. Lovely how nothings changed.

    --
    Why?
  244. Re:This isn't about freedom of speech or linking.. by Cyno · · Score: 1

    One question for you: did you look at his website?

  245. support political prisoners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the ACLU is not intrested in this case.

    if you want to help, try getting in touch with your local anarchist black cross. http://www.anarchistblackcross.org

  246. Oh stop making excuses!!!! by HanzoSan · · Score: 1



    Right now we have a Republican controlled congress, senate, president, hell republicans even control the media.

    Whats your excuse now? Republicans control EVERYTHING and still are spending through the roof, what do you have to say about that? It has nothing to do with the war on terrorism, the War on terrorism is expensive yes, but its HIGHLY over rated, we were attacked once in 10 years, yes it was a big attack but these terrorists were trying to attack us and failing all through the Clinton admin, Bush has his guard down and we get attacked and suddenly we have to give up all our freedom because the CIA didnt do its job?

    Throwinng more money at the problem is not the solution, it doesnt work public schools so why would it work for this? I mean thats what you republicans love to say, now eat your words!

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:Oh stop making excuses!!!! by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      a little correction...the CIA did do it's job, it sent a warning to the president that hijackings were coming. The president it seems, ignored those warnings. Which is odd, because at the G-8 convention in Genoa, they mounted anti-aircraft guns on the top of the building. Why? Because they were afraid someone might fly an airplane into the building.

    2. Re:Oh stop making excuses!!!! by HanzoSan · · Score: 1


      Yeah but people want to make excuses for the lazy president so its officially the CIAs fault.

      Don't you notice that this president has more vacations than any President before him? Hes always at camp david, has more vacations than I do and I'm a college student.

      This guy gets a summer break, and now hes on another vacation, I mean am I the only one who notices 95% of the time President Bush seems to be at camp david or some retreat?

      --
      If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    3. Re:Oh stop making excuses!!!! by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      You're not the only one.

  247. Obiligatory Office Space ref by kensai · · Score: 1

    I guess he's off to the federal "pound-me-in-the-ass" prison.

  248. It is your duty by mnemotronic · · Score: 1
    From that pesky document know as the Declaration of Independence:
    But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.
    Our forefathers recognized that power corrupts, and provided for future changes of government. There doesn't seem to be any restrictions on the means of change, and the original founders did, in fact, employ more than harsh language when throwing off the imperial yoke.
    --
    The Russians have won. They have made the world a cesspool of distrust, greed, fear and hate.
    1. Re:It is your duty by Unordained · · Score: 1

      ... it'd have been rather unfair for such people to tell us, after throwing out the brits, that the citizens of the new nation couldn't do the same as they saw fit. how likely is that to happen here, however, when we practically have a cult of our founding fathers and original documents? how could we overthrow our government, when we cherish the constitution so much? (note that we might be overthrowing the government specifically because it does not cherish the constitution as much as the citizens, individually, do!)

      in any case, the US government seems to have had quite a bit of fun over time either helping or crushing revolutions and rebellions in various nations ... there's more money to be made in selling weapons to both sides of a conflict, and more power to be gained by making a government dependent on us to protect them from their own citizens, than there is in fostering or helping rebellions ...

      we found our freedom (or so we think) through violent revolution. our farmers, our militia, our mujahideen (effectively) gave us what we now hold dear. i would at least like our country to have a consistent, stated policy when it comes to revolutions at home or abroad.

      it is the duty of the citizens to overthrow the government if they can't find any ways of changing it through the processes already provided ... but is it the duty of our government to hold on to its power regardless? is it the duty of the government to hold on to land it claims to govern, even if a group (a large majority in a given area) wishes to leave the union / nation?

      i think our "founding fathers" believed in the necessity of government, at least on some level. i don't think they believed the one they instituted was perfect, or intrinsically worthy of standing for all eternity: they had changed their world ... i think they expected those coming after them to do just as much, each in his own time. should we be required to resort to violence to change our government, even in an "enlightened" society? do we have to wait until it becomes "absolute despotism" before we can act? ... open-source law, government, society. source code isn't the only thing that needs to be open, free, and modifiable for your local needs. and i think most governments have failed at the first phase of development: requirements (and scope) determination. our governments are constantly undergoing scope-creep. (note that i don't mind large projects, so size isn't the problem ... it's the lack of goals, the lack of vision, the lack of design that bothers me.)

      [may the karma-bashing begin!]

  249. Re:You Have Freedom for All Speach or You have Non by Marx_Mrvelous · · Score: 1

    You make some very good points. However, the idea of perfectly free speech can only exist in an anarchistic state. While intellecually appealing, it's not really possible. Our legal system has grown over the years, and we as Americans have to (we don't have a choice if we stay in the US) obey it. And it has decided, as you pointed out, that some speech is simply not protected.

    And yes, it is naturally under the authority of whatever governemnt is in power. But it is not "at the whim" nor is it "whoever happens to be wielding authority." There are rigourous checks and balances to sto pany person's "whim." And we elect our leaders, so it's not any Joe Schmoe who decides what is legal and illegal.

    Personally, I believe in the freedom of speech. However I also believe in the law, and changing unjust laws. This kid clearly broke the law, and now he's serving a (rather moderate) sentence.

    --

    Moderation: Put your hand inside the puppet head!
  250. Ahh yes, the classic American Revolution reference by sxltrex · · Score: 2, Informative

    You're not the first in this thread to bring it up.

    If you'll remember your American history, the revolution took place because there were no other options. Does the phrase "taxation without representation" ring a bell? The American people were under British rule, yet had no say in the government. We've figured out how to get that representation in a peaceful manner since then.

    It's called an election.

  251. Re:Freenet oops needa hit preview by Myuu · · Score: 1

    oops sry, didnt see the CNN link, so you did try to back that one up.

    --

    forget it.
  252. First they came for... by Sanity · · Score: 2, Insightful
    ... the script kiddie, and I did nothing, because I was not a script kiddie, ...

    Before you try to convince yourself that you are safe because you are different from this guy in X ways, remember that they always come for the easiest targets first, but if nobody speaks out then, then it will only be a matter of time before they come for the rest of us.

    1. Re:First they came for... by Jonner · · Score: 1

      Are you seriously trying to compare this situation with Nazi Germany? Are you comparing being a script kiddie with being a Pole, Slav, Catholic or Jew? This guy was a vandal. Maybe defacing the sites was his form of "speech," but most societies prevent their citizens from beating each other senseless (outside the ring) to express themselves as well. Maybe you're another anarchist. Of course, that's perfectly all right as long as you don't bring anarchy to your neighbors.

    2. Re:First they came for... by Laplace · · Score: 1

      Then they came for the guy who referenced the "then they came for" poem, but we hated that guy, so I said nothing

      --
      The middle mind speaks!
    3. Re:First they came for... by Sanity · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Are you seriously trying to compare this situation with Nazi Germany?
      Deadly serious. Haven't you noticed the first American concentration camp off the cost of Cuba? Haven't you noticed how this camp is being used to subvert the justice system, just as they were in Nazi Germany (this was their original purpose before the wholesale slaughter of their inhabitants). Haven't you noticed the construction of execution chambers at this new American concentration camp?
      This guy was a vandal. Maybe defacing the sites was his form of "speech," but most societies prevent their citizens from beating each other senseless (outside the ring) to express themselves as well
      Yeah, and defacing a website is really the equivolent of beating someone senseless. It is wrong to vandalize websites, just as it is wrong to vandalize a wall, but it certainly not deserving of a year behind bars.
      Maybe you're another anarchist
      Ah yes, demonize those that disagree with you, assign them labels to make it easier to treat them as non-humans, we have seen your type before.
    4. Re:First they came for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Before you try to convince yourself that you are safe because you are different from this guy in X ways, remember that they always come for the easiest targets first, but if nobody speaks out then, then it will only be a matter of time before they come for the rest of us.

      That's a great argument for what is really true conservatism, the most basic principle of which is to conserve. I mean, if you want to use that argument against the right, remember that it is equally valid against the left. It's just the slippery slope argument. So, if you want to just keep things the way they are, then you want to conserve, which is what true conservatism really is.

    5. Re:First they came for... by Jonner · · Score: 1
      Deadly serious. Haven't you noticed the first American concentration camp off the cost of Cuba? Haven't you noticed how this camp is being used to subvert the justice system, just as they were in Nazi Germany (this was their original purpose before the wholesale slaughter of their inhabitants). Haven't you noticed the construction of execution chambers at this new American concentration camp?
      So, is that where they're keeping the script kiddies now? You've completely changed the subject.

      Yeah, and defacing a website is really the equivolent of beating someone senseless. It is wrong to vandalize websites, just as it is wrong to vandalize a wall, but it certainly not deserving of a year behind bars.
      I'm not defending the government's side in this case. I don't know enough about it to conclude whether it's an unjust punishment or not. It may be, but it's silly to cry, "Nazis!" every time someone is unfairly punished.

      Ah yes, demonize those that disagree with you, assign them labels to make it easier to treat them as non-humans, we have seen your type before.
      I didn't say demon; you did. You seem to hyperbolize everything. I think that neither authoritarianism nor anarchy is good. You are free to believe in either, since we don't yet live in the former. I said you might be an anarchist because you seem willing to defend any actions punished by "the Man." The US goverment has certainly done many injustices against its citizens, as have all governments. That doesn't mean it's time to blow it up just yet. We are free to discuss it, but this guy went far beyond discussion.

      How many times does it have to be reiterated that this is not simply a free speech case. This guy maliciously interfered with other people's sites and advocated violence. It's quite possible that he's being punished extra harshly to make an example, but you can't put him in the same category as the people rounded up by the Nazis just for being born and worshiping how they believed.
    6. Re:First they came for... by Sanity · · Score: 1
      So, is that where they're keeping the script kiddies now? You've completely changed the subject.
      Not at all, you will notice that the reason he pleaded out was due to the threat of 20 years being added to his sentence because he is a "terrorist". The parallels are clear - yes, this might be the thin end of the wedge (although a year in a federal prison is no party for a 20 year old geek), but it is a fucking big wedge.
      It may be, but it's silly to cry, "Nazis!" every time someone is unfairly punished.
      Wrong - it is silly not to cry "Nazis!" when they are the best example of what can happen when words like "terrorist" are used to demonize people, justify the curtailment of free speech, and circumvent the justice system (although in the Nazi's era it was words like "communist" and "jew").
      I didn't say demon; you did.
      Very observant, doesn't really address the point though.
      This guy maliciously interfered with other people's sites and advocated violence.
      George Bush advocates violence in what he claims is a good cause. The founders of this country advocated violence - would you have them put in prison too?
    7. Re:First they came for... by Jonner · · Score: 1
      Wrong - it is silly not to cry "Nazis!" when they are the best example of what can happen when words like "terrorist" are used to demonize people, justify the curtailment of free speech, and circumvent the justice system (although in the Nazi's era it was words like "communist" and "jew").
      I doubt the Jews and communists would appreciate your calling them terrorists. Or were you saying that those are different things, but equally bad? Terrorism is inherently harmful to others, though being a Jew or communist isn't.

      Will you call me a Nazi if I label you a "whitey"? I don't know what your background is, but it wouldn't bother me much, since that's what I am.

      It sounds like Sherman advocated terrorist acts, though that doesn't necessarily make him a terrorist. Are you saying he had no association with terrorism, or are you defending terrorism itself?

      Very observant, doesn't really address the point though.
      I did address the point. I said your attitude made you sound like an anarchist. If you are, I wholeheartedly disagree with you, but it doesn't bother me for you to think that way as long as you don't resort to terrorism or open rebellion. If you aren't an anarchist, I was mistaken, and I'm sorry.

      George Bush advocates violence in what he claims is a good cause. The founders of this country advocated violence - would you have them put in prison too?
      Both statements are true, and probabaly every president has used the military at some point. I think the war in Afghanistan was necessary, but I'm not sure about the one in Iraq yet. As I go down this rabbit trail, I find it necessary to point out that the President of the US is given the position of Commander in Chief by the Constitution. If he abuses that power, he should be accountable, but Sherman never had a constitutional mandate to crack websites and encourage individuals to blow stuff (or people) up.

      The founders of the US were traitors to the crown, so if I were a loyalist, I would put them in prison. Since I didn't live then, I can't guess which side I'd be on.

      By the way, what is Sherman's cause? Is it just anarchy for the sake of anarchy? If he actively attempts to overthrow the US government, he is by definition a traitor and I would have no problem with his feeling the full effect of the law. He hasn't done that yet, so it's quite possible that he's being punished too harshly.
    8. Re:First they came for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck man ... you shouldn't procreate.
      You owe at least that much to this world.

    9. Re:First they came for... by catsidhe · · Score: 1
      Haven't you noticed the first American concentration camp off the cost of Cuba?
      *Ahem*. Second.
      --
      "This is a Hollywood movie: when it comes to the Laws of Physics, they're lucky if they get Gravity!" --- my wife
    10. Re:First they came for... by Sanity · · Score: 1
      I doubt the Jews and communists would appreciate your calling them terrorists
      Stop being an ass - I didn't call them terrorists, I drew a parallel between the way that demonizing people is dangerous, and the way that people are demonized as "terrorists" today is very reminiscent of the way that Jews and communists were demonized in Nazi Germany. In fact, it was a terrorist act, the burning of the Reichstag (which the Nazis said was perpetrated by Communists) that justified many of the changes to the law that allowed Hitler to become a dictator, and permitted the establishment of concentration camps.
      had a constitutional mandate to crack websites and encourage individuals to blow stuff (or people) up
      Citizens don't need the government's permission for everything they do or say, but the government needs the constitutions permission to restrict the actions of citizens.
      The founders of the US were traitors to the crown, so if I were a loyalist, I would put them in prison. Since I didn't live then, I can't guess which side I'd be on.
      Great, so you think that the US government's treatment of its citizens should be modelled on the British monarchy's treatment of its subjects during the war of independence? Glad we clarified that.
    11. Re:First they came for... by Jonner · · Score: 1
      Stop being an ass - I didn't call them terrorists, I drew a parallel between the way that demonizing people is dangerous, and the way that people are demonized as "terrorists" today is very reminiscent of the way that Jews and communists were demonized in Nazi Germany. In fact, it was a terrorist act, the burning of the Reichstag (which the Nazis said was perpetrated by Communists) that justified many of the changes to the law that allowed Hitler to become a dictator, and permitted the establishment of concentration camps.
      Are you saying that communist, Jew and terrorist are similar categories? Are you saying it's OK to be a terrorist? If you are, then I don't think this discussion will go anywhere. There's nothing wrong with attacking terrorism. There is something wrong with calling people terrorists if they aren't. That's the mistake the Nazis made characterizing all communists as terrorists.

      Prosecuting and punishing terrorists is not the same thing as "demonizing" all communists and Jews. The Feds are going after this guy because he encouraged and threatened terrorism, not because he was an upstanding citizen who was of the wrong ethnic background or political party. Is the punishment too harsh? Quite possibly, but you are still going too far to compare this incident to the Nazi approach. I'm sure you could find much better examples of US abuse of power that really would be comparable to Nazi methods.

      Citizens don't need the government's permission for everything they do or say, but the government needs the constitutions permission to restrict the actions of citizens.
      If you don't believe citizens need permission from the government to kill other people or intentionally cause widespread fear and panic, you are an anarchist. I'm not "demonizing" you, just stating a fact. The Federal government is given the power to protect its citizens from enemies. I have no problem with terrorists being treated as enemies. If the government doesn't have the power to protect its citizens from enemies (including terrorists), it might as well not exist.

      Is this guy a terrorist? I'm not sure, but there is at least evidence that he was headed that way.

      Great, so you think that the US government's treatment of its citizens should be modelled on the British monarchy's treatment of its subjects during the war of independence? Glad we clarified that.
      Yes, that's exactly what I said. Your powers of comprehension are astounding.

      Since I have to spell everything out for you, maybe you'll understand this. First of all, no human government has ever been perfect and supporting a government doesn't necessarily entail supporting every decision it has ever made.

      In the 1700s, many of the British American colonists decided that the British government was no longer treating them fairly or allowing them the freedom they needed and deserved. They tried to reason with Parliament and the King, to no avail. So, after much thought and deliberation, they reluctantly decided to secede.

      Other colonists didn't feel it was necessary to rebel, so they considered the rebels traitors, which they were. Under English law, it was completely reasonable to jail traitors, as well as under US law. It's easy to say the rebels were right now, with 20/20 hindsight, but things weren't so clear to everyone then.

      I don't fear the US government when I discuss politics, even if I criticize the government. I assume you don't either. I would fear the government if I were planning a coup or rebellion and discussing it openly. That is not a form of protected speech. I think this is still mostly a free society, though there are threats to individual freedom that can't be ignored.
  253. I'm Willing To Wager... by istartedi · · Score: 1

    ...that many of the people on Slashdot who think "the people" should own all the source code fail to realize that "the people" own all the armed forces. Yes. That's right.

    We The People through our elected representatives hold the "code" to all deadly force originating from within the US.

    We The People decide what the protocols are for using that force.

    We The People decide which forks are the official version.

    We The People have decided that it is in our best interest to have one and only one DeadlyForceObject in the program.

    The proposed addition of AnarchistDeadlyForceClass, and the desire to instantiate objects of said class was considered and soundly rejected by We The People. It was determined that it would create file-format confusion, as well as causing havoc on the network.

    In other words, trying to form an alternative military for the purpose of overthrowing the current sovereign nation ain't too bright.

    Most successful revolutionaries form peaceful political organizations first, or form them in parallel with a militant wing so that they can deny connections with the militants.

    The political aspect of the "anarchist" and "anti capitalist" movements in the US has virtually no popular support. If that ever changes, we will be in a sorry state.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  254. Man this country is getting scary by end15 · · Score: 1

    I'm moving to Mos Espa until the whole thing blows over. Come get me when it's safe.

    --
    All glory to the Hypnotoad!
  255. Re:This isn't about freedom of speech or linking.. by lubricated · · Score: 1

    Overthrowing the current government is protected political speach under the first amendment. It is definetly what the founding fathers intended. After all they over threw their government.

    --
    It has been statistically shown that helmets increase the risk of head injury.
  256. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by Hatta · · Score: 1
    He wasn't just preaching.. he was practicing what he preached. Therefore, he posed a REAL threat, not a virtual one.

    I submit that those who do not practice what they preach are the real threats.
    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  257. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

    Yes, because we know that disorderly conduct and unlawful assembly are just the first signs of the next Sirhan Sirhan. Big threat, being disorderly and being charged with an unconstitutional crime against freedom of assembly.

  258. It's back by gacp · · Score: 1

    Sieg Heil!

    What else can you say??? The US is already fascist, no longer proto- .

    --
    ``L'imagination au povoir.''
  259. Re:Ahh yes, the classic American Revolution refere by swillden · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We've figured out how to get that representation in a peaceful manner since then.

    Yep, it's called professional lobbyists. Pony up the bucks and you'll be represented just fine.

    No, I'm not usually this cynical.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  260. THIS ISN'T 1984 by Gigantic1 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    This isn't 1984, and this young kid certainly isn't Winston. Hey...it wasn't bomb-making, or anarcy, or anything else that got this kid in trouble - this stuff is all over the web and has been for years. Specifically, it was advocating the violent overthrow of the United States Government that got this kid toasted.

    Advocating the violent overthrow of the United States government never has been, or will be, legally protected constitutional amendment and associated laws which gaurd freedom of speech, and I'm amazed that so many penis-brains on this board don't get it.

    1. Re:THIS ISN'T 1984 by dvdeug · · Score: 1

      Advocating the violent overthrow of the United States government never has been, or will be, legally protected

      Seems like speech--which is protected by the First Amendment--to me. It also seems weird to engage in a behavior (violent overthrow of your government) and to advocate such behavior ("to water the tree of liberty with the blood of patriots") and then prohibit it.

  261. Re:This isn't about freedom of speech or linking.. by KenSeymour · · Score: 1

    When they overthrew the existing government, the founding fathers knew it was illegal (at least until they were done overthrowing).

    "We must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately."

    Ben Franklin - At the signing of the Declaration of Independence

    The nature of revolutions is that they are illegal under the old government and remain so as long as the old government remains.

    --
    "We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them." -- Albert Einstein
  262. Re:After viewing his former website, by kolombangara · · Score: 1

    Mr. Hard Ass anti-communist has spoken.

    Then this would be a site you would love:
    iNfOwArS

    But then again, since you are iliterate (the main clue is that you don't know what the word Communism means) it will likely not be comprehendible to you.

  263. Re:Republicans arent conservative, liberaterians a by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

    Pffft. Impediment to progress? Both parties are. The government will fuck you over, doesn't matter if it's wearing the mask of republican, or democrat. Democrats sometimes support things like universal healthcare, whilst republicans support universal corporate welfare. Might I remind everone that the Military is ran completely like an authoritarian socialist (state-capitalist) institution?

  264. Social progress in 3 easy to follow steps by Jack+Zombie · · Score: 1

    STEP 1. Beat someone up.
    STEP 2. ?
    STEP 3. Social progress!

    Makes sense.

    --
    "You should never doubt what nobody is sure about." -- Willy Wonka
  265. Being arrested can just be the start of the proces by pfafrich · · Score: 2, Interesting
    There are many many people who have used court cases, being arrested and prision as a political tool, indeed it can really gell the movement together.

    Heres a few examples which spring to mind.

    • Gandhi two long streatches in jail. Malcome X, Martin Luther King.
    • Swords into ploughshares three women took hammers to a UK Hawk aircraft, caused several million pounds worth of damage. Did they run, no they just sat down and waited to be arrested.
    • Mc Libel Trial a very high profile libel case. Through fighting the case the anti Mc Donalds movement became much more high profile.
    • Earth First direct action (breaking the law) for the environment.

    In my youth, I engaged in a few actions (locking myself to the houses of parliment and Malaysian airlines office) with 90% arrest chance. And yes I got arrested but not charged. Its a very different fealing being locked up for your beleif rather than for a crime or an injustice. Indeed its even empowering in a way.

    This case is a little different. But I hope he will take it in the right way, with dignety. And realise that its part of the process of change. A year (six months with good behaviour) is not than long for your beleifs.

    --
    There are four sorts of people in the world: fools, lunatics, idiots and morons. - Umberto Eco, Foucaut's pendulum.
  266. I love it by e_pluribus_funk · · Score: 1

    These suburban revolutionariess prattle about their lost rights.

    What do you think happens during a revolution?

    The *only* revolution that ever turned out well was the American one.

    *Every* *single* *other* political revolution resulted in situations much, much worse than what led to the revolution in the first place.

    And oh, btw the way, the solution to you "losing your rights" is not to blow up innocent people (up to and including government bureaucrats). Given how few people participate (relatively speaking) in American politics, if your cause is persuasive, it should be no problem getting a plurality to support you.

    Ah, but thats the rub, isn't it? You guys don't have a plurality backing you. Hence the revolution. My way or the highway. If you can't get what you want out of the system, break the system, and fuck whoever else gets hurt.

  267. Immigrants create criminal justice jobs by e_pluribus_funk · · Score: 1

    1/3 of the convicted criminals currently being cycled through California are illegal aliens.

    The net-net of immigration was positive prior to 1965. The 1965 immigration act fucked that all up.

    Instead of allowing immigration based on the quality of the immigrant, we now have an immigration policy based on pre-existence of family members already in the United States. So Pablo gets a greencard, moves in, and mom, dad, Pablo's wife and 4 kids all get to come in. Only Pablo is the only one that works. Because a $10/hr day laborer job will put a family of 6 below the poverty level, Pablo is on more public assistance (way more) than the hypothetical taxes he might pay. But since he earns so little, changes are he gets the earned income tax credit, so he actually gets paid money by the Federal government, not pays any in. Pablo's folks are too old to work, so they also get public assistance. And yes I'm using an ethno-centric immigration example because the vast majority of our immigration comes from Mexico, and the vast majority of immigrants are very poorly educated and are a net drain on the economy. In effect, the 1965 Immigration Act has done exactly what it's proponents (Edward "I drowned my girlfriend" Kennedy) said it would not.

  268. Re:You're WAY off part 2 by searchr · · Score: 1

    Guns have no other purpose than to kill or destroy. Cigarettes have no other purpose than to kill or destroy. Oh wait, except both of those things make tons of money for their makers, employ millions of Americans and bankroll thousands of politicians.

  269. Good by e_pluribus_funk · · Score: 1

    This is the best thing I've read all day. We shouldn't allow immigrants in that need to be "job trained" in the first place. The real benefit would be keeping unqualified immigrants out in the first place. Immigration is NOT a right, it is a privilege.

  270. Look on the bright side... by Phil+John · · Score: 1

    to go along with his memorable raisethefist.com domain name, he could now also have "federal-pound-me-in-the-ass-prison.com" (still available) which could contain links to, and information on, methods for not dropping the soap in the shower. Large section also for how not to become "bubba's" bitch. ;o)

    --
    I am NaN
  271. Re:After viewing his former website, by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

    Alex Jones is an idiot. He's a disinformation agent for the government. He throws enough truth in to make peak interest of the people that are angry about the current state of affairs but he obfuscates the truth with government contrived and sanctioned lies and disinformation.

    And if you think I have no idea what communism is, you are so, so very wrong. I spell communism in lowercase to reflect my disrespect and disdain for such an evil philosophy.

    I've read Das Kapital and several of Lenin's works. I've studied Stalin and Stalinism in depth. I've also been to the Soviet Union and have some friends there and from there.

    You know not of what you speak, for you sir, are an idiot.

  272. Re:Ahh yes, the classic American Revolution refere by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

    the government still taxes felons.. felons aren't allowed to vote on the very laws that made them felons.. taxation without representation.

    --

    --

    WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
  273. This is what's scariest... by Phil+John · · Score: 5, Insightful

    (5) he cannot associate with any person or group that seeks to change the government in any way (be that environmental, social justice, political, economic, etc.)

    That to me sounds like they're encroaching on rights to freedom of political expression, without fear of reprisal by those in power (going back to federal pound-me-in-the-ass prison).

    It's in the same ballpark as some corrupt african states where people either support the government, live as a political exile or face the prospect of being torured and/or killed.

    Ok, so nobody is being tortured or killed in the USA (that's what happens in Cuba at Guantanamo, and a whole other kettle of fish), but this man's right to change the government should still be respected. We all have that right, whether we know it or not, we get to vote in another government if the current one makes a right pig's ear of the job.

    The right to political activism and peaceful protest should be a given in any country that truly deems itself "free".

    --
    I am NaN
    1. Re:This is what's scariest... by joonasl · · Score: 2, Informative
      Ok, so nobody is being tortured or killed in the USA (that's what happens in Cuba at Guantanamo, and a whole other kettle of fish), but this man's right to change the government should still be respected. What? Nobody is killed in USA? Are you sure?

      There are 82 juvenile offenders on the death row in US cuurently (other countries that execute juvenile offenders are Iran, Pakistan, Congo,Yemen.. nice company).

      From 1976 to 2001, total of 749 people have been executed (256 of those in Texas).

      So don't tell me nobody is killed in USA.

      --
      "There is a terrorist behind every bush"
    2. Re:This is what's scariest... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you looking for afremation of your misguided ideals against capitol punishment? To those who have much freedom like the US you fucking up and KILLING someone else gets you the death penalty. Almost nothing else but murder get the death penalty. The death penalty is carried out very rarely even in the cases it has been given. This is a bad thing? If you kill someone else on purpose you deserve what? 7 years in jail like in Europe? Hell in Europe you can kill a gay political canidate and get out in 15 years? 15 years for murder and thwarting democratic action. Go find someone else to cry for your fucked up misguided opinions on the death penalty. That bastard should be hung from a light post just for killing a gay let alone for the political damage it cauased in it's wake. Now he is appealing 15 years is to long according to his lawyer.

      fuck you diptard

    3. Re:This is what's scariest... by joonasl · · Score: 1
      Thank you for your kind words :)

      To those who have much freedom like the US you fucking up and KILLING someone else gets you the death penalty.

      Sure, there is almost unbearable amount of freedom in a country where people can be detained for unlimited time and tried in secret military tribunals.

      Hell in Europe you can kill a gay political canidate and get out in 15 years? 15 years for murder and thwarting democratic action. Go find someone else to cry for your fucked up misguided opinions on the death penalty.... That bastard should be hung from a light post just for killing a gay let alone for the political damage it cauased in it's wake.

      Firstly, USA is not completly foreign to politically motivated assasinations either. Secondly, the murder of Pim Fortuyin was had nothing to do with the sexual preference of the victim. And thirdly, It's very hard for me to understand how the execution of the murderer would have assisted the political process in any way.

      I won't even go to the racial aspects of the USAs capital punishment practise, nor will I dwell on the fact that there is hard evidence that innocent people have been executed in the US over the years.

      The only thing I will mention here is that even though you have the right to strongly disagree with everything I say, there hardly is any reason to use such abusive language..

      --
      "There is a terrorist behind every bush"
  274. Important missing fact . . . by werdna · · Score: 1

    To what charge did he plead? Is it obvious that his only crime was the exercise of free speech?

  275. Um... by XnetZERO · · Score: 1

    ...if the police are shooting at you how do you make bombs?

    1. Re:Um... by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      A molotav cocktail can be made in relatively few minutes. And it might be pointed out that police come to protests looking for trouble, I mean...they come armed to the teeth, that's no way to encourage non-violent protest if you ask me. "Well show up in APC's, Riotgear, SWAT Teams, Helicopters, with guns and grenade launchers to show them that violence will not be tolerated, and that dissent must be properly channeled through official means." Yeah...no police state there. As an interesting note, the first step toward a police state is to remove the authority and ability for a population to defend and organize itself. Secondly is to take away said population's control over their area, then the final step is to effectively make dissent among said population a crime. The U.S. allready has the first 2 qualifiers, the 3rd is being rammed through as we speak.

    2. Re:Um... by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      What are you, a moron? No cop goes to a protest looking for trouble. Cops hate protests because they can go from peaceful to all out war in a matter of seconds. They come armed to the teeth because they need to be. They're outnumbered by at least 20 to 1. It's very hard to take on a crowd of angry people with nothing more than a club. Just ask the LA police about crowds.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
  276. 18 USC 842(p)(2) is unConstitutional by bmasel · · Score: 1
    Bug asserts:
    18 USC 842(p)(2) - Unlawful Distribution of Information Relating to Explosives, etc...

    In the search warrant are several quotes from raisethefist.com in which information about explosives is provided along side some comments that encourage this knowledge be used against police officers.

    Here's the exact quote from 18 USC 842 (p)(2)(A):

    to teach or demonstrate the making or use of an explosive, a destructive device, or a weapon of mass destruction, or to distribute by any means information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the manufacture or use of an explosive, destructive device, or weapon of mass destruction, with the intent that the teaching, demonstration, or information be used for, or in furtherance of, an activity that constitutes a Federal crime of violence;

    I reply:

    From BRANDENBURG v. OHIO, 395 U.S. 444 (1969)

    "Freedoms of speech and press do not permit a State to forbid advocacy of the use of force or of law violation except where such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or produce such action."

    Missing from the Sherman case is imminence, the intent that the bombmaking information be used in furtherance of a particular crime.

    See alsoHESS v. INDIANA, 414 U.S. 105 (1973)

    Held: Appellant's language did not fall within any of the "narrowly limited classes of speech" that the States may punish without violating the First and Fourteenth Amendments, and since the evidence showed that the words he used were not directed to any person or group and there was no evidence that they were intended and likely to produce imminent disorder, application of the statute to appellant violated his rights of free speech.

    --
    Ben Masel: 51,282 votes for US Senate in the Wisconsin Democratic Primary
  277. If you can't shout fire in a crowded theatre... by Phil+John · · Score: 1

    can you shout bomb instead? Or what if the theatre's only half full? Or three quarters, I really don't think a three quarters full theatre could be considered crowded. Hell, with these new fangled multiplexes where each seat has 8 metres of leg room even if the oversold seats by a factor of two it still wouldn't be crowded. ;o)

    --
    I am NaN
  278. So Let Me Get This Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    In the US, you have the right to own a firearm, just in case the government needs overthrowing by the militia, but you're not allowed to write about building bombs, just in case the government needs overthrowing by the militia.

    I guess the keyboard really is mightier than the firearm.

    1. Re:So Let Me Get This Right by RevSmiley · · Score: 1

      The right to build bombs isn't in the Bill of Rights the right to keep and bear arms. (Swords, pikes, knives, Firearms and cannon.)

      --
      As you can see I don't care about my karma.
  279. Re:For all the people looking for the hacking angl by compjma · · Score: 1

    That's not what the RIAA says.

  280. So when are they going to arrest Google by complexmath · · Score: 1

    for linking to the same websites?

  281. What If He Were Non-US by hackrobat · · Score: 1
    What if this guy were non-US, and doing all this in some other country, against the US?

    Hint: Recruit foreign nationals for protesting against your government (and feel free to confuse this with terrorism).

  282. Mike Hawash by hackrobat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Guys, don't forget Mike Hawash.

  283. Clear and present danger by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Supreme Court has a lot of case law regarding this. See in particular: Abrams et al. v. United States (1919), in which the Supreme Court decided that speech which advocates the overthrow of the US government is not necessarily protected by the First Amendment.

    That particular case is notable in that the majority opinion and Holmes' dissent are in basic agreement about the constitutionality of the Espionage Act -- the disagreement was whether or not Abrams' pamphlet met the "clear and present danger" test.

    "Clear and present danger" is not just a catchy title of a book. It is an important test, and if you are going to argue about justice in this sort of case, you ought to inform yourself about this test (even if you don't agree with it). It is very relevant to this case and others like it.

  284. Careful... by El+Camino+SS · · Score: 1


    Hey, be quiet over there! You can't vote in prison! We are counting the days, so keep your head down for a bit.

  285. They weren't interested in taxation period by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

    Whether or not it came with representation. They would have had a sufficient number of seats in parliament to assure things went as they liked, and the future revolutionaries knew it.

  286. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by Havokmon · · Score: 1
    Which of those offences merits a custodial sentence, in your opinion?

    Or do you think that people can either:
    a) have free speech
    b) protest peacefully

    but if they choose to exercise both they should be arrested?

    Of course not. Which of those offences should an officer overlook, in your opinion?

    Or do you think that people can either:
    a) promote methods of overthrowing the government
    b) participate in a demonstration against government policy in which hundreds are arrested

    I get it. If they choose to do both, they're completely harmless.

    --
    "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
  287. Speaking of History by HanzoSan · · Score: 1



    Why dont we tell the true history about our founding fathers who were all for Freedom as long as you are a white christian male?

    Of course we never mention that slaves built the whitehouse, and we never give them any credit.

    We celebrate totally fucked up holidays like "Thanksgiving" which is an insult to ANY Native American, and we pretend like Native Americans just up and gave up their country.

    We make heros out of cowboys who slaughtered "indians", we make heros out of outlaws who would shoot random people who pissed them off.

    Lets say, a few months ago, you were on one of those trams at an international airport, and you see some guy standing close to you who happened to look Oriental (or is the PC term Asian?), with luggage tags from Beijing on his luggage. This guy is coughing up a storm and not caring about who's around him. Would you suspect him of having SARS or would that be "racist"?


    I dont know, but if the Asian person suspected you of being a racist white male, does this make the Asian racist, is this reverse racism or is the Asian just not being politically correct? I mean we know most white males are racist just like most Asians have SARs, most Gays have aids, and most Blacks are gangster rappers and atheletes.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:Speaking of History by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      If Hitler was on the $20 bill, how would the Jews feel?

    2. Re:Speaking of History by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      I doubt there would be any of them left to see it by now

  288. The Flag. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you americans can wave your flag as much as
    you like but the values it represents are
    destin for the bone yard.

    1. Re:The Flag. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will wave it over your broken and dead body you little islamic terrorist pig fucker.

  289. WMD's and the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US has WMD's and is/will use them to over throw any government it disagrees with. I has a citizen of the world say lets revolt against the most violent regieme currently in existence, the United States of America. Lets return it to the roots that the founding fathers laid down and away from the corporate state that it is now. With that we will show the rest of the world how to make their countries better without having to go in and use WMD's on them.

    (If anyone from the FBI reads this (1) what are you doing trolling /. and (2) this is free speech, i'm entitled to have these thoughts.)

    1. Re:WMD's and the US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually no you are not. It's called sedition.
      It's a crime. I don't support you desire so it's a crime against me. Dumb fucker your life is so fucking pathetic and worthless the only way you can get attention is through statements like this. You dickless litte weasle you are so chicken shit you wouldn't last 5 seconds in a federal prison. The FBI does watch this. You have a keyboard logger instaled on your computer and we are tracking your IP.

  290. Sherman - what a PUSSY by MBraynard · · Score: 1
    Dude, if you are going to be hard core and advocate overthrowing the government and provide instructions on how to do it, at least try to have some self respect and stand by your convictions and be willing to die for them rather coping a plea deal with the government that you seek to overthrow for one year when, had you advocated the overthrow of many other governments on this planet, you would have been shot outright.

    sherman - you are a pathetic WEASEL.

  291. Well theres proof by HanzoSan · · Score: 1



    We have ridiculous Holidays such as thanksgiving and crap, and we try to pretend like the US was founded on freedom, is this liberal or conservative bias?

    People forget that people were burned for being witches, made into slaves for being non white, made into virtual slaves if you were female, and the only way to actually be an "American" for the first 300-400 years in this country was to be a white christian male.

    Should we ignore the fact that we have never had a female President? I mean NEVER. We also never had a president who wasnt white, I mean NEVER. We never had a president who wasnt christian, and I mean NEVER, and lastly we never had a President who wasnt married (or at least I cannot remember one).

    So, the only people who think that theres no racism, sexism, etc etc in the USA right now, and all throughout history, are conservative christian white males, like George Bush for example. Read a history book, how much do you see on the civil rights movement, the gay rights movement, the womens rights movement? You barely see any of it.

    In my History class it was mentioned along with Kennedy for like one chapter, and the rest of the book was War, after War, after War, slaughter after slaughter, slavery here and there, more war, more killing, and theres a trend, there has always been a group of people throughout history in this country who have been against freedom.

    Guess who those people are? The Religious zealots who happen to be on the right, the conservative christians, the ones who burned witches, enslaved millions and millions of people, murdered the native americans, stole the land, and then made an insulting holiday called "thanksgiving" to rub it in their faces.

    There is ALOT about history that we cannot be proud of and we shouldnt be celebrating, and theres alot of things we should be celebrating. I'll never celebrate wars, I'll never celebrate thansgiving, or slavery, I do feel proud of the constitution, this was a wonderful step forward, I do feel proud of the civil rights movement, the womens rights movement, gay rights movement, and the internet, the inventing of the radio, the TV, the car, the airplane, world war 2, putting a man on the moon.

    This country is great, I'm sure someone here will comment that I am a liberal because I care about liberal history, but please point out some history from the right which was great, what the fall of the soviet union? is that all?

    I dont even like to divide history like this because we are all on the same team, but conservatives love to try to divide everything whenever they get the chance and label a person a liberal, a communist, a terrorist, or anything else they can think of when you disagree with them and honestly I'm getting sick of the paraniod witch-hunts, and the loss of freedom that conservatives bring, they have been doing this for hundreds of years, starting with the burning of witches, then there was communists, and now terrorists.

    The problem with these paraniod witch-hunts is, yes while some of the people are bad, the way they find a "witch" is simply be having some established conservative just call you a witch.

    Bill Oreilly can say you are a terrorist on national TV, and suddenly you are a terrorist, no trial, no hiring a lawyer, you are just captured and put somewhere on guantonimo bay and never heard from again.

    Thats not constitutional, and its not right, why do we want to give this much power to the government? its ridiculous that they can just point the finger at someone and put them in jail just because they want to, but thats the current law.

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
    1. Re:Well theres proof by Ideoscape · · Score: 1

      Agree with the whole post, with some minor corrections. We have had non-christian presidents, we've just never had any who *admitted to being non-christian* (essentially a few of the first presidents were deists). We've also had at least 1 president that was a closeted homosexual.

    2. Re:Well theres proof by japhmi · · Score: 1

      the only way to actually be an "American" for the first 300-400 years in this country

      Wow, did I enter a time warp or something? the US is over 400 years old now? I thought it was 227 years old.

      made into slaves for being non white

      Actually, just because you were non white didn't make you automatically a slave. There were non-white slave owners.

      we never had a President who wasnt married

      Besides James Buchanan, the 15th president. Many consider him the worst president ever.

      Read a history book, how much do you see on the civil rights movement, the gay rights movement, the womens rights movement? You barely see any of it.

      Well, most history textbooks around now in schools don't have the gay rights movement because the books are old and that movement is new.

      please point out some history from the right which was great, what the fall of the soviet union? is that all?

      The ending of slavery, the creation of the National Park System, National Wildlife Refuge System, lots of others I'm not thinking of off the top of my head.

      Bill Oreilly can say you are a terrorist on national TV, and suddenly you are a terrorist, no trial, no hiring a lawyer, you are just captured and put somewhere on guantonimo bay and never heard from again.

      Name one person who has been sent to Guantonimo because O'Reilly said they were a terrorist. Oh, and I've heard all sorts of people on the left go on about right-winged terrorists.

      Just a few of your points. Think before you type, then we'll all be better off.

      --
      "Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys" P. J. O'Rourke
  292. PLEEEEASE! Stop this crap! by El+Camino+SS · · Score: 0, Flamebait


    This is purely an issue of free speach (linking to information the US government doesn't like) since that is the only thing he has been convicted of.


    Hey, do you know of anyone that works as a clerk for the federal government? Maybe a tax accountant or some other mundane job? DO THEY DESERVE TO DIE FOR BEING A CLERK? DO THEY? Free speech? MY ASS!

    Do you think that no clerks, secretaries, mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, and CHILDREN died when Tim McVeigh decided to declare his personal war on the government? What about all the regular people that were there taking care of some beauracratic paperwork? WHAT ABOUT ALL OF THE INNOCENT CHILDREN IN THE DAYCARE? REMEMBER THE COVER OF THE MAGAZINES WITH THE FIREFIGHTER TAKING THE DYING CHILD OUT OF OKLAHOMA CITY? What did that child have to do with Tim McVeighs agenda? Why do you think that a man (he was 18) espousing attacking government installations and linking explosives information was NOT ADVOCATING WHAT THAT BUTCHER McVEIGH DID?

    Yeah, this kid was only hacking and advocating the attack of the US Govt, then linking to explosives. The vast majority of the federal US Gov't, like all governments, are very, very benign. Attack people that are involved in farm subsidies and veterans home loans? When it comes to someone advocating something like that, I tell my local police force one thing... aim for the head.

    America, no matter what you say, or think, does not just up and kill dissenters. After all, they only put this guy in jail for a year. In China, we would have never even been talking about this kid. We never would have even known.

    Attacking the government will almost always involve collateral damage to innocents. Like a person that takes a gov't desk job should just expect to have to defend their life against the kind of "treachery against the masses" that these, and other idiots on slashdot and everywhere else speak of.

    It's almost like saying... take a job at the ATF enforcing tobacco rules? Then we, the socialist a-holes deserve the right to attack and kill you. YOU CAN'T ATTACK. WE ARE OBLIGED TO. That sounds like the best, cleanest, most irrefutable way for my local law enforcement to cap someone to me.

    Sounds a little duplicitous, doesn't it? Just like everyone's little friends, Al-Qaeda. "GOD IS ON OUR SIDE SO WE CAN KILL, YOU CAN NOT!"

    Home-made explosives hardly ever get their intended targets, but are excellent at hitting innocents.

  293. Ok, so lets put David Duke in jail? by HanzoSan · · Score: 1



    I mean hes caused riots, caused terrorist attacks, etc etc, how about Trent Lott? can we arrest him and put him in jail? I know he didnt truely cause anything but hes clearly a racist and hes bad right?

    Why are we selectively targetting specific groups, why do we allow hate groups to exist in this country but we go after anti government groups or groups like the davidians in waco?

    --
    If you use Linux, please help development of Autopac
  294. Re:Ahh yes, the classic American Revolution refere by Hatta · · Score: 1
    You're not the first in this thread to bring it up.

    That's because it's a good point.
    The American people were under British rule, yet had no say in the government. We've figured out how to get that representation in a peaceful manner since then.

    It's called an election.

    Except that it doesn't work.
    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
  295. The truth is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I never would've heard of this guy or his website if it weren't for the fact he was charged.

  296. Re:Yeah, and Al Capone was only guilty of tax frau by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not about what he did, it's about what the Feds can easily prove.

    Innocent until proven guilty. Remember that?

  297. Re:The guy is a fascist by Jhon · · Score: 1
    He has the right, under the First Amendment to the Constitution of these United States, otherwise known as the first article in the Bill of Rights, to say what he wants, where he wants and when he wants, without fear of goverment action.


    The first amendment? You mean this:

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.


    Sure doesn't look like his objective was either to be 'peaceably' or to attempt to 'petition' the government. Looks like it was to violently oppose a government that was democratically elected and could quite as easily be democratically replaced -- if such a notion was popular.
  298. Re:Being arrested can just be the start of the pro by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 1

    dumbfuck, you WERE NOT ARRESTED FOR YOUR BELIEFS. You, one arrogant sonofabitch, decided to violate the law imposed on you in a non-totalitarian country in order to usurp the powers granted to the government by the people through their votes. You used physical force instead of democratic pressure. I hope all you dumbfucks who have to resort to this due to your being a superminority in your area can see that you are attempting to deny your countrymen the right to democratic process via the rule of law.
    Protest against REAL injustice, you petty little powderpuff! IN THIS WORLD, there are people raping and indiscriminately beating women just because they can! And to all of you neomarxists spoiled by wealthy living, quit your bitching and HELP PEOPLE. Don't destroy public or corporate structures, feed people.
    You whiny activist-mentality rejects can suck my dick if you think that any of the brain-dead things you do will affect genuine change in the world. Goddamn Here's what you're missing: Those problems that have vexed mankind for a hundred or more years do so because they are DIFFICULT to solve. It's not as simple as 'quit making nukes', or 'don't buy a gun'. Damnit, you have to somehow convince everyone to make a change in their attitudes, behavior and choices. This is why, from 1930-2003 not ONE problem has been solved by student activists. Think about that.

  299. Re:The guy is a fascist by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 1

    Sure doesn't look like his objective was either to be 'peaceably' or to attempt to 'petition' the government. Looks like it was to violently oppose a government that was democratically elected and could quite as easily be democratically replaced -- if such a notion was popular.

    Doesn't make a lick of difference what his objective was though, if he didn't act.

    --
    -1 Uncomfortable Truth
  300. Slippery slope by IshanCaspian · · Score: 1

    The slippery slope is a perfectly valid argument. What it states is that the absence of the government's ability to dictate freedom is an essential freedom in and of itself. It doesn't apply when the government already has the right to regulate certain freedoms, such as the examples you already stated, but when it comes to freedom of speech, the argument applies perfectly because that freedom should be absolute and unlimited.

    --

    But there is another kind of evil that we must fear most... and that is the indifference of good men.
  301. Next CNN by muldrake · · Score: 1
    There's nothing you could get from Sherman Austin that isn't already available from the notorious terrorists of CNN.

    Obviously we need to shut down CNN, too. What's funny is CNN themselves have often aired hysterical rants about how irresponsible it is to distributed bomb-making instructions on the Internet, while hosting such information themselves.

  302. It's frightening, nonetheless by coolMikeUSC · · Score: 1

    I don't agree at all with this misguided 20-year-old. He's making it easier for others like himself to wreak havoc on society. However, one must consider the heart of this issue: the freedom of information. He posted links to information that could be used for "wrong." But if a person were determined enough, he or she could get to this information anyway. Information is best when it's free because this way, at least both the "good" and the "bad" have access to it. This move can only pave the way for further restrictions on what information you can distribute, whether it be what you say, what you write, or, in this case, what you provide a URL to. Frightening indeed.

    --
    Ever notice how fast Windows runs? Neither do I - get Mac OS
  303. assorted comments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    George Washington lead a revolution against a despotic government and THEN put down attemped violent revolutions against HIS new government.

    Abe Lincoln SUSPENDED parts of the constitution under the theory that the constitution was "not a suicide pact" and preserving the Union held precedence in importance to rules on how to conduct the Union.

    Evolution theory and the practice of all long lived organizations show that self preservation is rule number one.

    "I took on the law and the law won" - John Melloncamp.

    "I found out it WAS what the govern ment" - Bread

    It is legal for the police to detain and search based on SUSPICION. This is limited by your rights to sue (a friend won a case of illegal arrest) and publicize (their bosses are elected and subject to public opinion).

    It is legal for the police to LIE and TRICK you into confessing. This is limited in ways still being defined by the courts - lying on tape was ruled not ok while the same words spoken by a person present was ruled ok.

    Note the judge did NOT go along with the procecutors recommendation. Confessing as part of a deal can wind up just as if the deal itself was a lie.

    Our system would grind to a halt if no one plead guilty; there are simply to many arrests and too few resources to handle that many trials given how convoluted and time consuming our trial system is.

    If this guy really wants to stir up the system LEGALLY, he should make himself the poster boy for NO ONE CONFESSING - MAKE ALL CASES GO TO TRIAL. If he succeeded, he would have caused a revolution without violence.

  304. have you ever been to a protest? by kyadd · · Score: 3, Informative

    Some cops do go to a protest looking for trouble. At some protests, the higher ups "pump up" the cops by telling them that we are racists or neo-nazi's and in one case told the cops that we had "bags of urine we were preparing to throw at them or had already thrown at them" (i heard this from a new york cop). In new york city, riot duty is not-required, only cops who want to bust heads sign up. Many nyc cops look down on the nyc riot cops as sicko's. I've seen nyc riot cops break peoples fingers who were handcuffed, and were not resisting. They don't "just have a club" they have a range of weapons, riot cops normally have a club, a gun, pepper spray, and in many cases flame resistant body armor. The frontline riot cops in new york are backed up by snipers teams, armored personal carriers, mounted police and cops with assualt rifles. "at least 20 to 1" in nyc the cops typically outnumber the protesters. At all of the protests I've been to only two where we did outnumber the cops. I rememeber a protest in boston, where the anarchists were surrounded by "special operations cops" (outnumbering us 2 to 1), outside of that they were flanked by a row of horses on the right and a row on the left, with 2 lines of spec ops motorcycle cops in front and 2 lines behind with a few fast responce vans following the march. About 18 anarchists about 80 cops, all of them armed with guns, pepper spray, shackles, and a pissed off expression. They pushed them around and yelled abuse at them from time to time, threated them, told them to shut up. If you would like evidence of any of this, look on the web, or goto a major protest. This is not a secret.

    1. Re:have you ever been to a protest? by Snake_Plisken · · Score: 1

      If my boss told me to wear the flame resistant body armor when I got to work in the morning, I'd know I'd be in for a pretty bad day. I myself have been to protests - peaceable ones. You blame the cops? When a buncha people gather with overthrowing the system on their minds that's gonna spell trouble. They should issue the cops flamethrowers to make their jobs easier. Burn em all baby!

      --

      Eat recycled food - it's good for the environment, and OK for you.
    2. Re:have you ever been to a protest? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      -1 flamebait. oh yeah. fuck you asshole. advocating burning innocent civilians who have a legal right to protest (granted, by the very system they want to overthrow) is fuckin bullshit. Does your mom know you say stuff like this on the internet? You terrorist!

  305. Re:This isn't about freedom of speech or linking.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Right.

    I'm sure it would have been much different if he were trying to incite violence against gays, women, or people or color. Or maybe if he were pro-gun instead of PRO-BOMB.

  306. Should Chemical engineers be outlawed? by Billnvd65 · · Score: 1, Interesting
    This is one of those topics that really make me wonder what the hell is happening in this world. What's next, "you have knowledge that "could" be used to build bombs, therefore you probably are a terrorist. If you share your information, you are a terrorist. Oh, wait, you only shared your information in a college environment, you are safe, but don't share it on the web as that is, well, bad!.


    Anyone can pick up a chemistry book and make basic explosives. Anyone can set his mind to gaining knowledge and make bombs. Posting information on explicit bomb making is questionable, but is it really wrong?


    What's next? "You were overheard talking about how a bomb is made, therefore you are arrested!"


    Gotta love how all this works!

  307. Fisted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hello??? The guy had a f**ked up site about maiking bombs and dissent, and overthrowing the government, etc etc. If anyone here extrapolates this case into some totalitarian regime where 'dissidence is crushed' thought police, and the all seeing government eyeball, your nuts! 'Oh, its just information!! Our liberties!!' LOL Gimme a f**kin break! I'd throw his ass in jail too, if he won't take that garbage off his little fisty homepage. Who cares! don't tell me that if he's censored its the beginning of the end. RRRRRRrrrrrriiiiigghht Mr. Fist is going to learn a harsh lesson in Jail. Gonna start calling him Mr. Fisted. ~p1LL

  308. Revolution Reloaded by quinkin · · Score: 1
    Well... if things get out of hand we sould always cut the political figureheads (and their families) into bits and throw whats left in the wells...

    I dont think they needed a website for that last time...

    Q.

    --
    Insert Signature Here
  309. Pax Americana by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,794163 ,00.html

    One more thing as well, do not fear the loud obnoxious drunk guy at the bar. Fear instead the quiet one who sits in the back and keeps his anger in.

  310. blah blah blah by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

    Dude, stfu. The gvt used to go after people for publishing steps to making a nuclear device until said people pointed out that it was commonly available knowledge that had simply been connected.

    In any case, its not this guys fault if another Timothy decides to blow up a building. ITS TIMOTHY'S FAULT. You're a ludite in the same vien as those people who claim that Grand Theft Auto incites violence towards women. Those ludites and you need to fuck off.

    1. Re:blah blah blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Promise me you won't procreate.
      You owe that much to the humanity.

    2. Re:blah blah blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Says you. I hope that if *you* procreate, you give your children up for adoption so they don't have to endure your cock gobbling stupidity.

  311. The little snot's in jail now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good.

  312. Pop Politic by inerte · · Score: 1

    Announcer: this is another public service announcement brought to you, in
    Part, by slim shady.

    Eminem: (whispered): tell 'em I don't give a fuck

    Announcer: slim shady does not give a fuck...what you think!

    Eminem: tell 'em to suck it

    Announcer: if you don't like it, you can suck his fucking cock!
    Eminem: tell 'em they kissed my ass

    Announcer: little did you know, upon purchasing this album, you have just
    Kissed his ass!

    Eminem: tell 'em I'm fed up

    Announcer: slim shady is fed up with your shit...and he's going to kill you!

    Eminem: yeah

    Announcer: uh...anything else?

    Eminem: yeah...sue me.

  313. Re:Being arrested can just be the start of the pro by finalrain · · Score: 1
    ...you are attempting to deny your countrymen the right to democratic process via the rule of law.

    Protest isn't a disruption of the democratic process. When people are uninformed, they vote out of ignorance. This is assuming they bother to vote at all, most don't.

    Protesting is one way of making your opinions heard. Is it effective? I don't know that it is, but you try getting your opinions on the news if your opinions aren't already status quo on the station in question.

    And to all of you neomarxists spoiled by wealthy living, quit your bitching and HELP PEOPLE. Don't destroy public or corporate structures, feed people.

    I can't speak for pfafrich, but I'm a libertarian, which isn't anything like marxism, communism, or "neomarxism" (not sure what you meant by that). Getting to my point, chaining yourself to a public building in protest is not a crime. Pfafrich was right when he said he was arrested for his beliefs. Or, nearly right anyway. He was arrested for expressing his beliefs in an extremely visible way.

    you have to somehow convince everyone to make a change in their attitudes, behaviour and choices (1). [...] not ONE problem has been solved by student activists(2).

    I put these two together because they are so obviously contradictory. How do you intend to change people's opinions without making them aware that there are opinions other than theirs? Let's pass a law then, shall we? "Everyone is required to have [x] opinion," Thus Sayeth Uncle Sam.

    I'm pretty sure that wouldn't help anything.

    Specifically in response to #2: It could be argued that the reason the Vietnam war ended when it did was because student activists gradually changed the opinions of enough people to make it politically necessary to end that war. By politically necessary, I mean, "If we don't put an end to this right now, people might not vote for us."

    I should point out that I wasn't alive during the Vietnam War. If the previous paragraph was grossly inaccurate, I apologize.

    Perhaps I'm going through a little too much trouble to respond to what seems to be an obvious troll.

    --
    -- It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.
  314. hmmf... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see nothing that this person has done that violates any law...any law that is accordance with e United States constitution. Any law, federal or state, that infringes on one's constitutional right to free speech or right to bear arms is an unconstitutional law, and, under more politically sane times, would not be allowed to even be passed as law. However, with the advent of the liberal movement that has infected our nation like a cancer, people are thinking less and less for themselves and surrending their objective thinking to the state. I see a dark cloud on our horizon, and it's not going to be from another terrorist attack, but rather, our own government. 1984...pre-WWII Nazi propaganda....enough said.

  315. Re:The guy is a fascist by Jhon · · Score: 1
    Doesn't make a lick of difference what his objective was though, if he didn't act.
    Oh? It doesn't?

    Seriously. Review Whitney v. California. In summary:

    Whitney v California (1927) 274 US 357, 71 L Ed 1095, 47 S Ct 641, it was held that the constitutional guaranties of free speech and free press did not permit a state to forbid or proscribe advocacy of the use of force or of law violation, except where such advocacy was directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and was likely to incite or produce such action.


  316. No Bush then .... by Jeehoba · · Score: 3, Interesting

    According to the following, I guess he can't associate with the President or any of the other members of his big Republican machine.

    "as Wilson said he also may not associate with anyone from a group that 'espouses physical force as a means of change.'"

    I guess poor Sherman will just have to leave the country and go somewhere where he has freedom of speech.

    1. Re:No Bush then .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now he is a convicted felon he will have really good luck trying to find a country to take him.
      Most decent countries will not even take you with a misdmeanor.

  317. Ok I'll bite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "...Supreme Court is ready to overturn this precedent (very possible, given its obvious partisanship and corruption).."

    Please state this "partisianship and corruption" and give realistic examples of the same.

  318. RE: and thankfully, you would! by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    The folks wanting to strip U.S. citizens of their right to keep and bear arms probably forget (or neglect) the fact that it's the last line of defense we have against police-state tactics.

    EG. Even if the law has decided that they're going to make it "ok" for cops to sneak into your home, unannounced, and go snooping around, if they have "probable cause" to believe you're doing something illegal - the fact that you might just have a loaded weapon handy for self-defense will deter police from making such bold moves. (If you're a cop, you're probably going to value your own life enough to say, "Hey, the law says I *can* do this, but it doesn't mean I think it's a smart idea. For my own safety's sake, I'd rather announce my presence instead of sneaking into this guy's house at night."

  319. Voltarine De Cleyre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'Make no laws whatever concerning speech, and speech will be free; so soon as you make a declaration on paper that speech shall be free, you will have a hundred lawyers proving that "freedom does not mean abuse, nor liberty license;" and they will define and define freedom out of existence.'
    -Voltarine De Cleyre

  320. HHa! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Personally, I believe in the freedom of speech. However..."

    this is a classic line for someone who really doesn't like free speech.

    Here's free speech. I'd like to fuck your sister and mother. I hope you die of cancer.

    Makes you kinda pissed off, doesn't it?

    Yep. That's free speech. It makes you mad, it makes you say "I'm all for free speech, but..."

    Honestly, you don't get free speech. Its meant to stir up trouble. Its meant to make you angry. I'm so sorry you have to add a "however" when you express support for free speech, because that is exactly the attitude of someone who doesn't like free speech.

    Get over it already.

    1. Re:HHa! by Marx_Mrvelous · · Score: 1

      No, it doesn't make me mad, You're an anonymous coward, not just in name but in action. You're, put simply, acting like an idiot. Your example is invalid, and not at all what I'm talking about. In fact you don't believe in free speech, either. You want to censor me, or else you would have phrased your argument differently. You're no different than me, you just like to feel good about yourself for being better than me. You're pathetic.

      --

      Moderation: Put your hand inside the puppet head!
  321. Not about Free Speech by starX · · Score: 3, Interesting

    As I recall, this guy was arrested for hacking (or at least attempting it) federal sites, not for saying he wanted to over throw the US Government. While I agree that it speaks ill of our legal system that such a crime may count as terrorism, a year in federal prison is a comparitively light sentence when you consider what some other people have done for similar crimes.

    And by the way, overthrowing the US Government is one of those ideas that started with the brilliant Ben Franklin, who thought we shuold have a revolution once every 17 years or so.

  322. Canada is nothing special -- 810 Orders by _KhlER3L · · Score: 1
    Canada is more big brotherly than the USA. The only difference is that the Canadian government is not so gung-ho about dramatically applying their backdoor legal technology. (With a day-time raid by dozens of federal agents pointing machine guns, for example.) Nobody in Canada notices unless somebody 'normal' is 'wrongfully' made to suffer. As long as the police and courts punish the undesirables, the Canadian media and talking classes do not seem to notice or care.

    One law, Judicial Restraint, or Peace Bond, or 810 Order, can restrict people as if on probation even if no crime has been committed, without a conviction. The only thing required is suspicion of (various things) by the police. A judge then makes a decision something like those he makes when allowing a search warrant. The level of proof necessary is 'reasonableness' rather than 'beyond a reasonable doubt'. In other words, bias, prejudice, weak evidence and other vagueries are officially invited to attend to someones legal harassment by the state.

    These 810 orders result in a one year prison term if the terms are not agreed to by the individual in question. They are renewable annually to no end.

    810.1 orders are particularly interesting, because in addition to there having to be no crime committed, there needen't even be a target of a crime apparent, only the vague possibility that one could occure. This special treatment is metted out to pedophiles, the new garbage class of the world.

    As I said before, this law is not overtly pursued. We only very rarely hear about so-and-so being forced to sign a peace bond, even though hundreds of people do so every year. It hasn't appeared on any journalist's radar. One may think that only those people who 'deserve it' fall under the yoke. But what it amounts to, in my view, is an legal loophole to persecute people the police and society doesn't like, without the threshold of proof or process inherent in a usual court-convictions.

    Instead of giving an individual the benefit of the doubt, or treating a prison term as the sum payment for a particular crime (as it is said to be), certain segments of the population are open to continual threat of harassment and punishment by a fickle public mood.

    In this case, Austin could have been quietly harrassed out of existence by an application of the 810 Order. He would have been forced to appear before the court, then given the choice of losing his right to live freely, or go to prison. The Canadian media would have said nothing about it, except maybe to yawn.

    _KhlER3L

  323. You are an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, but you're allowed to hate and be a racist. I know that might piss you off, but that's a risk of living in (what used to be) a free society.

    I should have the right to piss you off through my ideas and communication. You have the right to respond in kind, or ignore it.

    But thin-skinned assholes want anything offensive banned. Your kind make me sick.

  324. Mod parent up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Haha. For those who dont get it: try to name an equal amount of liberal voices on tv.

  325. Didn't rape her.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or are you going to argue that slaves weren't capable of making decisions about who and who not to have sex with?

    Or that she knew she'd getter treatment if she sex with the boss?

    And how is this any different than Hillary Clinton? She'd bet an aging soccer mom right now unless she was clever about who she married.

  326. You are stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Do you think that no clerks, secretaries, mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, and CHILDREN died when Tim McVeigh decided to declare his personal war on the government?"

    When Bush decided to attack Iraq, do you think that no clerks, secretaries, mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, and CHILDREN died when George Bush under false pretenses invaded Iraq?

    I mean, whine all you want about Timothy McVeigh, but the way you're describing him, I don't see the difference between the current administration and the lunatic McVeigh.

    Don't get me started on Ashcroft; he's the worst thing to happen to this country since Tojo.

  327. Because, dumbshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He was convicted of telling people how to make bombs.

    Look, he isn't exactly a poster boy, but he's exactly the kind of guy we need to defend because his "crimes" or either non-existant or so non-threatening that a normal, healthy government wouldn't pay any attention to him.

    Honestly, I don't think you like free speech. It bothers you too much.

    1. Re:Because, dumbshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give me a fucking break...
      If I attempt to incite you to commit a act ov violence and provide you with instructions of building a device to carry out the act I am attempting to inciet you to commit I have broken a federal law. If I then plead guilty I am fucked.

      If you can't get a grip on this you are fucked up in the head. But are proly an anarchists too so who gives a fuck.

  328. Re:The guy is a fascist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    did not permit a state to forbid ... advocacy of ... law violation, except where such advocacy was directed to inciting ... lawless action

    Your country is pretty fucked up, isn't it...

  329. Sherman Austin is... by Valar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    juvenile at best, damaging at worst. Anyone who has actually seen the site (fish around, there are archives [hint--archive.org]) can see that it is all over. The message presented is far from consistant, and many points of his arguments depend of wild conspiracy theories. He's one of those people that thinks that the line at the DMV is a global new world conspiracy to prevent him from excercising his god given right to drive, for the purpose of immobilizing the masses for the impending coup. Ok, so maybe not that extreme, but close. It's people like him that damage the reputation of people really trying to change things for the better. While this prosecution does present issues for freedom of speech, he is no hero....

  330. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by squiggleslash · · Score: 1
    AND he advocated overthrowing the goverment
    The great thing about living in a democracy is that you get a chance to overthrow the government every four (or so) years. And you don't have to throw a single molotov cocktail to do it.
    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  331. Yea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What else would some dumb fuck hate the US first pansy ass islamic jehaidist loving anarchisit liberal say. I have one thing for all you mutherfuckers. We will kill you first, we will hunt you terrorist supporting asses down and kill you. You attacked us you dumb mutherfuckers. Now you will die. Some how some way we will get you jehaidist pieces of shit and bury you ass in pork fat you will never see your shit eating Alah. We will turn dogs loose in the ghost towns of your "holy places." Don't whine abount innocent woman and children to us. We can see from you freedom loving places like Afganistan, Iraq and Iran how you value freedom and the rights of women and children. The Talaban you so love and idealize raped young boys passing them around like candy. You treat women and children as property and abose them. Unlike you we don't target women and children. You aim your bombs and guns and at them on purpose. Alah is a crack whore. Anyone who defends these terrorists and attacks our beloved leader Geroge Bush belongs in jail.

  332. I got your liberals right here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    For those who dont get it: try to name an equal amount of liberal voices on tv.

    Dan Rather
    Joe Conason
    Connie Chung
    Katie Couric
    Peter Jennings
    Andrew Leonard
    Aaron Brown
    Paul Begalia
    George Stephanopolous
    Bob Costas
    Helen Thomas
    Matt Lauer
    Phil Donahue
    Cynthia McFadden
    Walter Cronkite
    Barbara Walters
    Larry King
    Ann Curry
    Tom Brokaw
    Bill Moyers
    Peter Arnett

    Your move, asshole.

  333. Re:Ahh yes, the classic American Revolution refere by jonadab · · Score: 1

    They were permitted to vote prior to being convicted of their crimes.
    This is not remotely the same as having entire unrepresented
    geographical areas.

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  334. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People can believe whatever they fucking want. He wasn't hurting anybody by being at that protest. Perhaps if he had actually harmed a person in any shape or form, I would think that a prison sentence would be justified.

  335. Re:This is *no* bullshit by whatch+durrin · · Score: 1
    The problem with this is that the authorities are not hunting for neo-nazis, they're hunting for environmentalists, anti-globalization folks, anarchists, communists, in other words, political bodies which sometimes have valid concerns and challenges to the society.

    Yeah, their all "out to get you!" Please.

    If you were one of the environmentalist, anti-globalization, anarchist morons throwing bricks through store windows at the WTO conference in Seattle...then yes, they probably are coming after you - and for good reason.

    Otherwise, place the foil hat back on your head, check the phone for bugs, and start planning for the apocalypse.

    --
    ***
    Radio Shack. You've got questions...we've got blank stares(TM).
  336. this is an "anarchy" site? by toddbauer · · Score: 1

    You know, I'm not really too sure this guy was really sure of what he was talking about. Sure, he may not like the government..but he's not really an anarchist. To tell you the truth, what happened to him was what he deserved. He was obviously a violent "anarchist" if he had information on bomb construction. Anarchy isn't about the violent overthrow of the government, its about living in a peaceful utopia. You think I'm lying..just check a freaking dictionary.

  337. Final Straw by drakewyrm · · Score: 1

    That does it. I'm moving to New Zealand.

    --
    Batou: Hey, Major... You ever hear of "human rights"? Major: I understand the concept, but I've never seen it in action
  338. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

    b) participate in a demonstration against government policy in which hundreds are arrested

    Every demonstration against government policy ends up with hundreds being arrested these days. Who starts throwing things first? Police with teargas or protesters with bricks? From what I observed at the WTO protests in Seattle it was the police, but who knows.

  339. Re:You Have Freedom for All Speach or You have Non by salesgeek · · Score: 1

    Don't be too sure about the answer to either of those ... it may well turn out that supporting Bush's foreign policies will have been to support policies that result in far more American deaths than Al Q'aeda could ever achieve in its most ambitious dreams.

    Last I looked, the US bodycount for the entire Iraq conflict is less than, for example, the Maine accident of 1898.

    Having a strong military and the spine to use it has kept our country independent and prosperous for several centuries. If you think that being weak and wimpy will stop our nation's enemies, I think you'll be joining Nevil Chamberlin in getting "peace for our time."

    --
    -- $G
  340. Re:Ahh yes, the classic American Revolution refere by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

    And then the new aristocracy figured out how to change things back, despite the existence of elections. Big whooping deal, you are just another country, ruled by just another government, get off your high horse and look around -- you are not better than the rest of the world, and your government has political inbreeding going on, at the scale not seen since 17-18th century Europe.

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  341. Changing the Government by markcic · · Score: 1

    This scariest this:
    (5) he cannot associate with any person or group that seeks to change the government in any way (be that environmental, social justice, political, economic, etc.)

    Does that mean he can't join a political party?

    1. Re:Changing the Government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well sounds like he is a felon now and it don't matter he can't vote anyway.

  342. Re:The guy is a fascist by whatch+durrin · · Score: 1
    That damn pesky Supreme Court...always interpreting the Constitution:

    More than any other liberty, Americans probably exercise their right to freedom of expression the most. But this right cannot be used to justify saying any thing, at any time, in any place. The Supreme Court has established some reasonable restrictions on free speech. The clear and present danger test from Schenck v. U.S. (1919) restricted speech that provokes a "clear and present danger" to public order. The bad-tendency rule from Gitlow v. N.Y. (1925) limited speech that might lead to some evil.

    Source

    --
    ***
    Radio Shack. You've got questions...we've got blank stares(TM).
  343. Slippery Slopes and Drawing the Line by changnian · · Score: 1

    Attackers of many positions say "if this, then the slippery slope"; or "if this, then where do you draw the line"; and connect the position to be attacked with an absurd extremity.

    I agree that it is fallacy to argue in this way. It is simply a lack of maturity. Growing up means learning to draw lines. It often means clutching to vague and shifting handholds to keep from sliding down slipperly slopes. It means exercising judgement.

    There is a real position between extremes. Nobody should be allowed complete freedom to go off on his own and destroy the workings of our government; even if we mean to bring it down, we should do so together. And nobody should be arrested and imprisoned for speaking unwisely and recklessly.

    The trouble is that we demand absolutes. Shades of gray are intolerable. Since we have so broadened the public discourse, we find we cannot any longer locate a standard of moderation.

    An action today is either legal or illegal, nothing in between. We deny the right of family, clergy, or anyone else to put pressure on us to modify our behaviors. We think we have become more free, but instead, we see our freedoms eroded.

    Social sanctions are important in every society. Indeed, most people, even Americans, are still controlled by social sanctions. The trouble is that we generally do not think of ourselves as members of society at large, subject to general authorities, such as the bygone parish priest or high school principal. We are only subject to the dictates of our little group, and if we don't like them, we are free to change groups. And, if we choose to belong to no group at all, we can still manage our daily lives. There is no legal requirement that one belong to a church, or even a bridge club.

    Without the soft, ambiguous control of social sanctions, nothing is left between the individual and the State. This is seen as being to the individual's benefit, but the State is powerful. It must assume the burden of social arbitration -- bickering neighbors, feuding authors, careless drivers, all call 911. And although we now expect the State to intervene in every human disagreement, we cannot tolerate a humanized Justice. We demand that every ruling and action be scrupulously impartial.

    Perhaps we were, on the average, better served by the small-time corrupt officials of old, who in their petty way at least allowed some sort of humanity to sway their edicts. Now we have forced the most corrupt to rewrite the laws so as to legitimize their corruption, meanwhile placing its price out of reach of the common man.

    The poor fellow at the heart of this matter should never have been allowed to go so far off the deep end -- but that is not to say any branch of the government should ever have taken a hand. His friends, family, co-workers, poker buddies, clergy -- they are the ones who, in other societies, would have exerted pressure, outside of the criminal justice system, to get him to moderate his actions. He might well continue to protest the system, but more wisely.

    Where do you draw the line? Where age, wisdom, and experience teaches you to draw it. And you often draw the line loosely, in a shade of gray. But you do draw it somewhere -- between totalitarianism and anarchy.

    Modern society is like a machine without any oil. We believe, in our arrogance, that if the machine is perfectly built, there will be no friction, hence no need for lubrication or loose fit. Meanwhile, slaves to Progress, we drive the machine harder and faster, and cannot understand the meaning of the howling noises from within, nor extinguish the gouts of black smoke issuing from the cracks.

  344. a message from germany by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    A message from germany

  345. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by xenobyte · · Score: 1

    There is a huge difference between opposing certain policies of a government and attempting to overthrow it.

    That certainly depends on the way this opposition is manifested!

    If you do it by writing readers letters to newspapers or directly to your congressman, or participate in a peaceful demonstration that respects law and order - the diffence is huge and clear.

    If you do it through 'civil disobedience' (another word for rampant lawbreaking usually including violence), I don't see any difference at all.

    The use of lawbreaking by a violent mob is a major threat to any society and the reaction by the society must be equally major and severe in order to defend itself. This sentence is IMHO too lean.

    --
    "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
  346. Dangerous associates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The CNN article states also that: (Austin) may not associate with anyone from a group that "espouses physical force as a means of change." Does that include any member of the US army that just used physical force as a means of regime change in Iraq? Oh sorry - I forgot... It's the law. It's not meant to make sense.....

  347. From a french P.O.V : troll by aepervius · · Score: 1

    I am sorry but revolution *NEVER* ameliorate the social status of people as a whole. Revolution only brutaly move the people up and down in the social pyramid (stealing/confiscating/murder/rape/execution) for some, but the rest "the paysant" the serf and so on, (particulary in the case of french revolution, anyone outside Paris) never changed anything. Note that I am speaking on the WHOLE. On a small scale you can observe social progress for some, but onlyx at the detriment of other. Why is that there is no progress ? Because of two facts :

    1) even if the worst dictature the base of the pyramide (the people making up the most basic workforce), as long as thery fit in, usually only wants her/his next meal and some fun and that is it. Yeah call me elitiste , but if you think most people think of freedom of speech and not their next meal/sex time/alcohol then you are delusionnal. They pay more tax, and fit in even in the worst law, as long as they are left in peace. Only a few Intellectual, or powermonger which are not at the top usually wish the changes. The French revolution wasn't a "people" revolution, you just have to look at its leader beyond the first day.

    2) Social revolution perturbate the economic of a country deeply. It doesn't help it. But only *ECONOMIC* help people raise their status in a social scale. You do not live on air and politic. You live on "Food". But while you are on the barricade fighting the goivernement those stuff , like in every war, either aren't supplied regulary or are plainly not grown.


    What really change the live of people is economic revolution. not social one. Out of 3 revolution (Russian, French, US) I know that 2 brought more pain than ease for the people, and one (the US) I can't really speak of, but had the extrem advantage to be 1000's of kilometer away from the governement, and wasn't a revolution anyway , but a cut from a colony from its origin, and one can argue this is far easier on the evconomic of stuff.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  348. Faulty logic bigot. by eyeye · · Score: 1

    Of course it would be racist, are you a retard or something. Do brown people not need fertiliser?

    As for liberal bias in the US media all I can say as a Briton is ROFL, you will never (want to) understand but fellow Britons who have watched a few US news channels will probably know what I mean :-)

    --
    Bush and Blair ate my sig!
  349. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by fenix+down · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Looks like a pretty standard ideaologically-confused anarchist/commie hissyfit thing. Upside-down US flag, red star, and a black flag. Overlapping each other, no less. The bomb links are just par. He doesn't even put those up until late '02. Probably just responding to how tough it is to pull off that "crazy Jew from Cryptonomicon" vibe without some of that these days. This kid's even a little behind the curve as far as the capital @ clique goes. I know trendy anarchist/vegitarian/communists that had most of that shit in their AIM profiles before Bush had even settled in.

    I have him at slightly less dangerous than a camgirl, probably a big fan of Propaghandi. B+ for style though. Excellent use of Clash-tshirt-white on the splash page.

  350. Re:Ahh yes, the classic American Revolution refere by fenix+down · · Score: 1

    Your argument isn't that great. America did have a degree of representation, just not the kind that we wanted. Virtual representation? Remember? Representation isn't binary, if at some point you feel that you have a plan that would better represent you than the current system, "taxation without representation" would work just as well for you as it did then. Which is to say, not at all, other than to get your side fired up.

    <18th-century Brit>It's called the shared interest between property owners and society as a whole.</18th-century Brit>

  351. this shouldn't surprise anyone by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    This shouldn't surprise anyone... at the rate that USA is going, I guess I don't need to wait for the collapse of capitalism. Tyranny will take it down long before that...

    The US govt has always treated anarchists very badly. You probably don't know this but the modern incarnation of May day was influenced by the execution of some anarchists. This person is just the recent victim...

    I'm just wondering who is going to be next. Let's see which activist gets thrown in jail for 5 years next :(:(:(

    --
    Sivaram Velauthapillai
    Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
  352. the sad thing is... by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A foreigner could express his views of overthrowing a govt and yet nothing happens; but when a local citizen does it, it's jail time :(

    If you think this has nothing to do with his anti-government views, you have no fucking clue what is going on.

    --
    Sivaram Velauthapillai
    Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
  353. And bombing iraq was legal? LOONY by cheekyboy · · Score: 2

    So what bush did to illegaly bomb and take over iraq was 100% legal? Yeah right... its just so Haliburten and his buddies and oil mates get fat/juicy rich out of it and control the planet before the american economy falls and the US$ is worth-less than toilet paper.

    Is describing how to gut/kill a sheep dangerous? because that same info can be used to kill a human.

    Hiding HOW to do something will not PREVENT it, people are smart and will figure it out, I mean if nobel did 150 years ago , any one can now.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  354. Haha but Bush insighting revolution in iraq is ok? by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    Yeah, though when bush calls on citizens of other countries to overthrow their leaders its ok? but if americans want to do that to the Fed then its bad?

    Ha Ha

    america - the real dictatorship with fake democracy.
    No person outside the elite can ever become a president.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  355. Political Asylum by theolein · · Score: 1

    Considering that his life will be fucked from now on- imagine trying to find a job after his sentence, he would be better served in fleeing the USA to mexico or canada and requesting political asylum in Brazil, France, Sweden or any country that will respect the fact that he has been heavily sentenced for youthful idiocy.

  356. Re:This isn't about freedom of speech or linking.. by cynanthropic · · Score: 1

    lit crit folks get major mileage from the notion of a "speech act", in which a power dynamic within a group ensures that the words of one are automatically realized by others. think of a king in his court saying how great it'd be if X just dropped dead - the nature of the power dynamic in the court is such that someone will surely kill X. point is, the king knows that engaging in speech is tantamount to action (it's good to be the king), making him responsible for the action.

    18 USC 842 seems, IMHO, to be aimed at people who engage in violent acts through speech acts, eg the masterminds behind attacks or killings or whatnot. say lou reed takes a completely devoted tribe of mutant piglets and teaches them how to light a fire and play guitar, and then mentions that it'd be great if a particular barn burned down. when it does, is he responsible, even though the piglets set the fire? sure he is! and we need a law to that effect.

    but you can engage in a speach act only when you know that someone who is listening will turn your words into actions. to be a mastermind, there must be a plot, and plotters to carry out your wishes.

    Austin was no mastermind. no prestige in any group afforded him the power to engage in action by speech alone.

    there seem to me to be two readings (remember, IANAL!):

    * 18 USC 842 is meant to apply to speech acts, eg masterminds, in which case Austin has not broken this law

    * 18 USC 842 applies to speech with no predictable connection to any particular act, in which case it sounds wildly unconstitutional.

    thoughts?

  357. Declaration of Independence, Void Where Prohibited by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    When the united states of America was established there was much debate on the need for a bill of rights. The argument coming from most quarters was that it was uncessary considering that the absolute limitation of powers granted to the federal government were the chains that bound it. The assumption being that any powers not assigned to the federal government were by default reserved to the states or to the people.

    Eventually many signatories to the Constitution refused to sign it unless it had a bill of rights. The eventual agreement was that there should at least be a recognition in the Constitution of man's "natural" rights. Now there is a lot of debate about what "natural" rights are and where they come from, but some obvious ones are the right to self-defense and preservation, the right to speak your mind. It was clearly understood that these rights were not being conferred by the Constitution, but only being recognized as rights that naturally belonged to free men. These concepts were all codified in the 9th and 10th amendments that are now routinely ignored by nearly every state and federal court. The 9th and the 10th amendments clearly show that other natural rights existed. Thomas Jefferson outlined some of these other rights in the Declaration of Independence. This document has some of the most powerful opening paragraphs of any document written during the elightenment and post enlightenment era. I quote (and highlight) from it:

    "The Declaration of Independence of the Thirteen Colonies
    In CONGRESS, July 4, 1776

    The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America,

    When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

    We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. --That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. --Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain [George III] is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world."
    etc...

    It is not only a natural right, it is a manly duty.

    You know things have gone pretty far downhill when they give a guy a year in the federal pen for advocating revolution -- for suggesting that violent, non voter registered change might have to occur. The same judge would probably have arrested Washington, Jefferson, Paine etc.

    Sad.

  358. From his probation conditions... by perly-king-69 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    (5) he cannot associate with any person or group that seeks to change the government in any way (be that environmental, social justice, political, economic, etc

    Rememeber kids, you must not attempt to change the government. Your government loves you.

    Someone has the sig 'I'm interested in the future because that's where I'll be spending my time.

    You'd do well to take note of the maxim 'Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it'

    --

    --
    This sig is inoffensive.

  359. Re:This is *no* bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Oh, uh-huh-huh, you're so funny.

    Take the tiny minority of demonstrators that fuck things up and project that on the whole movement. You fucking trolling idiot.

    Like your parent poster said: they do have valid concerns sometimes.

  360. Not first... by santeri · · Score: 1
    Haven't you noticed the first American concentrathion camp off the cost of Cuba?

    Not the first, though. You had real concentration camps already during the WWII, for the Japanese and others of Asian heritage.

    --
    ______________
    OTTERS RULE.
  361. Re:This is *no* bullshit by nr · · Score: 1

    The apocalypse will come indeed, then that 'little' pile of 36 trillion dollars of debt collapses by its own weight and mortage rates skyrockets. It will create a living hell on earth for many americans, and its all Greenspans fault.

  362. Re:This is bullshit Huh? RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Everyday, 1000's of >70 year olds transiting US Airports on international Flights, are forced to sign a document that they willl not overthrow the US Goverment. An nondescript 80 year remarked, I only have 6 hours to do it, do they think I am Superman or something- and proudy signed.

  363. Good government? Really? by santeri · · Score: 1
    The Founding Fathers were all for violent overthrow of governments, so long as the government in question wasn't a good one.

    So how does this situation really differ from the one with the present day US government? As it certainly ain't a good one, my son.

    --
    ______________
    OTTERS RULE.
  364. The Websites with the information? by CyrusSukhia · · Score: 1

    And what about the sites he linked to? Will the Feds be going after them?

  365. Re:Being arrested can just be the start of the pro by pfafrich · · Score: 1
    You used physical force instead of democratic pressure.

    There are very different means of protest. Some choose violence, some choose non-violence or pasive resistance. I chose not to use violence of any sort, this included physical and verbal violence. Your post is actually more violent than my actions.

    Protest against REAL injustice, you petty little powderpuff!

    The malasian airways protest was protesting about malasians wholescale clearence of rain forrests and the desplacement of the tribes people there. The action was done in solidarity with 30 malasian tribes people who were being held by their govenment. Read the archive of raisethefist. Every item them is about an injustice.

    This is why, from 1930-2003 not ONE problem has been solved by student activists.

    But so much has been changed by law breaking protest.

    Suffrigetts - Womans right to vote, Ganhdi - independence for india. Swords into ploughshare brought the whole East Timor situation too the public eye. Earth First protest in the UK caused the govenment to re think roads program (some roads were halted). GM activists - changed the publics perception of GM food.

    Yes direct action is not the only tool for the job. That is why are now prefer to work by spreading information see Plants For A Future.

    --
    There are four sorts of people in the world: fools, lunatics, idiots and morons. - Umberto Eco, Foucaut's pendulum.
  366. er, Cuba? by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

    Ok, so nobody is being tortured or killed in the USA (that's what happens in Cuba at Guantanamo

    Um, you're thinking of the portion of Cuba outside of Guantanamo Bay.

    That's OK; easy mistake to make! :)

  367. Hmm, really? (was Re:First they came for...) by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

    Yeah, and defacing a website is really the equivolent of beating someone senseless. It is wrong to vandalize websites, just as it is wrong to vandalize a wall, but it certainly not deserving of a year behind bars.

    Really? If you vandalize the wall of my house, a year in prison is less painful than what you'll feel if I get to you first.

    1. Re:Hmm, really? (was Re:First they came for...) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i doubt it. do you take vandals up the ass until it DOESNT hurt anymore?

  368. It is a working vacation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Don't you notice that this president has more vacations than any President before him? Hes always at camp david, has more vacations than I do and I'm a college student."

    His vacations are working vacations. He is not one of those guys who leaves the cell phone at the office. It is less of a vacation than it is moving the White House to Crawford for a month.

  369. All laws legislate morality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Laws have little to do with morality outside of a theocracy"

    All laws have to do with morality: it is the government saying something is wrong or immoral.

  370. proof of motive? by jago25_98 · · Score: 1

    I suppose that in order to prevent crime it is /essential/ to pre-empt?

    If the infomation is distributed that is no proof of motive that is required for any prosecution right?

    People shouldn't be silenced from speech so,
    a breech of privacy is the next option.

    So how do you feel about this one?

    If you post on slashdot about bomb making and government is it ok for the authorities to tap your phone line and intercept your mail.

    At a push I am prepared to give up my privacy but only if there is no other option. Even then I'm not so sure as the infomation is so often not relevent to the reason for scrutiny.

  371. Re:You Have Freedom for All Speach or You have Non by HiThere · · Score: 1

    You are measuring at the present time. But you don't know what the future will bring, which was the point he was making.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  372. if you like don't the hea,t get out of the kitchen by kyadd · · Score: 1

    I'm not saying that sometimes cops are on the defenive, sometimes they are. As far as cops being the trouble makers I think that depends on the situation. Sometimes cops jobs are to just keep the peace, and make sure a footbal game doesn't get to out of hand. Sometimes the cops are there to protea ct certain target. Sometimes the cops are there to disrupt the protest. Just like an army police have different objectives.

    Protesters have a right to fight back against agression, and some do. Can some dig up that tape of police rubber bulleting, a group of nuns who are running from the police. Not everyone is as peacefull as nuns.

  373. Re:After viewing his former website, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fact that you called Austin a commy is enough to think you have no grasp. Alex Jones disinformation for the gov't? haha.

  374. Re:Republicans arent conservative, liberaterians a by mfrank · · Score: 1

    Yes, because there are plenty of Al-Queda members that are multi-frickin-millionairs.

    I'm not really scared of someone half a world away if they're only making $20 a year.

  375. Re:After viewing his former website, by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 1

    look at his website, dumbass..

  376. Re:This is *no* bullshit by anarcat · · Score: 1

    No, I am not what you call a moron throwing bricks through store windows, and yes they're still after me. No I won't put a foil hat on my head, but yes, I'm still paranoid, because it just happens that the paranoids are the one that don't get caught.

    I happen to be an independant media reporter and the police have already arrested me on bullshit charges of "Illegal assembly". So yes, they are after me, and for good reasons: I have a voice and actually speak up! I guess I wasn't paranoid enough and thought the police wouldn't bust a peaceful demo.

    In other news, recent demonstrations in downtown montreal produced the arrests of 21 street medics and a few more journalists. 240 persons were arrested on charges of "illegal assembly" (again) *after* the demo was over, and *after* the cops had already arrested 4 of the "throwing bricks morons" (as you call them).

    It's pretty easy to dismiss other people suffering by saying "you looked for it, you deserve it". But once the cops come busting down your door, no one will care for you either.

    --
    Semantics is the gravity of abstraction
  377. Re:Actually, the GPL hasn't exactly worked.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The American people were under British rule, yet had no say in the government. We've figured out how to get that representation in a peaceful manner since then.
    I presume by Americans you mean the Europeans who had migrated to America :)
  378. Re:This is *no* bullshit by Thangodin · · Score: 1

    Censorship is a lot like alcohol prohibition--it buries the problem in a place where no one sees it, and creates an underground that no one knows about until it's too late. If you think that censorship works, keep in mind that publishers used to go to great lengths to piss off the prudes in Boston so that they could put "Banned in Boston" on the cover of their books. And Alcoholics Anonymous was formed at the height of prohibition.

    Just because someone never tells anyone he's wants to kill the president doesn't mean he's not going to do it. Let them talk in the open where others can hear them and have a chance of correcting their views, instead of stewing in the basement like Raskalnikov before skulking off to do the deed. We do have laws against hate literature in Canada, and they're a mixed bag--they often give the racists a national pulpit (in court) to spout their venom, where everyone can hear them.

    America, by the way, does not have laws against hate literature. There is actually no legal way to shut down Neo-Nazis, and the government seems strangely blase about right wing extremists, even though they have a long history of terrorism and have committed more acts on terrorism on American soil than any other faction (uh huh, that's what burning a cross on your neighbour's lawn is.) The law being applied here is a rather vague, anti-terrorist law which can be applied to any dissident group. The choice of who it gets aimed at is discretionary. The question, and the danger, is: at whose discretion?

  379. Information is not the culprit by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    I don't care if its how to make a 9mm submachine gun, or a rocket motor, or a chocolate pie.

    Free speech dictates that you are allowed to disseminate this information.

    Its how its USED that is wrong. The information isn't at fault here.

    With your thinking, I guess we must also ban chemistry class in high school, or the chemical abstracts.. or physics... Its all about basic knowledge just being applied. I'm sure that's not what you meant, but properly extrapolated it does mean this ( and has been happening, I've noticed many books are now missing from my child's schools library that I had access too 20 years ago, and I've not gone and blown anyone up lately. )

    It must be absolute freedom of information.

    Too bad you posted anonymous.. you will never see this.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  380. revolution by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

    The problem with revolution is that those who revolt either a) think they have "THE" answer, or b) have no answer and are basically just trying to destroy they old. Both of these positions are inherently irresponsible and typically lead to greater atrocities than were committed under the prior regime in the short-run.

    This is not to say that revolts CAN have positive effects. They can, but we tend to romanticize these few exceptions.

    --
    -Stu
  381. Quick question by stephenbooth · · Score: 1

    What do you do if you're in a crowded theatre and notice a fire?

    Stephen

    --
    "Don't write down to your readers, the only people less intelligent than you can't read" - Sign on Newspaper Office Wall
  382. (OT: Nicely stated and succinct!) by Shardis · · Score: 1

    Woo hoo and cheers! I'd just like to second your opinion, and let you know I'd mod you up if I had mod points. :)

    We(the US) aren't perfect by any stretch of the imagination, and the quest for improvement should continue endlessly, but we seem to be doing alright comparitively so far.

  383. Re: Your response (OT) by Shardis · · Score: 1

    Hrm, this is my second "good job" posting in as many days. Some people on here actually do think(I was beginning to wonder). I'm not usually this effusive, but I don't think I've ever seen what I would just blow off and ignore as a regular /. troll responded to better, especially in this context. :)

  384. Possible Defense? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He should have exclaimed "but im not Jewish" ... ohh sorry wrong era ... its so easy to confuse the two.

  385. SMELL A GAPING HYMEN?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (Not the Subject Line Troll)

  386. Slippery Slopes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The value of the slippery slope argument is not so much in implying that arresting one anarchist today will lead to concentration camps tomorrow - nobody believes that. Rather the argument should be employed to suggest that, just as the extreme case (the bottom of the slope) is wrong, so are all of the intermediary steps. Is the current persecution of Jesus Castillo likely to lead to wholesale censorship and book-burning riots? Well, no, not really. But it IS wrong, nonetheless, just like the extreme case. So it is a way to suggest this wrongness by hitching it to some colorful imagery.

  387. Re:Being arrested can just be the start of the pro by ChaoticLimbs · · Score: 1

    I still remain convinced of two points, regardless of your argument.
    1. This asshat was arrested because he chained himself to a building. 2. Protest in itself is not inherently disruptive of the democratic process. Protest, and the right to petition one's government for redress of grievances is a necessary and healthy part of a thriving democracy. However, intentionally blocking roadways with ones body, blocking access to a building etc. cannot be viewed as a protected right, as it directly conflicts with another's right to movement and access to his or her property and public facilities. No one person's rights (no matter how vocally proclaimed) may take precedence over another person's. I am also quite libertarian but I think the activist mindset is long on talk, short on fix. Instead of simply protesting X injustice, seek to remedy it with work.
    Pfafrich was still arrested for chaining his dumb ass to a building. No amount of rationalization will change the simple fact that in America and most parts of Europe, you don't get arrested for just having views contrary to corporate interests. You get arrested when you take action which harms another person or entity. 'Nuff said.
    Disagree if you must, that's the beauty of it all. You can.

  388. Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fucking nigger got what he deserved. He should be sent back to liberia with the rest of his shit skinned brothas!