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Unmanned Aerial Drones Coming Soon Above U.S.

cnet-declan writes "Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) have been flying over Iraq and Afghanistan, but now the Bush administration wants to use them for domestic surveillance. A top Homeland Security official told Congress today, according to this CNET News.com article, that: "We need additional technology to supplement manned aircraft surveillance and current ground assets to ensure more effective monitoring of United States territory." One county in North Carolina is already using UAVs to monitor public gatherings. But what happens when lots of relatively dumb drones have to share airspace with aircraft carrying passengers? A pilot's association is worried."

841 comments

  1. Israel does this already... by mongoose(!no) · · Score: 5, Informative

    At major events in Israel, they already use unmanned blimps to monitor it from a distance. If they can keep it out of commericial airspace, it shouldn't be a problem.

    1. Re:Israel does this already... by Amonimous+Coward · · Score: 0

      Unmaned blimps are far more fuel efficient than unmaned planes. Plus they can stay airborne for more time. Why don't they use blimps all along ?

      I think blimps would be ideal for setting up wireless connectivity for a wide area. Just because some stupid blimp exploded, humankind almost does not consider the possibility of using blimps anymore, not even with new technology that would make it not flammable.

    2. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what exactly is commercial airspace? Is the area around my local municipal airport commercial airspace? What about the low altitude routes I fly as a private pilot? In fact "commercial airspace" to me would mean controlled airspace, which is almost all airspace over the US above 700 feet above ground. The issue here is that another pilot can see and avoid an aircraft but these UAVs have no capability to monitor the air around them for collision avoidance. I say they should be banned entirely until they have a feasable way to do their part in avoiding other air traffic. Having transponders so they can be tracked accurately by air traffic control isn't enough as I am not in contact with ATC during most of my flights.

      Consider this, an 8 pound bird can severely damage a light airplane. A collision with a 30 pound UAV would kill me, my passengers, and whoever happens to get in the way of my wreckage impacting the ground.

    3. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      exactly... ALL airspace is commercial airspace. non-pilots usually think that there are special areas set aside, arial highways so to speak (which do exist, kinda) but there is NOWHERE in the US where these things can be operated safely.

    4. Re:Israel does this already... by O_at_TT · · Score: 5, Interesting

      ...and NASA plans to do it too for terrain mapping purposes (presumably within US borders):

      http://esto.nasa.gov/obs_technologies_uavsar.html

      UAVs are something we're going to have to get used to. Up next: pilotless passenger planes. Most modern aircraft are already equipped with auto-takeoff, auto-pilot (cruise), and auto-land. What more do you need? The ability to control them from the ground? That's being worked on for security reasons.

      -Oliver / TreasureTunes.com

    5. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Israel does not have the Bill of Rights. It does have borders completely surrounded by hostile neighbors, including daily rocket attacks and suicide bombs, many originating within its territory.

      Israel has lots of unamerican "problems", like a state religion and the draft. We don't want those things here.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    6. Re:Israel does this already... by PPGMD · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Actually the US already uses blimps for radar coverage of the Gulf of Mexico and US-Mexico border. They are called Aerostat, they require restricted airspace and calm weather to fly, very calm weather. If I remember correctly the best Aerostat station has just under 70% availability (with most stations around 50%), sure thats great compared to the cost of keeping a US Border patrol EP-3 flying or an USAF E-3 flying, but I don't think it gives the coverage that the Department of Homeland security wants.

      Personally I am mixed on this program, I believe that border security needs to be strengthened but at a pilot I am kind of scared of being forced to share airspace with UAVs, and the pop-up TFRs that go with them.

      TFRs are the bane of private pilots because they are often short notice, large enough to be an inconvenience, but small enough that you can transit most of the center of what they are trying to protect in under a minute, and Part 121 and often part 135 traffic is most often exempted (the aircraft that can do the most damage). Here in Florida for the shuttle launches we have 24 hour TFRs (the TFR is post 9/11 NASA had used a set of restricted airspace that was much smaller or oriented downrange), that are so large that it cuts off East coast VFR corridor between Orlando's Class B airspace and the ADIZ. Forcing pilots to fly an obstacle course of TFR, restricted, and controlled airspace to get to their destination.

    7. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, there is prohibited airspace which is not commercial airspace, where these things can currently be flown. But that's not the issue.

    8. Re:Israel does this already... by smokeslikeapoet · · Score: 1
      At major events in Israel, they already use unmanned blimps to monitor it from a distance.

      Then why don't we just use Ted Kennedy?
    9. Re:Israel does this already... by hazem · · Score: 1

      I remember reading an account of an Iraqi general (pre Gulf-War I - when we were still their "friends") who visited the US. He was a pilot and got the opportunity to fly. When looking at the aviation map, he noted the small areas marked on the map and asked if that was where they could fly. His American counterpart explained that in fact, the small areas were the restricted areas and that he could fly pretty much everywhere else. He was astounded. In Iraq, he could only fly in very limited areas.

      I'd hate to see the US emulate the former Iraqi administration in its restrictive flight policies.

      (I think the book was "Ally to Adversary" by Rick Francona - but I've read a lot of books about Iraq. It's hard to keep them all straight.)

    10. Re:Israel does this already... by sebD · · Score: 1

      Since a lot a gatherings happen in cities it shouldn't be too much of a problem. A good portion of the airspace over a city is prohibited to commercial aircrafts for all kind of reasons (sound nuisance being one of them)

    11. Re:Israel does this already... by frisket · · Score: 1
      A pilot's association is worried.

      They should be.

    12. Re:Israel does this already... by Darby · · Score: 1

      At major events in Israel, they already use unmanned blimps to monitor it from a distance.

      Then why don't we just use Ted Kennedy?

      Because even though it's doubtful that he's seen it in years ( and I sure as shit ain't gonna vouch for it ) he still has a penis, hence isn't "unmanned".
      Well, that and the lighter than air thing.

    13. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given current US trends at home and abroad, it will not be long before the US has much more in common with Israel.

      Ironic, isn't it, that I am presented with the word "repress" to prove that this Anonymous Coward is human.

    14. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      > What more do you need?

      The ability to steer, a dimwit for president with a need to invade some other guy's country, two towers in New York, and the will to do it.

    15. Re:Israel does this already... by jacksonj04 · · Score: 1

      The trouble with all these auto- bits is they assume conditions are ideal. Landing is the most complex and dangerous part, and auto-land is still designed to be used in emergencies only.

      Improving technology with regards to positioning and orientation make this easier, but for a truly autonomous passenger jet it would need to take into account things such as load weight, weather conditions, other planes both in the air (easy enough) but also on the ground during taxi. For takeoff it needs to maintain orientation relative to the runway, compensate for wind; and for landing it needs to do everything from approach angle to appropriate brake points to runway alignment... the list goes on. What if the airport isn't fitted with the alignment equipment on the runway? A pilot could bring the plane down safely, the AI wouldn't have a clue.

      I don't deny it will happen, but I disagree the auto takeoff, pilot and landing functions can be strung together at the moment (or even in the immediate future) to produce a totally autonomous passenger craft even approaching the safetly levels of current piloted craft.

      --
      How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
    16. Re:Israel does this already... by BostonPilot · · Score: 1

      I beg to differ. Almost no airspace over US cities is prohibited airspace. Washington DC has a lot of prohibited airspace, but most other cities have none. As a former traffic helicopter pilot I can tell you that there are not many restrictions on where you can fly, except good judgement. San Francisco is one exception that I know of.

    17. Re:Israel does this already... by lixee · · Score: 1
      It does have borders completely surrounded by hostile neighbors

      More like "They have completely surrounded a peaceful nation through violence, and claimed that as their territory".

      Now, is it a crime to defend one's self?
      --
      Res publica non dominetur
    18. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      > Now, is it a crime to defend one's self?

      It's so funny to see criminals claim self-defense when their victims hit back.

    19. Re:Israel does this already... by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Unmanned, not unbrained. I'd feel safer with drones.

      Or perhaps you meant we could fill the blimps with his hot air.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    20. Re:Israel does this already... by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Blimps are big, slow and easy to see. As opposed to UAVs which are small, relatively fast and pretty much designed to be hard to spot -- never mind from a speeding plane.

    21. Re:Israel does this already... by edumacator · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Let's be careful that we don't overstate this issue. Saying unmanned reconnaisance is unconstitutional is not accurate. There is no difference constitutionally between manned aircraft and unmanned.



      The angst here is against the Bush administration's policies, not unmanned drones.



      Arguing the wrong point weakens the real discussion.

    22. Re:Israel does this already... by flyonthewall · · Score: 1

      Should not be too hard to do. Currently most regulations call for lowest flying altitudes of 1000AGl for fixed wings and 500' AGL for rotors (unless landing / take off). Increase that by 1000' and have the darn thing fly below that. Let them experience all the great stuff like power lines, antennas and the like.

      --
      "The avalanche has already started. It's too late for the pebbles to vote." - Kosh
    23. Re:Israel does this already... by novado · · Score: 1

      Last I heard, Israel DOESN'T have borders, at least none that it wishes to declare.

    24. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Apparently taking over somebody's homeland will piss some people off. Who knew?

    25. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FFS. I'm bored of this already.

      It should be your lame-ass government that you spy on, not your citizens.

    26. Re:Israel does this already... by Kombat · · Score: 1

      Most modern aircraft are already equipped with auto-takeoff, auto-pilot (cruise), and auto-land. What more do you need?

      This is incorrect. "Modern aircraft" (I assume we're talking about commercial passenger aviation here) cannot take off and land on their own. "Auto pilot," while very useful in relieving pilots of the drudgery of the uneventful portions of the flight, are actually quite limited in their capabilities. They can fly from point-to-point, they can hold and change altitude at predetermined times. However, they cannot recognize when they may encounter icing. Or when they need to vector themselves around weather. Or handle any eventuality that is remotely unusual (medical emergency, unruly passenger, decompression problems, hydraulic problems, fuel leaks, clear-air-turbulence). Such things are trivial for an actual pilot to manage.

      The take-off is always done by actual pilots, because a lot can go wrong, and a pilot needs to have complete situational awareness at all times during this critical portion of the flight. Also, tolerances for mistakes are much lower on the ground than in the air. If the airplane is 50 feet left of where it should be when cruising at 25,000 feet, that's fine. But if it's on the runway, rolling along at 70 mph, getting ready to rotate, then it just plowed through 2 dozen runway lights and possibly an airplane holding on a taxiway.

      Landing is equally sensitive. Modern GPS and ILS/localizer approaches are remarkably accurate, and can guide the airplane down to within 50 feet of the runway threshold in even the thickest fog. But a computer doesn't know how to flare in a 30 knot, 35 degree crosswind. We still need pilots for that last 50 feet.

      --
      Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
    27. Re:Israel does this already... by The+Snowman · · Score: 1

      Since a lot a gatherings happen in cities it shouldn't be too much of a problem. A good portion of the airspace over a city is prohibited to commercial aircrafts for all kind of reasons (sound nuisance being one of them)

      Interesting. I flew in over downtown Cleveland several times, and from living there for a good number of years, I know that airplanes definitely fly in over the city to land at the airport. Usually they take off the opposite direction, but still, they fly over a populated, urban area.

      --
      24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
    28. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The trouble with all these auto- bits is they assume conditions are ideal. Landing is the most complex and dangerous part, and auto-land is still designed to be used in emergencies only."

      I guess it depends on what your definition for ideal is. Autoland is used routinely on airliners, and it can be used in less than ideal conditions (fog, rain, wind, etc). In microburst situations, the autopilot can handle those too, as long as the equpiment is in place to 'see' them ahead of time. I believe autoland will also handle engine out scenerios, but I'm not too definite.

      Load and weight, conditions enroute, are already taken care of with the FMS in airliners. The pilots plug in the existing wind conditions for takeoff, the estimated CG of the aircraft, the flap setting used for takeoff, and the FMS tells them what the takeoff speeds are (or they're looked up on a table, which could be put in a FMS). Ground crews could do this preflight.

      During cruise the FMS computes the most economic cruise alt, cruise speed, the best time to start an engine idle descent.

      Not that you would want to just turn on the autopilot and sit in the back with a drink, it still takes skill and knowledge on how to use them. They're defintly not emergency use only.

      There are GPS approaches for runways without an ILS. The FAA is considering the idea of turning these GPS approaches into full blown instrument approaches. This means that every airport will have its own instrument approach regardless of the facilities on the ground.

    29. Re:Israel does this already... by mirio · · Score: 2, Informative

      The comment on Israel is informative but the idea of 'commercial airspace' is so off the mark it doesn't even make sense.

      I'm a pilot and I can tell you that there is no such thing as commercial airspace. When I take off and fly I can go pretty much anywhere I want. Sure, there are different types of airspace that require ATC clearance to enter, but there is not such beast as commercial airspace.

      Unless these Drones can 'see and avoid' just like other VFR aircraft they should not be permitted access to the NAS (national airspace system). The operators of UAVs should also be a qualified pilot and the UAVs should undergo some sort of certification program just as piloted aircraft. If the aircraft use the same airspace system, they should play by the same rules.

    30. Re:Israel does this already... by sebD · · Score: 1

      So I guess you are aware of the fact that you cannot simply fly wherever you want above the city (espacially at the height/altitude you want). Of course there are exceptions, you are indeed allowed to be quite close to the ground on your approach. But still , these are well defined areas. Try to fly your plane at 2000ft a above wallstreet.

      There could be problems with helicopters (press, medics, etc.) though ...

    31. Re:Israel does this already... by Bob3141592 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      UAVs are something we're going to have to get used to. Up next: pilotless passenger planes. Most modern aircraft are already equipped with auto-takeoff, auto-pilot (cruise), and auto-land. What more do you need? The ability to control them from the ground? That's being worked on for security reasons.

      That's a terrible idea, especially if you think it will improve security. Quite the opposite. All you need is one terrorist hacker to break into the system and grab control. Then instead of an attack by four planes you have every plane in the air becoming a weapon and/or target at the same time.

      --
      In theory, there's no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is.
    32. Re:Israel does this already... by InfiniteWisdom · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      It's so funny to see criminals claim self-defense when their victims hit back.
      A agree, it is funny to watch Israel claim self-defense when they are attacked by people whose land they've been occupying.

    33. Re:Israel does this already... by Frymaster · · Score: 1
      > What more do you need?

      The ability to steer, a dimwit for president with a need to invade some other guy's country, two towers in New York, and the will to do it.

      but with the soon-to-be-implemented automatic pilotless aircraft, all you'll need is a script kiddie with a copy of jihad.exe.

    34. Re:Israel does this already... by Keebler71 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I have extensive experience with military UAVs and can address at least a couple of these. Currently the military does control smaller UAVs without rated pilots at the controls provided the UAVs stay within restricted airspace. For Global Hawk, which primarily operates within the FAS but above the jetways, there exists an agreement (COA) that requires the pilots to be commercial-instrument rated. Climbs and descents to/from altitude occur within restricted airspace, but once above, the GH can pretty much go wherever (subject to the same restrictions placed on any other high-altitude aircraft, IFR aircraft). Oh, and the GH pilots are required to fly manned aircraft as well to maintain their proficiency as per the FARs.

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    35. Re:Israel does this already... by mirio · · Score: 1

      Very insightful without the usual slashdot bravado and swagger. Thanks!

    36. Re:Israel does this already... by GigG · · Score: 1

      Well the NY airspace is very complex because of the large number of busy airports. Take the airports away and there is nothing that says I can't fly 2000 ft above Wall St. Just glancing at the sectional it looks like 7001 would be OK and 1800 ft. But with the towers and other obstructions the below 1800 might not be legal for a whole other set of reasons none of which have a thing to do with the fact that the NYSE is there.

      --
      Is buying a Harley Davidson as your first motorcycle since you were 16 at age 49 a midlife crisis issue?
    37. Re:Israel does this already... by hackwrench · · Score: 1

      Israel surrounded Great Britain? Because everytime I've checked, that's who owned the property before Israel.

    38. Re:Israel does this already... by Richard+Steiner · · Score: 1

      It's my understanding that some commercial aircraft types are currently required to perform an automatic landing on a periodic basis just to make sure the system is functioning correctly.

      Since there are humans in the cockpit who can override at any time, the risk is negligible.

      --
      Mainframe/UNIX Bit Twiddler and long time Windows/Linux Hobbyist.
      The Theorem Theorem: If If, Then Then.
    39. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If youre talking about the ADIZ in DC, then yea that is restricted, but that doesnt mean there arent any aircraft flying through it.

      Or perhaps you are referring to the numerous MOA's (Military Operation Areas) around our country. Once again, it is restricted in a sense, but not entirely off-limits & in most cases not entirely devoid of civilian aircraft (at least not yet).

      These UAV's are a bad idea in every conceivable way. They are a gross erosion of our privacy. They are unsafe. And they are not any cheaper than putting a pilot up there.

      Some croney in Texas stands to make billions off of them & THATS why theyre being considered.

    40. Re:Israel does this already... by InfiniteWisdom · · Score: 1

      Maybe you need crack open a newspaper and realize that the world hasn't stood still over the past 2000 years

      "The thinking and the ideas that it is possible to continue holding [people] under occupation - it's occupation; one may not like the word, but what is happening here; it's occupation - to hold 3.5 million Palestinians under occupation in my mind is bad for Israel, also for the Palestinians, also for Israel's economy."

      - Ariel Sharon on 26 May, 2003.

    41. Re:Israel does this already... by terrymr · · Score: 1

      According to the marketing blurb ... the latest 777 flies on autopilot once it reaches 500ft above ground level. Apprently they think we need a human in the loop to get the plane that far.

    42. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can't make your case without name-calling, labelling or profanity, you've automatically lost the argument

      YUOR DUMB LOL!!!1!11

    43. Re:Israel does this already... by operagost · · Score: 1

      So you think the President caused the 9/11 attacks? Who are you, Ted Kennedy?

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    44. Re:Israel does this already... by operagost · · Score: 1

      Britain reneged on their earlier commitment to Israel-- when they had already reserved the lion's share of the land to Arab peoples in what is now known as Jordan-- and diced up what was left into a nearly indefensible "gerrymander" of plots. All fine and good, until Israel was immediately attacked for daring to declare their independence.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    45. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      someone to blame when something goes wrong

    46. Re:Israel does this already... by alcmaeon · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I agree. I'm not pleased with the prospect that the Zionists and the Christian-fundies are turning the U.S. into a damned police state just like they have in the Shit-hole(y) Land.

    47. Re:Israel does this already... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>It does have borders completely surrounded by hostile neighbors

      >More like "They have completely surrounded a peaceful nation through violence, and claimed that as their territory".

      >Now, is it a crime to defend one's self?

      I don't disagree with your statement, but I can't tell if you are speaking about Isreal or the Palestinians.

      If someone attacks and TAKES OVER your home, is it a crime to take it back? Is it terrorism to take something back that is yours?

      That's the real reason why there will be no peace there. The issue is distorted into the right of Israel to "exist" at the expense of another people. That land has changed hands so many times. Jews have no more claim to it than Romans. You ca NOT peacefully carve out an ethnically pure homeland out of such a stew.

      Meanwhile there are families who have family deeds to the land going back not just in recent times, but colonial times.. and even Ottoman times. Should they be 'cleansed' off their land, and that land given to someone born in Moscow?

      If Iraqi and Afghan expatriates can vote in their homeland's elections, expatriate and 'refugee' Palestians should be allowed to do the same. The dirty secret of the Israeli democracy is... apartheid. The debate goes nowhere because the wrong arguments are argued.

      Not blasting you, but you seemed sincere in your question. Read up on the history. Mass-retribution, and bulldozing of entire villages is terrorism also.

    48. Re:Israel does this already... by oaksong · · Score: 1

      In the US they'll just make good targets for teenagers with air rifles.

    49. Re:Israel does this already... by jafac · · Score: 1

      If someone attacks and TAKES OVER your home, is it a crime to take it back? Is it terrorism to take something back that is yours?

      Well, how many generations do you go back to figure on whether it's a crime. According to their mythology, the current Israelis are descendents of the people who were attacked and carted off by the Babylonians 1500 years ago. So they're just taking their land back that they once had. On the other hand, 1000 years prior to that, they were wandering nomads who invaded and took the land. 500 years before that, they willingly had migrated to Egypt to avoid a famine.

      So do the legitimate descendents of Jacob have a legitimate claim to this land? And after 2500 years, are today's Israelis genetically Jacob's inheritors? Even with their cultural laws regarding breeding outside of their own?

      Did the Native Americans steal North America from some other culture or people in the distant past?

      At some point, we have to put our spears down and accept that - hey, we're living where we are now. We're who we are now. Living in a constant state of warfare over a disputed past is not constructive.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    50. Re:Israel does this already... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      The ability to control them from the ground? That's being worked on for security reasons.

      Right. With this technology the next time we have a Sept 11 style attack the terrorists won't even have to board the planes....

      This is inexcusibly stupid. Remote control from the ground reduces rather than increases security.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    51. Re:Israel does this already... by einhverfr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Israel does not have the Bill of Rights. It does have borders completely surrounded by hostile neighbors, including daily rocket attacks and suicide bombs, many originating within its territory.

      Israel has boarders? Where are they, exactly?

      Israel has lots of unamerican "problems", like a state religion and the draft. We don't want those things here.

      Lets put a simple list together:
      1) Administrative detention without charge or trial.
      2) Turture of prisoners
      3) Racial segragation (in that the Israeli Arabs have extreme difficulty buying land throughout most if Israel)
      4) Inhumane treatment of detainees.

      Funny, with the exception of #3, these problems are starting to look less and less unamerican.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    52. Re:Israel does this already... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      The dirty secret of the Israeli democracy is... apartheid.

      As someone who follows the Middle East closely though a combination of Arab and Israeli sources, there is far more to this statement than perhaps you are aware of.

      The fact is, some 20% of the Israeli citizenry as recognized by the Israeli government are Arabs and this portion is growing as the Arabs are more likely to live in poverty and thus have more children. Even without a right to return by the Arabs, I would not expect Jews to be a majority in Israel for more than about 30 years.

      Yet, this significant minority population is heavily discriminated against in housing, employment, etc. They are largely feasibly able to own land in small portions of the country and people refuse to abide by court rulings that challenge the dicrimination they face every day.

      So even without talking about the Palestinians, apartheid exists within Israel's green line.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    53. Re:Israel does this already... by Scudsucker · · Score: 1
      Britain reneged on their earlier commitment to Israel

      There was no Israel for Britain to reneg on. And brining up colonial meddling hardly excuses Israeli meddling in Southeast Asia.

      All fine and good, until Israel was immediately attacked for daring to declare their independence.

      ...because they had no business carving a nation out of an area with complete disreguard to the existing population. Isreal has no right to exist.

    54. Re:Israel does this already... by algae · · Score: 1
      Apparently taking over somebody's homeland will piss some people off. Who knew?

      These guys knew. Fat lotta good it did 'em.

      --
      Causation can cause correlation
    55. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Israel exists. That is the basis of its right to exist. On what basis do you base a right for a country to exist? And on what basis do you say it's right to destroy an existing country?

      --

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      make install -not war

    56. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      "I agree. I'm not pleased with the prospect that the Zionists and the Christian-fundies are turning the U.S. into a damned police state just like they have in the Shit-hole(y) Land."

      Personally, I think that ancient religions are the last self-perpetuating artifacts of the cultures that inhabited these desert areas when they were more habitable. They make a culture that is good at quickly destroying other cultures, but not as good as those cultures at sustaining habitation.

      The current ecotastrophe overshadowing all our decisions has little to learn from the religious wars that are hogging the limelight.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    57. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Apparently, it pisses off people whose homeland it never was - like Syria, Egypt, Lebanon, Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan... Even people who piss off (and piss on) the displaced people - see the 1970s PLO.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    58. Re:Israel does this already... by Tweekster · · Score: 1

      Then why hasnt it happened already? You dont need physical control of the plane. just the ground control system

      --
      The phrase "more better" is acceptable English. suck it grammar Nazis
    59. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that unmanned reconnaisance is unconstitutional. Nor that it would be so because it's unmanned.

      You are arguing not only the wrong point, but a point you made up to oppose. That's called a "straw man" argument. Making it destroys your argument.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    60. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      "They have completely surrounded a peaceful nation through violence, and claimed that as their territory".

      Palestine has never been "peaceful", certainly not since Israel occupied Palestinian territory to end wars in which it was attacked from that territory. So you're not talking about Palestine.

      Your sentence more accurately describes the Arab countries which completely surrounded Israel in a series of wars, attacks and invasions, without attacks on them by Israel. I'm not willing to spin fantasy like you are, so I won't describe Israel as "a peaceful nation", especially given its committment to winning wars to defend its existence. But history shows much less evidence that Israel makes war without first being attacked. And Sharon, the asshole responsible for the few events for which there is such evidence, is dead.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    61. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Israel's borders are based on those mandated by the UN acts creating it. The inherent instability of those borders, exploited by invading neighboring countries for its first several decades, resulted in new borders created by victory over its attackers in war. That includes occupied territories, which Israel is now releasing with new borders.

      When you win a war with a neighbor, even when they didn't start it, you get to decide the border. When they did start it, it's hard to discredit the defensive necessity of changing the borders.

      As for America's increasing abuse of liberties, those are totally unacceptable. America is supposed to be better than other countries, like France, Germany, Russia, Iraq, Iran, Israel, Guatemala, Cambodia, China, etc, at protecting liberty. And I insist it lives up to that minimum expectation.

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    62. Re:Israel does this already... by edumacator · · Score: 1

      Wow...Now I'm just confused. Did I make something up,did you, or is this some kind of weird trip?

      You didn't say, "This is unconstitutional." But the mention of the Bill of Rights somewhat implies it, as in; "They can do it in Israel because they don't have a bill of rights. But the government can't do it here because we do." An implied argument can be even more dangerous than an explicit one. Do you get what I'm implying?

      I accept that you didn't intend to make an unconstitutional argument, but I was worried that would be the road people would go down after your post.

    63. Re:Israel does this already... by operagost · · Score: 1

      Neither does Iraq and Lebanon, as they were created in much the same way by western European nations.

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    64. Re:Israel does this already... by einhverfr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It seems to me that stating that the West Bank is part of Israel is about like saying Iraq is part of the US. The problem in both areas is that Iraqis are not American citizens, and Palestinians are not citizens of Israel. The same held true, for example, regarding Eastern Europe under the Communists.

      The other issue is one of illegal annexation which I have not addressed in my posts. Current international humanitarian law strictly forbids military conquest as a way of making one's country bigger. In this view, the settlement blocks are illegal and all of them (outside the green line) ought to be removed.

      I have stated elsewhere that the Palestinians have a legitimate right to fight back against this occupation and the illegal annexation of their land by the Israeli settlements. While I do not think that this right extends to, say, blowing up a bus in Haifa, I do think that settlers are probably fair and legitimate targets and certainly nobody can argue that with attacks aimed solely at the IDF.

      Middle Eastern politics is a mess (and getting worse) and it is sad because we have some real opportunities here. We could (and should, IMO) offer a security guarantee to both Syria and Iran on the condition that they do not fund attacks on the civilian populace within Israel's Green Line (the '49 borders). We should make it clear that we will look the other way when attacks are made against targets in Golan, Gaza, and the West Bank, but will rescind this guarantee if they do not cut off funding to Hizbullah in the event that they send some of their rockets towards, say, Haifa. This might help keep them from meddling in Iraq, and might provide some real pressure that could be exerted on both the Israelis and Palestinians to keep things more civil.

      WRT American civil liberties, I fully agree, BTW.

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    65. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      What is happening in Israel/Palestine is conversion of the Gaza / West Bank occupied territories into a country, and Palestinian terrorists into a government and army. That moves Palestine out of its twilight status as "occupied territories" which have political and military power only through terrorism, which cannot actually change Israel's politics or defend Palestine.

      Once Palestine is completely converted into a state, a full-scale war will begin. Israel's military will defeat Palestine's military, extract a peace settlement with Palestine, and stability proceed. Stability of very low quality of life and autonomy for Palestine. Because Israel will set the terms, and will both punish Palestine and secure it from further threats.

      I regret that outcome. Israel is one people, so much more similar than different, regardless of tribe, religion or politics. Integration is the only way to both external and internal peace in that region. But the past couple of generations on both sides have done too much to destroy every chance at peace. Violence will peak in the next 3-5-10 years, followed by Israeli-enforced peace. If Israel had structured its economy not to depend on US and other EurAmerican military welfare, and Palestinians hadn't created itself as a terrorist state supported by the worst terrorist states, integration would be possible. Popular election of Hamas, which now makes clear that Palestinian voters are terrorists, makes "tweaking" the politics there impossible. Which is the design of both suicidal Palestinians and homicidal Israelis.

      It's just more blood and death in a region that half the world takes much too seriously as license to do bad things to our own neighbors and fellow humans. I regret the whole thing, but I can see that the political, military and economic momentum is now irresistable.

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    66. Re:Israel does this already... by CodeManBob · · Score: 1
      Apparently taking over somebody's homeland will piss some people off. Who knew?
      We (the USA) did! See this
    67. Re:Israel does this already... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Once Palestine is completely converted into a state, a full-scale war will begin. Israel's military will defeat Palestine's military, extract a peace settlement with Palestine, and stability proceed. Stability of very low quality of life and autonomy for Palestine. Because Israel will set the terms, and will both punish Palestine and secure it from further threats.

      How much of the region's history are you familiar with?

      Israeli history is crazy. Israel, ironically enough, is the only country I know of that elected a man who, during WWII was an avid Nazi sympathizer to the highest levels of government. Don't believe me? Do some research on Yitzach Shameer, the Nazis, and the Stern Gang. And yet this Nazi sympathizer turned out to be one of the forces which helped start the peace process a few decades ago.

      After the War for Independance (1948-9), the borders that were established are now called "The Green Line" and roughly include Israel with with the exception of Gaza, Golan, and the West Bank. Gaza was held by Egypt, the West Bank by Jordan, and Golan was a part of Syria. Through a series of wars, Isreal occupied various parts of the surrounding areas including Gaza, Sinai (now returned to Egypt), Golan, and the West Bank. Egypt and Jordan now have peace treaties with Israel, meaning that the main obstacle to peace is the unresolved issue over the Golan with Syria (and hence Syria funds Hizbullah as a way of fighting back).

      The Israeli population has been largely divided about the purpose of the occupations. The defense establishment has generally regarded the occupied territories in a similar way to the way Stalin regarded Eastern Europe-- as a buffer zone to protect against foreign invaders.

      However, the settler movement has seen the occupation as about expanding Israel to what they see is the full Biblical promise. Thus the settlements and outposts have generally been seen by certain aspects of the civil authorities as a way to solidify control over these territories such that the Palestinian people could eventually be transferred to other countries and this land would become the land for the Jews alone. Such parties as the National Union Party and the now defunct National Religious Party based their entire political platform on this agenda. For better or worse, the plan has caused immesurable suffering on both Israelis and Palestinians, and is no longer feasible to continue for the simple reason that the impoverished Palestinians (due to their poverty) are having more children than the Israelis and so it is likely that Arabs will be a majority west of the Jordan within the decade ("Arabs" includes Palestinians and Israeli Arabs). Thus, faced with the growing understanding that transfer is not a viable option (and pressure from the Quartet to go away from this sort of solution to the "Palestinian problem"), they have had to move to a new strategy-- that of unilaterally declaring borders by building the security fence.

      Personally I think that the Hamas victory is a very good thing for peace. While Hamas has not formally renounced their goal of destroying Israel, it looks like they are preparing for a fairly major set of peace initiatives, and once a framework for negotiations is established, Hamas may be a more credible negotiator than was Fatah, just as Netenyahu was a more credible negotiator than Barak (appearances can be decieving). Note that Barak actually wanted to hand over a number of Israeli Arab populations to the Palestinians as a way of maintaining a Jewish majority.

      The wing of Israeli politics that sees Israel as a country by Jews for Jews. however, is still alive and well. Over time, I have little doubt that Israel will become a fully secular state with a Muslim majority no matter how the conflict with the Palestinians is resolved. This is simply because the Israeli Arabs, in large part due to their higher level of poverty, have more children and so over time, they are becoming a larger force in Israeli society. Within fourty years,

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    68. Re:Israel does this already... by lixee · · Score: 1

      As far as I know, before British and Jewish occupation Palestinians have been a peaceful nation.
      Your argument makes sense if we assume that there's nothing wrong with the Jewish settlement in the middle-east. How would've you liked it if instead of rellocating them to Palestine, the U.N. decided in 1947 to put them right next to wherever you live? (I know it's impossible as you probably are from the U.S., but just think about it). I, for one, would have resisted the occupation by all means.
      I highly recommend this excellent article in this month issue of "Le monde diplomatique" http://mondediplo.com/2006/03/02islam

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    69. Re:Israel does this already... by dvdvon · · Score: 1

      Oh please! "Peaceful" moslem nations? History has shown that only happens when they've managed to kill or convert everyone who is on or within their borders.

    70. Re:Israel does this already... by lixee · · Score: 1

      It's really sad that Islam has got such a reputation nowadays.
      Again, try opening up a history book some time and read how life was peaceful under Islamic rule before the last century. What has changed to make Muslims go total nuts, is in my opinion, the oppression they've been under after WWII (opressive regimes directly supported by the U.S.) and the unsettlement of the Palestinian issue.
      I am not saying it's an excuse to start killing innocent people, but I understand.

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    71. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Oh, I'm pretty familiar with Israel's history. Some of my family has lived there for generations, some for hundreds of generations, some moved in a century ago, some after WWII. I've been there myself, as well as to Egypt, Turkey and some other countries in the region that bear directly on its "destiny". And of course growing up and living here in NYC there's no shortage of Israeli history available, from many (of course conflicting) perspectives.

      From my point of view, Israel has had two basic ways to stabilize under Zionist government: integration with domestic Arabs, or exclusion of Arabs to a separate country. Occupied "Arab territory" (territory Arabs exclude Jews/EurAmericans from, which Israel won't force to integrate) is an untenable status. The Golan Heights were used too often for Syrian military advantage to allow return to Syria, especially as Syria's government has become even more provocative, and of course refuses to release the entire nation of Lebanon from its brutal control. The PLO and other terrorist networks integration with Palestinian leadership made integrating those territories into Jordan and Egypt impossible, because of Palestinian terrorism and destabilization in those Arab neighbors. As well as the use of Palestinians as pawns in neighboring Arab countries' game against Israel since its foundation, and before. The Intifada's replacement of the Oslo peace has also killed integration into Isreal. Palestinians have carved out a country for themselves by alienating any other neighboring country with which they might merge - with that country's active participation in the process.

      So they're all left with a Palestine defined by wars with Israel that Palestine only loses. Palestinians have bet on fighting strength and foreign dependence with Hamas. Promises of peace and "reformation" from Hamas are even more worthless than promises of peace from Arafat: their English TV diplomacy is followed immediately by Arabic grapevine agitation. And Israel's military factions are investing too much in the wall and other strategic "disengagement" to give up all the typical profits and power from the warmonger trade.

      I think Israel has a chance to decouple "Palestine" from "Arab". Israel's democracy can accommodate different majorities, even Muslim, but only when not preempted by threats of extinction. If Israeli politics can marginalize the faction currently demanding the wall exclude "Israeli Arabs" as well as "Palestinians" and that it include "Palestinian territory" artificially Jewized with colonizing "settlers", it will have a direction towards integration. Integration of Arabs with a stake in growing, not destroying, Israel, and competing with those Palestinian Arabs whose own democracy elects Hamas. Down that road still lies the wall, splitting the countries, staging the inevitable military conflict between Palestine's Hamas army and Israel's military, resulting in military defeat of Palestine/Hamas, enforced peace under Israeli terms. If that peace offers less violence, but more freedom to Israeli Arabs than Palestine offers its own Arabs, Israel will likely continue down the road to integrity even with a Muslim majority.

      Even further down that road lies possible reintegration of the two countries. The end of the Cold War allowed reunifying East/West Germany in the context of increased multinational regionalism, deempahsized nationalism, and new imperatives for cooperation across the old divides. The likely further decrease of nationalism in favor of global corporatism will offer more chances to reduce war across the oversimplified Israel/Palestine border. Like everywhere else, it will probably increase wage slavery and corporate exploitation, but why should we expect to solve all the world's problems with one tribal conflict? That kind of naive demand is at the heart of the intractable conflict there for the past several millennia.

      Along the way, Israel will have to abandon racism one way or another. And probably tighten up its socialism, too, rather than subsidize hu

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    72. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      I don't know what it is that you know about "Palestinians", but "Palestinians" have not been a nation (before 1948) since the time of Hebrew conquest millennia ago. Even then it was only occasionally under local rule. For almost its entire history, Palestine and its people have been ruled by distant empires, whether Egyptian, Babylonian, Assyrian, Roman, Byzantine, Persian, Arabic, Venetian, Vatican, Turkish or English. Even if you describe that long history of conquest as "foreign aggression", peace there has been enforced brutally by foreign occupying armies. Usually with local opposition, even if usually ineffective. English control and Israeli autonomy have come with much greater freedom than in millennia past, which has allowed much more persistent violence. And which has had more effect on local politics, perpetuating the violence. Where is some evidence for this "peaceful nation" you claim, other than that of a forcefully subdued people in bondage?

      You can't possibly support any claim that I say there's nothing wrong with the Jewish settlement in the Mideast.

      As far as whether I'd like resettled Jews "right next to where I live", I live in New York City. Right next to me is a community of Jews indistinguishable from a European shtetl, but with plumbing and electricity. Most of the worst Jewish racists in Israel travel freely between here and there, often growing up here to migrate there. Far from "impossible", I live in a city, where I grew up, that has been defined quite a bit by Jewish resettlement here, and is directly connected to those resettled in Israel. And when the people integrate with the locals, even if they don't assimilate, it's a perfectly good way for a country to evolve.

      I don't know how deeply you've bought into the "Jewish occupation" propaganda, so I don't know whether I'm just wasting keystrokes talking with you about Israel/Palestine expecting actual communication, but I hope for it. Your link to the French article leads with statements including "[Palestinians] will be punished for practising democracy". Palestinians will be "punished" for representing themselves with Hamas, an unambiguously terrorist gang with decades of blood of Israelis of every kind on its hands. Which is still a terrorist gang, making Palestine a terrorist country of its own free choosing. I live in a country that has chosen Bush to represent itself, though barely and under great (though insufficient) duress and protest. People who think Americans are insane warmongers, who treat us differently, certainly have grounds for doing so. Where effective, their "punishment" of the US for our government's terrible policies, is useful. But I'm not going to pretend that those people "hate democracy", or punish us for practicing it. That kind of propaganda is exactly what Bush produces, because he has contempt for the democracy that puts him in power over people he's punishing. Likewise Hamas and its allies, notably Syria and the Sauds, produce exactly the same kind of propaganda to cover their hatred of democracy. It's no mere coincidence that they are all allies against the rest of us in the world, regardless of their superficial squabbles over dividing the spoils of their wars against us.

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    73. Re:Israel does this already... by lixee · · Score: 1
      But I'm not going to pretend that those people "hate democracy", or punish us for practicing it. That kind of propaganda is exactly what Bush produces, because he has contempt for the democracy that puts him in power over people he's punishing.
      Excellent point! Thanks for the insight ,Doc.
      Because I'm a Muslim, I am very biased when it comes to Palestine/Israel. From my perspective, Jews shouldn't even have been there in the first place; I just had to say something as your original statement suggested that the Israelis were the victims in the conflict. I'm glad that you get the big picture.
      Your link to the French article leads with statements including "[Palestinians] will be punished for practising democracy". Palestinians will be "punished" for representing themselves with Hamas
      It's true that under the present circumstances, every single Arab country that holds free elections will end up with an Islamist (emphasis on the -ist) regime. It happened in Algeria more than 15 years ago. Egypt, Iran and Palestine are also good examples of where things are going.
      I come from Morocco, and even though it's an absolut monarchy where elections are virtually useless (not that the results are not tampered with anyway; I recall a referendum in the 90's which was approved by 99.97% of votes), islamist parties are forbidden. This is to say how much popular they are! The reason for this? Well, the average occidental would say because we're all blood-thirsty terrorists. For me, it's the legimate reaction to decades of oppressive regimes (all of which were evidently backed by the U.S.) The terrorists are just a product of that conjuncture.
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    74. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      I spent the millennium rollover (2000-1) in Morrocco, in the desert outside Ouarzazate under the stars. I lived with a Berber gnaoua troupe, had a fling with a Rabat girl in Marrakech, and haunted the Casablanca bazaar for days. Unaccompanied, without French, Arabic or Berber - just a smile and an open mind. I had a great time, and confirmed my view that the Mediterranean is much more a geographical region than is "Europe" or "Africa". Further confirmed when I hopped over Mauritania to travel alone through Mali and Timbuktu. And I've continued to update myself with developments in those regions, both over the Net and in person with emigres here in NYC.

      I saw that many "Muslim" countries are subjugated by their own duopoly: tyrants vs theocrats, just as Americans have our own Democrats vs Republicans. We've had centuries to evolve people power here, but Muslims have had millennia to for people to either accept powerlessness, or to use their power to demand tyrants or theocrats.

      I think the worst reversal ever for universal democracy, certainly as a means to personal freedom and equity, was Bush's Iraq invasion. Apart from every other strategic, legal and political consideration, I think of what America would have become if France had merely invaded Britain's 13 American colonies for "regime change" and to institute democracy here. We probably would never have made our own national identity. We started our revolution not as a sophisticaed democracy, but based simply on "independence" from England - the Declaration of Independence is the basis of our nation, though it has no legal weight except rhetorical. If America wants democracies, we need to support independent foreign democratic groups in autocratic countries. Just like France backed the American Congress against the British, along with Poland and other original American allies.

      I'd organize programs to support local factions, like South Africa's ANC, with economic, propaganda, diplomatic, communications/training, and even security guarantees. Even more radically, I would stop America harboring political refugees, which takes the pressure off their home countries to reform. Except perhaps long enough to temporarily relocate immediate family out of harm's way while the "freedom fighter" gets American training, including human rights screening/training and even political/governance theory, not necessarily even in the American system. Sponsor self-determination, and countries will find their own way with sure feet to rule by the people. Even when "based in sharia", the self-determination will evolve just as American law evolved from both old/new testament biblical morality and English law, as well as French and Spanish colonial legal artifacts.

      I'm not so sure that decades of oppressive regimes in Muslim countries can be blamed simply on "US backing", though that's certainly largely true. The British have much responsibility, especially in creating all of the "sponsored" states the US "inherited" following the British Empire downsizing. The boundaries of most of Africa, Arabia, "the Orient" are largely British in origin, designed to split more stable nations into crippled states governed by a greedy, fearful minority, neighboring a rival state where the roles are reversed or shifted to a different oppressed/or. Americans have a lot of blame for perpatuating such states, for accepting the Cold War scam of "fighting Communism" by chosing fascism, rather than growing democracy. But specifically Iraq, Pakistan, southern West Africa, South and East Africa, Arabia, Malaysia, and territory of millions of other people are deliberately botched British creations. The French have their blame, Belgians in Central Africa, even the Dutch in Indonesia have a legacy of blame.

      The bigger picture is a half-millennium of EurAmerican corporate exploitation. Even North America has been exploited that way, though our people have gotten our share more equitably distributed elsewhere by middle-class revolution enabling centuries of overt corporat

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    75. Re:Israel does this already... by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Neither does Iraq and Lebanon, as they were created in much the same way by western European nations.

      Yes, there were a lot of lines drawn arbitrarily on a map, and those lines became countries virtually overnight. The difference between Israel and the rest, however, is that the rest weren't specifically drawn up as a homeland for people who hadn't lived there for thousands of years, reguardless of any existing population. Nor, to my knowledge, were millions of people displaced by a different ethnic group in the formation of Iraq, Iran, etc.

      So not only are these examples oceans apart, they aren't even on the same planet.

    76. Re:Israel does this already... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      I agree with your long-term assessment. Most of my criticisms here are nitpicks.

      First, the groups that want to exclude Israeli Arabs in the final border were marginalized even when they had PM Ehud Barak's support when he was in office. I don't think they pose a real threat.

      As a sidenote, I once rode on a plane next to an Israeli terrorist (from Kehane Chaim)-- a very chilling experience, but one which was utterly at odds with my experience of the Israelis I have met in my travels, who by and large seem to be peaceable folk.

      Secondly, the issue of security guarantees is a difficult one. The real issue is that we provide a lot of military support to the area-- most notably to Egypt, Turkey, and Israel. This military aid is as much a part of the problem as it is a part of the solution because it helps Israel defer the need to build peace. As one Ha'aretz columnist put it, "The world cannot afford a superpower who behaves like a rogue nation or a rogue nation that behaves like a superpower."

      I would suggest security conditional security guarantees for a number of reasons. Right now, Iran and Syria have an interest in keeping us bogged down in Iraq. A security guarantee would go a long ways towards abating that tendency, and articulating red lines would be worthwhile in the process. Americans, Afghans, and Iraqis are dying because Iran is afraid we might invade them next and wants to keep our forces tied up elsewhere. Yet this might also be an opportunity to help bring Iran and Syria into the peace process.

      Along the way, Israel will have to abandon racism one way or another. And probably tighten up its socialism, too, rather than subsidize huge nonproductive Arab families who will threaten its entire system at the polls. Israel's stability lies in more constitutionality, less militarism and even less direct democracy. At least less direct democracy that lets populism trump equality. They're only a half-century into their democratic republic, though there's lots of success elsewhere to adopt.

      Very well put.

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    77. Re:Israel does this already... by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      I don't know if your comments are even "nitpicks", since I agree with them. Though I'm curious how you know your planemate was who you say he was.

      As for security guarantees, I've thought through an entire reconfiguration of American global military as "border cop". The DoD would replace US troops everywhere with local and regional (NATO, OAS, ASEAN, UN, etc) troops, except for a "skeleton crew" retained for interface. American troops would redeploy back to the US and to naval flotillas. The Navy would protect port security, including foreign ports which ship directly to the US, augmenting the programs like that we already have, especially where foreign ports are less secure, like those controlled directly by foreign governments like Dubai. Most of the forces would remain at sea, patrolling sea lanes (Malaysia/Indonesia and East Africa have a serious piracy problem). Naval materiel would include quickly redeployable land bases and equipment for interfacing with seaborne supplies, like fast-install rail lines. We'd also increase current R&D into cargo and communications blimps, and even faster cargo jets carrying "hanging payloads". The idea is to withdraw US troops from every country, including the US, except at the specific request of an allied government (not the forced requests left over from past wars).

      The US would offers security guarantees to allies within current security organizations wherever the US belongs to one operating in that country, as well as directly when necessary (eg. Africa). America's overall strategy would change somewhere between the worn-out occupation model of the past century and the insanely overreaching and provocative "preemptive intervention" of the "Bush Doctrine", to "rapid response". "Security" means both military guarantees and natural disaster relief. As more developing countries develop infrastructure and population along previously deserted natural disaster areas (earthquakes, volcanoes, floodplains, wildfires, industrial disasters, etc), while those disasters become more frequent in the changing climate, and the global media exposes us all to compelling images of destruction, there will be lots of demand for US relief efforts. Since the US benefits the most from the global infrastructure threatened by disasters, has the best relief infrastructure, has the most generous relief donors (and agency infrastructure to support it), the US will be delivering that relief anyway. Most of the same rapid deployment disaster relief, in supplies, temporary housing, rugged transportation, etc will be dual-use for relief and for security assistance. The combined package will also increase the willingness of foreign governments to accept the security guarantees. Especially as the local US "skeleton crews" deliver their ongoing training of local military/relief until their government "calls in the US backup".

      I'd like to see the over 350K overseas US troops reduced to something like 40K. I'd like to see all US bases taken over by our allied governments, perhaps "mothballing" some section of some facilities for repopulation upon emergency US redeployment. I want to see foreign governments primarily responsible for their own borders and security, including lives on the line and budgets. And I'd like to see the US redeploy those almost 30% of the 1M DoD personnel to local National Guard and Border Patrol, with maybe 50K on active duty in Naval vessels and foreign ports. I'd like to see Pentagon budgets drop, foreigners own their own security (with the option to upgrade on a moment's notice). I'd like to see American foreign presence based on integration rather than occupation, converting more staff to intelligence than to mere idle, threatening force. I'd like to see a productive force even in peacetime, helping foreigners invest in disaster preparedness and crisis intervention. Most of all, I'd like to see Americans quit our jobs as global "human shields" that enable neighbors to never integrate themselves, but keep fighting while Americans sometimes clean up the mess, while helping ensure there's always a mess to clean up.

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    78. Re:Israel does this already... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      I don't know if your comments are even "nitpicks", since I agree with them. Though I'm curious how you know your planemate was who you say he was.

      She referred to Baruch Goldstein as "a hero" and repeatedly made mention of "what we are trying to do is create a greater Israel for the Jews." There were other references of identification to Kehane Chaim. I am not 100% certain, esp. given the fact that she said these things while apparently unconcerned that she was eating a ham and cheese sandwich... But... Yet another way she differed from other Israelis I had met.

      As I side note, if I wasn't so horrified by her condoning terrorist acts against Israeli Arabs and Palestinians, I would have probably asked her if she wanted some shellfish with her ham-and-cheese (how many rules of kosher eating can we violate at once?)...

      Most Israelis I have met are peaceable folk who respond well when I say something like "I admire Shimon Peres." They may be frightened into supporting unsound policies, but they are good people for the most part (sort of like most Americans in this way). Most Israelis I have met want peace, an equality-centric society, more constitutionality, and most of the things we have discussed. The problem is that Israeli politics never really seems to be in retrospect what it appeared at the time.

      Otherwise, good conversation.

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  2. Wryness by (1+-sqrt(5))*(2**-1) · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The effects of surveillant tyranny are subtle; amongst the Soviets, for example, lorded a pervasive wryness. An old joke ran:
    The Bolsheviks liberated us at last from liberty itself.
    Much more worrisome, therefore, than the evidence of surveillant tyranny, is the wryness of ensuing “in Soviet America” jokes.
    1. Re: Wryness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Democracy gives the people the government they deserve.

    2. Re:Wryness by KBAegis · · Score: 0

      As Big Brother takes to the skies: Karl Roves Republican's have liberated us at last from liberty itself. ;)

    3. Re:Wryness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      what about being liberated in liberia? eh?

    4. Re: Wryness by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 1

      good thing this is a constitutional republic, not a democracy, then. if only someone would actually dust off the old thing and read it once in a while.

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    5. Re:Wryness by rbannon · · Score: 1

      In a historical note, Americans (that means US citizens) have become their worst enemy (that means the Soviet Union). Stalin would have been a proud, if only he were an American.

    6. Re: Wryness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      design is one thing, in practice the US is a plutocracy, the closest term I have read for our particular form of that is "technofeudalism".

    7. Re: Wryness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guarantee that the biggest problem facing the United States is not going to be solved by a debate on whether it is in fact a democracy or a constitutional republic. In fact, arguing about that crap just creates bigger problems.

    8. Re: Wryness by nickos · · Score: 1

      I live in a constitutional monarchy, but it is also a democracy. Just like the US, the people of Belarus have a republic. The difference is that theirs is in fact a dictatorship.

      I have a feeling that too many slashdotters base their knowledge of this field on the game Civilization's forms of government.

    9. Re:Wryness by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      I think you mean Franco. The current administration is definitely more fascist than communist.

      Side note: Republicans, since when do you support fascism? What the fuck, guys?

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    10. Re:Wryness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Side note: Republicans, since when do you support fascism? What the fuck, guys?

      I love how anyone making a point like this on the other side, for instance:

      Democrats, since when are you spineless, cut-and-run dogs who hate democracy (of all things)?

      is instantly "offtopiced" into oblivion.

      BTW, I don't necessarily agree with either of those points. I personally have a much more positive view of the situation in Iraq than most here. It is always crappy when people are dying. Just remember that fewer are dying now than under Saddam, and those that live may actually end up with a decent country. The amazing thing is the sacrifice the all-volunteer US military is making for what it believes in.

      War has never solved anything...except fascism, tyranny, oppression, slavery, and genocide. Think about it.

    11. Re:Wryness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Just remember that fewer are dying now than under Saddam"

      The problem being that, well, you know... that's wrong.

      But even this is dellusional: I'm the first to say sometimes deaths are the path to peace; there were much more people dying during IIGM than in the previous years in Europe, but I don't think somebody would say figthing against fascism at a deadly cost was a bad thing (while there were bad things within, remember Dresden).

      So, the *real* problem is not the immediate one that, in fact, more people is dying now than during Saddam days; the problem number one is that the big fishes that started the war were bastard lyiers; that the war itself was nothing but a pretext so gain control or Irak's oil; that the civilian lives value nothing on the eyes of those pretending "to bring democracy to the people"; that the powers that be have the guts of sending Americans to be killed just for a few companies bringing back millions over millions. And on top of all this they still pretend to treat us as idiots that still believe that's all for democracy.

      I spout on all that bullshit.

    12. Re:Wryness by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      BTW, I don't necessarily agree with either of those points. I personally have a much more positive view of the situation in Iraq than most here. It is always crappy when people are dying. Just remember that fewer are dying now than under Saddam, and those that live may actually end up with a decent country. The amazing thing is the sacrifice the all-volunteer US military is making for what it believes in.

      Uh, dead wrong.

      War has never solved anything...except fascism, tyranny, oppression, slavery, and genocide. Think about it.

      So you're saying war is the cause of, and the solution to, all of life's problems?

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
  3. Now you won't be considered paranoid.... by countach · · Score: 1

    Now you won't be considered paranoid if you believe there are black helicopters outside your window observing your every move. It might be true!

    Woe oh woe... how will we tell the real lunies from the fake ones, if they really ARE watching you?

    1. Re:Now you won't be considered paranoid.... by uncanny · · Score: 1

      Like bush already didn't give us enough reasons to be paranoid about our phone lines. how will you tell the loonies from the non? well, the ones who put bush in the white house = loony!

    2. Re:Now you won't be considered paranoid.... by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      Hey!!!! That secret webcam in the ladies' restroom (or bathroom, or spa, or school showers) isn't a voyeur's dream-come-true.

      It's actually part of the Terrorist Surveillance Program!

    3. Re:Now you won't be considered paranoid.... by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      I think a line or two of Nirvana is appropriate here:
      Just because you're paranoid...
      Don't mean they're not after you
      (Don't complain to me about the grammar, that's a direct quote from the song and ergo all complaints should be directed to Kurt Cobain provided you can find a medium.)

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    4. Re:Now you won't be considered paranoid.... by shokk · · Score: 1

      Do you honestly have something to be paranoid about in your phone conversations, or are they as ridiculous as 95% of the blogs out there. I don't think Homeland Security is really interested in the calls about your overdue credit cards.

      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart, he dreams himself your master."
    5. Re:Now you won't be considered paranoid.... by HTTP+Error+403+403.9 · · Score: 1
      Do you honestly have something to be paranoid about in your phone conversations, or are they as ridiculous as 95% of the blogs out there. I don't think Homeland Security is really interested in the calls about your overdue credit cards.
      Can I have your name and social security number? You don't have anything to hide so it shouldn't bother you? Your mother's maiden name is part of the public record so you might as well give that to me as well. Don't be paranoid I won't do anything bad. Honestly.

      Trust your government as much as you trust your fellow citizen.

      --
      I'm not a Troll, it's reverse psychology.
    6. Re:Now you won't be considered paranoid.... by torpor · · Score: 1

      Do you honestly have something to be paranoid about in your phone conversations, or are they as ridiculous as 95% of the blogs out there. I don't think Homeland Security is really interested in the calls about your overdue credit cards.

      The frog is, slowly, being boiled. So I don't have anything to be paranoid about now .. but what if I start talking about how much I think this government sucks, and that something should be done about it .. will those happy little eyes in the sky rat me out to their masters?

      These spyplanes are a control factor. The government is exerting more and more control over the lifestyles of its citizens. Conform, or go to jail, Citizen.

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    7. Re:Now you won't be considered paranoid.... by Omaze · · Score: 1

      I have nothing to hide but perhaps you could tell me why the last three packages that I received via FedEx were opened before I received them?

      --
      The government itself is not stealing your liberties. Their new programs are enabling criminals who will.
    8. Re:Now you won't be considered paranoid.... by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      It's easy to tell: If they think it's helicopters they're loonies, if they think it's planes they're sane :p.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    9. Re:Now you won't be considered paranoid.... by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      Do you honestly have something to be paranoid about in your phone conversations, or are they as ridiculous as 95% of the blogs out there. I don't think Homeland Security is really interested in the calls about your overdue credit cards.

      And you are really so naive to think that the spying would focus on Joe Sixpack (at least at the beginning of this nightmare) rather then on oposing political candidates and their friends/families, journalists, prominent dissenters, etc?

    10. Re:Now you won't be considered paranoid.... by shokk · · Score: 1

      Sure, its 123-45-6789.

      --
      "Beware of he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart, he dreams himself your master."
  4. Tomorrow's Headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Baltimore to be renamed "City 17"

  5. What's that in the sky? by breadboy21 · · Score: 1

    It's a bird!! It's a plane!!! No, it's a UAV!!!

    1. Re:What's that in the sky? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder if when you wrote that you actually thought you were making a great comment.

  6. So they come in our bedroom windows... by solafide · · Score: 1

    So now the government will be able to look right in our windows and see what we are doing most of the time. And thus it'll only be a small step to microchipping us all. Whee. I for one welcome our new governmental overlords.

    1. Re:So they come in our bedroom windows... by KBAegis · · Score: 0

      Oh, come ON! There will be at least 3 years (Give or take 3) of revolution for us to die in before it gets THAT bad.

  7. Well you know that old saying by bogie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Boil a frog slowly...

    My new sig seems even more appropriate than usual.

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    1. Re:Well you know that old saying by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      Um, no I don't know that old saying.

      WTF are you saying?!?!

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    2. Re:Well you know that old saying by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      If you put a frog into a pot of boiling water - it will do all it can to escape.

      However, if you put it in a pot of cold water and heat it on the stove, the frog will happily sit there until it boils to death.

      (Or so I heard)

      The GP was refering to the gradual erosion of our civil rights.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    3. Re:Well you know that old saying by chrispycreeme · · Score: 1

      The saying goes that if your throw a frog into boiling water he will jump right back out. But, if you put him in cold water and slowly raise the tempurature he will sit happily till he is cooked. I don't know if this is true or not but I think it's sposed ta be one of them meta-4's or maybe one of them Smilm- Slimel- Slilmelimelies..

    4. Re:Well you know that old saying by MyNymWasTaken · · Score: 5, Informative

      Place a frog in a pan of cold water. He doesn't hop out.
      Place a frog in a pan of boiling hot water. He immeadiately hops out.
      Place a frog in a pan of cold water, and slowly raise the temperature to boiling. He remains in the pan until being boiled to death.

      Place a person in a peaceful, law-abiding (gov. & civilian) society. He doesn't speak out.
      Place a person in a totalitarian nightmare. He fights back.
      Place a person in a law-abiding society and slowly remove his civil rights bit by bit. He doesn't fight back because "it doesn't affect me" until he is living in a totalitarian nightmare with no rights and no one to back him up.

    5. Re:Well you know that old saying by Txiasaeia · · Score: 5, Informative

      This is an urban myth, but I get your point.

      --
      Condemnant quod non intellegunt.
    6. Re:Well you know that old saying by sonamchauhan · · Score: 1
      Quoting from http://www.fastcompany.com/online/01/frog.html

      According to Dr. George R. Zug, curator of reptiles and amphibians, the National Museum of Natural History, "Well that's, may I say, bullshit. If a frog had a means of getting out, it certainly would get out. And I cannot imagine that anything dropped in boiling water would not be scalded and die from the injuries."

      Professor Doug Melton, Harvard University Biology Department, says, "If you put a frog in boiling water, it won't jump out. It will die. If you put it in cold water, it will jump before it gets hot -- they don't sit still for you."

      ...

      "The change myth assumes a very narrow view of people. If frogs can do it, people definitely can."

    7. Re:Well you know that old saying by MyNymWasTaken · · Score: 1

      Just like somebody who is seeing their civil rights & freedoms gradually taken away will react in outrage.

    8. Re:Well you know that old saying by Esion+Modnar · · Score: 1
      Place a person in a totalitarian nightmare. He fights back.

      Slowly or quickly, the result is the same. Where the analogy breaks down is that the society, though now oppressed, is not dead by metaphorical boiling. Can't be, or who's to suppress?

      We tend to think that once we become totalitarian, that's it, it's too late. Well, it's too late for peaceful change. Eventually, maybe years or decades later, the pendulum will swing back.

      And when it does, many people in this country, innocent and evil alike, will die. It's the sad Malthusian cycle of governments.

      Harry Seldon would have predicted it.

      --

      They say the first thing to go is your penis. Well, it's either that or your brain. I forget which...
    9. Re:Well you know that old saying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is why you *need* to react with outrage when the temperature goes up even a few degrees....

      People didn't react enough in Nazi Germany. They might not now.

    10. Re:Well you know that old saying by mibus · · Score: 1

      Harry Seldon would have predicted it. ...and Preem Palver would have made sure it happened :)

    11. Re:Well you know that old saying by Thing+1 · · Score: 1
      Well, perhaps the answer can be obtained with less American blood than has already been shed. Rather than impeaching, how about trying him for treason?

      He manipulated the armed forces for personal gain. (He waged war on another country, using our armed forces; that could probably be legally argued to be the same as waging war on the United States, although IMNAL.)

      We all know the punishment for treason.

      Don't expect to hear much from me further. But I'm not the only one saying these things. It'll happen. But like you said, a lot of innocent blood has already and will continue to be shed before we get justice, of sorts.



      For those who don't follow links, here's the relevant part:

      In the United States Code the penalty ranges from "shall suffer death" to "shall be imprisoned not less than five years and fined under this title but not less than $10,000; and shall be incapable of holding any office under the United States."
      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
    12. Re:Well you know that old saying by MemoryDragon · · Score: 1

      Does not work, check history, Hint, Austria/Germany 1848, Hint France 1789. People are no frogs.

    13. Re:Well you know that old saying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you're talking about is one of the oldest tricks in the book of organized coercion (government). Democracy only adds a little more value to the technique of frog-boiling.

      The US government of today dwarfs the US government of only 50 years ago, both in revenue and power over the people. How did they do it? Frog-boiling, just like you said, with a few lucky breaks here and there (for example 9/11 and the resulting patriot act which was passed in less time than it takes for you to say "oppression"). But for the most part, frog-boiling. There is a reason why every year there are more laws than the year before, yet nobody seems to notice. The reason is that you weren't supposed to notice.

    14. Re:Well you know that old saying by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Unless of course you tell them terrorists want to kill them and it's for their own security. Then they'll be fine with it. Support our troops!

    15. Re:Well you know that old saying by Mydron · · Score: 1

      At the risk of sounding like a luddite, although we may be able to affect change through violence the people's ability to do so is stunted considerably by improvements in technology. Technology that is increasingly only in the hands of the state. At least now, and in the past, the machine by which a state oppresses it's people largely consists of other [common] people. For example, soldiers, police, etc. Therefore you can reasonably expect that at some point those people will disagree with the oppression that they're being asked to impose and turn their tools against their masters.

      In the future though, as automation and robotics become more prevalent and advanced you'll see the tools of oppression concentrated in the hands of fewer and fewer. These are the people who hold the strings. These are the people controlling the automated aircraft carriers, UAVs, spy satellites, crowd control devices and armed robotic vehicles (all current or near-future technology). None of these things are in the hands of the people who can affect violent change.

      For would-be aggressors against the oppressive state, the cost of revolt is considerably higher than it would otherwise be. To keep the state in check we have enshrined the right to bear arms. Tomorrow we will need something considerably more potent than [fire]arms to threaten the state.

    16. Re:Well you know that old saying by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      sigh. that's not the reason.

      the reason is simple: lawyers are in charge of making the laws.

      they have no interest whatsoever in simplifying the law, or even creating good (or bad) law and a vague interest increasing the volume of law: the more laws on the books, good or bad, the more work there is for lawyers.

      The problem compounds because there are few people in the US with both the money and schedules flexible enough to run for office, and "barrister" is a profession which provides both.

      So there is a positive feedback loop: legislators create more laws, more complicated law requires more lawyers, more lawyers are available/rich enough to run for office, lawyers-turned-legislators do what they know: argue and create complicated law, etc. They don't even need to be aware of the cycle to contribute to it.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  8. huzzah by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 4, Funny

    hail skynet.

    --
    MORTAR COMBAT!
    1. Re:huzzah by sgt_doom · · Score: 2, Funny

      The next news flash will be that those UAVs are now networked with Diebold voting machines?????

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

      ...and equiped with those hellfire missiles?

  9. what happens? by RedACE7500 · · Score: 5, Funny

    But what happens when lots of relatively dumb drones have to share airspace with aircraft carrying passengers? Hilarity ensues...

    1. Re:what happens? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They miss you over here

    2. Re:what happens? by Dr.+Eggman · · Score: 1

      Oops, I thought you said "Hillary ensues..."

      --
      Demented But Determined.
    3. Re:what happens? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      But what happens when lots of relatively dumb drones have to share airspace with aircraft carrying passengers?


      I didn't know these surveillance crafts will have passangers on them!

    4. Re:what happens? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah? Well I work for someone who formats paragraphs for a living...

    5. Re:what happens? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL. you sure you don't work at the US mint?

    6. Re:what happens? by RedACE7500 · · Score: 1

      No no, you have it all wrong. The passengers will be carrying the aircrafts!

    7. Re:what happens? by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      I work for someone who makes unmanned drones/rockets/tanks/ships/computers/condoms/etc for a living....

      Look, that pre-fabricated, "just add-water", flamebait post was maybe funny the first 294 times or so it was posted on Slashdot. It is getting really old now. You are not even creative enough to re-arrange some sentences in it for variety.

    8. Re:what happens? by EZLeeAmused · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I was waiting for someone more informed to post. I'm one of those people who know little more about the subject than I learned in TFA, but in my defense this is my first post to this topic and I am neither spreading erroneous information nor claiming superior knowledge of the subject. Most of the posts so far have been knee-jerk Orwellian nightmares - I know I'll get grief for that sentence, but to be perfectly honest I am less concerned about the government watching me do things and more concerned about keeping them from limiting the things I can do. My votes and donations can only go so far.

      However, I was disappointed by your post. You say that posters have it all wrong, but you don't supply a single detail about what they are getting wrong or what the truth of the matter is. Would you care to back up your claims and do so?

      That is, of course, unless they are government secrets and if you told me you would have to kill me :-(

      --
      Some see the vessel as half full; others see it as half-empty; We pour it out on the floor and laugh
    9. Re:what happens? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      were you hoping for a funny moderation or were you actually sucked in by that classic troll?

    10. Re:what happens? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aluminum rain.

  10. "Security" makes it all OK? by Motherfucking+Shit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First it was the domestic wiretap issue; the administration not only didn't deny doing it, they flat-out flaunted it. Now they want to put unmanned drones in the air to watch God-knows-what. There's no longer even a pretense, a facade, even the slightest attempt to hide the surveillance society.

    I thought that actions like appropriating the military for civilian law enforcement, spying on US citizens within the US, etc. were illegal. Why doesn't anyone seem to give a shit anymore?

    --
    "BSD: Free as in speech. Linux: Free as in beer. Windows 10: Free as in herpes." --Man On Pink Corner in #52607549.
    1. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      they flat-out flaunted it

      One proven winning tactic of the political game is to publicly repeat a false theory, with emotion and indisputable dedication, so that a significant (hopefully vocal) percentage of the population adopts and touts the theory as its own.

      What we are observing is one of the fundamental building blocks of organized coercion (government): large-scale exploitation of group think.

    2. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Espressoman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well from the perspective of most people outside the U.S.A., Americans seem to be happy with a powerful, corrupt government controlled by corporate and military interests. You voted one of those space monkeys from the 60's in as President, and seem to be a country to be utterly sucked in by the lies you are told, no matter how laughable they are.

      Your take on democracy is a joke, and you don't seem to care while your over-inflated military launches illegal invasions against countries with oil or strategic significance. Your secret service and other agencies and corporations prop up dictators while it suites them (e.g. Saddam Hussein, Pervez Musharraf, the Israeli occupation of Palestine, the Teliban), giving them power, sophisticated weapons of mass destruction (missiles, illegal armaments, fighter jets), all while turning a blind eye to their various crimes (genocide, drug trafficking, torture, etc.), and of course giving them lots and lots of money.

      You don't care about corruption at home (e.g. Florida vote rigging), you don't care about inaction at home (e.g. New Orleans), you don't care that you have a completely insane attitude to firearms (everybody should have one (which the rest of the world sees as ludicrous)), drugs (the war on drugs can be won, all pot smokers are criminals, drug abuse is a disease (for crying out loud)), etc., etc.), and you actually voted in George W. Bush. Is that guy really the very best example of humanity you could find to be your surpreme leader?

      To the rest of the Western world, and then some, the U.S. is a country of lazy, fat, stupid, nut jobs who are too pathetic to question their leaders, question their government, or question the U.S. democratic system which keeps things as bad as they are. You are quite simply hopeless. All (a very few of) you do is winge and wonder how your rights could be slowly ebbing away and why nobody cares. Well *YOU* don't care, or you'd be protesting in the streets, you'd be throwing down your governement, you'd be routing out corruption, you'd curtail the corporations who would otherwise bleed the world dry for the sake of their shareholders' greed.

    3. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Keebler71 · · Score: 1
      I thought that actions like appropriating the military for civilian law enforcement, spying on US citizens within the US, etc. were illegal. Why doesn't anyone seem to give a shit anymore?

      Because if you had read the article, you'd have known that this has nothing to do with the military. It is the police who want this capability, and last I checked, the police have the Constitutional authority to conduct surveillance. By the way, the act you are referring to is called Posse Comitatus

      As for this comment:

      First it was the domestic wiretap issue

      Calling that surveillance "domestic wiretap" is very misleading. Much more accurate (but less inflamatory which is why no-one seems to be running with it) would be something like: "warrantless wiretapping of international calls on known terrorists channels [read numbers] even if the call terminates or originates within the United States" Not saying it's right... just more accurate. I recently saw a poll in which 25% of Americans thought that they had been spied on by the government as a result of this "domestic wiretap" policy. That's just ridiculous/paranoid/misinformed.

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    4. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by humphrm · · Score: 1

      Before we write it off as another example of Bush administration surveillance, how much do we know about this program? There is already military aircraft flying sorties over U.S. Airspace to deter another 9/11 style attack, this is in response to everyone whining about the prior lack of protection of the U.S. mainland that allowed attackers to launch an attack on our own soil (well, airspace).

      So if the military is already keeping a watch on US airspace, what's the problem with increasing that protection by using cheap drones to augment human sorties?

      I agree that the current administration has taken inappropriate liberties with our liberties. But I don't use that as an excuse to knock down every attempt to protect US soil, regardless of it's value.

      Now the issue of sharing airspace with commercial traffic is another one altogether, and I think that the US would be wise to keep their drones out of the way of commercial traffic if they don't want a major disaster.

      --
      -- "In order to have power, I must be taken seriously." -Mojo Jojo
    5. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't be coy, tell us what you really think!

    6. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      "warrantless wiretapping of international calls on known terrorists channels [read numbers] even if the call terminates or originates within the United States"

      Trouble with this purposefully misleading definition is this: who decides what are these "channels" or "numbers"? Thats right, the same people who do the "warrantless", supervision-free wiretapping. Translation: they can pick any number and any international call originating within the US they like by simply claiming a vague "terrorist" connection. And be entitled to keep the exact nature of that "connection" secret from anyone based on "national security". In case you wonder this is tyranny pure and simple, indistinguishable from what the Gestapo, KGB or Saddam's henchmen would do in the same exact circumstance. And "national security" was the exact same excuse every tyrant of 20th century has used for this.

      Now add the fact that there is no certainty (as the administration is being extremely obtuse about this) that the calls were even international to begin with.

      Result: guaranteed warantless (i.e. based on the administration's whim) wiretapping of any one of the international calls from/to the US, plus possible warrantless (i.e. based on the administration's whim) wiretapping of just about any phone conversation in the US.

      That is the meaning of that "domestic wiretap issue".

      These types of activities, including the abhorrent "secret trials" and "secret evidence" (which defendants are not entitled to seeing) are what has beyond any doubt pushed the USA into the category of a "police-state". Textbook example of one, as a matter of fact.

      The UAV drones are simply a confirmation that the process of conversion of USA into a full-blown tyranny is now under way and proceeding apace.

    7. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by SickFreak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I hope I am not the only one tired of this type of shit. If "security" means I have to have drones flying over me to keep watch on me, then no, George and Co., I don't want to be secure. Thanks for asking.

    8. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Because if you had read the article, you'd have known that this has nothing to do with the military. It is the police who want this capability

      Ah, I see your reasoning. And by the same token, the Administration and Congress had nothing to do with the Patriot act because it is used by local law enforcement. Makes perfect sense.

      and last I checked, the police have the Constitutional authority to conduct surveillance.

      And the last time I checked, they were required to get a warrant before doing so. What do you bet there wont be some court cases over air surveillance because the cops didn't get one?

    9. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by c6gunner · · Score: 1
      And the last time I checked, they were required to get a warrant before doing so. What do you bet there wont be some court cases over air surveillance because the cops didn't get one?
      What are you smoking? Police only require a warrant in order to invade your personal property. No warrants are required to monitor public spaces.
    10. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      You don't care about corruption at home (e.g. Florida vote rigging), you don't care about inaction at home (e.g. New Orleans)...


      Wait for the 2006 elections... with any luck they will show that the American public doesn't remain asleep at the switch forever (or if they don't, it's not too late for me to move to Canada).

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    11. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      And the last time I checked, they were required to get a warrant before doing so. What do you bet there wont be some court cases over air surveillance because the cops didn't get one?

      There already was one:

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florida_v._Riley

      The Supreme Court reversed the decision of the Florida Supreme Court with a four-vote plurality, arguing that the accused did not have a reasonable expectation that the greenhouse was protected from aerial view, and thus that the helicopter surveillance did not constitute a search under the Fourth Amendment. However, the Court stopped short of allowing all aerial inspections of private property, noting that it was "of obvious importance" that a private citizen could have legally flown in the same airspace.

    12. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

      >appropriating the military for civilian law enforcement

      The magic words to Google for are "Posse Comitatus". An 1878 law barred the Army from domestic law enforcement. Since then, there's been some drift. One military lawyer has written Through a gradual erosion of the act's prohibitions over the past 20 years, posse comitatus today is more of a procedural formality than an actual impediment to the use of U.S. military forces in homeland defense.

    13. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by kwoff · · Score: 0
      To the rest of the Western world, and then some, the U.S. is a country of lazy, fat, stupid, nut jobs

      Keep thinking that, if it makes you feel better.

    14. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by ichigo+2.0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      you don't care that you have a completely insane attitude to firearms (everybody should have one (which the rest of the world sees as ludicrous)) ... you'd be throwing down your governement

      Won't the weapons come in handy when rebelling? In fact, isn't that the reason the right to bear arms is constitutionally protected, so that the people will be able to overthrow their government?

      You don't care about corruption at home (e.g. Florida vote rigging) ... and you actually voted in George W. Bush.

      If the votes are rigged, then how do you know anyone even voted for him?

    15. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by torpor · · Score: 1

      To the rest of the Western world, and then some, the U.S. is a country of lazy, fat, stupid, nut jobs
      Keep thinking that, if it makes you feel better.

      Thing is, its not a thought, its a fact. I've been around the world 3 times, and categorically, this sums up what people all over the world think of americans: lazy, fat, stupid, nut jobs.

      America has a huge PR problem in the eyes of the rest of the world. You can blame Hollywood for that, since it seems to delight in exporting the worst of American virtue and calling it entertainment. Either Americans get out of their little boxes and do something about their country and the crimes it is committing, or this image will persist to the very end.

      What would make me feel better is if I knew a few more Americans (I've lived there for many years) who didn't fit this stereotype ...

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    16. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by scdeimos · · Score: 1
      To the rest of the Western world, and then some, the U.S. is a country of lazy, fat, stupid, nut jobs

      That's not strictly true. I know at least two Americans who aren't fat, and one of them might even be smart. :)

    17. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by zardo · · Score: 0, Troll

      You contradict yourself. If you think drugs should all be legal, despite the harm they do, then how can you not be in favor of gun rights? You're inconsistent. I think your hate is driven by outside forces, it certainly isn't rational. You probably couldn't point out a few positive things America has done for the world, like when we stopped Hitler, ended world war 2, freed people from the shackles of communism in east germany and former soviet states. Other countries are guilty of inaction.

    18. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by accessdeniednsp · · Score: 1

      Perhaps he was picking his battles, so to speak, and not falling into a pre-determined camp. Maybe he is genuinely anti-drug but pro-firearms. There's no reason that one has to imply the other. Anti-drug people don't have to be anti-gun and pro-(life|choice). Sandboxing is popular among Americans, too. Polarization is a popular pasttime these days.

      Just a thought....

    19. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "Won't the weapons come in handy when rebelling? In fact, isn't that the reason the right to bear arms is constitutionally protected, so that the people will be able to overthrow their government?"

      Yeah, like they are "coming in handy" in Iraq! The idea is to reduce state sponsered violence not provoke it!

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    20. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by 4D6963 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You probably couldn't point out a few positive things America has done for the world, like when we stopped Hitler

      Funny, when talking about WWII, it often sounds like the americans did it all, as if what UK and Russia did was so unsignifying that you could take credit for all of it.

      freed people from the shackles of communism in east germany and former soviet states

      And removed a dangerous socialist president (Salvador Allede) to replace with a more firendly dictator (Augusto Pinochet). You see, fighting against socialism/communism/terrorism or whatever the axis of evil of the day is isn't systematically a good thing. But the USA isn't about doing good in the world, otherwise we would have troops in Nepal, no, what has been done since Eisenhower left the oval office has been done mainly by interest, not to help other people out our to free people from an evil regime.

      If there had been no Cold War, would the USA have done anything to stop communism? Of course not, think about China. If we helped the "freedom fighters" (before we rm'ed them to "terrorists") in the 80's in Afghanistan, if we fought against communism, it was to weaken the ennemy, wasn't it?

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    21. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by baKanale · · Score: 4, Interesting

      you don't care that you have a completely insane attitude to firearms (everybody should have one (which the rest of the world sees as ludicrous))

      1.) Not every American has a gun. In fact, there are many who think that noone should even have so much as a pointy stick. We also have to go through an extensive (by some measures too extensive, by others not extensive enough) system of registration and permit application, depending on the class of weapon. We ban the mentally ill, criminals, and many other people from owning firearms.

      2.) Depending on the numbers you use, the United States has fewer violent crimes than many other nations (I don't remember the exact details, however. I am sorry), and that crimes such as muggings and home invasions are down due to the fact that many criminals are afraid of being shot. Of course, like many numbers, these are subject to debate, so we can practically ignore them. But still, it is a compelling possibility. However, it is a documented fact that in many countries where gun possession is illegal, knife and other weapon crimes increase substantially.

      3.) So most of the rest of the civilized world thinks our gun policies are "ludicrous"? Switzerland actually has a required period of military service for all able males, and many afterwards serve in a militia capacity, and are therefore ISSUED an assault rifle by the government. Also, it is the "only country in which it is lawful to make your own black powder". From what I gather they have quite a low crime rate. Australia also has historically lax laws on guns due to high need for guns as pest control and a low crime rate, which is kinda funny for a nation decended from a penal colony. That is changing due to increased crime rates in some areas, but still, they're relatively hands-off on guns. Finland also has similar gun laws, as they have alot of huntil in their nation. They are also one of the few countries where silencers are completely unregulated (here in the US I believe you can apply for a permit, but not always, and it's very difficult to get). Many of these countries also have a high emphasis on gun safety, which many of the true hardcore gun people in the US would also say is very important.

      In conclusion, our gun laws may be among the more "loose" or "unrestrictive", and there are many unfortunate things that happen due to this. Personally, I think we could due to have slightly better control of the situation and tighten certain parts of our gun laws up. But we're not the only ones who like our guns. There are a number of other, well respected nations, that have fairly loose gun laws, much like our own. We're only a target on this matter because we're the biggest nation of the bunch, and we have a large imprint on the world scene in other matter.

      drugs (the war on drugs can be won, all pot smokers are criminals, drug abuse is a disease (for crying out loud))

      It could be won, but even if it can't we should still fight it to at least reduce the damage done. Drug abuse is a disease, much like manic depression and other mental disorders are diseases (for example, cocaine abuse renders the brain incapable of gaining any joy from anything but cocaine. That's why it's called abuse, boys and girls. As for the pot-heads, perhaps our laws are a bit too heavy on them, and that maybe it should be legalized along the same lines as alcohol and tobacco, but frankly I don't know enough about the situation to make a judgement.

      You don't care about corruption at home (e.g. Florida vote rigging), you don't care about inaction at home (e.g. New Orleans)

      O RLY? I was pretty sure I heard much angry debate about both issues over here!

      and you actually voted in George W. Bush. Is that guy really the v

    22. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Australia [wikipedia.org] also has historically lax laws on guns due to high need for guns as pest control and a low crime rate, which is kinda funny for a nation decended from a penal colony. That is changing due to increased crime rates in some areas, but still, they're relatively hands-off on guns.

      Sorry, but after a spate of massacres beginning in the late eighties - early ninties (Hoddle Street Massacre, Strathfield Massacre) and culminating in the Port Arthur Massacre of 1996, restricive gun laws were forced on the populace. Farmers are allowed an exemption to carry semi-automatic rifles with maximum 10 round magazines, otherwise you are restricted to single shot weapons, and generally have to be a licensed member of a gun club, and use it for target shooting. Habndguns are severely restrcted. Air rifles are subject to the licensing laws. BB guns etc are banned. Anything better than a muzzle loader is either illegal or heavily licensed.

      In summary, Australia is a prime example of the nanny state. We have the same ridiculously draconian drug laws as the US, but we have far worse restrictions on firearms.

    23. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Threni · · Score: 1

      ...
      It could be won, but even if it can't we should still fight it to at least reduce the damage done. Drug abuse is a disease, much like manic depression and other mental disorders are diseases (for example, cocaine abuse renders the brain incapable of gaining any joy from anything but cocaine. That's why it's called abuse, boys and girls. As for the pot-heads, perhaps our laws are a bit too heavy on them, and that maybe it should be legalized along the same lines as alcohol and tobacco, but frankly I don't know enough about the situation to make a judgement. ...

      You don't know enough, judging by your comments on cocaine, "drug abuse" and "pot-heads". You've certainly been paying attention to those anti-drug lectures though, huh?

      "Drug abuse" isn't a disease; it's nothing like manic depression; people who use cocaine are not necessarily "incapable of gaining any joy from anything but cocaine"; it's called "drug abuse" by people who are against people having the right to use drugs; "pot-heads" is a pejorative term for the millions of people around the world who smoke cannabis (to give it its proper name).

    24. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      Won't the weapons come in handy when rebelling? In fact, isn't that the reason the right to bear arms is constitutionally protected, so that the people will be able to overthrow their government?


      In theory, yes. Back in the day when US gained their independence, the "official" military didn't really outgun the general population. Both used same weapons (well, military had artillery, but that's about the only advantage). But how about today? The state-military overwhelmingly outguns the population. If citizens of USA (or some other western country for that matter), started an armed rebellion against the government, they would not face militaray equipped with similar weapons to their own. They would face military equipped with helicopters, bombers, tanks, APC's, machine-guns, artillery, assault-rifles, poison gas, surveillance-satellites, unmanned and armed drones and even nuclear weapons. All those weapons are out of reach for the general population. Few hundred years ago the weapons used by the military were available to the general populace as well. Not so today.

      Yes, I support the right to own and carry firearms. Population in Finland is very heavily armed, and we have no problems with firearms.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    25. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If "the rest of the world" is shallow enough to think that the US (or any country) thinks as a collective whole, like some giant borg-like brain, then the rest of the world can kiss my ass. There are war protests going on every day in the US. There are essays being written every day about the immorality and destruction caused by runaway government. There are people who want the US government to be orders of magnitude less powerful, both home and abroad. There are even people who don't believe in government (organized coercion) at all!

      Should we lump all of these unique individuals into your collective borg? What a naive, backwards way to think!

      In reality, every society is nothing but a collection of unique, thinking individuals, and anyone who can't see that is so far brainwashed by their own collective (ironically!) that they are past the point of no return. So here's a hearty Fuck You to anyone who believes "the US" thinks as one collective unit.

      I do not support what the US government is doing, either here or abroad, and I absolutely refuse to take responsibility for what I am forced to participate in against my will. If you can't respect me for that, then I don't respect you either.

      Grow up and admit that government is not voluntary. Everything government does and could possibly do is founded on the principle of coercion. Stop blaming the victims and do something useful.

    26. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by baKanale · · Score: 1

      "Drug abuse" isn't a disease; it's nothing like manic depression; people who use cocaine are not necessarily "incapable of gaining any joy from anything but cocaine"; it's called "drug abuse" by people who are against people having the right to use drugs; "pot-heads" is a pejorative term for the millions of people around the world who smoke cannabis (to give it its proper name).

      I was under the impression, from multiple reputable sources, that, for example, cocaine addiction eventually inhibits the brain from producing dopamine under all circumstances except while under the influence of cocaine. And given that many people who are heavily addicted to drugs pretty much devote their lives to the continuance of their addiction. Of course, I draw a distinct line between casual use and true addicts. I'm quite sure that it's possible to enjoy drugs without getting addited, like how many people casually drink but don't end up going to AA meetings or beating their wife. But apparently you are more knowledgable on drug use, so I'll bow to your more "professional" opinion.

      Also, I don't mean to offend by refering to users of cannabis as "pot-heads". I actually used it there because I misquoted the parent comment, which is my own fault. I meant it more as a term of affection, but if it really bothers you I'll retract it. Personally, on a moral level, I don't care what people do with their personal drug use habits, as long as they don't harm anyone else in the course of it. I don't actually support the legalization of drugs (though cannabis, if I had more proof of the assertions of many users that it's benign, I'd favor a controlled legalization of it; unfortunately, I haven't seen much evidence either way), but if people want to, well, I really don't care.

      Of course, I'm rather unknowlegeable about the subject, knowing mostly what I learned in health class and what little I've picked up elsewhere. So if I've stated any gross mistruths here, I'm sorry.

    27. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Keebler71 · · Score: 1
      plus possible warrantless (i.e. based on the administration's whim) wiretapping of just about any phone conversation in the US.

      But there is absolutely zero proof of this. The notion that this could be happening is, as you point out, purely speculation based on the fact that there is acknowledged, warrantless surveillance of calls that sometimes terminate within the US and that a government that can do that could also be spying on purely domestic calls.

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    28. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Keebler71 · · Score: 1
      And by the same token, the Administration and Congress had nothing to do with the Patriot act because it is used by local law enforcement.

      This statement, while true, has nothing to do with law enforcement using new tools to conduct surveillance. Law enforcement can currently use wiretaps, undercover agents, keyloggers, and manned aircraft to conduct lawful surveillance. I don't understand what is the difference between using a helicopter for surveillance and a UAV. It is simply a modernization of technology. You know all those signs that say "Speed Limit Enforced by Aircraft"? Does it really matter if it is a manned aircraft or a remotely piloted aircraft?

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    29. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by packeteer · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      drugs (the war on drugs can be won, all pot smokers are criminals, drug abuse is a disease (for crying out loud)), etc., etc.),

      Are you saying that drug abuse is not a disease? If you are then i think most scientists around the world would disagree with you. Correct me if i am wrong but i interpreted your words as saying that you think pot smokers are not criminals (technically they are since they are commiting a crime) but you disagree with all reasonable peer reviewed science about addiction and claim its not a disease?

      Maybe its too late at night for me to read so much into your words but please clarify.

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    30. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, actually, a lot of us feel that way. Especially your neighbours, eh.

    31. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If America hadn't gotten involved in World War II, it would not have ended nearly as quickly and effectively as it did.

      Period.

    32. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Kombat · · Score: 1

      you disagree with all reasonable peer reviewed science about addiction and claim its not a disease?

      I feel compelled to remind you of the (very controversial) South Park episode in which a statue of the Virgin Mary bleeds. That's the episode in which Stan's Dad (Randy Marsh) learns that he is an alcoholic, and alcoholism is a disease. Randy despairs that his disease will kill him, and there's nothing he can do about it. He goes to the statue of the Virgin Mary to pray to be cured, and believes it works. He lives clean and sober, until he finds out that the bleeding statue was in fact not a miracle. He concludes that he must not actually be cured, and therefore still has "alcoholism". He immediately relapses and begins drinking again, believing he'll never be free of his disease.

      It is a cartoon, but nevertheless is poignant, and makes a good point. One exchange in the episode is particularly relevant, when one character claims that alcoholism is a disease, and Stan replies, "No, cancer is a disease. My dad just needs to drink less."

      --
      Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
    33. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know... You are correct.

    34. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Keebler71 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Well from the perspective of most people outside the U.S.A., Americans seem to be happy with a powerful, corrupt government controlled by corporate and military interests.

      Of course that is possible... but it is also possible that foreigners are misinformed. Which is more likely? If I believed half of what I read in the Guardian, I'd hate America too.

      --
      "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
    35. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the parent was trying to say that this is how the rest of the world views the US. And it is. If you dont like the fact that your leaders are making you look like an idiot and causing the rest of the world to judge you without knowing you, then do something about them. Whether you like it or not you are a part of that group simply because you are American, show some national pride. Saying "I dont take any resposibility for their actions" just makes you a fat, lazy, apathetic, "apoligist" American. Dont you have any pride in your country? Dont you have any pride in yourself? It's time we start taking resposibility for our own damn country or WE WILL LOOSE IT. Democracy and freedom arent something that just exists for the taking, it requires work and responsibility from every citizen within that society. No one person is going to come along and magically fix things.

      Ask not what your country can do for you...JFK

    36. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Neurotoxic666 · · Score: 1
      1.) Not every American has a gun. In fact, there are many who think that noone should even have so much as a pointy stick. We also have to go through ... system of registration and permit application ... We ban the mentally ill, criminals, and many other people from owning firearms.

      To quote Chris Rock: so what'd you want? A cookie? You're supposed to do that. That's the least one could expect his country to do. Come on.

      2.) Depending on the numbers you use, the United States has fewer violent crimes than many other nations ... However, it is a documented fact that in many countries where gun possession is illegal, knife and other weapon crimes increase substantially.

      Uh ok. First of all, please show us the numbers. Of course if, as you say, it depends on the numbers you use, then maybe you can prove anything. But just for the fun of it, try comparing two similar and bordering nations like, say, the USA and Canada. See what you come up with. And by the way, I'd much rather be attacked by a kid with a knife than a kid with a gun. There's a reason why there's not much knife regulations: it's much easier to kill with a gun than a knife.

      3.) So most of the rest of the civilized world thinks our gun policies are "ludicrous"?

      Yes. Are you really comparing Switzerland with the USA? Europe is a different place. You are comparing responsible people with Americans. The violent crime rate in the USA is almost ten times that of Switzerland, per 100,000. That somehow shows that guns themselves are not the problem. Therefore, I wouldn't let Americans own guns. But you do. So we think your gun "policies" are ludicrous.

      It could be won, but even if it can't we should still fight it to at least reduce the damage done.

      Yes, there's a real problem that has to be fought. But the way it looks, potheads will soon get shot by flying drones. =P

      Well, only slightly over half of 15% of the population actually voted for him

      And he's still in power? Only 15% of the country voted for him, he's ruining everybody, making war around the world, violating the basis of your nation, slows scientific research, and no one complains? You know, it's easy to dismiss the issue by saying only 15% voted for him. But the point is, 99% of Americans ARE voting for him everyday by letting him in power. And for that, we see Americans as a bunch of lazy assholes, too preoccupied with their daily TV shows to do much to save democracy.

      Mod me down all you want. That doesn't change the fact that, in reality, despite what CNN and Fox might say, Americans are seen as a bunch of morons pretty much everywhere. Don't blame me, that's just the way it is and will be until you show some common sense.

      --
      You are more than the sum of what you consume. Desire is not an occupation.
    37. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      To the rest of the Western world, and then some, the U.S. is a country of lazy, fat, stupid, nut jobs who are too pathetic to question their leaders, question their government, or question the U.S. democratic system which keeps things as bad as they are. You are quite simply hopeless.

      As an american, I can assure you that your perception of americans is 100% accurate. I am constantly embarassed and appaled by the behavior of my countrymen.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    38. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by novapyro · · Score: 1
      Of Switzerland, you said:

      Also, it is the "only country in which it is lawful to make your own black powder".


      That's simply not true. It is quite legal to make your own black powder (or 'BP', in the vernacular) in the US. I'd be happy to explain the rules, and point you to the resources if you're interested. State and local laws may restrict you, but that is by no means the usual case. If you make it, you have to store it properly (and that is clearly explained in documentation from BATF) and you may not transport it on the highways unless you are licensed. But you can make it on your own property, store it in a magazine, and use it there to your heart's content. I have frequent contact with BATF (Bureau of Alchol, Tobacco, and Firearms) and other authorities. And, by the way, I mean that it is legal even without an explosives manufacturing license. But you may, for the cost of filing and submitting fingerprints and a passport photo, obtain a license. If you apply for a license to manufacture explosives, it must be granted if you do not fall into one of the "disabled" classes of individuals. So, if you become licensed to manufacture explosives, then you can transport it as well as make it.

      My club has literally tons of fireworks in our magazines, along with a few hundred pounds of BP. Some of the BP is homemade, some of it is commercially purchased. All of it is great fun, or hellishly dangerous depending on how you treat it.

      In addition to the forgoing, other countries have long-standing and richly developed traditions of fireworks manufacture. And the most fundamental composition in fireworks construction is black powder. I know several people who manufacture fireworks in other countries. I do not know what the legal status is in all those places, but I presume it is legal in at least some of them.

      See http://www.crackerjacks.org/ for details of the Crackerjacks. Also see http://www.pgi.org/fireworks-clubs.aspx for other clubs.

    39. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      But there is absolutely zero proof of this. The notion that this could be happening is, as you point out, purely speculation based on the fact that there is acknowledged, warrantless surveillance of calls that sometimes terminate within the US and that a government that can do that could also be spying on purely domestic calls.

      That is true, but as I pointed out, as soon as the government engages in any sort of totalitarian measures, such as any kind of warrantless wiretapping (no matter how supposedly limited), all bets are essentially off. Such is the nature of these things. It is really "all-or-nothing" proposition. Either the government obides by the law, or it does not. And if it does not, there is essentially no telling how far they will go. And we already know that they are fond of secret trials and secret detention and secret from the defendant evidence (i.e. you are not entitled to see the "evidence" against you -- I don't know if there is any more of a signature hallmark of totalitarianism then being sentenced for "crimes" against which accusation you cannot defend yourself). Compared to these grave evils already commited, and given the general, well proven attidude of these people, spying on all and any phone conversations within the US is small potatoes for them.

    40. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember this is the admin spying on vegans and Quakers. And to think the right used to scream about Clinton and the UN. *headshake* With the Dominionsist that hang arround this bunch it is getty a little to close to the "Handmaids Tale" for my liking.

    41. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Skagit · · Score: 1

      True - we are outgunned. Still, the fact that the civilian population of some US states is armed to the teeth means that they can wage a guerilla war with minimal influx of materiel. Look at Iraq - the insurgents seem to be doing quite a fine job of making things dangerous for the US military. Consider also the modern IRA and the Viet Cong. Tanks, planes, artillery, Globalhawk and some big boats don't seem to work so well against a small indigenous group with an ideological axe to grind.

      All you have to do is make the folks of Georgia or Pennsylvania or Arizona mad enough and suddenly, you've got IED's, snipers, sabotage and mayhem on a big scale. Maybe they'll liberate a National Guard Armory.

      Show an gun battle between Army Humvees and pickups full of militia men on the Baltimore Beltway on the evening news and see how fast the resistance grows. Then, the people in New Jersey and California and Massachusetts start demanding answers and the militia gets to explain their grievances on the front page of the NY Times.

      That's why the Second Amendment's there and that's why it doesn't matter that we're outgunned to start. Domestic surveillance is a nasty end-around, preventing the militia from organizing.

      --
      Why does my coffee mug smell like trout?
    42. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by orim · · Score: 1

      The USA "freed people from the shackles of communism in east germany and former soviet states"...

      AHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHHAHA... ROTFLMAO.
      Where the fuck was the US in the 50s, the 60s and the 70s when the smaller countries tried to throw off the Soviets? Where the fuck was the almighty US when tanks were smearing protesters in Budapest all over the streets? They were shitting in their pants in the Pentagon for the fear that the Russians might overrun them in Western Europe.

      It was the Polish and the Russian people who threw down the communism, not the Americans. As much as you'd like to belive Reagan was a Christ-like figure who single-handedly defeated the commies, that's not quite true.
      All Reagan would've done were it not for the *people* of eastern Europe would be to invite even more repression upon the rest of the Eastern bloc. Because when the going gets tough, those in the power will grab whatever's left, and ordinary people will suffer more.

      As for the rest of the world, I think the US record speaks for itself. Funding death squads in Latin America in the name of anti-communist ideology, or napalming thousands of asian people for the same reason, that's nothing to be proud of.

      --
      "If you could only see what I've seen with your eyes..." - Roy Batty
    43. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by 4D6963 · · Score: 1
      And if France hadn't been involved in your revolution/independance war (whatever you call that) you'd probably be sipping tea everyday at 5 o'clock.

      Just because the USA helped doesn't allow them to take all the credit, and you can tell me they don't, but lots of americans actually do.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    44. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Braino420 · · Score: 1

      You have just made the most uneducated comment I have ever seen on Slashdot.

      I'm surprised you didn't post that bullshit AC

      I also find it funny you don't mention the country you are from and that you assume everyone in a country as big as the US thinks the exact same thing. Ahhhhahahaha, keep trying troll.

      --
      They call me the wookie man, I guess that's what I am
    45. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Depending on the numbers you use, the United States has fewer violent crimes than many other nations

      Would these number happen to be multiples of the square root of minus one?

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    46. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by makohund · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're right about the armament mismatch... but I'm not so sure it is impossible to overcome. Look at the trouble we've had in other countries in those situations.

      A few other factors to take into account:

      Internal problems in the armed forces...
      1. Reluctance/hesitation or even refusal to fire upon lesser or un-armed american civilians (by low-level troops)

      2. Mass disobedience of orders (while following orders is deep rooted, the concept of "unlawful orders" is planted right alongside it)

      3. Any given region in the US will be considered "home" by a number of troops... home state and neighboring states. Loyalty to homeland can be a hard thing to overcome. (Fighting people in their own backyard "protecting home" can be extremely difficult already. Now try to do it when 10% or more of your own force is a risk for defection and/or sabotage.)

      4. Again... defection and/or internal sabotage.

      5. If 3/4 of military forces and 95% of commander's attention is off in some other country... how convenient.

      6. If an uprising managed to drag on for a while, interesting questions arise:
      Who's gonna pay the troops?
      With what money that the govt doesn't already owe some other country?
      What countries aren't going to want debts paid up before the economy goes totally tits up? What will motivate unpaid soldiers to stick around?
      Where would replacements for wounded/killed/deserted/otherwise gone soldiers come from? Not like you can institute a draft on the very people you are fighting.

      Increasing capabilities of resistance:
      1. Guerilla Warfare against people that look like you, talk like you, dress like you, and share the same cultural background. In their own backyard. That is a nightmare scenario for any professional millitary. How do they tell the opponents apart from themselves? Of course those opponents are going to exploit that weakness to the fullest.

      2. Armories are scattered all over the country. They aren't exactly heavily guarded in a fashion that an armed mob couldn't handle. Not exactly helicopters and tanks, but still very useful.

      3. Bases storing equipment aren't exactly always heavily guarded, either. Sabotage and theft is not out of the question.

      4. The civilian population is full of former military, from all ranks and backgrounds. I don't doubt some of them would end up involved somehow... running/planning/training, etc. It'd be a matter of loyalty to home, or loyalty to the service. Doubtless plenty would end up on each side of that fence.

      5. I'm sure there are allies to be found in the world that would jump on the opportunity to lend some aid/equipment/supplies or even another front to be fought. (Small, irritating ones... Wouldn't want to send their fingers heading for the Big Red Buttons. Maybe invade Guam or something ridiculous like that with a completely anonymous force. Then abandon it quickly. For no reason other than distraction.)

      (Hey, I bet China would jump all over that shit. If we knock out our own military from the inside, guess who might get to rule the world next? ;) )

      Lastly... waging war and supporting an army takes massive resources. There are invaluable logistical targets everywhere.

      Want to halt all of those wonderful advanced weapons in their tracks? Kill their fuel supply/resupply. It's not like it is all produced and stored in some other country and they have it shipped here on a regular basis.

      Where do the repair parts for the cool equipment come from?
      How many sources are there for some of the exotic materials required for manufacture?

      Now, I'm not saying that it wouldn't be ugly, or that an armed rebellion against our military would succeed. (Or even get past the "handful of people in a bar planning it stage".) There are way too many points of failure, and is borderline suicide to try.

      BUT... I wouldn't write it off as absolutely impossible. At the very least it might not be quite the cakewalk people often

    47. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's no problem for a modern military to occupy and hold a country against a disorganized, technologically inferior populace. Look at the success the US military has had occupying Iraq. It should be even easier in the US, where the population is much larger and more highly educated.

      I expect the whole military would just do what the president told them to as well. They'd probably like nuking their homes and neighbors.

    48. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by zardo · · Score: 1
      There have been spy satellites with sensors on the homeland for decades.

      I actually want to have cameras up and down the street I live on, recording every waking moment, so that if someone breaks into my house there's a record of it. It's common sense really, and you sound like you're sticking up for criminals and terrorists.

      Thank you George Orwell for spawning generations upon generations of nutcase conspiracy theorists.

    49. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Java+Ape · · Score: 1

      Ouch -- that hits pretty close to home. As somebody who has beat my head bloody trying to fight some of the idiocy that passes for government in the US let me say that it's not that easy to derail the system. The folks in power aren't entirely stupid (O.K, Bush is!). They've engineered a system where there are so many affronts, on so many levels, that you can't concentrate on any one of them. Our system of democracy depends on an educated public (oops) being able to recognize an abuse, come to some sort of consensus, and take actions months or years later when we get a chance to vote. The problem is that a large number of people need to be made aware of a single issue and then act in a concerted fashion to effect change. The politicians know that as soon as any given abuse begins to attract our collective attention, all they have to do is engage in an even bigger abuse on another front. The public isn't well enough organized, educated or motivated to respond to an ever-changing barrage of attacks on all fronts simultaneously, which is EXACTLY what the politicians are counting on. Basically, the current administration has declared war on the populace, and the Blitzkrieg has overwhelmed the defenses. Most people are angry, but are shell-shocked, and unsure how best to respond. Voting is a rare event, and you only get to choose between two hand-picked industry shills, the real independants are weeded out long before any of the primarys. Protests take a great deal of time and effort to organize, and are routinely ignored. Civil disobedience used to get publicity, but now you're just quietly carted off, charged with everything they can think of, and fined insane amounts to guarantee you won't do it again. All very quiet, neatly taken care of, and the tame press won't breathe a whisper to anyone, so there's no publicity. The only action left is actual violence -- hey do you suppose that's why they're stepping up surveillance, eliminating civil rights, and building secret prisons around the world? Gee, these guys have thought of everything. So, I've done everything but the violence option (which I won't pursue). I've wasted lots of time, effort and money, and been roundly defeated by our government. I accomplished ABSOLUTELY NOTHING. I'm yielding the field while I still my life and my family -- democracy is dead.

    50. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Spaceman40 · · Score: 1

      It'd take massive popular support,...

      That there is the problem: apathetic Americans are the rule, not the exception, and anything other than a concerted, national effort is (perhaps unfortunately) pretty much bound to fail.

      "Find out just what the people will submit to and you have found out the exact amount of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them; and these will continue until they are resisted with either words or blows, or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress."
      -- Frederick Douglass, civil rights activist, Aug. 4, 1857

      --
      I [may] disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.
    51. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      "It could be won, but even if it can't we should still fight it to at least reduce the damage done. Drug abuse is a disease, much like manic depression and other mental disorders are diseases"

      No these arent diseases.. these are choices. No one makes you do cocaine even if your addicted. Its a mental PROBLEM (arguaby because its illegal its more of a problem) but its definately something you can overcome yourself without medical care. same with alcoholism and the addiction to tobacco products. The reason they are diseases is because the medical establishment makes alot more money treating a problem then just smacking people and saying, dont fucking do that if you want to be the picture of health.

      But the larger point is that we shouldnt be fighting against these drugs at all. All drugs should be legal, safe and controlled. If i want to work a full day and come home and smoke two pipes of opium every night, legally obtained, what the fucks business is it of the governements?

      The rest of your post seems to be gun nut ranting, and although the first part of my post advocates an american libertarian view on substances, i would never condone private ownership of guns at the level of the states. There is a reason why canada only has several hundred gun murders a year and the states has a magnitude more. The real thing you should be doing with those guns, and the only reason i think people should have them, would be to overthrow your government. A waco type event every month would definately start making people listen. Otherwise, your just shooting your fellow citizens so the government doesnt have to.

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    52. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by k2r · · Score: 1

      Get your facts straight.
      I once talked to some Australian friends about the US and WW2 and they had some _very_ decent points to make about "freeing the world from Hitler et al.".

      Basically it was something about the Commonwealth declaring war in 09/1939 while the US was still doing great business with Hitlers Germany and waiting until more than _two_years_later_ before entering (being declared) war.
      I - being a German - have NEVER met any member of any nation bragging about THEM freeing US from Hitler except from US-Americans who don't know the flying fsck about history.

      Although I had a lot of interesting talks with people who lived during this time. I'm thankful for all the people who gave their life fighting this war, I'm thankful for all the people who helped rebuilding this mess (to build a strong country as an fortess against the evil communist world eastern of Germany) but I'm not thankful for most of the crimes your country commited afterwards.

      Of course, there are US-Americans who aren't stupid, fat, lazy nutjobs, but it seems as if all of them left the country a while ago...

      k2r

    53. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by cyphercell · · Score: 1

      I don't think you get it. Our government has weapons of mass destruction, and weapons of mass distraction, and tasers, rubber bullets that can be fired by snipers, laws that make it illegal to protest on weekdays, and a government where we can't win for voting. We protest (illegally) and the news doesn't cover it. I'm of the opinion that only riots will get news coverage. Riots would require a catalyst (such as boiling water), to be sparked, and I wouldn't be surprised if troops would be deployed (at this point). We need strong leaders, strong leaders need strong followers, and strong, dedicated, intelligent followers need information. The public isn't being informed at all, Rush Limbaugh is actually considered an accurate news source, leading many political debates among the laymen to end with "you're an unpatriotic, girly man, who's afraid of war". It's Sick, it's shameful, and it's the current state of affairs.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    54. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by zardo · · Score: 3, Insightful
      If only I could "reply all" to all the negative feedback. I know the facts, probably better than you do. We sat by and did nothing for a long time, until someone finally realized "hey, if hitler wins in europe, he is going to come over and get us next... we'd better stop him RIGHT NOW!" There's no excuse for waiting that long. We simply didn't want to go to war, the public supported inaction, and so that's what we did.

      Same situation in most places around the world right now. There is turmoil brewing in the middle east and nobody but the US and a few of our allies is doing anything about it.

    55. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by zardo · · Score: 1

      I simply state that if it weren't for America's ACTION (vs. inaction) that Hitler would have taken over europe. Like I told another poster, there's no excuse for the 2 years of inaction, wasted time while hundreds of thousands of europeans fought and died while we enjoyed life over here. I visited St. Petersburg (then Stalingrad) to see firsthand, I know what I'm talking about and I certainly get filled with emotion when I think about stalingrad.

    56. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Espressoman · · Score: 1

      That's right, I'm saying that it's not a disease. Beating your wife or kids isn't a disease. Driving to a bar to get drunk and then driving home again isn't a disease. Doing something because you find it hard not to is not a sign that you have some kind of disease, it's merely a sign that you are lacking in self-control and are neglecting your personal responsibility. There are all sorts of causes of this behaviour, but in most cases the way to get back on track is to take personal responsibility for your actions, plain and simple. The sad thing about kids today, very much the world over, is that they are not taught the right skills for dealing with all of the distractions and temptations which are part of modern life. Too much television, too little responsibility, too lax and cowardly an education system, a warped sense of values, etc., etc. There are millions of young adults out there who can't even look after themselves, let alone handle drugs and sex.

      Anyway, back to pot smokers as criminals. I smoke pot. My friends smoke pot. In fact around 30% of my country's population smoke pot. That would make, under our laws (which are basically the same as those in the U.S.) 30% of the population criminals. This to me is nuts. I have a job, I have a wife, I have a kid. I smoke when the time for smoking is right, usually on a friday or saturday night. I like to make music when I'm irie. It's something I do in my own time, in my own home, without causing trouble or harm to anybody else. I've been smoking pot for twenty years now. I'm not a 'stoner', I just prefer it over alcholol. If this is a crime, then the law that makes it a crime is a stupid one and it should be abolished.

      To say that someone is a criminal is to say they should be reviled, or punished, or treated. Pot smoking should not be a crime, because pot smokers deserve none of the stigma of the criminal label.

    57. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
      If you know the facts than making the blanket statement you made earlier should just be embarrasing. Furthermore, the Middle East has been in 'turmoil' since the fall of the Ottoman Empire (if not far earlier) and Western attempts to 'fix' this area has actually made it worse. Frankly, I think the Mid-East would be better served if the various psuedo-colonialist powers, i.e. Britian, the US, France, and Russia would stop screwing with these countries and let the chips fall as they may. We have already shoved warring tribal ethnic and religious sects into fake countries, removed Democratically-elected leaders because they displeased us, supported violent and dangerous warlords, and generally screwed up the place.

      Armed invasion is dangerous and increasingly unsupportable as the symmetry of war turns towards the guerilla fighter and generally fails to create stable viable governments over long periods of time. This is an especially bad policy because it polarizes groups against the US rather than their own governments allowing the Syrians, Jordanians, and Iranian leaders legitimacy as they 'fight' against the US.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    58. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Espressoman · · Score: 1

      Well I'm a pacifist so no I don't think weapons will do anybody any good. For starters violence by the people usually takes the form of riots, which is usually good justification for the government to bring in the army. It is also makes good media spin, showing the government doing everything possible to save the country from falling into chaos.

      > If the votes are rigged, then how do you know anyone even voted for him?

      Well my take on this is that if a people do little or nothing about rigged elections, they are still responsible for who's in government. George shouldn't have won the first election, but you, as a country, let him get in anyway, as if you voted him in. There could have been enormous civil unrest (strikes, vigils, rallies, etc.), but you did nothing. And look at the mess this half-wit has got you into.

    59. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by k2r · · Score: 1

      > I know the facts, probably better than you do.

      Well, if you've grown up in the US it's not very likely that your knowlegde about the Weimarer Reich, Hitler's Germany, WW2 and time of rebuilding is more complete than the knowlegde a person has who spent 13 years on a German school in Germany.
      If you're not from the US on the other hand - my history grades were more B than A, so I wouldn't be too confident then.

      Your comparison between Hitler and Hussein however shows not a grain of historical knowlegde.
      The historical and political situations and mechanisms are just so completely different - except that there are people suffering and dying.

      However, your comparison shows why one should have no faith that the US will recognize just HOW fucked up the situation really is now that they intervened officially. There is absolutely no way to fix what you have broken within the last years and every step you will / can take now will be another mile on the road to hell for us all.

      Really, iran openly working on nuclear weapons and feeling justified about this because thats the only way that might keep the US out - what stupid step will you take next?
      Or what stupid steps will GOD tell your faith-based leader in their occasional talks? Whatever happens, your leader is absolutely confident that a) he's on a crusade b) there will be life after death for him.

      The only thing that might safe us is cold fusion.

      k2r

    60. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Espressoman · · Score: 1

      Get together with others who feel similarly. Get out there on the streets, on your cell phones, on the Internet, with a consistant message. Tell people they need to find the truth, and tell them how to find the truth. Tell people how to stage a peaceful revolution, and show courage. If the few in the U.S. who really care stand up and show how the American people are being cheated of the good and responsible government they all deserve, then things can change.

      But if you do nothing, perhaps hoping that things will improve by themselves, or that someother brave revolutionary souls will stand up on your behalf, you will grow old and die in sadness.

    61. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Espressoman · · Score: 1

      I think the fundamental omission you are making here is the role the U.S. (along with France, Britain, and others) has had in creating and perpetuating the turmoil in the Middle East.

    62. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by baKanale · · Score: 1

      Uh ok. First of all, please show us the numbers. Of course if, as you say, it depends on the numbers you use, then maybe you can prove anything. But just for the fun of it, try comparing two similar and bordering nations like, say, the USA and Canada. See what you come up with. And by the way, I'd much rather be attacked by a kid with a knife than a kid with a gun. There's a reason why there's not much knife regulations: it's much easier to kill with a gun than a knife.

      Well, I did a quick Google search, and here are just a few links:
      http://www.haciendapub.com/stolinsky.html
      http://www.ncpa.org/pi/crime/crime21.html
      http://www.jpfo.org/data-docs.htm

      But then again, as I said, there are rather varying numbers on the subject. Kinda like eggs. There's always a study every two months about how eggs are good for you, but they're bad, but they're also good. Personally, I think our gun control laws are pretty good as they are, but could certainly due to at least have a bit more strictness to it. If I were actually making the policy I'd probably like to better review the laws and the statictics, as well as more theories about how they affect eachother, but I don't have the time, so I can only make vague generalizations.

      Only 15% of the country voted for him

      Well, more like 20%. Of course, only 40% voted. And yeah, that does actually suck. It'd be nice if more people voted. Well, I shouldn't talk, because I didn't vote due to my bizarre political beliefs, but I think that the 60% who didn't vote were just too lazy/apathetic to do so. Well, I guess it makes sense, then, that his job approval ratings are near around the percent of the population who voted for him! As for myself, I don't really like the president too much. He does things that I agree with (i.e. staying in Iraq; I agree that the war was on shaky moral ground, but I think that leaving now would be doing more of a disservice to the Iraqis...), but I'm becoming increasingly fed up with his bullshit (I once had high hopes for his second term, where he'd be less of a Republican ass, but not so much; for example, he keeps talking about "alternative energy", but I see nothing happening. And his in-ability to veto a single spending bill makes me wonder...)

      99% of Americans ARE voting for him everyday by letting him in power.

      I keep hearing that Americans need to "overthrow" the government on this thread, but how are we suppose to do this without guns? But that aside, what makes you think that the resulting government would be any better, especially how crazy the American people are/are percieved? No offense, but I doubt that will work. But there's good news on the horizon: based on Bush's poor ratings, there's expected to be in a backlash in the 2006 Congressional elections, leading to a Democratic congress and a Republican presidency. Kinda like a reversed version of the Clinton era. Personally, I think that the balance will make for better policy over the next two years.

      Mod me down all you want. That doesn't change the fact that, in reality, despite what CNN and Fox might say, Americans are seen as a bunch of morons pretty much everywhere. Don't blame me, that's just the way it is and will be until you show some common sense.

      I agree with you in general, if not in the specifics. Whether we deserve it or not we are percieved rather poorly overseas. Hell, we're often poorly percieved in our own country. I think a fair amount of this in undeserved (we're the only remaining superpower, so we're bound to be a target; plus, anti-american sentiment has alot of historical roots), but yes, there is alot of stupid things that America, as a people AND as a government, do. Hopefully in the future things will get better.

    63. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by 10Ghz · · Score: 1
      Yeah, it's no problem for a modern military to occupy and hold a country against a disorganized, technologically inferior populace. Look at the success the US military has had occupying Iraq.


      There is a difference here. In case of Iraq, USA moved in from the outside, dispupted the status quo, replaced the leaders and occupied the country. In case of an uprising in USA, the military would be the one maintaining the status quo. They would not have to replace leaders or act as an outside invasion-force. It's a lot easier to maintain something, than it is to rebuild something.
      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
    64. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      I think if a significant percentage of the population of the US decided there was no option but armed rebellion the situation for a hypothetical all-siding-with-the-president military would be rather worse than they face in Iraq.

      The US is attempting to establish some sort of order and security in Iraq. Very similarly to what they'd be trying to do in a rebellious US. Except that the US population is MUCH bigger and better armed.

      Really though, the situation would most likely be more similar to any of the civil wars or coups that history has provided as examples. Look to the old Soviet Union for a good modern example.

    65. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by zardo · · Score: 1
      If you can't identify a difference between what's going on right now and mistakes that were made in the past, then you need to take a step back, forget all the bullshit floating around in your head, and start fresh. I have no doubt there were mistakes made in the past, but your argument lies on three incorrect assumptions, 1. that any intervention is always bad intervention, 2. that all countries are naturally inclined to right themselves of any political turmoil and 3. that the state of one country politically doesn't have any bearing other countries, near or far. Think about those three things.

      Also your view of warfighting is not current. America learned a lot from our failure with the Vietnam war, we are launching more and more high-bandwidth communication satellites and UAV drones to get a real good idea of where the enemy is at any given moment. We will become better and better at fighting wars like this. I predict sometime in the future if a bomb goes off in a "red zone" we can trace the bomb back to where it originated using surveillance backlogs. Terrorists can't carry on in a situation like that. We created a stable government in Germany and Japan following WW2, Japan has really run with it, Germany was hindered by the Berlin wall for a long time. Both are perfect examples of success, and really have nothing to do with Vietnam. We weren't nation building in Vietnam, we were looking for a military surrender, which was bad policy.

      Had I said America was the only country that had anything to do with Hitler's defeat, that would have been a blanket statement. As it is, we were the sole contributing factor to Hitler's defeat, without U.S. intervention, the world would be a different place.

    66. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by zardo · · Score: 1
      Sure I took history, but most of my knowledge comes from private reading. When I go to the bookstore, I pass by the history and biographies to see if anything catches my eye. WW2 is particularly interesting.

      I never made anything like a comparison between Hitler and Hussein. I was comparing two situations where action vs. inaction made a hell of a difference.

      If you honestly believe all hope is lost, then I pity you. Watch and learn. Remember your foul attitude at this point, and in 10 years look back on it and wonder to yourself, "What was wrong with me then?" You sound more like a religious fanatic with your doomsday predictions.

      Next step is to show Iran who's boss. Crack down on this form of political crime. No country in the world wants fascist Iran to have a nuke. The fact that you blame their attempts to aquire nuclear weapons on America shows exactly who you are. They've been working on nuclear weapons for a long time, child. I could turn this asinine discussion on you by saying that it's the rest of the world's fault for this attitude that inaction (codeword diplomacy) is the solution to everything. You've all made it known that America is the only country willing to use preemptive military action, and we are preoccupied right now, they are taking advantage of this situation. Think about this for a second. Would Iran still be working on a nuclear weapon if we hadn't gone into Iraq? Would Iran continue to enrich uranium and defy international condemnation and peace efforts if the rest of the world had taken UN security resolutions seriously back when it mattered?

      Cold fusion? How am I to have a rational discussion with someone who is on drugs all the time?

    67. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by zardo · · Score: 1

      I may have omitted it here but not elsewhere. In hindsight there have been mistakes. This is an attempt to fix them. I don't think this would have fixed itself, like some have suggested ("Let the chips fall as they may").

    68. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      I once talked to some Australian friends about the US and WW2 and they had some _very_ decent points to make about "freeing the world from Hitler et al."

      Your Austrailan friends need some history lessons. The Western ALLIES (not just the US, which included Austrailan forces) freed EUROPE from Hitler. The Soviets freed Russia from Hitler, and ultimately destroyed them. If they are looking for someone to thank over WW2, they are looking on the wrong side of the Iron Curtain.

    69. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by k2r · · Score: 1

      I didn't mention the Soviets or Russia...

    70. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      I didn't mention the Soviets or Russia...

      That was my point. You wrote:

      I once talked to some Australian friends about the US and WW2 and they had some _very_ decent points to make about "freeing the world from Hitler et al.".

      Any discussion about "freeing the world from Hitler" WITHOUT mentioning the Soviets is dangerous revisionist nonsense. And for Austrailians, who's forces played a relatively large part in the war, it's an unforgivable point of view. Not that the Russians didn't do the same, but it's a road you don't want to go down. Witness the current state of the US, where people have this idea that it's impossible for Americans to torture anyone, and that all of America's actions are inherently just. That "follow the leader and don't ask questions" approach is about as unamerican as you can get, and leads to the world we have today.

      Another example you might be more familiar with is the intro sequence to Enterprise. Kinda gives the impression that the US led the space race, doesn't it?

    71. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by k2r · · Score: 1

      Oh, of course my friends and me are absolutely aware of the important part the soviets played in WW2. My posting was not about "who played an important role in WW2" but about "who is bragging constantly". My Australian friends didn't say "WE were the most important party against Hitler" but "The US brags about it's role in WW2 in an non-adequate way. There were a lot more parties involved a lot earlier than the US that don't feel as if this gives them a special authority in the world in 2006."

      I didn't try to mention all parties.
      Maybe I didn't mention the Russians because their historical role in WW2 is common knowlegde in Germany.
      If you'd ask who fought in WW2 against Hitler, most people would mention GB, USA and Russia.

      > Another example you might be more familiar with is the intro sequence to Enterprise.

      I'm absolutely aware of these things and they constantly annoy me.

      So, I don't think that our views differ very much in these points but that you misunderstood my intention.
      It's not too easy for me to have a sufficiently sophisticated discussion in English.

      k2r

    72. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link. People (including myself) like to complain about the Bush Administration eroding people's rights, but I think the real worry is that the Supreme Court has been rubber-stamping even the most brazen of police tactics for decades.

    73. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      How about flying 400 feet over your own, private property, using a police helecopter, to peer in the skylight of your greenhouse, without a warrant? Thanks to FleaPlus for the link.

    74. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by westyx · · Score: 1

      I'd agree that an american civil war is unlikely at this time, but you've already had one. Or two, depending how you want to define civil war. America is also somewhat polarised, although nowhere near as much as it was in the 1861 war, so the prospects of another civil war are not as farfetched you make them out to be (however, the chances are still exceedingly slim).

    75. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by kwoff · · Score: 1
      America has a huge PR problem in the eyes of the rest of the world.

      Maybe from your perspective it's a problem. I want everyone to think we're lazy, fat, and stupid. It makes kicking their asses easier.

    76. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? by torpor · · Score: 1

      yeah, coz being a fat, lazy, ass-kicking bully is exactly how to get yourself lynched. it'll happen.

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
  11. They're already here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While in Marfa Texas, near the Mexico border, there was an odd black dot that didn't move in the sky. When I got to the Observatory I took a look at it from one of the sight seeing binoculers. It was one of the DEA Drug blimps.

    1. Re:They're already here... by An+ominous+Cow+art · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hmm, you know fuel prices are high when the unmarked black helicopters have been replaced with unmarked black blimps :-).

  12. We can't control our own borders... by DAldredge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We can't control our own borders but we will use tech like this to monitor our own citizens...

    Anyone else find that just a little weird?

    1. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We can control our borders. We just choose not to.

    2. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Eightyford · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We can't control our own borders but we will use tech like this to monitor our own citizens...

      Anyone else find that just a little weird?


      The people in charge can control the borders. They just choose not to.

    3. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only thing I find weird is the fact that your anti-semetic nazi ass hasn't been booted off slashdot!

    4. Re:We can't control our own borders... by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      Please log in so I can know who you are.

    5. Re:We can't control our own borders... by stinerman · · Score: 1

      It's not me ;-)

      In response to the original question, spying on our own citizens is framed as a national security issue (so it immediately gets at least 300 votes in the House and 70 votes in the Senate). Border control isn't. I could spout off theories as to why this is, but I don't want to stray off topic.

    6. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What are you prepared to do about this situation, Mr. Aldredge? It obviously seems to trouble you, as an American citizen. But are you actually willing to take a stand against this? Will you at least be writing your various politicial representatives, even if doing so has no effect? Will you be protesting in public?

      We often hear from Americans that the French are "pussies" or "wimps". But look what we observed this week: millions of French citizens protested against government action they disagreed with. Those people took to the streets to let the politicians know they were wrong regarding labor laws. That is what truly protects liberty. Keep in mind that these drones are a far more serious issue! But we won't hear a peep out of most Americans.

    7. Re:We can't control our own borders... by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      How do you know I haven't already done so?

    8. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you know I haven't already done so?

      I don't. But it is safe to assume that most Americans won't do anything about this issue. I would hope that you are not like most Americans.

      If you have actually done something, let us know exactly what it was that you did. It would be of great benefit if you were to post the correspondence you have sent to your representatives. Post a transcript of a telephone call or meeting, if you did either of those. Tell us about any protests you have attended. Others may find it beneficial to make use of such material in their own efforts to stand against this attack on the liberty of the American citizenry.

    9. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DShitredge avoids Aerial Dones by simply never leaving his parent's basement. So long as nobody stops him from going online and bitching about Jews, he won't do shit.

    10. Re:We can't control our own borders... by TummyX · · Score: 0, Redundant

      But if google did this and called it, say, google earth live, it would be ok right?

    11. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DShitstain would not understand your theories anyways! All he cares about is hating on Jews.

    12. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Voltageaav · · Score: 1

      Where did that come from? Any proof for that at all or is it just the flamebait it smells like to me?

      --
      Someone save me from this sanity.
    13. Re:We can't control our own borders... by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      No. It would be wrong for Google also.

    14. Re:We can't control our own borders... by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      There is proof.

      It comes from the fact that politicians in southern border states tend to favor things like amnesty for illegal immigrants, while continuing to hold-up legal immigration from the north. They seek to gain a whole lot if constituents if they can fast-track illegal immigrants into becoming citizens.

    15. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The article talks about restricting a strip of airspace along the border so the drones won't crash into small planes. This is about securing the border, among other things. The drones have an advantage in that their cameras are much harder to disable or steal than ground based cameras. The problem private pilots have with drones is that they fly at the same altitudes as small planes. Commercial and milirtary jets fly higher, so there's less concern there.

    16. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Voltageaav · · Score: 1

      That's local politicians who just want a distinct advantage over their competitors. If they give the people the right to vote, the people will be thankful, and vote for them. As you said though, it's only in the southwest and it's mostly lower level politicians. Anyone who cares about the greater scheme of things isn't as likely to want to give them amnesty. Our main obsicle is the shear number of illeagle immigrints though. Current estimates place the total number at 11-12 million. That's 1 out of ever 25 people in the United States. That's 1 out of every 25 people in the united states who don't pay taxes, don't pay social security, and still gain many benifits from the people who do pay them. That's that many more people looking for jobs, making less of a demand, and dropping average wages. Immigration is so swamped with illeagle immigrints that they can't afford to deport the vast majority of them. Recently, three illeagles were released after being found with 90Lbs of drugs in thier car because immigartion had no room for them. The numbers are simply too overwhelming.

      --
      Someone save me from this sanity.
    17. Re:We can't control our own borders... by MrWa · · Score: 1
      We can't control our own borders but we will use tech like this to monitor our own citizens...

      Maybe that is the plan: make the U.S. unappealing enough that people will not want to sneak in illegally.

    18. Re:We can't control our own borders... by robogun · · Score: 1

      If you live in CA it is common knowledge that once undocumented aliens get past the 15-mile checkpoints, the ICE can or will not enforce. In any event the Border Patrol "arrest" procedure is catch-and-release - no confinement, no court dates, no consequences. Certainly you are aware of the Minuteman movement, where frustrated citizens (or racists, depending on your viewpoint) sit on the border to deter entry. A local talk show host calls them "undocumented border patrol agents."

      If you visit the south end of the San Fernando Valley you will find the logical conclusion of these policies - essentially a Mexican colony in the US, 200,000+ strong. Certainly they are hard workers who take the jobs Americans don't want to do, but who's to say the jobs would have paid higher - and not had alien stigma - if we didn't let them all in in the first place.

    19. Re:We can't control our own borders... by sentientbrendan · · Score: 1

      >The people in charge can control the borders. They just choose not to.

      Yes. What surprises me, is that people think that this is a bad thing. The government, and most businesses *do* want *more* immigrants, not less, by whatever means necessary. Lots of cheap labor will help businesses compete internationally.

      The are hampered by a populist movement that believes they can maintain their jobs and high wages by keeping out foreign workers. *rolls eyes* What these people need to realize, is that if you can't compete for your job with pedro, you are screwed no matter what. Either the immigrants will come here to work, and at least contribute to our society, pay taxes, etc, or they will work in foreign countries and your job will either be outsourced there, or the market will simply be taken over by foreign countries.

      I have pretty low respect for populist movement in general... our government may not be the brightest, but the average guy on the street should *not* be running the country, and this is exactly why. There's a reason that america is *not* a democracy, but a republic.

      One reason that we can't compete, is because of cost of living issues, wages, etc, which will naturally collect themselves in time if our industry doesn't go to crap immediately. Afterall, this country is relatively underpopulated, and has excess food production capacity, that will keep us permanently ahead of most of the other industrialized countries in terms of low cost of living. It won't keep us ahead of the *industrializing* countries, but industrializing countries become industrialized after not too long...

      The other reason we can't compete... which will certainly not correct itself, is that the american public education system has pretty much collapsed. Uneven funding, teacher unions, and general apathy towards the youth shown by the government (they don't vote, so why spend money on them?) have made most american schools into daycare facilities whose primary purpose is to keep kids off the streets. Lack of education has in turn made the young pretty politically unimpowered in this generation, which has in turn given the government free reign to cut back on education programs and put more money into things that older americans care about... like prescription medicine, or killing muslims.

    20. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Spasmodeus · · Score: 1

      The very first sentence of TFA states "everything from border security to domestic surveillance" as the proposed use for UAVs.

      But don't let that interrupt the hand-wringing. They probably really just want to use it to find and arrest RIAA violaters and Democrats.

    21. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Cl1mh4224rd · · Score: 1
      We can't control our own borders but we will use tech like this to monitor our own citizens...
      And my parents tell me I should get out more often. Now I have a real reason not to...
      --
      People will pass up steak once a week, for crap every day.
    22. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, we don't care if immigrants come. Hell, we're all for it.

      We just want Pedro to sign the guestbook and come in through the front door instead of jumping the fence in the back.

    23. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a reason that america is *not* a democracy, but a republic.

      Well, America is a continent, not a republic. If you meant the U.S., then I'm afraid a republic is a form of democracy.

    24. Re:We can't control our own borders... by JollyFinn · · Score: 1
      If you meant the U.S., then I'm afraid a republic is a form of democracy.

      No its not. The democracy eliminates corruption and waste completely, and you can set tax rate to 100%. The down side is that every agressive unit makes TWO citizens unhappy, instead of only one under republic.

      --
      Emacs is good operating system, but it has one flaw: Its text editor could be better.
    25. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US has coal-powered babies? That's so Industrially Revolutionary, dude!

    26. Re:We can't control our own borders... by baKanale · · Score: 1

      We can't control our own borders but we will use tech like this to monitor our own citizens...

      Anyone else find that just a little weird?
      Couldn't this very technology be used, and to great effect might I add, to better control the border? Instead of building a wall on the border to keep the illegals and smugglers out and overstocking the border with large amounts of patrols and guards, have these UAV's scan the border for movement/heat signatures (i.e. bodies) and then alert the smaller amount of live patrol guards to move to that location for interception.

      Sure, it could be used illegally, but so can nearly every other technology. It also has plenty of other valid uses, like patroling around secure areas (power plants, military installations, political events like speeches, etc).

    27. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, this competitive underclass you're trying to set up.. Can I choose to not pay taxes like them? Can I refuse to contribute to social security? Can I decide I don't really need to have insurance or even a license while I'm driving my car? No? Then shut up.

    28. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Shajenko42 · · Score: 1
      Certainly they are hard workers who take the jobs Americans don't want to do
      Jobs Americans don't want to do? What, are we just a fragile citizenry who can't do an honest day's work?

      Here's a hint - there's no such thing as a job Americans don't want to do - but there are jobs companies don't want to pay a living wage for.
    29. Re:We can't control our own borders... by robogun · · Score: 1

      No, there's this thing called job stigma. The kids in Calif don't want to do jobs that Mexicans do - stoop labor, landscaping, kitchen work, etc - because that's what Mexicans are willing to do. This was certainly not the case two decades ago.

      These jobs never paid a living wage,* but they used to pay an intermediate wage suitable for unskilled workers.

      That is, until the floodgates were opened to cheap labor. As with the situation with China, with cheap toys flooding in, we are now discovering how costly all this cheap stuff is.

      *As it's currently defined: Sufficient salary to support a household with three dependents - in Calif, that's in the mid five figures

    30. Re:We can't control our own borders... by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      UAV's have been in use for several years on the border. They aren't helping that much.

    31. Re:We can't control our own borders... by wuffalicious · · Score: 1

      You people have no vision! Look at the subtleties of the current administration's plan: if the economy goes far enough down hill we won't need to control our borders.

      A genius, that Bush is.

    32. Re:We can't control our own borders... by winwar · · Score: 1

      "The government, and most businesses *do* want *more* immigrants, not less, by whatever means necessary. Lots of cheap labor will help businesses compete internationally.

      The are hampered by a populist movement that believes they can maintain their jobs and high wages by keeping out foreign workers. *rolls eyes* What these people need to realize, is that if you can't compete for your job with pedro, you are screwed no matter what. Either the immigrants will come here to work, and at least contribute to our society, pay taxes, etc, or they will work in foreign countries and your job will either be outsourced there, or the market will simply be taken over by foreign countries."

      And the quickest way to reduce illegal immigration (other than give amnesty to anyone who crosses the border) is to require companies verify the persons status. This is a step up from the current system. And then heavily fine any company that hires someone not permitted to work. But companies don't want that...

      We can prevent "Pedro" from working here. If he can't work here, he probably won't come. And most of the jobs illegal immigrants take CAN'T be outsourced. Some industries might. Granted people may decide that lawncare or janitorial work isn't worth paying for anymore....

    33. Re:We can't control our own borders... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what isn't helping much? YOUR EVIL JEW HATING!

    34. Re:We can't control our own borders... by sentientbrendan · · Score: 1

      >We can prevent "Pedro" from working here. If he can't work here, he probably won't come. And most of
      >the jobs illegal immigrants take CAN'T be outsourced. Some industries might. Granted people may
      >decide that lawncare or janitorial work isn't worth paying for anymore....

      Ugh, you are entirely missing the point. The problem isn't that janitorial and lawncare jobs are being taken away, if those were the only jobs under competition from illegal immigrants, no one would care that much. The problem isn't the service sector at all. Really, the service sector can hardly be called an industry...

      This is all about our ability to make products we can export cheaply. If we can't do that, and we can't right now, than nobody buys anything from us (the US). When that happens, the dollar no longer has value. When that happens... we become a third world country. In some sense that solves the problem, but only after it ceases to have meaning.

  13. Hollywood, anybody? by thc69 · · Score: 1

    The imagery brought to mind by this makes me think of a handicapped dude in a Pontiac Aztek...or, uh, something.

    --
    Procrastination -- because good things come to those who wait.
  14. more effective monitoring of United States by jmnormand · · Score: 1

    some how the bush admin using the phrase "more effective monitoring of United States territory" does not make me feel all warm and fuzzy. since the major advantage to uavs is they dont risk troop in warzones i dont really see the benefits for domestic surveillance. probably useful for boarder patrol i supose.

    1. Re:more effective monitoring of United States by thrillseeker · · Score: 1
      the major advantage to uavs is they dont risk troop in warzones

      Drones don't get tired and make mistakes - if remotely piloted the operator can swap out as frequently as needed with frested personnel. For missions that don't require on-site decision making by a pilot, or neck-bending maneuvering to engage other aircraft, a drone is extremely cost effective.

    2. Re:more effective monitoring of United States by jbrader · · Score: 1

      frested = fresh + rested

      --
      You are so boring that when I see you my feet go to sleep.
    3. Re:more effective monitoring of United States by Bjorn_Redtail · · Score: 1

      "neck-bending maneuvering to engage other aircraft" Which is similar to the neck bending needed to avoid other aircraft. Which is why AOPA is concerned that domestic use of these unmanned aircraft will interfere with general aviation.

    4. Re:more effective monitoring of United States by bhodikhan · · Score: 1

      Oh no. I hope they aren't gonna arm 'em with Hellfire missles. Can you imagine the mistakes then!

  15. Big Brother Watching by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Appealing to the conspiracy theorists: here we go, with an extension of Big Brother Watching(tm), where other activities such as "war on terrorism" could be viewed as a ruse by which to implement these very sorts of things that, perhaps not on the outset, serve to dimish our freedoms in clever ways - and we, the public have not much choice - where the larger percent accepts it, like pigs to the slaughter.

    1. Re:Big Brother Watching by Travelsonic · · Score: 1

      While the whole big brother fear crowd CAN get out of hand - THIS is reason to be concrned, especially if it gets out of hand (and a history lesson might teach you a thing or two about it almost always doing so) - I don't want to be watched. If I got nothing to hide, they don't have any reason to watch me. PERIOD... sheeple.... baaa baaaaaaaah!

      --
      If you believe in privacy, and believe you have "nothing to hide" at the same time, you're a goddammed idiot
  16. Not long now... by Bandraginus · · Score: 1

    before they hand these drones over to the Ministry of Truth.

  17. They Live: We Sleep by Baldrson · · Score: 1

    This reminds me of the scene in "They Live" where the protaganist finds some sunglasses that lets him see through the hypnotic haze created by the "capitalist" aliens and and finds there's this little UFO shaped thing following him around with a camera trained on him -- which he then blows away with a shotgun.

    1. Re:They Live: We Sleep by MORTAR_COMBAT! · · Score: 1

      What needs to happen for us to wake up?

      --
      MORTAR COMBAT!
    2. Re:They Live: We Sleep by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uh... sunglasses, duh?

    3. Re:They Live: We Sleep by Clod9 · · Score: 1
      Deaths of children, that's what. When they start arming the drones, and one of them mistakenly shoots a group of young people, then people will cry out. The deaths at Kent State changed a lot in regards to the Vietnam War. Not all by itself, but it cause a lot of people to wake up and realize their government doesn't have their best interests in mind.

      Actually, the more rapidly they bring this stuff on (wiretaps, drones, armed garrisons, voting machines) the better our chances, because people might wake up in time to do something. The longer it goes on, and the more gradually totalitarianism takes hold, the harder it is to get rid of it. I put our current chances at less than 50% to avoid an actual revolution within the next 50 years.

      What people don't realize is that if millions take to the streets, they actually can change things. It's been that way for a long time, but the state is getting better at mezmerizing its populace in industrialized nations.

  18. Boob watching by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where can I apply for the job to monitor the live feed from drones protecting nude beaches from terrorist attacks?

  19. targeting practice? by cabinetsoft · · Score: 1

    I dare all US gun owner citizens to targetting practice on them... otherwise maybe they'll find the WMD not found in Iraq.

    1. Re:targeting practice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought that too, but these things fly 3-5 miles up. Just spotting one would be a bit of a challenge, and at that range telling it apart from a civilian craft's going to be pretty hard unless you know what you're doing.

      I'd suggest against asking the average gun owner to shoot at them. Unless you've got a really good rifle and aim, you're not going to hit them, and they're probably not going to be hurt much by most civilian rifles anyway unless you get a lucky shot, and then it'll probably just crash into someone's house.

  20. Dumb drones, eh? by d.corri · · Score: 0

    The Bush administration seems to be full of those.

    1. Re:Dumb drones, eh? by d.corri · · Score: 0

      The real dumb drones are the people who voted for that guy.

      Yes, I just replied to my own post. Nobody else was going to, anyway.

  21. UAV's, why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yea they use UAV's in iraq and yea they work for monitoring a few things. Typicaly they are used for following convoys, because typicaly its difcult to keep track of a single vehicle. Now that the war has become urban they just dont use them as much anymore. What kind of real intel can you get on something flying over it at 12,000 feet? The fact of the matter is the UAV technology is not up to snuff for what the police would want to use it for. Its idea that sounds really good on paper, but to impliment is a diffrent story.

  22. UAVs whan? by zobier · · Score: 1

    According to the Weekly Piracy Report there are UAVs watching our oceans, so what makes you think they're not already watching us too?

    --
    Me lost me cookie at the disco.
  23. Unmanned Brother by overacid · · Score: 1

    Big, Bushy, Brother is watching

  24. There are a number of reasons, actually. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Nobody in America gives a shit for several reasons.

    The first is the same bread-and-circuses problem that plagued the Roman Empire. As long as they have beer and football, Mountain Dew and XBox, or their cell phones and MTV, most Americans are quite content.

    The second is a lousy mass media. Many people who might take a stand against anti-freedom activities such as this aren't even aware of the issue, just because it isn't reported well by major news outlets.

    The third is a lack of understanding. Low-quality history lessons in schools, often teaching what amounts to idealistic propaganda, have resulted in many youths (and now adults) not even being able to comprehend the issues at hand. They are unaware of how such 'security' measures were the hallmarks of numerous totalitarian regimes, just in the 20th century alone.

    It's a multifaceted problem, and no solution is readily available.

    1. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by max99ted · · Score: 1

      It's a multifaceted problem, and no solution is readily available.

      I'd say move North but things seems to be slipping here as well.

      --

      Please stop APK.. you're only hurting yourself.

    2. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by SteeldrivingJon · · Score: 1


      "Many people who might take a stand against anti-freedom activities such as this aren't even aware of the issue, just because it isn't reported well by major news outlets."

      Or, more likely, you get Fox News and right wingers or spineless suckups at other networks who will parrot the government's empty rationalizations, and push the idea that if you oppose the institution of a police state, you're supporting the terrorists.

      --
      September 2011: Looking for Cocoa/iOS work in Boston area Cocoa Programmer Quincy, MA
    3. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Naito · · Score: 1

      the fourth is that if you complain, you're branded as being unpatriotic, a quack, and at worst, a TERRORIST!! Because if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to worry about, right???

      And you thought that movie "Enemy of the State" was just a movie.

    4. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by DigiShaman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're a perfect example of "What's wrong with America".

      Liberals see they're being attacked by the media. Conservatives see they're being attacked by the media. Results? The partisan media outlets such as CNN and Fox have won your attention. This is important because the perpetual bashing that goes on drives up the rating and thus further adds fuel to the fire. Obviously the political mud slinging that goes on in Washington DC is the root cause as everyone is jockeying for power.

      Want to be cleansed of this rotgut? Tell the media to go fuck themselves. Do your own investigations and read personal blogs around the world for a more dynamic outlook into our global society.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    5. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      The whole America=Rome thing has been done to death, so has the Sports=Circus/Arena thing.

      Lets look at that. In Rome and other urban centers during the late Republic and Empire the Circus and Colosseum were diversions that the public demanded. Holidays were declared, taxes not gathered and most of the public didn't work, they went to the Circus and the Colosseum for games. If there weren't games or even enough games there was civil unrest of the sort that'd make the Rodney King riots look like a game.

      Now in the modern western world the games are a diversion for sure, but they are a profit making venture not for the the government or to control the rage of the mob but purely entertainment. The analogy of modern games to Roman games is shown to be false when there are strikes and professional sporting seasons don't happen (MLB, NBA, NHL in the last 15 years for example) and there is no civil unrest. Had three to six months of no games occured in Rome or Constantinople there'd likely not be any ruins to visit today as the mob would have destroyed it all.

      Now then if we look at restrictions put on people in the United States, United Kingdom, or Canada during the American Civil War, First and Second World Wars and compare those restrictions to what is happening during this Global War on Terror, you'll see that the reaction now is much less invasive than it was during those conflicts.

    6. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 0
      Nobody in America gives a shit for several reasons.

      You forgot the fourth reason: it just doesn't matter. Anyone who doesn't wear the foil hat realizes that a bunch of drones looking down on US territory doesn't matter at all to individual liberty.

      Sheesh, I seriously think that if people like you had their way, the police wouldn't be allowed to patrol the streets.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    7. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Secret+Rabbit · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Now then if we look at restrictions put on people in the United States, United Kingdom, or Canada during the American Civil War, First and Second World Wars and compare those restrictions to what is happening during this Global War on Terror, you'll see that the reaction now is much less invasive than it was during those conflicts.

      You seem to be missing a point. That point being that the first 3 wars that you mentioned actually had goals that were achievable. The latter does have achievable goals. Or are you so naive to think that a "war on terrorism" can actually be won?

      You also seem to be justifying an erosion of freedoms as ok and something that'll be returned after the conflict ends. Well since this war cannot be won, those freedoms will never return.

      For that matter, what justifies this increase in surveillance? Are there operatives about everywhere? Must we fear everyone?

      If we all remember the Simpsons episode (paraphrase):
      Lisa: I have a rock. It keeps bears away.
      Homer: How do I know this rock works.
      Lisa: Do you see any bears around?
      Momer: I'll give you $10 for it.
      Lise: Dad, it doesn't really work.
      Homer: $20!

      Thus the administration is keeping everyone safe from the terrorists. Because do you see any of them around. Let's just keep letting them do whatever they want.

    8. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by teldar · · Score: 1
      Do your own investigations and read personal blogs around the world.
      1. Hmm. Sounds like letting someone else do your own investigations for you. Why not read the bills and try to do your own thinking for you?
    9. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Where's Gordon Freeman? The Combine is starting to make its move!

    10. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure, why can't it be won? The conflict against Fascism/Nazism was won and while places like Spain held out, it largely went away. Imperial Japan's cult of Militarism was defeated.

      Stalinist Communism was rolled back in Europe, the Americas, Africa and Asia for the most part.

      Islamist Terrorism can be defeated or marginalized too.

    11. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by betsig339 · · Score: 1

      When the ability to build drones becomes cheap enough for local law enforcement to use, they won't have to patrol the streets. The law enforcement already uses face and silhouette tracking software to keep tabs on people in public via inter-linked streetlight and survelance cameras.

      When the government finally has silent, non-stop drones (solar power gives huge battery life), we need not worry, because every person in the entire country will have a convienent eye watching over them, reminding them with a ticket every time they travel .1 miles per hour over the speed limit or jay-walk. Because, having someone watching everything we do is freedom, right?

      Maybe the foil-heads were on to something.

    12. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > It's a multifaceted problem, and no solution is readily available.

      I always thought opposition to government oppression was the reason US citizens had the right to bear arms.

    13. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mr. "Earp" :

      You don't have a clue as to the real nature of what's going on now.

      But that doesn't stop you from posting, does it ? LOL !!!!!

    14. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by azakem · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The second is a lousy mass media. Many people who might take a stand against anti-freedom activities such as this aren't even aware of the issue, just because it isn't reported well by major news outlets.

      For proof of this, just take a look at CNN.com's front page right now. Apparently video footage of pigs jumping off a diving board is a far more pressing issue than the prospect of Enemy Of The State gaining documentary status.

    15. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Scudsucker · · Score: 2

      You forgot the fourth reason: it just doesn't matter. Anyone who doesn't wear the foil hat realizes that a bunch of drones looking down on US territory doesn't matter at all to individual liberty.

      More like "just doesn't get it". These things could become as common as K-9 units. And if SCOTUS rubber stamps searches like these the way they have car searches, the cops will be able to use these for everything except looking in your bathroom window. The other scary part is how easily these planes could be tied into a national system, in a permanent database. In 20 years it would be trivial for someone with access to go back and look at all your day to day movements from the preceeding five years.

      Sheesh, I seriously think that if people like you had their way, the police wouldn't be allowed to patrol the streets.

      Don't be a tool. There can be a hundered cops in front of your house but they all have short term memory. With our ever expanding storage technology, surveillance can be filed in a giant Wal-Mart type database - and never removed.

    16. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The analogy of modern games to Roman games is shown to be false when there are strikes and professional sporting seasons don't happen (MLB, NBA, NHL in the last 15 years for example) and there is no civil unrest.

      Haven't seen too many soccer riots, have you? And it doesn't matter if sports fans lose a major league sports league, because there are always alternatives, even in the same sport. MLB, the NBA, the NHL and NFL could all dissapear tomorrow, and there would still be minor league/college teams.

      Now in the modern western world the games are a diversion for sure, but they are a profit making venture not for the the government or to control the rage of the mob but purely entertainment.

      Just because the motivations are different, doesn't change the outcome, you fuckwit.

    17. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      You forgot the fourth reason: it just doesn't matter. Anyone who doesn't wear the foil hat realizes that a bunch of drones looking down on US territory doesn't matter at all to individual liberty.


      You really don't mind the government watching you constantly, every time you step outside your house? You're braver than I thought...

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    18. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Jeremi · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Islamist Terrorism can be defeated or marginalized too.


      Perhaps, but it isn't "The War on Islamic Terrorism", it's "The War on Terrorism". Even if we pacify the Islamic terrorists, there will always be the potential that some other miscreants will get up to the same tricks. Since you can't brainwash everybody to forget that the techniques of terrorism exist, the threat of terrorism can never go away, and therefore the War on Terrorism can never be won. And I rather suspect that that is just how certain parts of our government like it.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    19. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First of all, your country has grown too large when you have this sense of estrangement from your government, and they from you, the giant gray blob of voters.

      Secondly, total information awareness is a stated goal of your cronies.

      Maybe once the shell-shocked hard Vietnam vets die off an out of your govt the paranoia will subside?

    20. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by 4D6963 · · Score: 1
      Or are you so naive to think that a "war on terrorism" can actually be won?

      Exactly, matter of fact it's just a substitute to cold war. It will last for about 40 years during which they'll do whatever they want using war on terror as an excuse for it until for some reason they'll get tired of it / move on to a new thing, although I hardly can see what they might move to next.

      Maybe one day the military industrial complex will just magically step out of the oval office...

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    21. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It is not called the Global War on Islamist Terror because of political niceties and because we need bases in nations with strong Islamic populations (the 'Stans, Qatar, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia (not anymore though), Jordan, and North Africa).

      The Second World War was a war on fascism, it was ended although some fascist states continued to exsist (Spain, Argentina).

      The Korean War ended in 1953 although technically the state of war still exists between the United States, the Republic of Korea, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and the People's Republic of China and the United Nations states who sent forces to Korea.

      A war can be ended even though the threat still exists. The threat will be marginalized and the various aspects of the war will spin down and fade into the background.

    22. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Tsagadai · · Score: 1

      Anyone with half a brain can see none of those things have been defeated. There are still fascist xenophobic states around the world. North Korea looks awfully stalinist. Defeating terrorism is dumber than the war on drugs. Anyone with half a brain can see terrorism will still be part of the world for a lot longer if not forever. As will drugs be. Accept the fact that your nation has declared war on something that is not going away. But unlike the stated reason for the war your liberties and rights sure are going away, and fast.

    23. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WWI did have goals that were achievable but I still think it was one of the stupidest wars ever fought. "Gavrilo Princip, of the Black Hand Gang, assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand while he was visiting Sarajevo" (from wiki) then, somehow, it happened. Millions were killed and still no one is quite sure exactly why it happened. A lot of people think arms dealers pushed the whole idea.
      Mexican-American War 1846 - "They invaded us first." lie
      Spanish-American War 1898 - "Battleship Maine" lie
      WWI - who knows??
      Vietnam - Gulf of Tonkin Lie
      Iraq - WMD lie

    24. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by CharlieG · · Score: 1

      Really?

      Hummm

      Lincoln suspends Habius Corpus - never mind the whole argument RE States Rights Vs Federalism

      WWII - Asian Americans on the west coast are locked up in internment camps. Public works are guarded by the military with Orders to shoot. Blackout wardens walking around making sure no light could be seen. Rationing. Travel Restrictions. Heck, my Dad (WWII vet with the OSS OG) remembers one training mission where the blithely STOLE someone's car, and dropped drove it into the C&O barge canal outside DC (Yes, a simulated car bomb in WWII). And remember, you could NOT just go get another one - he said the Govt had to do LOTS of paperwork to get the guy a new car (RARE during the war years). Tossing a rock through a recruiting station window (like was done in on college town this weekend) would have gotten you arrested for sabotage - and convicted. Speaking in support of it would have gotten you arrested for supporting the Enemy - or blackballed from your job (Enjoy being homeless).

      I think you don't realize how much more tolerant of decent we are in this country since the 1960s. Even into the 1950s, if the local beat cop didn't like that you were hanging out on the street corner, he would tell you to move - and you DID, if not, you expect at least a gentle whack on the ass with a nightstick (if you were a kid) to get you moving. Heck - want to see what the Government could get away with in the 1st half of the 1900s? Do a web search on the "Bonus Riot" ( http://www.thehistorynet.com/ahi/bl_bonus_march/ is a good start)

      --
      -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
    25. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by CharlieG · · Score: 1

      Ooops - responded to the wrong person

      --
      -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
    26. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by bonius_rex · · Score: 1

      >> Sure, why can't it be won? The conflict against Fascism/Nazism was won

      Because we didn't make war on these ideas.  The congress of the United States declared war on Germany, Japan, etc.

      Think of it like this:  declareWar() is a method of class congress.  It takes a single argument of type country.

      congress.declareWar(germany)    // this is ok

      president.declareWar(terrorism) // president has no such method
                                      // type mismatch

      The destructor of the war object generally involves a peace treaty and/or the total collapse of the enemy country.  I really don't forsee Osama sitting down and signing a treaty, and there is no nation-state of AlQuadia to collapse.  The end_of_war conditions can never be met.

    27. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Ah, but see, us Canadians are cunning like the fox. Yes, we elected a crazy conservative but we gave him a minority government, shared with the pilfering Liberals and, the best part, the socialist NDP. Muahahaha!

    28. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Wiseleo · · Score: 1

      20 years?

      We have extremely high speed networks today, extremely cheap storage, and very high resolution CCD sensors with face recognition technology. We have this today. Shoot in gray scale vs. color for higher contrast and greater image compression.

      I can deliver a prototype of what you are talking about today. GPS-guided UAVs can enable Enemy of the State today already.

      We have the transponder tags for frequent bridge travelers. Integrate that, and I can catch you at the toll gates and follow you home. Vehicles are sold with OnStar. Integrate with OnStar with a warrant from a secret court, and I can track you wherever. We have traffic analysis cameras. Replace them with hi-res units and equip with OCR technology (plates are easy stuff), and I can track you anywhere on a monitored interstate and pick up further with a UAV. You carry a cell-phone with a GPS for e911. Court order, link that signal to the UAV. Better yet, combine that signal with FLIR :-).

      Does this start to sound familiar?

      The databases are accessible with standard interfaces these days and it's fairly intuitive to combine data from multiple databases. The days of incomptatible closed mainframes are either gone or very rapidly headed in that direction as data becomes easier to migrate and analyse. Combine that with something like Sun Grid and you can track this stuff fairly inexpensively. Some of the things I do combine data from multiple SQL Server instances to enable greater depth of customer relationship management. We are not evil, but the same technology can be used for evil purposes pretty quickly.

      The technology is here today, not 20 years from now.

      --
      Leonid S. Knyshov
      Find me on Quora :)
    29. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Neurotoxic666 · · Score: 1
      Do your own investigations and read personal blogs around the world for a more dynamic outlook into our global society.

      Actually, just reading something from outside the US, even from mainstream medias, as long as it isn't from the US, will make a big difference.

      I'm Canadian (eh) and during the 9/11, Afghanistan and Iraq events, I have been reading CNN and my usual sources of "mainstream" information (CBC and a local newspaper's online edition). Often I just couldn't believe the American and Canadian media were talkiing about the same events. You guys miss a lot of details, have the informations later than the rest to make sure it is properly filtered (if you get the info at all) and emphasis is always where the Americans look good (I bet we hear more about your killed soldiers around the world than you do).

      Blogs are great when you know which ones to read and can think for yourself what's true and what's not. Unfortunately, most people try to think the least they can and will opt for the easy, TV-dinnerish mass media. Then they get flooded with "patriotic" bullshit and are terrorized with urgent news flashes, alert levels rising, flue pandemics killing millions and even the most insignificant event in a day is turned into an important call to support the war on terror.

      And I can tell that based on the differences between American and Canadian biggest news sources. It's amazing how an (almost) entire country's attention can be taken away from stuff that matters with reality shows, hollow programs and biased 5 o'clock news. Even with more intelligent humour (say, like the Simpsons), Mister American will laugh at Homer hitting his head on the wall and will never, ever get the message behind it. Ah well.

      What scares me, actualy, is that Canada is becoming like that too. Wait ten years and we'll be seeing used British unmanned flying drones paid twice the price crash all over the place. Hell yeah.

      --
      You are more than the sum of what you consume. Desire is not an occupation.
    30. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by courtarro · · Score: 1
      Tell the media to go fuck themselves. Do your own investigations and read personal blogs around the world for a more dynamic outlook into our global society.

      This is a nice ideal, but the only people with time to "do [their] own investigations" are journalists. I don't have the time, resources, or connections to travel to Iraq and see what's happening there. The media have huge resources that we pay for in the form of watching ads (or donating in the case of NPR), and in return they specialize in using that money efficiently to tell us about current events. They're far from perfect, but they're really all we've got. Blogs are a good supplement, but like Wikipedia, they aren't a primary source of information so you're still receiving a filter.

      A person can rely on the media and still stay atop current events as long as they make an active attempt to get their news from varied sources, like NPR and BBC in addition to CNN. If you get news from sources that have many different filters, eventually the filters will become 100% transparent. It's just not practical to ignore these resources.

    31. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if we pacify the Islamic terrorists, there will always be the potential that some other miscreants will get up to the same tricks.

      And not all those "Islamic terrorists" are actually motivated by religous reasons. Osama bin Laden is not a dumbass. Sure, he might have a religious perversion to Islam, but very fundamentally, he's just against some fundamental things that are pretty universally opposed within human civilization.

      There's a reason why Osama or anyone doesn't oppose, let's say, Sweden or Japan. And the reason is not that those countries have great tech and chicks.

      Sweden and Japan don't focus on stealing natural resources and boosting corporate profits instead of repairing destroyed infrastructure after invading countries. Swedish and Japanese militaries work in responsible fashion in battlefields, while U.S. doesn't mind to use internationally banned chemical weapons to wipe out cities with civilian population or send out any fucking farmer to be tortured in overseas prisons. Sweden and Japan are generous at development aid and building schools in poor countries, while U.S. is only active at building military bases and enforcing corporate interests. Sweden and Japan have ban on arms sales to human rights violating countries, while U.S. government-Halliburton alliance is the world's biggest arms trader to any dictator or warlord with cash or profitable business plan. Swedish and Japanese governments don't actively push propaganda or censorship to their citizens, while every U.S. generation tend to be brainwashed with empty declarations, flag swinging, endless rhetoric and government supported or produced propaganda and censorship. Sweden and Japan implement real democracy, their citizens are encouraged to participate in it and the leaders are expected strict responsibility, while U.S. implements two-party corrupted system without any real transparency or political responsibility.

      It's easy to see, why someone wants to fight against domestic and international de facto totalitarianship of nutheads. I might join too, if I didn't like my job, wife and hobbies too much.

      I'm just waiting until the expression "might join" is enough for a ticket to prison or free bullet.

    32. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      In many of your examples, "winning" involved the ascension of a more powerful statist element, primarily the superpowers ... who have produced great militancy and death around the globe. Like most worshippers of Western "civilization", this is your great blind spot.

      Islamic Terrorism has always been marginalized by the America-Britain-Israel Axis. You could make a good case for a German-France Axis also doing the same, since they are also major arms dealers for equipping the Middle East for warfare (internal and external).

      Islamic Terrorism cannot be defeated by the same power that has fostered it ... namely, the oil-grabbing militancy of the US and Britain. Actual defeat or significant marginalization would require a disconnected power (like China) to come in with a military campaign. Of course, China's motivation now to do so is either zero for political reasons, or some positive quantity due to a desire for oil. So, such a defeat will never happen.

      I really don't understand all these comments I've heard since 911 about "defeating terrorism". Like Noam Chomsky has paraphrasedly said, if you want to stop terrorism, you have to stop performing terrorist acts yourself. Since the USA now blatantly attacks countries pre-emptively (ironically, rather than just sending in CIA hit teams as in the past 2 generations), then clearly the practice of statist terrorism is not going to stop ... hence the terrorist reprisal system will not stop.

      To sum up: Americans refuse to admit they live in the largest Evil Empire ever known. Economically, America has attacked the world for at least 2 generations, and America's concurrent worldwide militancy has been done largely to support that economic war. THIS is the cause of many of the world's woes, and such an Evil Empire just DEMANDS endless and growing reprisals. As we speak here, yet another youth in Iraq watches today's bloodshed, notes the US soldiers involved, and then takes a vow to bring America down. Empires demand terrorism.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    33. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by rossifer · · Score: 1

      [...Much insightful stuff...] As we speak here, yet another youth in Iraq watches today's bloodshed, notes the US soldiers involved, and then takes a vow to bring America down.

      Abso-fucking-lutely!

      I've been saying this since 9/11 and the only response I get back is that I hate America. What? Because I want the place I live to be better than it is and the acts done in my name to be less reprehensible, I somehow hate my home?

      Doublethink is thriving across this country, not just in the red states.

      And before any red state residents get their panties in a twist, I'm a registered Republican (though I haven't voted for a Republican Presidential candidate since Regan).

      Regards,
      Ross

    34. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The third is a lack of understanding. Low-quality history lessons in schools, often teaching what amounts to idealistic propaganda, have resulted in many youths (and now adults) not even being able to comprehend the issues at hand. They are unaware of how such 'security' measures were the hallmarks of numerous totalitarian regimes, just in the 20th century alone.
      In Western technocratic culture (and every other culture is being bulldozed by or transformed to that culture), change is so rapid that people live in the future rather than in the past. Education becomes technical training. In that context it is just natural that an education system will not have the time to teach enough about the past for people to apply lessons from the past.

    35. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by cyphercell · · Score: 1
      Heck - want to see what the Government could get away with in the 1st half of the 1900s? Do a web search on the "Bonus Riot"

      Nowadays, the army would more than likely open fire after the bottles were thrown. Todays peacekeepers are cowards.

      --
      Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
    36. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      I estimate that since late 2001, I've been called "Communist" about 300 times, "Socialist" another 150-200, and have had my patriotism or nationalism seriously questioned (even up to the accusation of "treason") about 500 times. These events are incomparable to what happened before 911. So, I can say with some surety that 911 only brought out America's simmering trend of civilian militancy. This is well in line with your observation.

      So, Goering's observation (which I confirmed verbatim by obtaining Gustavus Gilbert's book, "Nuremburg Diaries" -- hint hint) about scaring a Republic into supporting Fascism is an accurate prediction about Western culture at least, and may reflect all Human cultures to some degree.

      I highly recommend obtaining Gilbert's book. Goering and others in the Nuremburg clink had a lot more to say about the structure and attitudes of their hyperpatriotic government. They supported the effective worship of the leader, even to the point of accepting all blame just to clear said leader of any taint. They strongly advocated the violent supression of dissent, and the monopoly control of state elements leading to the formation of public knowledge (i.e. manipulating public opinion via propaganda). Too many of these viewpoints apply to what's happening in the West (primarily America and Britain) today.

      (To be fair, Gilbert's book is biased. It is just another book written by the victors, who have obviously now re-arranged the world into another Third Reich, but a T.R. dominated by a class and philosophy of bankers and capitalism. We can clearly say that certain elements of the T.R. actually won the war since they were already inherent in the Allied powers, or they were quickly adopted by same.)

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    37. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by CharlieG · · Score: 1

      And do you think that the 2 leaders who ordered them to open fire would end up being the Supreme Allied Commander, and the Head of the Military in the Pacfic, or would they be thrown out, and court marshaled?

      --
      -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
    38. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by aeoneal · · Score: 1

      There's another good quote, from Mengele. "The more we do to you, the less you believe we are doing it."

    39. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by SteeldrivingJon · · Score: 1


      You clearly didn't even read my comment. I don't even have *cable* with which to watch CNN and Fox.

      --
      September 2011: Looking for Cocoa/iOS work in Boston area Cocoa Programmer Quincy, MA
    40. Re:There are a number of reasons, actually. by Secret+Rabbit · · Score: 1

      So then, which army are you going to attack? What country?

      How do you defeat an idea if it isn't attached to something?

      I'd also hate to tell you this, but terrorism has always been marginalized. That is until the media got a hold of it and blew the whole thing wildlly out of proportion.

      If you don't believe me, just look at the numbers. Since 9/11 there's been what, about 3000 (not including 9/11) people die upto 3/4 years after 9/11 because of terrorism. So, that's about 2-3 people per day that died from terrorist attacks.

      Yah, major epidemic. Gotta nip that in the bud straight away. It certainly threatens to overthrow society as we know it. Let's take extreme measures like suspending civil rights to a large degree to keep this thing that is wildly out of control in check.

  25. Should this be... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..in Your Rights Online?

  26. Homeland... and the future... by ShadowNetworks · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The US is made of thousands upon thousands of immigrant. Very few of us are native. The current political and powers that be want everyone watched 24x7. It's scary to think that we'd spy on our own citizens just to protect them. But if we allow such things as domestic USVs, what's next? Tracking chips implanted in everyone? I don't know where this is all headed, but there are some crazy politicians and military forces out there that think they should play god to their own citizens. In times like these, we need to consider the repercussions of our actions. I hate to see this ever happen on American soil.

    --
    Give me a productive error over a boring, mundane and unproductive fact any day. ~Anon
    1. Re:Homeland... and the future... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "what's next? Tracking chips implanted in everyone? I don't know where this is all headed, but there are some crazy politicians and military forces out there that think they should play god to their own citizens."

      Interesting that you should say that, considering that Bush has been reported to be activly trying to bring about the End Times. No links, cause I'm lazy. Google is your friend, though.

  27. Raises a question: by Runefox · · Score: 2, Funny

    But can they run Linux?

    --
    Screw the rules, I have green hair!
    1. Re:Raises a question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Smile! AMRAAMs love you!
      R-77s love you more efficiently over a greater range and cost less. Their little sister R-73s are still a generation ahead of anything the US has deployed.
    2. Re:Raises a question: by Runefox · · Score: 1

      Ah, the AMRAAMski. Yeah, those are pretty neat, and use a better guidance system in my opinion. The sig's mainly to quote someone who I used to play Fighters Anthology with a long time ago. I figure it's a good balance between cheese and humour.

      --
      Screw the rules, I have green hair!
  28. Time for tinfoil by truthsearch · · Score: 1

    It's time to wrap my umbrella in tinfoil and use it every day. At least it's more comfortable than the tinfoil hat.

    1. Re:Time for tinfoil by tfiedler · · Score: 1

      Make sure you don't use aluminum foil.

      --
      Democrats and Republicans are like AIDS and Cancer, I want neither!
  29. America's new twist on an old sport by billcopc · · Score: 2, Funny

    How high do these things fly above ground ? Are then within rifle range ? :) Skeet shooting could take on a whole new perspective!

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
    1. Re:America's new twist on an old sport by keeboo · · Score: 1

      How high do these things fly above ground ? Are then within rifle range ? :) Skeet shooting could take on a whole new perspective!

      I guess one rifle probably could destroy (or at least damage it badly) one of these.
      What I'm more unsure is whether would they send you to Guantanamo or do the dirty job locally?

    2. Re:America's new twist on an old sport by QCompson · · Score: 1

      Man, you must be one horny son of a... Oh, nevermind, I misunderstood.

    3. Re:America's new twist on an old sport by DeltaHat · · Score: 1

      Quick! Somebody call Dick Chaney!

    4. Re:America's new twist on an old sport by 42Penguins · · Score: 5, Informative

      I'd watch myself if I were you.. these people don't exactly have a sense of humor.
      In fact, saying it publically in my town (via letter to the editor) will get you arrested:
      http://www.wlio.com/localNews.aspx?NewsID=3246

    5. Re:America's new twist on an old sport by castlec · · Score: 1

      Dude, who wants to really admit they are from the Lima area?? Good ole Ada.... I ever so slightly miss thee :o)

      --
      When I tell an object to delete this, am I killing it or telling it to kill me?
    6. Re:America's new twist on an old sport by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Among the witnesses testifying for the prosecution: T-S-A officials, local authorities, and the airport's owner.

      Well there's a set of disinterested, objective parties if I've ever seen one.

      A couple of years back, there was a telephone workers strike in the San Francisco Bay Area. During the negotiations, someone ripped out a handful of wiring from a couple of B-boxes.

      The first thing the grasping bastards in the local PDs did was to start the usual overcharging by asserting that, if the perpetrators were apprehended, they would go for the basic four year prison term, plus a three year "terrorism enhancement"

      It's because of this kind of bullshit (read -- extortion) that people in general have little respect for our laws. They'll obey them only to the extent that they fear apprehension and prosecution by our fascist LEOs.

      When guns are outlawed, only the government will have guns. -- Edward Abbey

  30. I know what they're going to use it for. by AxemRed · · Score: 1

    *cough* border patrol *cough*

  31. Yea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I won't need to buy clay pigeons any more!

  32. And more importantly, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Do you need a permit for these things? Or are they classified as varmints, and therefore, can be hunted at any time with no bag limit?

    Finally a hunting sport vegans can enjoy! All the hunting, none of the guilt!

    ---------
    Human rights

  33. I acutally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Saw this thing flying by my window the other day (I live right next door to the county in question). I thought those damn kids next door were screwing with me, so I went to find the shotgun. When I went out to shoot it, it was gone.

  34. Until you kill someone idiot by technoextreme · · Score: 1
    How high do these things fly above ground ? Are then within rifle range ? :) Skeet shooting could take on a whole new perspective!

    Yeah now you have a big giant projectile flying towards the ground which could land on someone's house. Not to mention whenever you miss you will have a hail of buckshot flying randomly away. I really hope this was a joke. Also, I have only heard of a Predator Drone being shot down once and that was with an RPG. So I don't even think you would be able to shoot them down in the first place.
    --
    Ooo man the floppy drive is broken. No wait. The computer is just upside down.
  35. Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 5, Funny
    "The issue came to head when AOPA learned that the Gaston County Police Department in North Carolina had bought a "CyberBUG" UAV from Cyber Defense Systems."

    Every fucking time I turn around another police outfit from Bumblefuck, U.S.A. has bought itself a shiny new toy with my "homeland security" tax dollars. (Add your least favorite story about the new SWAT team in a county with three homocides a year, an armored car for a town of 50K people, etc.) And because there usually aren't any terrorists anywhere near them, these knuckledraggers end up figuring out a way to chase the usual crowd of inbred drunks around town with it.

    1. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by Y-Crate · · Score: 1
      Every fucking time I turn around another police outfit from Bumblefuck, U.S.A. has bought itself a shiny new toy with my "homeland security" tax dollars. (Add your least favorite story about the new SWAT team in a county with three homocides a year, an armored car for a town of 50K people, etc.)
      Oddly enough, it seems to be most prevalent in the Red States that are so incredibly vocal about how much they truly, passionately hate taxes and government programs, but fight their way to the front of the trough to get any pork they can - even if the money could be better spent actually helping people who might just need it. The Homeland Security funds are distributed in ways that ensure sparsely populated states get less per-capita than repeat targets such as New York.
    2. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by Voltageaav · · Score: 5, Informative

      Not all UAV's are all that expensive really. The Raven UAV used by the US military costs about $35,000. Less than the average squad car and probably much more useful. This is probably the closest thing to what they are talking about using in current use by the US government. It's been used with great success in the field http://www.1id.army.mil/1ID/News/September/Article _06/Article_06.htm . Also, as they are used more widely and production increases, costs to produce them will drop.

      --
      Someone save me from this sanity.
    3. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by ivan256 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oddly enough, it seems to be most prevalent in the Red States that are so incredibly vocal about...

      Oh, please. I'm guessing that you only pay attention to negative details about people you disagree with. Look around some blue states now and then. Tell me why back-woods suburbs need a fleet of SUV patrol "cars" and a million dollar 4" thick bullet-proof vestibule in their police station lobby when the only violent crime in town in the last decade involved a drunk guy and a knife. Pick a party... Pick a state... They're all guilty of the pork.

      Also, your last sentence doesn't seem to mean what you wanted it to mean... Either that or you have a really screwy vision of who needs the funds.

    4. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 2, Insightful
      "Not all UAV's are all that expensive really. The Raven UAV used by the US military costs about $35,000."

      Of course, you're omitting training, storage and repair costs and the time lost putting a cop in front of a TV screen instead of out on the streets.

    5. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by rcs1000 · · Score: 1

      Don't forget, you don't have to put an expensive American policeman in front of the screen.

      All over America, politicians are investigating ways to lower the cost via outsourcing. Bids have been recieved from Iran, North Korea and Cuba. Administration officials have praised globalisation; said one "it's terrific; we get greater security for our people, while simultaneously lowering our costs." Perot Systems, well known for liberal attitudes and support of employment in American, has agreed to administer the system. :-)

      --
      --- My dad's political betting
    6. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by will_die · · Score: 1

      It was forced through by Sen. Patrick Leahy that all states get a portion of the money, instead of the orginal plan that high risk areas get the money. He and his party are happy that some place that has no real need gets new armored vehicle but places which could use them have spend all thier share.
      Most states have no real use for the money so after purchasing vests for all police station that wanted them it has become first come first served.

    7. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by centipetalforce · · Score: 1

      That's actually even more scary. Think about how easy it would be to have one flying 24/7 over every city. Think about it, every porch will be photographed, and if you leave your window open they won't hesitate to shoot pictures of you in front of your monitor. So you will forgive me if the enthusiasm in your post frightens me.

    8. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by EnglishTim · · Score: 1

      The Raven UAV you link to is a small hand-launched vehicle for doing short-range low-alititude surviellance. It's basically not much more than an electric model plane with a camera and some neat navigation electronics.

      The article mentioned UAVs flying at 12,000 feet, which sound much more like full-sized pilotless planes. They're certainly not going to cost anything close to $35,000.

    9. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by OhHellWithIt · · Score: 1
      . . . to chase the usual crowd of inbred drunks around town with it.

      Maybe it's because the usual crowd of inbred drunks are more of a problem. How many people are killed by drunk drivers each year?

      I'm not disagreeing with you, BTW. I grew up in BF, U.S.A., and I can't begin to count the number of federally-funded projects (long before anyone had heard of Al Qaeda or Bin Laden except maybe the Bush family) that went in and were then allowed to waste away from neglect because the town/county wasn't even willing to pay for its upkeep.

      Anyway, I'm against these drones because they might collide with the black helicopters.

      --
      "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell
    10. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nd because there usually aren't any terrorists anywhere near them, these knuckledraggers end up figuring out a way to chase the usual crowd of inbred drunks around town with it.

      You were modded funny, but I think you were serious. Here's a hint to all you NYC self-persecuted types: terrorists hit other places, too. Remember Oklahoma City; and in fact Al Queda threats were stopped against prominent West Coast targets. So pull your noses out of your navel.

    11. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by artifex2004 · · Score: 1
      Less than the average squad car and probably much more useful.


      Really?

      Can it fly in bad weather?
      Can it transport apprehended suspects?
      Can it be used as a traffic barrier?
      What about the "community presence" factor?

    12. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      You know, Gaston County is a suburban county just west of Charlotte, NC, part of a metropolitan area with a population of around two million. Hardly "bumblefuck."

    13. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      How many people are killed by drunk drivers each year?

      Less than the number distracted by cell phones or lack of sleep. In fact, drunk driving is now to the point where it is inconsequential. If you've noticed, MADD has started programs to lower speed limits and other things unrelated to drunk driving. Why? Because they have run out of things to be mad about. They've gotten everything the've ever asked for, and they mostly worked. Drunk driving isn't a problem anymore, based on the actions of watchdog groups like MADD.

      Oh, and I don't drink and I've never been drunk, so don't take my comments as some sort of justification for my own actions.

    14. Re:Goddamn Homeland Security Slush Fund... by OhHellWithIt · · Score: 1
      Wow! I haven't looked into statistics on drunk driving lately, but I guess I wouldn't call it inconsequential until I stop seeing articles about people killed or maimed by drunks. The only things I see that need doing at this point are mandatory jail time for driving under suspension or after revocation, and continuing education to ensure the next generation knows it's dangerous and wrong to get behind the wheel after too much alcohol.

      MADD lost my support here when they began calling for a 0.05% threshhold of legal intoxication. When you get that low, there have to be other factors beyond alcohol that cause an accident, like excessive speed, inattentiveness, sleepiness, etc. That's one problem with some advocacy organizations, is that they aren't willing to go away when the problem they were formed to address is gone.

      Anyway, to get back on topic, I sure hope the FAA wiLl apply the same alcohol standards to pilots of unmanned aircraft that they apply to the pilots of manned aircraft.

      --
      "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell
  36. Re:If I had mod points... by symbolic · · Score: 1


    I'd mod this post up.

  37. UAVs vastly superior to blimps by GuyMannDude · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Unmaned blimps are far more fuel efficient than unmaned planes. Plus they can stay airborne for more time. Why don't they use blimps all along ?

    Because you can't reroute blimps to get a closer look at something very easily.

    Funny this article gets posted while I'm in the middle of writing a proposal for follow-on funding on my research into UAV control algorithms...

    Endurance is a concern. Collision avoidance is a concern. But UAVs offer incredible surveillance opportunities that stationary sensors just can't match.

    • First, blimps are pretty damn obvious. Small UAVs (SUAVs) aren't nearly as noticable so there's the ability to conduct covert surveillance. Very useful if you're using the videofeed from an SUAV to direct police to intruders.
    • UAVs can be rerouted to obtain favorable viewing geometries. Suspect went around the corner so you lose clear line of sight? Just move the sensor to another position. Same with obscuration due to smoke, fog, etc. UAVs give you the ability to pick your line of sight.
    • While SUAVs can be used for covert surveillance, they can also be used to make it very obvious to a vandal or other petty criminal that they are being observed. Want to scare off the suspect? Just have the UAV follow him really conspicuously. Eventually he'll hear the motor of the plane and notice this thing is tailing him.
    • SUAVs are reasonably cheap, too. Some of these models are little more than model aircraft with sensors glued onto them.

    I could go on and on but I need to get back to writing my UAV proposal. UAVs are one of the hottest military technologies these days. It's not surprising that the commercial and civilian sector is starting to take a look at how these maturing drones can be used to solve their problems.

    GMD

    1. Re:UAVs vastly superior to blimps by Chr0nik · · Score: 1

      Since when were blimps NOT arial vehicles?

      --


      ... what did you expect, something profound?
    2. Re:UAVs vastly superior to blimps by Nethead · · Score: 1
      Want to scare off the suspect? Just have the UAV follow him really conspicuously. Eventually he'll hear the motor of the plane and notice this thing is tailing him.

      That's where I start to question things. If someone is being stalked by a UAV how will they know who the stalker is? Will a 'suspect' be able to get a badge number?

      --
      -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    3. Re:UAVs vastly superior to blimps by drgonzo59 · · Score: 4, Funny
      Take your pistol, shoot it down and wait and see who will come after you to you arrest you for shooting down their drone.

      Even better! Build you own drones to fight the drones that stalk you or build a EMP emmiting device and watch these suckers drop from the skies like frozen turkeys.

    4. Re:UAVs vastly superior to blimps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      They are not. They are a renewable source of flying thing. Its, .. Its like nuclear power, .. a renewable source .. of energy, .. only blimps fly. Trust me I know about these things.

      ~George Bush

    5. Re:UAVs vastly superior to blimps by Carthag · · Score: 1

      Or you could get a gang of baseball players to knock down the copseyes with chunks of concrete & have Ron Cole take a look at it.

      Just don't come running to me when you can't get any drinking water!

    6. Re:UAVs vastly superior to blimps by JustOK · · Score: 2, Funny
      Since when were blimps NOT arial vehicles?

      I thought they were Times New Roman...
      --
      rewriting history since 2109
    7. Re:UAVs vastly superior to blimps by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      And then you'll only need to attach a gun (hint: http://slashdot.org/hardware/04/12/02/007253.shtml ?tid=216&tid=103 ) to UAV to be able to kill a suspect immediately on the scene of a crime.

    8. Re:UAVs vastly superior to blimps by operagost · · Score: 1

      AC trolls are the only true source of perpetual stupidity.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    9. Re:UAVs vastly superior to blimps by winwar · · Score: 1

      So, is there any data out there on their spud resistance? :)

      While small, they do tend to fly slow and straight.... :)

  38. my god by Aurisor · · Score: 2

    OK guys. The government is literally, unabashedly making automated drones for domestic surveilance....it's like hey guys, here are some neat robots we're going to use to spy on you with. This is literally, undeniably, frighteningly Orwellian.

    Of course, journalists must be up in arms over this, right? Yes! Finally, our free press is holding our government accountable!

    Oh wait. No.

    "That raises not just privacy concerns," but [ insert a whole screenful of blather about how the FAA might have trouble "integrating" these drones into their flight paths. ]

    Next we'll be seeing articles about how digital media companies are rushing to produce products that cut back on that pesky echo in your phones due to all the government wiretaps. "It raises not just privacy concerns, but audio fidelity ones as well!"

  39. Let them do it within United States territory! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As soon as you people get a clue that the words "United States", and U.S. means the government. The name of the government is "United States".
    So are you a Walmart citizen? Home Depot citizen?
    Why do you swear under penality that you are a U.S. Government citizen?
    Do you have a United States issued serial number? No? How about SSN? OH! That serial number! You are owned! Get a clue!
    Stop them by stop being owned!

    So I see no problem doing this in U.S. territory. Keep it in D.C. and those islands they own.
    But just don't do it here in the several States.

  40. Half-Life 2 by tmasky · · Score: 1

    I always scoffed when people claimed that Half-Life 2 was "so realistic". Well bugger me, they weren't wrong - just early.

    1. Re:Half-Life 2 by Patrik_AKA_RedX · · Score: 1

      Do you now understand what Steam is? HL2 was designed to analyse how people would rebel against a suppressive regime. Via Steam all those gamers were analysed and with that data they modified their practices. After HL3 rebellion will be impossible and the 1000 year lasting copyright empire will be a fact.

      You may not believe this, but the government is already changing your enviroment to prevent rebelion. Here is some prove:
      * Go outside and look in garbage bins, crates and dark corners. You notice all the healthpacks, weapons, ammo and powerups are gone.
      * Get a crowbar (if you can find one, see above) and try to break open a crate. You find that they have made them of incredible strong material. * Go to a restricted area (like an army bunker), you'll find that the key or code for a locked door is suddenly no longer hidden on your side of the door.
      * Try to buy some instant-health-pack. These are suddenly no longer available. Shop-keepers have already got their memories altered about these items and wouldn't know what you're talking about. Even magical items are no longer in stock.
      * Jump up against a concrete brick. Instead of the brick breaking up and you getting a coin, you'll get a headache and no brickbreaking.

      As you can see, they're acting fast, so start collecting any magic mushrooms, flowers and stars you can find. Before even those are gone...

  41. 2084 by headkase · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I wish Orwell's 1984 was required to be taught and discussed to death in citizenship classes in high school. What most people don't seem to understand is that 1984 is not really about "big brother" but instead it foretells what Orwell deeply distrusted: a global information system and the abuse of it. In a way Orwell was a pessimist - he knew that no matter how well intentioned any system would be abused. UAV's are a symptom of Orwell's fears, they are just more information inputs into a global database. By themselves it's almost silly to complain about them but in aggregate with other databases the whole becomes dangerous to liberty. Everyone has broken some law somewhere and if that information is easily looked up it makes everyone susceptible to blackmail - who did you have an affair with last year? There was an old soviet joke about having laws against everything so if the KGB wanted you they would simply selectively enforce any law they wanted to against you. What citizens should demand to combat Orwell's dystopia is transparency in the process' and records of their government. Yes some things do need to be classified but they are usually the exception and not the rule. And no matter how classified everything should eventually become known.

    Anyway, I'm too drunk to continue so please correct and extend what I've said. Goodnight. ;) :)

    --
    Shh.
    1. Re:2084 by Kukuman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It was at some schools I went to (we moved around a lot). But all those schools were in pretty liberal areas, so it was like preaching to the choir. The people who really need to read it are the ones who have never really been exposed to its ideas.

    2. Re:2084 by GJSchaller · · Score: 1

      There was an old soviet joke about having laws against everything so if the KGB wanted you they would simply selectively enforce any law they wanted to against you.

      I have been told by a cop friend that modern US police are trained that if they want to pull someone over, they can at will, and then to look for a reason to do so as they approach the car. 99% of the time, they will find a legitimate breach of the law by the time they reach the driver: Dice form mirror, license plate frame, etc. - all minor crap that has no real impact, but can be used as a legal reason to pull someone over and talk to them. Legally, the cop's ass is covered because they have a reason to pull you over if asked, even if they didn't see it when they pulled you over - they just won't admit that part.

    3. Re:2084 by glas_gow · · Score: 1
      What citizens should demand to combat Orwell's dystopia is transparency in the process' and records of their government.

      It seems to me that there is plenty of transparency at the moment. It's almost a joke that everyone knows - and no one denies - the litany of judicial oversights, wiretaps, renditions - it's so well known I don't even have to go on. AND, I think this is where the comparisons to totalitarian states end. This is more frightening, in a way, because it's happening in front of our eyes, by administrations we supposedly chose and there seems to be nothing anyone can do about it.

    4. Re:2084 by zen-theorist · · Score: 1
      I wish Orwell's 1984 was required to be taught and discussed to death in citizenship classes in high school. What most people don't seem to understand is that 1984 is not really about "big brother" but instead it foretells what Orwell deeply distrusted: a global information system and the abuse of it. In a way Orwell was a pessimist - he knew that no matter how well intentioned any system would be abused. UAV's are a symptom of Orwell's fears, they are just more information inputs into a global database. By themselves it's almost silly to complain about them but in aggregate with other databases the whole becomes dangerous to liberty. Everyone has broken some law somewhere and if that information is easily looked up it makes everyone susceptible to blackmail - who did you have an affair with last year? There was an old soviet joke about having laws against everything so if the KGB wanted you they would simply selectively enforce any law they wanted to against you. What citizens should demand to combat Orwell's dystopia is transparency in the process' and records of their government. Yes some things do need to be classified but they are usually the exception and not the rule. And no matter how classified everything should eventually become known. Anyway, I'm too drunk to continue so please correct and extend what I've said. Goodnight. ;) :)
      wow, am interested to see what you have to say when you are sober. :)

      saw V for Vendetta yesternite, its made by the Wachowski brothers, and shows a terrorist's retaliation on a totalitarian government. i am glad hollywood releases such flicks, inspite of the extra meat, extra cheese they add to each of their dishes.

    5. Re:2084 by Vskye · · Score: 1

      I wish Orwell's 1984 was required to be taught and discussed to death in citizenship classes in high school.
       
      It was part of my required reading back in high school english class back in the mid to late 70's, and it should be required today. I swear, some of the stupid shit that they teach in schools today, ask my two boys about any WWII, Korea, Vietnam or Cival War history they just have a blank stare for the most part. Hell, I might just be old school also.

      --
      Life was hell, then I discovered Linux...
    6. Re:2084 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really, you were too drunk to start. Sadly, you were also too drunk to know it.

    7. Re:2084 by Ratso+Baggins · · Score: 1
      Citizen's Initiated Referendum, where the citizens make the decisions by referendum. Compulsory Citizenship classes in schools. At least one free Media outlet funded by gov, but not answerable in any way to it - only to the citizens. Personal accountability for politicians and corporations.

      The sad/ironic thing is the US constitution and bill of rights already do an excellent job of defining a reasonable and free society. I believe a good quick fix would be to lower the legal status of the corporation to below that of the individual. Triple bottom line (financial, environmental and social) accounting would help tremendously, if there was a real way to implement it.

      --

      --
      "we live in a post-ideological world..." - Billy Bragg.

    8. Re:2084 by magicchex · · Score: 1

      I'm not certain that it was required, but 1984 was definitely read in at least one of the English classes I took in high school.

      --
      How many fulltime jobs can one man have?
    9. Re:2084 by Jeremi · · Score: 3, Insightful
      It seems to me that there is plenty of transparency at the moment. It's almost a joke that everyone knows - and no one denies - the litany of judicial oversights, wiretaps, renditions - it's so well known I don't even have to go on.


      Just because we know about a lot doesn't mean that there isn't a lot more that isn't public knowledge. By analogy: if you turn on the light and see several cockroaches, it's a very good bet that your house has many other unseen cockroaches in it as well.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    10. Re:2084 by sydneyfong · · Score: 1

      I'll be modded down, but...

      If the fear is that the govt will/may use the data to impose arbitrary laws on you, why tackle the access to data if you could (theoretically) tackle the LAWS instead?

      --
      Don't quote me on this.
    11. Re:2084 by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      It takes an "Animal Farm" to create a "big brother".

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    12. Re:2084 by Stiletto · · Score: 1


      History is not one of the subjects tested on standardized tests. The results of these tests are used by the government to determine school funding. Is it any surprise that children are no longer being taught history?

      In this way, the government determines what is taught in school. Now... Why do you suppose it is that the government no longer wants history to be taught in school???

    13. Re:2084 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see you've interpreted 1984 the way most people interpret The Catcher in the Rye. That is to say, without the sense of irony.

      Winston Smith was only arrested, tortured and debriefed when he repeatedly declared himself a terrorist. He was handed all the information he would need to make an informed choice when he was interviewing with Inner Party Guy (it's been a few years, so the names escape me) with his girlfriend. Inner Party Guy seemed to be about ready to induct Winston into the ranks of the Inner Party, by giving him the book by Emanuel Goldstein about how the party is run. Then Winston, the moron, decided, "ooga booga, I'm gonna blow up some buildings."

      Next thing you know, he's sent through exactly the rigamarole he was expecting in the first chapter. He knew that he'd be arrested and tortured for trying anything overtly, but he decided to go up to the Man and say, "Hi there! I'm a terrorist! Look at me!"

      The moral of the story isn't "Duh, police state == bad!" The moral is that you shouldn't be like Winston Smith. 1984 rings true today because it rings true in ANY society. There's always going to be a pseudo-Marxist interpretation for ANY industrial or post-industrial society.

      Indeed, the police state that the US is degenerating into is becoming worse than 1984, because nowadays they're arresting way more people than just poor stupid braggarts like Winston.

    14. Re:2084 by kinkos · · Score: 1

      I completely agree with everything stated by the PP. All i can really add is that V for Vendetta (the movie) shows a good example of how present USA is headed the way of Britain in V for Vendetta. Go out and see it - Kick Ass movie :)

      --
      Open Source, Open Mind
    15. Re:2084 by kinkos · · Score: 1

      Remember, remember the fifth of November
      The gunpowder treason and plot.
      I see no reason why gunpowder treason
      Should ever be forgot.

      --
      Open Source, Open Mind
  42. Everybody is blinded by ModernGeek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Everybody is blinded by the media and by schools. Teachers are threatened by the government, and are forced to spread the propaganda to our children, and it is even starting to happen in Universities. Patriotism is being turned into extremism. History teachers and professors know about it, people who read the news from free media outlets such as this one know about it, but the masses cannot even fathom the idea that our government is corrupt and are fixated into this mindset that if a superior (President, Media, Retail Salesman) tells them something, that they must obey and follow. Any out-speak or saying different to them is seen as uncivilized and outrageous.

    --
    Sig: I stole this sig.
    1. Re:Everybody is blinded by zardo · · Score: 1

      This is getting spooky!

  43. Contrarian view by GuyMannDude · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The first is the same bread-and-circuses problem that plagued the Roman Empire. As long as they have beer and football, Mountain Dew and XBox, or their cell phones and MTV, most Americans are quite content.

    Funny you should mention beer, football, cell phones, mass media, and MTV in your post about why UAV surveillance is evil.

    Most people are disgusted by the post-SuperBowl riots that envitably ensue when a few celebrating football fans, drunk with beer, start using the occasion as an opportunity to cause mayhem. UAVs monitoring a crowd can make sure that troublemakers are quickly identified and subdued by police before they incite a violent riot.

    MTV and other youth-oriented mass media are fairly blatant in their encouragement of young people to protest the G8 summit or the meeting of the World Bank by going ape shit. Gone are the days of peaceful protests. Leaders of political groups have realized that causing mayhem is one sure-fire way of attracting attention (positive or negative -- it doesn't matter) to their cause and making life tough for their political enemies. Attempts by police to remove troublemakers from the crowd of mostly-peaceful demonstrators is foiled as highly-organized groups use cell phones to adapt to police movements in real-time.

    It's a multifaceted problem, and no solution is readily available.

    Oh, indeed it is a multifaceted problem. It's not clear to me, however, that you have considered the other facet of surveillance and what it means in today's society. Technology is a tool. It can be used for good or for evil.

    GMD

    1. Re:Contrarian view by necrognome · · Score: 1

      They had a name for folks like yourself in mid-20th-century Europe. I believe it was: collaborator...

      --


      Let's get drunk and delete production data!
    2. Re:Contrarian view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > They had a name for folks like yourself in mid-20th-century Europe. I believe it was: collaborator...

      They had a name for folks like you in mid-20th-century Eruope. No, wait, they didn't have names. But they had numbers tattooed on something destined to become a "Geheime-statz-polizei" - (literally translated as "homeland - state - police", often abbreviated "ge/sta/po") officer's lampshade.

      It's over man. When they come for you to ask you to sign on as a collaborator, those are the only two options.

      "I know I'm a louse. But I'm a live louse."
      - Daffy Duck, ca. 1950s, old Unistat cartoons

    3. Re:Contrarian view by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      They had a name for folks like yourself in mid-20th-century Europe. I believe it was: collaborator...

      They also had a name for the very same folk in late 18th century America. The word was patriot.

      Authority is not always bad. it is always POTENTIALLY bad, but if you can't see the difference then you're probably better off in a totalitarian nanny state.

    4. Re:Contrarian view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gone are the days of peaceful protests.

      Yeah, but most of the extreme agitators are government plants, just like with COINTELPRO. Draw the other nuts to you and you'll know who to arrest when the heat is on...

    5. Re:Contrarian view by slashdotmsiriv · · Score: 1

      You might want to put your real name in the signature and refer to this post in you DARPA proposal ...

    6. Re:Contrarian view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. "Geheime" means secret.

    7. Re:Contrarian view by Gulthek · · Score: 1

      People are human. Riots, drunkenness, disorderly conduct, crime, etc. are all part of what it means to be human in a human society. Extra surveillance won't change anything about human nature one bit, all it will do is give hotheads more reason to lash out against authority.

    8. Re:Contrarian view by MrCopilot · · Score: 1
      The problem is we have more than 1 kind of UAV.

      First you got your Observers like
      GlobalHawk http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RQ-4_Global_Hawk

      and then there is the
      Armed Flying Bringers of Death
      Predator Drone http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RQ-1_Predator

      Problem is you give no resistance to one you get both. Then we got skynet in the freakin sky man.

      Man where is my beer?

      --
      OSGGFG - Open Source Gamers Guide to Free Games
    9. Re:Contrarian view by necrognome · · Score: 1
      They also had a name for the very same folk in late 18th century America. The word was patriot.


      Perhaps you "learned" American history from an speculative history novel in which the British surpressed the revolutionary uprising. Perhaps your view of history "makes sense" to you. If you are religious, incurious, and statist, then you have little to worry about as far as omnipresent aerial surveillance is concerned. The fascism-to-be will very much represent your interests.
      --


      Let's get drunk and delete production data!
    10. Re:Contrarian view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Geheime a break.

    11. Re:Contrarian view by martinX · · Score: 4, Funny

      "The RQ-1A/B Predator is a system, not just an aircraft. The fully operational system consists of four air vehicles (with sensors), a ground control station (GCS), a Predator primary satellite link communication suite and 55 people."

      That thing is freakin' awesome.

      Except for the whole Deathbringing, and suppression of my rights and stuff. But still...

      --
      When they came for the communists, I said "He's next door. Take him away. Goddam commies."
    12. Re:Contrarian view by tm2b · · Score: 1
      They also had a name for the very same folk in late 18th century America. The word was patriot.
      Well, some did. Others called them "Tories."
      --
      "It is our blasphemy which has made us great, and will sustain us, and which the gods secretly admire in us." - Zelazny
    13. Re:Contrarian view by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      MTV and other youth-oriented mass media are fairly blatant in their encouragement of young people to protest the G8 summit or the meeting of the World Bank by going ape shit.


      Care to back that accusation up with some evidence? MTV may do many things, but (rap videos aside) inciting riots is not one I've heard them accused of doing before.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    14. Re:Contrarian view by Belgand · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Most American patriots that tend to be revered today seem, when looked at a bit more objectively and in comparison to the rest of their society, to be dangerous free-thinking radicals. A number of important ones had religious ideas (i.e. deism) that were far from the majority (either then or today). They met in small groups and supported armed rebellion against the state or disruptive civil disobedience of various forms. They used the media of their time to disagree vehemently with the established order often through the use of self-publishing (dare I make an obvious blogging comparison?).

      In the end they developed a largely new system of government that vastly differed from what else was around at the time and put a great deal of emphasis on limiting the powers of the government in favor of personal rights (note how the Bill of Rights largely makes use of negative rights by stating that "Congress shall make no law restricting the right of foo" rather than explicitly guaranteeing that right).

      These are people that would be (rather rightly I think) seen as dissidents, potentially dangerous seperatists, and enemies of the state. It's quite likely that the average American would fear and distrust them if they were acting today.

      Perhaps their biggest flaw was that, like most idealists, they assumed that people were as deeply passionate about these things as they were. That they cared strongly about injustice and the abuse of power and were willing to act on it.

      They weren't patriots because they supported the current government. They were patriots because they didn't.

    15. Re:Contrarian view by Magada · · Score: 0

      In an earlier post, you say you're working on control algoryhims for UAV's. While I have all admiration fro tecnical advancements, I must ask where your ethics are. More to the point, where is your sense of self-preservation? Do you trust your leaders enough to provide them with advanced technology you *know* can be used for evil?

      --
      Something bad is coming when people are suddenly anxious to tell the truth.
    16. Re:Contrarian view by TapeCutter · · Score: 1

      "Gone are the days of peaceful protests."

      Exactly what day(s) are we talking about here? The days when people bashed "nigger lovers", the day MLK was shot, the days spooks followed John Lennon around or something more recent in the days "Cat Stevens" is considered a terrorist sympathiser. I have picked US events since most will recognise them. From what I can remember and what I read, western governments in general got a whole lot more peacefull when crowds started chanting "the whole world is watching" toward the end of the 60's. But that development and mobile comms is about all that has changed about "protesting" since WW2.

      There were "troublemakers" back then, just as there always has been. It is also not unknown for "troublemakers" to be sponsered by governments so as to "discredit groups" they see as a threat, "make cause" for increased powers or even just to "flush out the troublemakers" because they are feeling parinoid. I'm not only talking about third world dictatorships, western governments have a poor records of abstaining from these tatics and I see no reason why they would suddenly stop when global parinoia has gone through the roof.

      What also has me baffled is why you have decided MTV are the "troublemakers", 1/4 million people went to the G8 protest with very reasonable demands. Like it or not, 1/4 million people is a large (unarmed and in places drunk) army who were better behaved than any regular unifomed army that decides to "demand" something. Just how long they would stay peacefull when a UAV swoops, (or drops), out of the sky and into the crowd is debateable.

      I do agree mobile comms are being used in sophisticated ways to manipulate crowds via disinformation and coordinate the ensuing riots. I have no idea who is responsible or how UAV's could possibly help ease tension in an already angry mob.

      --
      And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
    17. Re:Contrarian view by Aceticon · · Score: 1

      "The RQ-1A/B Predator is a system, not just an aircraft. The fully operational system consists of four air vehicles (with sensors), a ground control station (GCS), a Predator primary satellite link communication suite and 55 people."

      If they deliver a version where the 55 people are scantilly claded playmates put me down for half a dozen.

      Come to think of it, forget the air vehicles, the ground control station and the Predator primary satellite link communication suite and just deliver me the 55 scantilly claded playmates, preferable NOT in the puff-up version.

    18. Re:Contrarian view by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Yep. He's confusing that with the StaSi. The guys that made sure that in Soviet Germany, the party comes to YOU.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    19. Re:Contrarian view by arexu · · Score: 1

      "Perhaps their biggest flaw was that, like most idealists, they assumed that people were as deeply passionate about these things as they were. That they cared strongly about injustice and the abuse of power and were willing to act on it."

      Oddly enough, a fair amount of the people DID feel that way in the 1770s. But the same sort of dreamers were dead wrong (or hadn't managed to convince the masses) in 1812. Sometimes idealists and the populace share the dream, and sometimes they don't.

      A stopped clock is right twice a day, I won't use it as my primary timepiece, but it might remind me to check the time. I still know it's broke, just like your conspiracy rant.

      --
      I'd love to help you out -- which way did you come in?
    20. Re:Contrarian view by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Say again? You mean the rebels who conducted a successful rebellion against their king and country? Those guys were real authoritarians, all right. Definitely walked the straight and narrow. Big supporters of doing what you're told.

    21. Re:Contrarian view by mirio · · Score: 1

      And this is supposed to be CHEAPER to operate than a traditional manned aircraft? Whatever.

    22. Re:Contrarian view by Bob3141592 · · Score: 2

      These are people that would be (rather rightly I think) seen as dissidents, potentially dangerous seperatists, and enemies of the state. It's quite likely that the average American would fear and distrust them if they were acting today.

      Perhaps their biggest flaw was that, like most idealists, they assumed that people were as deeply passionate about these things as they were. That they cared strongly about injustice and the abuse of power and were willing to act on it.

      They weren't patriots because they supported the current government. They were patriots because they didn't.


      Bravo. If I could mode your post up past 5, I would.

      The most important thing to a functional democracy is an informed and involved public. I doubt that the current administration fears anything more. I also doubt that a different administration would be much better in that regard, but at least I can hope.

      --
      In theory, there's no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is.
    23. Re:Contrarian view by Irish_Samurai · · Score: 1

      This is why I have promptly registered my child at Battle School

      You know, it pays to have your kids in high places.

    24. Re:Contrarian view by SoulRider · · Score: 1

      to be dangerous free-thinking radicals.

      Or are they dangerous free-radical thinkers?

    25. Re:Contrarian view by Dark_MadMax666 · · Score: 1

      How much support staff/infrastructure is needed for 4 F15 you think? And the cost of 4 f15 themselves + trained pilots .Predator is a bargain today and will be only more cost effective in the future ( when there is more automation and less dumb humans wasting resources).

    26. Re:Contrarian view by SpyPlane · · Score: 1

      It was never meant to be cheaper, just safer. The Air Force would rather loose a ton of $5mil unmanned aircraft than a single $20mil fighter with a pilot inside. Plus all that support infrastructure is not just for ONE aircraft. The base station et. al. is a one to many type setup.

      --
      "We need a fourth law of Robotics: Stop Fingering My Wife"
    27. Re:Contrarian view by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's very depressing that a comment of pure common sense is considered +5.

    28. Re:Contrarian view by mirio · · Score: 1

      F15s are NOT surveillance aircraft. Domestically, a Cessna 172 could perform the functions of these drones. How many people does it take to operate a 172 for surveillance? Three. One pilot, one spotter/equipment operator and and one mechanic.

    29. Re:Contrarian view by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      Psst... think past 1776 to what they did when they actually won.

      The American Revolution was a war for a better government, not anarchy. And once that war was won, well, every red-blooded dissident became a red-blooded supporter of the government.

    30. Re:Contrarian view by Belgand · · Score: 1

      Oh, I agree entirely and I certainly don't support anarchy (either as a legitimate political idea or as a teenager who wants to appear rebelious). My main point is the whole "with us or against us" way things have been cast with the idea that "patriots" always support the government no matter what and that they can do no wrong. My intent was to contrast this with the fact that the people most commonly agreed upon as patriots are people who looked at their government, saw it wanting, and felt that the only way to make things right was through a radical change.

      Patriots are people who care about their country... not the government or country as a legal entity, but the place where they live and feel that it should be governed justly. I would say that fairly frequently this requires being at odds with the government and demanding more from them. Someone who feels that the country is always great and never questions that their leaders are always doing the right thing is about as far away from being a patriot as possible.

  44. Unconstitutional Surveilance? by the_REAL_sam · · Score: 0

    The question in my mind is when is "blanket surveilance" of the public so universal that it is unconstitutional by default.

    Relevant to finding the answer is:

    From the Bill of Rights

    Amendment 4
    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, adn the persons or things to be seized.

    Amendment 8
    The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

    LAW:
    There are ?federal?state? antistalking laws. I presume they must apply to police departments, too, if there is no warrant issued to follow a person, or use cameras/private eyes to follow them around in public areas.

    Yea there's got to be more to it, but that's my layman's effort at constitionally examining evil 1984 Domesting Spy Drones.

    That's for the legal analysis. And now for the larger implications:

    BUSH PUSHED FOR
    SECRET TRIALS
    SECRET DETENTION
    TORTURE
    UNIVERSAL RIGHT TO DECLARE WAR
    ROVING SURVEILANCE
    ROVING WIRETAPS
    SEARCHES WITHOUT WARRANTS
    SECRET GOVERNMENT OFFICES
    SECRET PRISONS
    SECRET PRISONER LISTS
    PRISONERS WITHOUT RIGHTS
    SHADOW GOVERNMENT
    EXPANDING THE MILITARY FOR A TRUMPED UP WAR
    AND THE BASTARD WAS NEVER EVEN PROPERLY ELECTED!
    WTF!!

    I BELIEVE BUSH DID 911 ON HIS OWN,
    TO JUSTIFY BUILDING A POLICE STATE.
    THE BUILDUP TO THE WAR HAS ALL THE HALLMARKS OF 1937 GERMANY.

    I DON'T WANT A POLICE STATE.
    THERE IS NO PUBLIC MANDATE FOR A POLICE STATE.

    IT'S EITHER TIME TO STORM THE WHITE HOUSE!
    -OR-
    DRAFT G.W. BUSH INTO THE INFANTRY, TO THE FRONT LINES, TO IRAQ. AS A RIFLEMAN!
    -OR-
    IMPEACH

    IT IS TIME!!!

    --
    "Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us." -Jesus Christ The Lord's Prayer
    1. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you remember, the 5th of November?
      The death of democrocy;
      I see no reason,
      That vote counting treason,
      Should ever have been forgot!

    2. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by denis-The-menace · · Score: 1

      As an outsider looking in to the US, I am amazed how you were so quick to try to impeach a president for lying about where wiley jr. was hiding but not one interpreting your constitution and law to suit his handlers' needs.

      The guy is making the whole world hate Americans more (as if that was possible)and stripping your civil rights daily.

      I thought you guys got angry when you get screwed.
      I guess TV, iPODs and pr0n distractions are just to great.

      Well I guess I'll have to post my comments as ANON in case the Shrub feels like liberating my country.

      --
      Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    3. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      As an outsider looking in to the US, I am amazed how you were so quick to try to impeach a president for lying about where wiley jr. was hiding but not one interpreting your constitution and law to suit his handlers' needs.

      Could you elaborate on how aircraft surveillance is unconstitutional or against the law? The Supreme Court's ruled in Florida v. Riley that a warrant isn't needed to observe property from public airspace.

    4. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      Reading the wikipedia entry, it is far from clear to me (who is not a lawyer, btw) that these sorts of drones would be constitutional based on this ruling. The entry says:
      Any member of the public could legally have been flying over Riley's property in a helicopter at the altitude of 400 feet and could have observed Riley's greenhouse. The police officer did no more.
      The entry also notes that the police officer observed the marijuana with his naked eyes, and makes reference to reasonable expectation of privacy. So at least superficially, this seems to me to be quite different than, eg, a drone with a powerful telescopic lense on it to observer people's faces, as many posts here seem to imply might want to be done with these drones. (Obviously, certain applications would not require this.)

    5. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by the_REAL_sam · · Score: 1

      Well I'm not an attorney, but I wanted to get the ball rolling in a direction of analysis of the topic the (un)constitutionality of blanket eavesdropping. They might have a precident allowing aerial photos of the country but that is by no means a precident in favor of ubiquitous police awareness.

      I loosely observed 3 potential defenses against blanket eavesdropping: 1 defense from antistalking laws, and 2 defenses from the constitution. I believe each of the defenses provides SOME degree of coverage against sweeping aerial police eavesdropping.

      The fourth amendment provides that the government needs to have probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describe the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. In this case what those drones could do would be to search EVERYTHING without a warrant. They could look into windows, back yards, cars, etc. I'm personally GLAD we have our fine police officers on patrol, but that doesn't mean I want them examining every aspect of my life and/or building databases on the populace. No thanks. And I don't see much difference between that and the drones.

      The Eighth amendment specifies that some rights exist, and are protected by the constitution/bill of rights, EVEN THOUGH THEY ARE NOT SPELLED OUT. The eighth amendment is the sort of broad protection which could be used to explain why police state evesdropping powers are unconstitutional. I say that because the degree of abuse from ubiqutious surveilance c/would be staggaring. I believe that much eavesdropping is PRECISELY the sort of unforeseen "discretionary right" that the framers had in mind when they added the eighth amendment.

      The law(s) against stalking ? I don't know much about them, but basically their existance means that it's not only unconstitutional (for a cop) to follow a person around and search them without warrants or probably cause, it's also illegal.

      OK? I hope that helps. It's good to know about that supreme court case. Can you share any of the details?

      PS
      IDK why they modded my first post down. It is a reasonable post.

      --
      "Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us." -Jesus Christ The Lord's Prayer
    6. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      They might have a precident allowing aerial photos of the country but that is by no means a precident in favor of ubiquitous police awareness.

      I'd certainly be opposed to ubiquitous awareness, especially if such awareness wasn't accompanied by a similar ability of the populace to keep tabs on police activity. However, it isn't ubiquitous awareness which is being proposed, but awareness of areas visible from public areas. In effect, it's just like the awareness provided by satellites, but with higher spatial and temporal resolution.

      The fourth amendment provides that the government needs to have probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describe the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. In this case what those drones could do would be to search EVERYTHING without a warrant.

      If I understand the Florida v. Riley ruling correctly, the whole point is that aerial observation doesn't constitute a search, just as watching somebody from the top of a building doesn't constitute a search.

      The Eighth amendment specifies that some rights exist, and are protected by the constitution/bill of rights, EVEN THOUGH THEY ARE NOT SPELLED OUT.

      Oh yes, certainly. I'm of a libertarian slant, and tend to defend my rights rather rabidly. However, I'm still not clear on what this hypothetical right you're referring to is. The right to not be observed by people in public places?

      I'm personally GLAD we have our fine police officers on patrol, but that doesn't mean I want them examining every aspect of my life and/or building databases on the populace.

      I support the right of individuals to engage in such activity (particularly when it's targetted towards politicians). Since police officers are also individuals, it's difficult for me to think of a solid reason to deny them that right.

      The law(s) against stalking ? I don't know much about them, but basically their existance means that it's not only unconstitutional (for a cop) to follow a person around and search them without warrants or probably cause, it's also illegal.

      Hm... I'm actually not familiar with such laws myself. If anyone else has further insight, I'd love to see it.

      IDK why they modded my first post down. It is a reasonable post.

      Who knows... mods are crazy.

    7. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      The entry also notes that the police officer observed the marijuana with his naked eyes, and makes reference to reasonable expectation of privacy. So at least superficially, this seems to me to be quite different than, eg, a drone with a powerful telescopic lense on it to observer people's faces, as many posts here seem to imply might want to be done with these drones.

      Could you elaborate on what makes it different, besides a matter of degree? What if the marijuana were spotted by a telescopic lens on an unmanned satellite?

    8. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by the_REAL_sam · · Score: 1

      >However, it isn't ubiquitous awareness which is being proposed, but awareness of
      >areas visible from public areas. In effect, it's just like the awareness provided
      >by satellites, but with higher spatial and temporal resolution. ...
      >If I understand the Florida v. Riley ruling correctly, the whole point is that
      >aerial observation doesn't constitute a search, just as watching somebody from the
      >top of a building doesn't constitute a search.

      Well there must be a reasonable delineation, and the technological feasability/proposal of these aerial drones makes that clear. The drones are going to be equipped with ?high resolution? cameras, and able to fly/change direction and position of focus, and zoom in/out. For heaven's sake, if a cop were doing such a thing with a helecopter and a zoom lense it would be a crime. Doing it with a drone should not receive any more leniency than that. And the fact that drones are more available only exacerbates the impact of the first claim.

      >However, I'm still not clear on what this hypothetical right you're referring
      >to is. The right to not be observed by people in public places?

      The "hypothetical right" is that (unless warrants are issued) people have the right to live their lives free from "ubiquitous/heavy scrutiny". According to that hypothetical right, there is no agent who is/should be capable of pulling in EVERY DETAIL of someone's LIFE and (without warrant) making a complete documentary of it. Yet the drones could make such possibilities into reality. The drones could look into every car window, every apartment window, every house/back yard...Everything.

      >I support the right of individuals to engage in such activity (particularly when
      >it's targetted towards politicians). Since police officers are also individuals,
      >it's difficult for me to think of a solid reason to deny them that right.

      I agree that it is important to boost public accessibility to records which make available the behavior of public officials. In particular, conflicts of interest should be visible so that people can identify clear cases of abuse.

      Anyhow, I suppose it is important to distinguish, between an "off duty cop" with his freedom-loving "civilian cap" on, and an "on duty" cop, who's job is to catch crooks, but is also sworn to uphold and respect the constitution of the United States of America.

      --
      "Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us." -Jesus Christ The Lord's Prayer
    9. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      For heaven's sake, if a cop were doing such a thing with a helecopter and a zoom lense it would be a crime.

      Is it a crime? Granted, I may be naive in this area, but I don't think it should be illegal for a person to make use of a helicopter and zoom lens simultaneously, even if they happen to be a police officer.

      The "hypothetical right" is that (unless warrants are issued) people have the right to live their lives free from "ubiquitous/heavy scrutiny".

      Even if they're a celebrity or a politician? IMHO, it should be permissible to place politicians under an extreme amount of scrutiny.

      According to that hypothetical right, there is no agent who is/should be capable of pulling in EVERY DETAIL of someone's LIFE and (without warrant) making a complete documentary of it.

      Every detail which is visible from a public place.

      Yet the drones could make such possibilities into reality. The drones could look into every car window, every apartment window, every house/back yard...Everything.

      As can any human police officer, or any private citizen. The difference is simply a matter of degree.

      I should probably mention that I'm a supporter of sousveillance, bottom-up surveillance of those in authority.

      Anyhow, I suppose it is important to distinguish, between an "off duty cop" with his freedom-loving "civilian cap" on, and an "on duty" cop, who's job is to catch crooks, but is also sworn to uphold and respect the constitution of the United States of America.

      If an off-duty cop observes something, is s/he allowed to act on that information when they're back on-duty?

      One of my main contentions is that I can't see any way to effectively place restriction on police surveillance in public areas which wouldn't also put unreasonable restrictions on the sorts of observations private citizens are allowed to engage in.

    10. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      First let me say that if this is something controversial enough that it might go to the supreme court, there is no way I am not going to be capable of arguing convincingly that it is unconstitutional. I am just suggesting that in my layman's opinion based on this wikipedia article, there appear to be important differences.
      1) The Florida Supreme Court ruled this was an illegal search. So the sort of activity in FL vs Riley would seem to be almost be an illegal search, even though it wasn't. This tells me we need to look at the SCOTUS decision carefully.
      2) The wiki article states: The Supreme Court reversed the decision of the Florida Supreme Court with a four-vote plurality, arguing that the accused did not have a reasonable expectation that the greenhouse was protected from aerial view. So this search was legal because Riley did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy that was violated by the police helicopter. So then we have to ask: why was his reasonable expectation of privace not violated?
      3) Wiki now quotes the supreme court decision as Any member of the public could legally have been flying over Riley's property in a helicopter at the altitude of 400 feet and could have observed Riley's greenhouse. The police officer did no more. So I (naively) take this to mean that if other people could not have also flown over his greenhouse and observed his marijuana, then his privacy would have been violated.
      4) However, the SCOTUS seems to place an even stronger requirement for the search to be legal. Again, wiki quotes them as: As far as this record reveals, no intimate details connected with the use of the home or curtilage were observed, and there was no undue noise, no wind, no dust, or threat of injury. In these circumstances, there was no violation of the Fourth Amendment. So if the search had also observed 'intimate details connected with the use of the home" (whatever that means, exactly), then seeming it would have been illegal.
      5) So I claim first that because a spy plane with a powerful camera on it may very well violate the standard set in (3). In particular, if the sort of technology required for such a camera is very expensive and as a practical matter only available to law enforcement. So this would mean that if I am in my greenhouse, and a spyplane takes a picture of my face, this has violated my reasonable expectation of privacy because there is no way that an ordinary citizen could have observed the same things that the spy plane observed. Perhaps my reasonable expectation of privace would have been violated even if only the marijuana had been seen, but from an altitude too high for a normal citizen to have seen it from a plane (ie, space). The possiblity of this seems to be supported by O'Conner's dissent, which wiki quotes as stating: [I]t is not conclusive to observe, as the plurality does, that "[a]ny member of the public could legally have been flying over Riley's property in a helicopter at the altitude of 400 feet and could have observed Riley's greenhouse." Nor is it conclusive that police helicopters may often fly at 400 feet. If the public rarely, if ever, travels overhead at such altitudes, the observation cannot be said to be from a vantage point generally used by the public and Riley cannot be said to have "knowingly expose[d]" his greenhouse to public view.
      6) Further, I claim that even if a spyplane or satelite doesn't violate (3), it would still be very limited by the standard in (4) so that the blanket statement that a warrant is not needed to observe property from the air is too vague to be completely true.

      So I guess that the difference is just a matter of degree, but to me, it looks like degree is everything.

    11. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by the_REAL_sam · · Score: 1

      >I don't think it should be illegal for a person to make use
      >of a helicopter and zoom lens simultaneously, even if they
      >happen to be a police officer.

      Well I had considerably more in mind when I said that. I think you probably understand what I had in mind. I was talking about the ability to park a helicopter/ drone/ what-have-you outside peoples' windows with a zoom lense, finding gaps in their curtains, (or forcing them to USE curtains to defend their otherwise-safe privacy) and zooming into their private activity? Do you think that police should be able to ride on the (hypothetical) loophole in the constitution, and gather surveilance without a warrant? IT IS Clear that the police have constitutional restrictions placed on their behavior. Just as it is clear that their are authorized to make arrests, to incarcerate, to carry weapons, handcuffs, handguns, AND that it is a CRIME to resist their activity. Those are some GOOD REASONS to restrict their rights. And if a person cannot think of HOW to seperate the cop's private right to observe, and their public duty to respect the constitution, well I really don't think that should translate into a privacy nightmare for me.

      I agree with you that keeping a watchful eye on the financial activities of public servants is a very good idea. But I don't think it is appropriate to turn their lives into living hell, depriving them of all manner of personal privacy. (For starters, do you WANT people who don't value their own privacy in office? Would you expect them to value your own?) Ultimately, I see NO reason to translate a need to keep a watchful eye on the "backroom agreements" and financial activities of public servants and elected officials into a justification for police state powers.

      The two are very seperate things, and I don't think it's suitable to "muddy" the boundary between them.

      Celeb's? I'm one of those people who thinks celeb's deserve privacy too.

      >If an off-duty cop observes something, is s/he allowed
      >to act on that information when they're back on-duty?

      The question is clear, but the courts are there for a reason, and I believe the specific details of the case are relevant to the answer, so I'm not gonna touch it.

      >One of my main contentions is that I can't see any way
      >to effectively place restriction on police surveillance
      >in public areas which wouldn't also put unreasonable
      >restrictions on the sorts of observations private
      >citizens are allowed to engage in.

      Well I just said something about that above here. Cops have extra rights and protections, granted by law. That makes them a different type of citizen while they're wearing that badge. The badge means the cop is acting on behalf of the goverment, which is obligated to respect the constitutional rights of the citizens. Therefore, restricting some of the cop's rights is appropriate.

      =)

      --
      "Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us." -Jesus Christ The Lord's Prayer
    12. Re:Unconstitutional Surveilance? by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      Well I had considerably more in mind when I said that. I think you probably understand what I had in mind. I was talking about the ability to park a helicopter/ drone/ what-have-you outside peoples' windows with a zoom lense, finding gaps in their curtains, (or forcing them to USE curtains to defend their otherwise-safe privacy) and zooming into their private activity? Do you think that police should be able to ride on the (hypothetical) loophole in the constitution, and gather surveilance without a warrant?

      I don't consider this a loophole -- there isn't any infringement of private property going on. Rather, I think anybody in a public area should have the right to use whatever camera, zoom lens, or image enhancement algorithm that they want. Of course, being right outside somebody's window probably isn't public airspace. If somebody's shower is visible from public property and they want guaranteed privacy, they should probably get a curtain.

      Celeb's? I'm one of those people who thinks celeb's deserve privacy too.

      Sure, but nobody has a guarantee of privacy when they're visible from public.

  45. drug sting by EraserMouseMan · · Score: 1

    I wonder if monotoring drug trafficing is the main intended use. I guess I really don't mind it. It's just another tool. How could a drone be misused in a way that any other survelance tool can't be?

  46. Welcome to... by Khyber · · Score: 1

    The Surveillance States of CAMerica.

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  47. Skynet by WheresMyDingo · · Score: 1

    um, just checking... do they look anything like this?

  48. Stupid conspiracy nut by technoextreme · · Score: 1
    World Trade Center building 7 fell in exactly the same exactly symmetrical way as WTC 1 and 2, and it was NOT hit by an airplane.
    I don't get it. Why do people believe such asinine things? The buildings caught on fire and collapsed from a failure in structual integrity. They are probably the most dramatic examples but this wasn't certainly wasn't the only time it happened. An oil tanker fire actually caused part of I-95 to buckle thus leaving part of the bridge unusable. The reason why all the of the collapses looked like controlled demolotions is because of Newton. Floor fails and floor fails down ontop of next floor which causes a domino effect. Even if part of the floor was strucually sound it was still going down. Also, those loud explosions you think people heard was the sound of foot wide girders being riped in half. PS. The magic bullet theory is entirely plausible.
    --
    Ooo man the floppy drive is broken. No wait. The computer is just upside down.
    1. Re:Stupid conspiracy nut by bjerko · · Score: 1

      Let people think for themselves! Loose Change Watch 'Loose Change' on Google Video for FREE Then decide for yourself if it's a conspiracy.

    2. Re:Stupid conspiracy nut by deesine · · Score: 1
      Floor fails and floor fails down ontop of next floor which causes a domino effect.

      And with each floor pan falling onto the pan beneath it, a small amount of time is taken (that whole conservation of energy thing, you've prbly heard of it). Yet, when we observe footage of the towers falling, there is no delay. The falling is smooth and without hiccups, not to mention, completely symetrical (including WC7 which was not hit by a plane).

      I used to be one of the people calling this line of thought rubbish. Until I started reading and looking at the evidence. It's compelling. Find out for yourself.

      --
      damaged by dogma
  49. MOD UP (at least don't mod down) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's nice to hear someone questioning slashdot's groupthink once in awhile. He made a legit attempt to contribute something to the discussion. If you disagree with this guy, post a response. Don't do that 'overrated' crap.

  50. You must. by Raven42rac · · Score: 4, Interesting

    You must give up freedom to protect freedom. That is, unless you hate freedom. How did this happen to my country in 6 years? How the fuck.

    --
    I hate sigs.
    1. Re:You must. by Lost+Penguin · · Score: 1

      Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.

      Benjamin Franklin

      --
      I am the unwilling control for my Origin.
    2. Re:You must. by Raven42rac · · Score: 1

      Love the tagline.

      --
      I hate sigs.
    3. Re:You must. by Turn-X+Alphonse · · Score: 1

      That quote is so over used it's pathetic. It's also totally incorrect..

      Lets say a rapist gets into your house and you have your daughter with you. You can lock yourself in a room (hence safety, but can't go any where yet freedom), to protect her. You only have to give it up untill he's gone, now it may just be me but I think I know what I'd do. Do I suddenly not deserve freedom any more?

      Please don't use bullshit quotes, every parrot can repeat them and they never mean anything the parrot thinks.

      --
      I like muppets.
    4. Re:You must. by isotope23 · · Score: 1

      "Lets say a rapist gets into your house and you have your daughter with you. You can lock yourself in a room (hence safety, but can't go any where yet freedom), to protect her. You only have to give it up untill he's gone, now it may just be me but I think I know what I'd do. Do I suddenly not deserve freedom any more?"

      Hmmm, cower and HOPE he goes away? Hope that he doesn't break through a door, just like how he broke into your house? Fuck that.

      He dies or I die, and if I go I sure as hell will try to take him with me. Cops do not stop crime, they are there to pick up the pieces, and to try and stop FUTURE crime by the same offender.

      Freedom is only yours if you are willing to defend it.

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    5. Re:You must. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      umm, i believe that he was talking about freedoms as in inalienable rights. I dont think that your rapist argument holds to the quote.

    6. Re:You must. by betsig339 · · Score: 3, Interesting
      ... A little thought next time before you try and build hypothetical situations.

      By locking yourself in a room you have not relinquished any essential liberties (life, liberty, pursuit of happiness) since, one, you're not dead, two, you are still able to say what you want, practice whatever religion you want, walk back out through the locked door (available option, however ill-decided), and three, you still have the ability to pursue happiness, even if it includes using the firearm you keep in the room (thanks to the liberty to bear arms) as the other replier to this parent suggests doing. No loss of freedom.

      The quote, "Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety," is not sickeningly overused, but rather unobserved too many times. By that I mean the message is not considered, only the imediate implication. It does not stand for "no police! no guns! no survelance," but something closer to "the government is for the people, not the other way around."

      But, since you've decided neither Lost Penguin or I know what Benjamin Franklin intended his audience to understand, please, enlighten us. Also, how is it (the quote) totally incorrect? I'm curious.

    7. Re:You must. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Obviously, it is you who doesn't get it.

      It is a metaphor, not an analogy. I know that analogies are /. tradition but you are obviously confused as to what the metaphors meaning is. On top of that, your analogy is crap.

      We have been told that the enemy hates freedom. That, they don't want us to be free. Yet, you've also been told that in order to protect you from the enemy, they have to take away "some" of your freedom. Do you see the circle here? According to that logic, those who are in favor of taking away some freedom in order to gain safety, have actually given the enemy some of what it wants.

      Freedom _does_ take sacrifice. The real question is:

      Are you willing to sacrifice a bit of your safety for freedom?

      I am.

      Just as many are so willing to sacrifice other peoples lives for a false sense of security vis a vis Iraq, they should be ready to sacrifice a bit of _their_own_ safety for the real freedom of themselves, their families and their fellow citizens.

      Get some balls people.
      If being free means that the odds of me being killed in a terrorist attack goes from 1 in 300,000,000 to 1 in 200,000,000 (which are immensely conservative odds I'm giving here*)- I'm ready to make that sacrifice. Why? Becase being free is what this place is (was) all about.

      [*] - Odds of a U.S. resident being killed by terrorists in a shopping mall, in the coming year, assuming the person spends two hours a week in malls and assuming terrorists destroy one mall (and everyone in it) each week

      1 in 1,500,000

      Assuming the terrorists destroyed one mall each month, the odds would climb to 1 in 6,000,000. This also assumes the total destruction of the entire mall; if that unlikely event didn't occur, the odds would become even more favorable.
      http://www.aei-brookings.org/policy/page.php?id=19

      Here is another saying for you, one that might be easier for you to grasp.

      "I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!"

    8. Re:You must. by 4D6963 · · Score: 1
      It's also totally incorrect.

      For a minute I thought you meant the quote itself was not correctly quoted, but when you say "incorrect" you mean you disagree with it.

      Lets say a rapist gets into your house and you have your daughter with you. You can lock yourself in a room (hence safety, but can't go any where yet freedom), to protect her. You only have to give it up untill he's gone, now it may just be me but I think I know what I'd do. Do I suddenly not deserve freedom any more?

      Oh, what a shit analogy. What does it have to do with the reality? Does hiding yourself mean losing freedom just because you can't move much? Where's the rapist? If you're talking about terrorists, your analogy totally falls apart, cuz when we know there's a terrorist is around, he's already dead, because terrorist are only feared when they die (for kamikaze terrorists at least). And where's the necessary loss of freedom? Ain't none :

      Basically, a 911 type attack is a bullet took to the head. And what we have done before in my analogy means either doing some shit that has nothing to do with it, or start wearing a bulletproof vest. No matter what you do, you'll get a plane in a tower whenever some lunatic feels like. No matter how many bulletproof vests you wear, you'll always be able to take 2 to the head.

      You lose freedom not so you can be protected, but because it serves your administration well.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    9. Re:You must. by ByteGuerrilla · · Score: 0
      That quote is so over used it's pathetic. It's also totally incorrect.. Lets say a rapist gets into your house and you have your daughter with you. You can lock yourself in a room (hence safety, but can't go any where yet freedom), to protect her. You only have to give it up untill he's gone, now it may just be me but I think I know what I'd do. Do I suddenly not deserve freedom any more? Please don't use bullshit quotes, every parrot can repeat them and they never mean anything the parrot thinks.
      Do you actually understand what you're talking about? Scratch that, do you actually understand anything?
      --

      A block of code, sufficiently well-written, is indistinguishable from magick.

    10. Re:You must. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets say a rapist gets into your house and you have your daughter with you. You can lock yourself in a room (hence safety, but can't go any where yet freedom), to protect her. You only have to give it up untill he's gone, now it may just be me but I think I know what I'd do.

      Oh yeah? Well we just passed a law that says you MUST lock her in the room and sit there until he's gone. What happens to the people with guns who were capable of defending their house? Do you feel safer yet?

      Do I suddenly not deserve freedom any more?

      One day, you're out on a business trip and your daughter is raped. Under the new law you failed to lock her in your room and sit there, so you get arrested for it.

      Enjoy your freedom.

    11. Re:You must. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US government has been steadily and continuously expanding its powers, both at home and abroad, for the better part of its existence. If you think the last 6 years are to blame for what you see, then you'd better open your eyes. It is the natural tendency of government to expand in power, because it benefits the power elite.

      The sooner you realize that government operates in the interest of the power elite, and not "the people", the sooner you will understand why all this is happening.

      The reason is that it was bound to happen. What you see (widespread corruption and abuse of power) isn't a malfunction; it is the natural course of government. But how can it be prevented? Don't ask the founders -- they tried and failed.

    12. Re:You must. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did this happen to my country in 6 years?

      GWB became president in early 2001... May have been a contributing factor. :-p

    13. Re:You must. by Raven42rac · · Score: 1

      Let's say a logical fallacy breaks into my argument......

      --
      I hate sigs.
    14. Re:You must. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did this happen to my country in 6 years? How the fuck.

      Oh... hahaha... yeah... I get it... Bush administration.... lol 6 years. /Sarcasm

      You have to be pretty naive to think that this just took 6 years to happen.

    15. Re:You must. by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      It's also totally incorrect.

      Says who? You might ask Tom DeLay who lost his position and now his guns because he became the victim of his own government's abuse of power. Innocent until proven guilty? No, crybabies like you have to be "protected".

      Who needs due process of law when we can all be "safer" from indicted felons like DeLay?

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    16. Re:You must. by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      It didn't happen in 6 years... it has been going on for the last 50. You just noticed it in the last 6 years, because the current president is not charasmatic enough to sell it to you properly. Don't worry, come next election we will have a president who can properly lull you back to sleep with his smooth talkin'.

    17. Re:You must. by BillyBlaze · · Score: 1

      Uh, duh - Freedom is Slavery, didn't you get the memo?

    18. Re:You must. by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      You must give up freedom to protect freedom. That is, unless you hate freedom. How did this happen to my country in 6 years?

      Fear has been used for a lot longer than 6 years. DUCK AND COVER CITIZEN, and be sure to report those communist spies should Y2K cause the AIDS epidemic to reach Bird Flu proportions after terrorists have interbred it with the "poison" ricin and antrax.

      That's if your kids haven't been kidnapped by perverts...that goes without saying.

  51. Finally! by DextroShadow · · Score: 1

    The rednecks can finally shoot at something else other than their cars!

    PULL!

    --
    My karma makes buddha cry.
  52. Um; One question: by Lost+Penguin · · Score: 1

    Would these be the same "Drones" that carry Air to Surface Missiles?
    Like we use in Afganistan and Iraq?
    But we might need a court order to load live rounds, right?

    This may be how the Republicans plan on winning this next election:
    They can link the electronic voting booths to these "unarmed" drones.

    "Press here to vote against Bush" (Swish, Boom) "Next voter please"

    --
    I am the unwilling control for my Origin.
  53. Time to move... by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We've got little time left before the borders completely close.

    There are only two choice at this point in my opinion:

    1) Openly take back the government by hook or by crook. This is costly in life, money, and security but has been shown by other people of the world to work.

    or

    2) Leave the country until it collapses or someone cleans it up. Depending on how you look at it this could be construed as an abandonment of one's responsibilities as a US citizen but those of you with family and small children, like me, should seriously think about what kind of country they are going to grow up in. If they can't defend themselves then you have to move them elsewhere.

    This is one of those times I wish I hadn't been right to wear my tinfoil. I wish I could see a path to be able to remove it. But I don't see that in my lifetime especially if these things get worse as I suspect they will.

    In my opinion this is one step before the wall.

    (Why isn't this article in the YRO section?)

    I await the inevitable mod down by those that think I'm OT, Troll, Overrated, or Flamebait...

    --

    "Bah!" - Dogbert
    1. Re:Time to move... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Leave the country until it collapses or someone cleans it up.

      But where to go?

      If you pick another Western democracy (Europe, Australia, Japan, New Zealand, even Canada) they all seem willing to follow the US's lead on removing civil liberties and spy on their citizens. See the recent National ID card for the UK.
      Plus Canada's too close for comfort if things start flaring up in the US.

      If you pick a country most like to be able to stand up to the US (China) -- well, the human rights in China are already not so great.

      If you pick a small, third world nation, either they will not be able to protect you, or they have high levels of corruption, etc. Even at best, you are most likely simply delaying the problem until survalance and tracking technology reachs there in another 30-40 years, when your children and grandchildren will have to deal with it.

      India has potential, but then again, they also have a semi-hostile nuke-packing neighbor in Pakistan.

      So here is the question I ask the great slashdot masses: if an average income citizen wanted to leave the US, to what country should they be applying for immigration?

    2. Re:Time to move... by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      But where to go?

      If you pick another Western democracy (Europe, Australia, Japan, New Zealand, even Canada) they all seem willing to follow the US's lead on removing civil liberties and spy on their citizens. See the recent National ID card for the UK.
      Plus Canada's too close for comfort if things start flaring up in the US.

      If you pick a country most like to be able to stand up to the US (China) -- well, the human rights in China are already not so great.

      If you pick a small, third world nation, either they will not be able to protect you, or they have high levels of corruption, etc. Even at best, you are most likely simply delaying the problem until survalance and tracking technology reachs there in another 30-40 years, when your children and grandchildren will have to deal with it.

      India has potential, but then again, they also have a semi-hostile nuke-packing neighbor in Pakistan.

      So here is the question I ask the great slashdot masses: if an average income citizen wanted to leave the US, to what country should they be applying for immigration?


      I don't have a good answer for you. It may be that like in Orwell's book there really is nowhere to go. (Or at least it appears that way in 1984.) Fighting might be our only choice. If that is necessary then so be it but consideration for your family should come first in that decision.

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
    3. Re:Time to move... by magicchex · · Score: 1

      So here is the question I ask the great slashdot masses: if an average income citizen wanted to leave the US, to what country should they be applying for immigration?

      This is one of the moments that I'm happy I'm a dual citizen in the US and Poland. By no means do I necessarily desire to live in the highly conservative nation of Poland, but thanks to Poland becoming an EU member nation, I can now live and work anywhere in the EU. The reason I would desire to live in the EU is the options that are available. The EU nations are independent enough that a little "nation hopping" could hopefully be done if the original country I moved to started leaning too much towards US-like policies. This at least gives me some room for movement if things start going sour again.

      --
      How many fulltime jobs can one man have?
    4. Re:Time to move... by Khyber · · Score: 1

      So here is the question I ask the great slashdot masses: if an average income citizen wanted to leave the US, to what country should they be applying for immigration?

      Panama or Vanuatu. The former treats American ex-patriates like gods, and the latter is very, VERY lax on business restrictions, so it's far easier to start and maintain your own business.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    5. Re:Time to move... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Be a man. Don't move-- go down swinging like the rest of us will have to. Don't try to escape your fate.

    6. Re:Time to move... by rehevkor5 · · Score: 1

      I'm a fan of the idea of a tax boycott, myself.

    7. Re:Time to move... by Shihar · · Score: 1

      I await the inevitable mod down by those that think I'm OT, Troll, Overrated, or Flamebait...

      Right. Take a look at this thread. Do you see piles of people saying "Hey guys, be chill, they are just UAVs taking top down shots at people in public?" Not really. At worst you are going to get an overrated for adding nothing to the conversation then the usual "Fuck it! I'm moving to Canada!". Making this line of thinking roughly as reasonable as the "some country did something horrible" story getting responded to with "yeah, but the US sucks too!!!11!!"

      At least we have not imprisoned citizens of Japanese ancestry, segregate out the blacks, kept the women in the damn kitchen, draft everyone of age into the army, and then went out and utterly flatten and destroy cities, kill tens of millions in indiscriminate bombing, and then occupy at a couple of civilizations, doesn't it?

      Oh wait, we have.

      Get a grip on reality. The US has steadily gotten better. The "good old days" as you seem to remember them are a delusion. Hell, it wasn't like Vietnam and the atrocities committed on the citizens (via the draft) and others (via machine guns, bombs, napalm, Agent Orange, exc.) are a distant memory. Exactly what good old days are you pining away for?

      The good old days are here. Discrimination is lower then at any point in history, women make up 57% of college gradates, we have not imprisoned every single person of the same ancestry as we are fighting, and the people are so sensitized to war that some psycho bitch who apparently likes naked Arab men gets the headlines for being an example of the horrific treatment of an occupied nation (versus, you know, US soldiers lining women and children up on the street and executing them Vietnam style).

      Is the best we can find to bitch at being that some fat cop is going to get a fly a UAV to watch a large gathering rather then have to get up off his ass and watch it on foot? Have you ever been to any large gathering of people in the public space? There are always a pile of cops there to break up fights, keep people from pouring into the traffic, and keep the counter-protests for getting murdered/murdering someone. So who gives a flying fuck if instead of one more cop in a cruiser standing on the ground with a beating stick they have a UAV?

    8. Re:Time to move... by bprime · · Score: 1

      Hey Dude, you should move up to Canada. Shit's good up here. Ineffectual minority governments that can't actually do anything - universal health care - good schools - great weather (on the west coast) - lots of jobs. It's God's country :)

      Seriously, all you American /.-ers who bitch and moan about America - I don't blame you, but why don't you just leave?

    9. Re:Time to move... by dodobh · · Score: 1

      India is also in range of Chinese and US warheads. OTOH, we don't care about them, we don't cower in fright that a nuclear war may erupt tomorrow.

      Que sera sera.

      --
      I can throw myself at the ground, and miss.
    10. Re:Time to move... by JollyFinn · · Score: 1
      Leave the country until it collapses or someone cleans it up.

      I have one question. In 1935 if you where dissident in german would you have fled to.

      1. Austria
      2. Poland
      3. france
      4. Hungary
      5. Greece
      6. philippines
      7. ????

      There are plenty of places where you shouldn't of gone at that time. But how would you recongice which place would be "safe" place to go now. Today safe place, don't have any oil reserves, is not English speaking country, nor near one. Does not have large muslim population. etc... United States has such military hegenomy that with its potential if it goes 100% totalian regime with some how people ACCEPTING casualties in war, there is no place which would be safe from that machine. Then with that militarism, there would be military build up else where, and weaker nations would either join bigger nations, or be invaded by them forcefully.

      --
      Emacs is good operating system, but it has one flaw: Its text editor could be better.
    11. Re:Time to move... by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1

      Because we're trying to fix the problem, instead of letting the problem fix itself.

      --
      Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
    12. Re:Time to move... by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      Right. Take a look at this thread. Do you see piles of people saying "Hey guys, be chill, they are just UAVs taking top down shots at people in public?" Not really. At worst you are going to get an overrated for adding nothing to the conversation then the usual "Fuck it! I'm moving to Canada!". Making this line of thinking roughly as reasonable as the "some country did something horrible" story getting responded to with "yeah, but the US sucks too!!!11!!"

      Fair enough. The moderation often doesn't make much sense though.

      At least we have not imprisoned citizens of Japanese ancestry, segregate out the blacks, kept the women in the damn kitchen, draft everyone of age into the army, and then went out and utterly flatten and destroy cities, kill tens of millions in indiscriminate bombing, and then occupy at a couple of civilizations, doesn't it?

      Oh wait, we have.


      And we'll do it again and again and again because the people that are in power now are the children of the people in power then and are taught AND BELIEVE the same as their parents.

      Get a grip on reality. The US has steadily gotten better. The "good old days" as you seem to remember them are a delusion. Hell, it wasn't like Vietnam and the atrocities committed on the citizens (via the draft) and others (via machine guns, bombs, napalm, Agent Orange, exc.) are a distant memory. Exactly what good old days are you pining away for?

      The good old days are here. Discrimination is lower then at any point in history, women make up 57% of college gradates, we have not imprisoned every single person of the same ancestry as we are fighting, and the people are so sensitized to war that some psycho bitch who apparently likes naked Arab men gets the headlines for being an example of the horrific treatment of an occupied nation (versus, you know, US soldiers lining women and children up on the street and executing them Vietnam style).


      Instead we live in a country where we're still fighting a war in a foreign land that uses children occasinally for suicide bombers, has no strategic value other than oil, is eating soldiers and resources by the C5-full, and is rife with corporate greed. Oh and then there's our internal conflicts like a corrupt government that is following the instructions of large corporations and to hell with it's people, that produces drugs with multiple side-effects so they can get the drugs to market and make money at the expense of people's lives (you used to only be allowed one - maybe), that considers personal privacy a threat to it's own power and less important than keeping people from copying that movie or DVD, that has rigged election results - Diebold anyone?, that has no plans for a future that doesn't involve a war somewhere, and that has pissed off most of the civilized and uncivilized world at this point.

      As for the "some psycho bitch who apparently likes naked Arab men" comment, if you really believed in free speech you wouldn't have mentioned it. And our country is all about free speech...right? Or should I stand in a Free Speech Zone before saying that?

      Is the best we can find to bitch at being that some fat cop is going to get a fly a UAV to watch a large gathering rather then have to get up off his ass and watch it on foot? Have you ever been to any large gathering of people in the public space? There are always a pile of cops there to break up fights, keep people from pouring into the traffic, and keep the counter-protests for getting murdered/murdering someone. So who gives a flying fuck if instead of one more cop in a cruiser standing on the ground with a beating stick they have a UAV?

      Because those UAVs have only one use - surveillance. Do you honestly believe that they are only going to use them for crowd control? It's too far and too fast down the "slippery slope" - almost unchecked at this point. Once they get permission to fly them it will be easy enough to widen the search pattern so

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
    13. Re:Time to move... by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      Hey Dude, you should move up to Canada. Shit's good up here. Ineffectual minority governments that can't actually do anything - universal health care - good schools - great weather (on the west coast) - lots of jobs. It's God's country :)

      Sounds fantastic - and I already know some Canadians I could stay with.

      Seriously, all you American /.-ers who bitch and moan about America - I don't blame you, but why don't you just leave?

      Because some of us are married to sheeple and have little lambs. If we were to try to leave it would be like trying to remove a barbed fishing hook - the harder you pull the more it latches on. You have to work the hook out. What use would it be to move and take my child only to be sued for custody and have my child dragged back into the mess?

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
    14. Re:Time to move... by Shihar · · Score: 1

      And we'll do it again and again and again because the people that are in power now are the children of the people in power then and are taught AND BELIEVE the same as their parents.

      No, we won't and we haven't. We couldn't achieve the civil rights abuses that we already have had if we tried. If you are suggesting that this nation is worse off then say 1940, you are bat shit crazy. We will never ever again have segregation laws. Women will never again make up a minority of the college educated people in this world. No, people do not feel the same way they did in 1940. The fact that 57% of all college grads are women pretty squarely rebukes this insane belief. Times and people have changed. The past was not a fairy tale land and today the nightmare. Only in our fairytale imagination can we delude ourselves into thinking that things have actually gotten worse.

      Instead we live in a country where we're still fighting a war in a foreign land that uses children occasinally for suicide bombers, has no strategic value other than oil, is eating soldiers and resources by the C5-full, and is rife with corporate greed.

      We are on what, year 3 of this conflict? We have lost fewer than 2,500 soldiers. That makes Iraq a lesser killer in the US then swimming pools. Get a grip on reality. We have fought major wars at least once every 20 years since 1900. World War I, World War II, Korea, and Vietnam make Iraq look like pocket change. Further, of all of those wars, only Iraq was fought with an all volunteer army. I don't know about you, but I consider a war with under 3000 casualties fought with a volunteer army a pretty damn big improvement over draft armies that managed to score hundreds of thousands of casualties and kill millions in their wake. Again, you are dealing with some serious delusional revisionist history if you think things are getting worse and NOW is the time to run to Canada. You missed the boat. If you don't like this shit, your great grand parents should have bailed because things are only getting better, not worse.

      Oh and then there's our internal conflicts like a corrupt government that is following the instructions of large corporations and to hell with it's people, that produces drugs with multiple side-effects so they can get the drugs to market and make money at the expense of people's lives (you used to only be allowed one - maybe)...

      Right. Unlike in the good old days when the only psyche drug was lithium which was great shit with no side effects. Unlike in the good old days when all surgery involved being split down the middle, pulled apart, and having a pretty moderate to fair chance of being killed. Unlike in the good old days when poorly tested birth control drugs resulted in a rash of babies being born without limbs. In these new and horrible day of drug company abuse, for some reason we seem to be living longer and longer. Why do you think that is? Have we collectively suddenly started eating better (I'll give you a hint, the answer is no, we eat like shit)? Again, you are suffering from some hardcore revisionist history if you think medicine has somehow gotten worse. You are also blatantly ignoring the fact that even though we exercise less and eat worse, we keep on living longer and longer. The good old days when America was wonderful and proper never existed.

      Because those UAVs have only one use - surveillance. Do you honestly believe that they are only going to use them for crowd control? It's too far and too fast down the "slippery slope" - almost unchecked at this point. Once they get permission to fly them it will be easy enough to widen the search pattern so that they cover the local areas for any "terrorist" - which if you recall by law is whatever GWB or Congress Co. says one is. How many sheeple are going to just think "Oh! A Drone! There must be a crowd close by!" and let it pass?

      Have you ever seen a police helicopter? What did you do when you did? Did you freak the fuck out because they

    15. Re:Time to move... by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      No, we won't and we haven't. We couldn't achieve the civil rights abuses that we already have had if we tried. If you are suggesting that this nation is worse off then say 1940, you are bat shit crazy. We will never ever again have segregation laws. Women will never again make up a minority of the college educated people in this world. No, people do not feel the same way they did in 1940. The fact that 57% of all college grads are women pretty squarely rebukes this insane belief. Times and people have changed. The past was not a fairy tale land and today the nightmare. Only in our fairytale imagination can we delude ourselves into thinking that things have actually gotten worse.

      So instead we have an increase in religious discrimination, exploitation of anybody with a low income, the inability to effectively protest without being labeled a terrorist, and people living to work not working to live. While you are correct in the fact that some things have gotten better OTHER things have gotten worse. And will continue to do so. Just because we don't have the SAME violations and problems doesn't mean we won't have ones equaly as bad.

      We are on what, year 3 of this conflict? We have lost fewer than 2,500 soldiers. That makes Iraq a lesser killer in the US then swimming pools. Get a grip on reality. We have fought major wars at least once every 20 years since 1900. World War I, World War II, Korea, and Vietnam make Iraq look like pocket change. Further, of all of those wars, only Iraq was fought with an all volunteer army. I don't know about you, but I consider a war with under 3000 casualties fought with a volunteer army a pretty damn big improvement over draft armies that managed to score hundreds of thousands of casualties and kill millions in their wake. Again, you are dealing with some serious delusional revisionist history if you think things are getting worse and NOW is the time to run to Canada. You missed the boat. If you don't like this shit, your great grand parents should have bailed because things are only getting better, not worse.

      Still too many dead and too much spent for what amounts to nothing more than sheer greed. The price isn't the issue - it's what we're buying with that price. A life is worth much more than a barrel of oil.

      Right. Unlike in the good old days when the only psyche drug was lithium which was great shit with no side effects. Unlike in the good old days when all surgery involved being split down the middle, pulled apart, and having a pretty moderate to fair chance of being killed. Unlike in the good old days when poorly tested birth control drugs resulted in a rash of babies being born without limbs. In these new and horrible day of drug company abuse, for some reason we seem to be living longer and longer. Why do you think that is? Have we collectively suddenly started eating better (I'll give you a hint, the answer is no, we eat like shit)? Again, you are suffering from some hardcore revisionist history if you think medicine has somehow gotten worse. You are also blatantly ignoring the fact that even though we exercise less and eat worse, we keep on living longer and longer. The good old days when America was wonderful and proper never existed.

      Granted there are reasons to accept a drug with multiple side effect but most of the time the drug manufactureres CAN do better but DON'T due to financial pressure for profit. I'm sure there were much better drugs than Lithium too.

      As for the babies being born with defects - my daughter is an Autistic 8 eyar old. Her Autism was catalyized by the Thimerosal put into the MMR and other vaccine shots. That data was IGNORED AND HID until people beat the doors down exposing it. Medicine may have gotten better but the ethics behind the medicine have gotten worse.

      Have you ever seen a police helicopter? What did you do when you did? Did you freak the fuck out because they WERE WATCHING YOU. No. You probably didn't give a shit while the police helicopter went on not

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
    16. Re:Time to move... by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      The only reasonably free countries I can think of off hand is:

      Switzerland, Iceland.

      But even these have problems. Iceland is defended by the U.S., and Switzerland in right in the middle of the totalitarian EU.

    17. Re:Time to move... by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      Leave the country until it collapses or someone cleans it up. Depending on how you look at it this could be construed as an abandonment of one's responsibilities as a US citizen but those of you with family and small children, like me, should seriously think about what kind of country they are going to grow up in. If they can't defend themselves then you have to move them elsewhere.

      The trouble is, where are you going to go? Europe and Canada are becoming totalitarian too, and everywhere else in the world is poor, or oppressive, or too small to defend themselves from the big guys when they decide to spread their totalitarianism.

    18. Re:Time to move... by Braino420 · · Score: 1

      2) Leave the country until it collapses or someone cleans it up. Depending on how you look at it this could be construed as an abandonment of one's responsibilities as a US citizen but those of you with family and small children, like me, should seriously think about what kind of country they are going to grow up in. If they can't defend themselves then you have to move them elsewhere.

      Ya, but where would you go? I need to learn Swedish

      --
      They call me the wookie man, I guess that's what I am
    19. Re:Time to move... by Shihar · · Score: 1

      So instead we have an increase in religious discrimination...

      Discrimination is a fact of life. It will never go away. The best you can do is make sure that it isn't institutionalized and try and educate people. Religious discrimination in the US is at an all time low. The few whack jobs who discriminate don't even number enough to organize into something like the KKK. At best, we have the same old boring marginalized neo-nazi's and the like who get the shit beat out of theme by vigilantes every time they make too much noise. Hell, I was at an anti-KKK rally just a few months back. There were about a dozen tools in white robes preaching the evils of Arabs and blacks in a cage surrounded by a few hundred very pissed off people ralling against them. If they didn't have a cage and riot squad protecting them, they would have been torn limb from limb. The only thing the average person is intolerant over is intolerance. ... exploitation of anybody with a low income...

      Right, because the coal mines of the of middle America, the cotton farms of Southern America, and the industrial factories of Northern America were always kind to the poor. Now the poor have terrible jobs like McDonalds, mopping the floors, and working at Wal-Mart. Oh god, the humanity of it all. Give me the good old days of black lung. ...the inability to effectively protest without being labeled a terrorist...

      You have got to be joking me. You are complaining that people label protests terrorist? Hi! Welcome to the US! The first amendment is in full effect here. This means that you can call Bush a fucking psycho Nazi from hell come to eat little children, and his dumb red neck supporters can call you terrorist. You don't have a "right" to not be called inane names. Any and every public group in the US gets names flung at them, from right wing think tanks to ultra-left environmentalist groups. If you are a public group or movement, someone is going to call you names. Suck it up and try and remember the old childhood saying. Sticks and stones will break my bones... ...and people living to work not working to live.

      Remember back in the good old days when this didn't happen? Remember when we had a large social safety net, adequate health care for all, and no one worked long hard hours? Oh shit. That time never existed.

      If you are living to work, I suggest cutting the fuck back on your spending, getting a new job, and getting your life in order. I personally have followed my own advice and refused jobs that had a slave driver as a boss. Some people get off on sacrificing their lives for few extra dollars. More power (and money) to them.

      You are not going to starve in the US. If you have ever left the US and seen a third world nation you will quickly realize that even if you lived in the darkest US ghetto, you have in fact never actually seen a starving person in your entire life. You have it good, your hours are not that long, and the pay is pretty damn good. Don't like what you have? Get something else. If you have use citizenship, even a high school drop out can work to do more then live. Granted, you might not live in the lap of luxury, but you sure as shit don't need to work 80 hours a week to keep from starving to death.

      As for people doing getaways? They're criminals - what stops them from buying a rocket to shoot down drones? They don't cost that much on the black market supposedly and a criminal isn't going to care where the thing lands as long as they can get away. At least with a police helicopter the pilot has a damn good reason for landing the thing intact and not on someone's house.

      I'm sorry, but are you a fucking idiot? Do you think your person who gets into a high speed chase has a fucking anti-aircraft missile on hand? Have you ever heard of a criminal using a fucking rocket to shoot down a police helicopter? Have you ever even heard of a police helicopter being shot do

    20. Re:Time to move... by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      United States has such military hegenomy that with its potential if it goes 100% totalian regime with some how people ACCEPTING casualties in war (emphaisis mine)

      Why do you think they are putting so much effort in drones? Remember, the Iraq war has only killed 3,000 people. Thats 3,000 real people, the tanned coloured ones don't matter to anyone it seems.

  54. Can we have Jessica Alba take 'em out when needed? by neurocutie · · Score: 1

    Thing is.... the drones in Dark Angel were ARMED, so not only for surveillance, but "enforcement" (aka assassinations). I guess Bush won't be announcing that part of the program too soon...

  55. Re:BY and FOR the people? by failure-man · · Score: 4, Informative

    World Trade Center building 7 fell in exactly the same exactly symmetrical way as WTC 1 and 2, and it was NOT hit by an airplane. ALL the collapses looked like controlled demolitions. See the news footage in the movie Loose Change. It is a work in progress, but already very informative.

    Why is there always one of these?
     
    Okay, I'll preface this by saying that I'm a leftist, and hate the Bush administration as much as anyone, but there WERE NO FUCKING EXPLOSIVES IN THE TOWERS.
     
    They fell like controlled demolitions because controlled demolitions are implosions. What do you think happens when you heat and soften the trusses on an exoskelital building?
     
    (I'll tell you because you obviously don't know.) The trusses sag and fail causing the outside, load bearing members buckle without their lateral stabilization, the top falls, and the whole thing comes crashing inward.
     
    It's the fire, not the impact that caused the real damage, and if I remember rightly number seven was heavily fire damaged as well. Next time try a little science before breaking out the crackpot conspiricy theories please. There are plenty of legitimate reasons to hate the Bush administration that don't make you look like a nut.

  56. Next Big Story: by DoctaWatson · · Score: 1

    Congress Passes Anti-Crowbar Legislation

  57. Scared? by The+Step+Child · · Score: 1

    There are a lot of posts on here screaming "Orwellian" and such, but suppose these drones don't make it into the mainstream. How long until the resolution and capture speed improves on satellites to the point of making these drones unnecessary?

  58. Who watches the watchers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    UAVs are one of the hottest military technologies these days. It's not surprising that the commercial and civilian sector is starting to take a look at how these maturing drones can be used to solve their problems.

    ..Once everyone is watching everyone else then we'll have no more problems?

    Thats great, because I hear that naked people have the most to hide

  59. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  60. Bees?!!?! by ImaLamer · · Score: 0, Redundant

    In Soviet Union, Drone Flys You!

    (also, I for one welcome our giant bee overlords)

  61. Oops. by Mancat · · Score: 1

    Hey, don't mind me if I accidentally shoot one down. I'm sure it will be just a mistake, and not on purpose at all. No way would I do that, 'cause I like being spied on.

    --
    hello dear sirs my name is jamesh i are india (bihar) can u guide me install red had linux 9?
  62. Closing down of airspace by mnmn · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Most of the airspace below 12500 feet in north america is class X (dont remember X), where you can fly around anywhere without a previously declared plan. You need a mode C transponder, but youre free to fly VFR. Thats reflective of the freedom provided to you. Certain regions, cities, airports etc are more restricted, but the default piece of ground is this VFR class.

    Looks like this class might be eliminated completely to allow drones to fly around anywhere. Which means a general aviation airplane will have to always file a flightplan and possibly remain on IFR, except on airport approaches, where they can request a VFR type approach. Flying will never be the same.

    Its easy to sell this to the general public. "We dont want to let anyone fly just anywhere" and "we could use the extra security" and "War against terrorism" whatever that means. But somewhere in the future Americans will realize what they lost.

    --
    "Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
    1. Re:Closing down of airspace by stovetop · · Score: 1

      Where did you get your license? This description bears no resemblance to the US airspace system.

    2. Re:Closing down of airspace by mercuryresearch · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Your interpretation is incorrect. Most airspace is class E -- which is controlled airspace -- but airspace designations are primarily about visibility minimums and communications requirements, and have little bearing on flight plan or instrument flight status. Classes D, C, and B are all associated with areas in and around airports, with increasing requirements for communications (D,C, and B all require communications with the airport tower, C requires transponder, and B requires transponder and permission to enter the airspace.) So today, even the most restricted airspace (B) you can fly over without a flight plan.

      So unless most airspace is declared class B, it's not really an issue. I really don't think the FAA / ATC want to deal with the millions of clearance requests, etc they'd encounter if they did something so drastic.

      What's more likely is that they'll swiss-cheese the airspace with temporary flight restrictions (TFRs) around areas where the drones operate. Presumably they could become so numerous as to make private flight planning a bit difficult. Before then, however, there will probably be enough crashes with drones to result in them be forced into small saftey zones. If the Predator is any indication, there will be many, many crashes as UAVs get used more extensively -- which would totally undermine any safety-selling approach that might be tried.

    3. Re:Closing down of airspace by zamboni1138 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Classes of US Civil Airspace:

      A: 18,000+ feet, IFR flight plan required
      B: Major airport (LAX, SEA, ORD, etc.), 10,000 MSL and below
      C: Medium airport, usually only to 4,000 AGL
      D: Small airport with tower, usually only to 2,500 AGL
      E: Everywhere else above 1,200 AGL
      G: Everywhere else below 1,200 AGL

      You are thinking of Class E and G airspace.

      Just remember in Class G to stay *at least* 500 feet from my barn.

      MSL = Mean Sea Level
      AGL = Above Ground Level

    4. Re:Closing down of airspace by phliar · · Score: 2, Insightful
      12,500? The only place I can think of in the FARs about 12,500' is for oxygen use in unpressurised planes. Possibly you're thinking of 18,000' -- everything above is Class A, i.e. IFR only.

      IFR -- Instrument Flight Rules; there are no visibility and ceiling requirements when you're IFR since you're required to be in contact with ATC and controlled by them. VFR is Visual Flight Rules, i.e. you're flying by looking outside, so obviously there are various visibility and ceiling requirements. Airspace is not divided into IFR and VFR. Individual flights are operating under IFR or VFR. Contrary to what you see on TV, a VFR flight does not need to file a flight plan.

      Class A is for IFR traffic only. All other classes allow VFR traffic. The lower classes have various different vis/celing requirements and ATC service. Class G is the lowest, where there is no ATC service and everyone just has to negotiate and cooperate (the "Small Airplane Big Sky" theory of collision avoidance). In the US the only Class G airspace is out west over unpopulated areas, and below a certain height above ground (a few thousand feet depending on various factors). Most airspace in the US is Class E; classes B, C, and D are around airports. In Class E airspace, IFR traffic needs to file a flight plan, get clearance etc. etc. but VFR traffic can just go, provided visibility requirements are met.

      "Mode C" is a type of radar transponder. Unlike movie radar with green blips and pings, in the modern radar environment ATC knows not just where an airplane is but also how high it is, thanks to Mode C. In the US, although a Mode C transponder is not required (except within 30 nautical miles from a major airport like JFK), if your airplane has one you are required by law to turn it on. Airplanes that don't have Mode C transponders are usually old small airplanes without electrical systems or radios (like the Piper Cub). Your average Cessna has Mode C.

      From a pilot's point of view, UAVs are no more an issue than any other military traffic. UAVs -- like airliners -- will know where the other airplanes are, even without help from ATC. UAVs will be controlled by ATC, just like the airliners and the military. We no more need to get rid of Class E airspace because of UAVs than because of airlines.

      Although in the current political climate anything is possible. Shouldn't you need a clearance to drive on the freeway? A multi-ton chunk of metal travelling a 75 mph is a huge and deadly amount of energy, and elementary safety requires the government know exactly where every car is. Or do you have something to hide?

      --
      Unlimited growth == Cancer.
    5. Re:Closing down of airspace by Witchblade · · Score: 4, Insightful
      So unless most airspace is declared class B, it's not really an issue. I really don't think the FAA / ATC want to deal with the millions of clearance requests, etc they'd encounter if they did something so drastic.

      Ah, but if you've been paying attention the past few years, the FAA and the major airlines seem hellbent on removing general aviation from the US altogether (closing non-airline airports, insisting on implementing per request fees for ATC, trying to ground all aircraft built before the last few decades. And don't get me started on the stupidity of every major city wanting a Washington D.C. style Air Defense Identificaton Zone). I suspect having nothing flying anywhere near the ground except governemnt controled drones would suit them just fine.

      What's more likely is that they'll swiss-cheese the airspace with temporary flight restrictions (TFRs) around areas where the drones operate. Presumably they could become so numerous as to make private flight planning a bit difficult.

      Or they'll just make private flying illegal.

    6. Re:Closing down of airspace by Knackered · · Score: 1

      From a pilot's point of view, UAVs are no more an issue than any other military traffic.


      Except that the responsibility for "see and avoid" in VFR traffic isn't clear for UAVs. Is the remote controller responsible for see and avoid? What if they don't have 360 degree vision from the UAV?

      a.
      --
      a.
    7. Re:Closing down of airspace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's actually a bit more complicated, but not that much.

      Airspace all around the world is always classified in one of the classes A through G. In general, class A is extremely tightly controlled (clearance required, have to follow ATC orders) while G means "no control whatsoever". In fact, due to limitations in radar and radio equipment, class G airspace cannot be controlled, even if they wanted to. Class G is generally just above the surface, or out over the ocean. Class B through F offer various gradations of control and requirements.

      Furthermore, there are two sets of "flight rules" which you can fly under. If you fly under Visual Flight Rules, then you're flying, well, visually. This means you've got to stay out of the clouds (and depending on the airspace you're flying in, a set distance from cloud) so that you can see and avoid other aircraft. If you fly under Instrument Flight Rules, the assumption is that you can't see out the window and need to trust your instruments to keep the plane upright. Also, you need to trust ATC to keep you clear of other aircraft. Obviously, commercial aircraft fly IFR all the time. It gives them a safety net and helps them make the schedule.

      You can fly VFR and IFR in any airspace, with two exceptions: in class A VFR is not allowed, and in class F and G, ATC is not able to help you well enough so that IFR actually separates you from other flights.

      In the US, everything above 18.000 feet is Class A airspace and thus IFR. Everything up there will be on a flightplan and monitored/controlled by ATC. If a UAV would be flying there, it would have a clearance (so ATC knows it's there), a transponder (so ATC knows exactly where it is) and it would need to have someone, somewhere, talking to ATC. So a UAV up there would not be a problem at all.

      Underneath the 18.000 feet is class E airspace. This is the least of the "controlled" airspaces. (F and G are uncontrolled.) This means that no clearance is required for VFR flight, no radio contact is required (generally), no transponder is required (generally). You can generally do as you please here. The only reason that UAVs are not allowed here right now is that the "see and avoid" principle applies, and UAVs have proven to be uncapable of that.

      Underneath the class E airspace layer, surface to 1200 feet up, lies class G airspace (uncontrolled). This is the place where you might meet towers, kites, remote controlled toy aircraft and other stuff that, as an aircraft, you generally will want to avoid. So nobody with a sense of mind flies there for long periods.

      Those (A, E, G) are the three primary layers of airspace in the US. Furthermore, within this structure you also have pillars of class B, C or D airspace (sometimes they look more like inverted wedding cakes). These pillars are more or less centered on airports. To fly in class B, C or D you need a clearance from ATC and, depending on the exact flight rules, you are being told by ATC where to go and how to get there. Again, this is a space where UAVs are probably not going to be allowed, unless they operate on a flightplan and so forth.

      (And to make the list complete, there is no class F airspace defined within the US.)

      That's why particularly the AOPA is so worried, and you don't hear anything about this from the airlines. Airlines generally operate above 18.000 feet (class A), and they take off, climb, descend and land generally within class B and C (or occasionally D) airspace. So there's no danger that these UAVs actually share the same airspace as the airlines. But the AOPA represents General Aviation, and GA generally does take place in class E airspace - the most likely place for UAVs.

      And if you think this is a moot point, think about this. See and avoid is incredibly hard to do in an aircraft. Most aircraft are painted white (particularly composites, due to temperature limits) or fairly light shades of blue, red, yellow and so forth. Traveling at a minimum speed of about 100 knots (120 US miles, or 180 km/h) and comi

    8. Re:Closing down of airspace by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I hadn't heard any of this, but allowing the thread to be the forecast of general aviation restrictions to come, my first thought was... what happens to all those cropdusters and puddle-jumpers, most of which are strictly visual and don't even have radios? getting too restrictive could ground a whole class of pilots, and put them and their support industries out of work.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    9. Re:Closing down of airspace by scdeimos · · Score: 1
      What if they don't have 360 degree vision from the UAV?
      Show me a 727 or larger aircraft with 360 degree vision.
    10. Re:Closing down of airspace by eraserewind · · Score: 1

      Probably a dumb question, but why is it that the higher and therefore less crowded you go the more restricted it is? Or is it more crowded the higher you go? What do most commercial passenger planes fly at?

    11. Re:Closing down of airspace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The USA starving because of crop-dusting being made illegal is a small price to pay...

    12. Re:Closing down of airspace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Show me a 727 or larger aircraft with 360 degree vision.

      This isn't about large/fast aircraft. A 727 is a flying freight-train and climbs out of the troposphere before the Cessna 150 that I fly can get to 5000'.

      Why does the non-pilot-rated public insist that riding around in airliners airliners is "flying"? Sitting in a semi-public bus that happens to leave the ground is nothing like flying in a real airplane.

    13. Re:Closing down of airspace by PPGMD · · Score: 1

      Most commerical (part 121 and 135) traffic flies in Class A airspace.

    14. Re:Closing down of airspace by PPGMD · · Score: 1
      The airlines don't want to kill GA, but they don't want to have to fund it, which is why they are pushing for per-request fees for ATC, and landing fees to apply to GA aircraft (they generally don't because GA aircraft don't put as large dents in the runway). The airlines actually rely on GA because without GA there would be a much smaller pool of trained pilots, that they would have to pay higher.

      It's not the airlines that are closing local airports, it's land developers, NIMBYs, and their political lackey's (*cough*Daley*cough*). It's stupid mayors that are pushing for their own ADIZs (*cough*Daley*cough*).

      I really should get that cough looked at.

  63. One idea... by at_slashdot · · Score: 1

    Maybe we'll survey him and people like him out of their jobs. How about that?

    --
    "It is our choices, Harry, that show what we truly are, far more than our abilities." -- Prof. Dumbledore
  64. Re:Can we have Jessica Alba take 'em out when need by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only one of the drones was armed, and it was a specific prototype. The normal drones that appeared throughout the series were unarmed.

    I have no life either.

  65. Beowulf by JonathanR · · Score: 1

    Imagine a Beowulf clust... Oh. Maybe not.

  66. Bush wants: "Domestic surveillance" by Newer+Guy · · Score: 1

    In other words, to SPY on United States citizens... Tell me, how long until some guy begins walking up to all of us asking: "YOUR PapEERS PLLeese?!"

  67. The UAV communications spec is an open protocol. by pcraven · · Score: 2, Informative

    Of course, since UAV communications are though an open standard, you could always try to hook in yourself. Then you can see what 'big brother' is looking at.

    This is the TCS specification. Used in the U.S.

    This is the NATO standard, a bit newer.

    Of course, people should use VPN or similar, but it isn't required.

  68. USA - Land of the ..... by blankoboy · · Score: 1

    totalitarian with a cushy 'land of the free feel' to it. Either way you look at it the values that Americans hold close to their hearts are being eaten away as they sit idly by.

    As another poster so aptly put, most Americans are perfectly content if they have their servings of - Football, Mountain Dew, MTV, American Idol, etc..... Sad, but true. Wake up Americans, you've been given the date rape drug and you're currently getting a$$-raped by the government you elected. Sigh.

  69. Drones for DRM by TheReal_BarkMan · · Score: 1

    At first glance on my RSS reader, I thought I read that unmanned drones are going to be used to enforce DRM. MS.RIAA.MPAA.gov

  70. ONLY the World Trade Center buildings. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1, Insightful

    In the entire history of the world, how many buildings have fallen because of extensive fires on their upper floors?

    Answer: ONLY the World Trade Center buildings.

    I can accept a loss of structural integrity. I cannot see the physics behind a completely symmetrical collapse of THREE buildings.

    1. Re:ONLY the World Trade Center buildings. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moreover... only three steel structures buildings have EVER fallen due to fire... WTC1, WTC2, and WTC7

  71. Everyone's Talking About Privacy... by Errandboy+of+Doom · · Score: 1

    I'll be taking a huge karmic hit here, but... I have a strong distrust of privacy rights.

    I've played games of chance, and I've played games of perfect information, like Chess and Go.

    Maybe it's just because I can't bluff, but it always seemed to me that games of perfect information were fairer.

    When I buy a car, I want to know if it's a lemon. When I vote for a candidate, I want to know their voting history. When I use a piece of software, I want to know how it works.

    When I go outside, certainly I'd prefer no one knew where I was or what I was doing, but I believe ethics are meaningless unless they are universalizable. There's no reason I should be able to hide details about myself while the used car dealer cannot.

    As someone who is innately curious about the world, I embrace disclosure and transparency. I just as much prefer everything to be out in the open.

  72. UAV's don't have to be dangerous. by t0qer · · Score: 1

    UAV's don't have to weigh 14 lb's to get the job done. I fly a Parkzone F-27 Stryker. It only weighs 21 oz.

    I've flown it plenty of times with a cheapo swann 2.4 ghz wireless camera on board. It's made of foam, and it's a pusher (prop in back) so in the even it does hit somebody, they're not going to be chopped to pieces from a propeller.

    With the assistance of a friend holding a pringles cantenna, i've gotten plenty of range for the video.

    Of course, we're not talking common sense here, we're talking the military, and anything that isn't bullet proof, costs 10x what it should cost, and doesn't have some degree of danger will never be acceptable for them.

    Personally, i'm not too worried about UAV's flying overhead. I'm more scared of cops that are jack booted thugs beating up on innocent people.

  73. the pilots shouldn't worry.... by BewireNomali · · Score: 1

    ... as they soon will be replaced by the drones anyway. Problem solved.

    I'm looking forward to second generation automated flight and cars.

    --
    un burrito me trampeó.
    1. Re:the pilots shouldn't worry.... by RPI+Geek · · Score: 2, Insightful

      UAVs are here today and the elimination of the human pilot is many years off; we DO need to worry about the time in between now and then.

      I wish the article said what kind of UAV is going to be used, because they can get pretty big: the RQ-1 Predator is comperable in length, height, and weight to a Cessna 152, and in wingspan it's 15 feet longer. The wrong paint scheme could render predator-sized UAV practically invisible, and a smaller UAV could easily be missed by a pilot. Given the damage that birds can do, a collision with all but the smallest ones could cause catastrophic damage to a small plane like a 152. I suspect that predator-sized UAVs will be out of budget for most applications, which means that pilots will have to start watching out for smaller and smaller traffic. The last thing pilots need, especially recreational pilots who don't fly daily, is another distraction to watch for. There are all sorts of restrictive rules for planes and pilots: I don't see why any of them should be relaxed for UAVs. Indeed, they should be subject to closer scrutiny simply because they have no brain.

      If UAVs remain doing the jobs they're currently doing: monitoring borders and ports, I don't forsee many problems. If these things start making their way into more populated areas, big issues arise. The biggest issue that I can think of is one of th e first things I learned in flight school: the final responsibility for avoiding other air traffic always falls with the pilot. When the pilot is a computer, does it have any responsibility? This rule works best when there are real pilots in each plane; when one of the planes is a drone, the other pilots have double responsibility.

      I vividly remember one graph from my textbook while I was taking flying lessons: there was a chart with 2 lines: NECESSARY pilot skill to operate the plane, and AVAILABLE pilot skill. During preflight and taxi, there was plenty of room between the two lines. During takeoff, the lines were closer but there was still a good margin. During cruise and nazvigation, there was once again a large safety margin. Landing was the interesting part: the available skill and necessary skill lines were really damn close. Plenty of pilots have more than enough skill to land safely all the time. It only takes one pilot who doesn't to make the news. Naturally, these UAVs would be in closest contact with other planes when around airports: the times when the pilot has the least amount of extra attention to spare for a UAV in the traffic pattern.

      Do UAVs check above and below themselves before ascending or descending like human pilots do? Do they check for planes that don't have transponders or radios like human pilots? Do they take into account the fact that other planes might have malfunctioning equipment like human pilots? Did a pilot write the code that flies the UAV or was it a programmer working overtime to make a deadline? Personally, I would like these issues and more brought up to the aviation community and satisfactorily addressed before UAVs become a common sight in the sky.

      --

      - "Nobody came out that night, not one was ever seen. But Old Man Stauf is waiting there, crazy sick and mean!"
  74. Looking out for his own by peej73 · · Score: 1

    How fitting a "relatively dumb drone" is sanctioning the use of relatively dumb drones.

  75. Make UAV data open-access by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

    I would have no problem with this (and would actually think this is a good thing) if all imagery data from these UAVs were made accessible to the tax-paying public. As David Brin discussed in The Transparent Society, increasing surveillance can actually improve society and make people/government more accountable, but only if such surveillance is two-sided.

    1. Re:Make UAV data open-access by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      In theory, yes, a more-open society with 2-way surveillance probably would be a better society.

      But that's idealistic. Is there any society in history in which surveillance -- or any form of power, for that matter -- has ever been two-sided? I know of none.

      Look at the modern surveillance-state of Britain and China, and the emerging surveillance states of the U.S., Germany, and most other developed nations. In which of those countries do the citizens have the ability to spy on their governments as much as the government spies on them?

      That's right: NONE OF THEM.

      Brin's vision is an idealistic one, and I wish people would stop referencing that utopian text as though it were in any way realistic.

      The practical reality is the same one that has dominated mankind since the creation of institutions: he who has the power makes the rules. Governments are nothing more than warlords in control of a nation, and are in control only because the people let them be in control. The U.S. was founded as a counter-revolution to the idea that people should be afraid of their governments; that "the people should not be afraid of their governments, governments should be afraid of their people."

      Unfortunately, that founding view has been in decline since the nation's founding, and particularly since the start of FDR's administration...

      So, as a practical, realistic matter on the grounds of fairness, on the basis of world history, there is no reason to support the UAV surveillance-state our current government wants to implement.

      When the U.S. govn't is ready to disclose even Top Secret secrets to the public (and try for treason any person who discloses them to non-American citizens -- as I believe the Constitution was originally meant to implement), then we will talk... But that won't happen because Americans now believe in the power of a strong central government and correctly believe that such information will quickly be known to potential enemies if it is made public to U.S. citizens -- to the detriment of the nation.

      Thus, as things stand today, a symmetrical surveillance society isn't even close to happening: there is a vast information asymmetry between our government and the governed, and this is a serious problem that will likely never be resolved absent radical change in our government's organization and electoral system.

  76. 2nd amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Enough said, really, but for those who dont get it: This is why the 2nd amendment exists. I've considered firing on manned military aircraft that used my hilltop for low-level training to the severe detriment of my livestock's health, not to mention my own peace of mind and the integrity of my window glass. (Never did it, extreme wideband RF interference seems to be effective enough.)

    UAV's shouldnt be that hard to pot with civillian/improvised weaponry. Possibly theres interesting or useful salvage in the remnants, too.

    Of course im speaking in hopeful, nay insane, optimism here. the continued existance of functioning speed/stoplight/toll booth cameras in this country is truly depressing on reflection.

  77. Licensed Pilot and am concerned by aviator · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I am a licensed pilot, and I am worried about the risk of a midair collision. I would not want to be flying (either private or commercial) in the vicinity of one of these UAVs.

    1. Re:Licensed Pilot and am concerned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I would not want to be flying (either private or commercial) in the vicinity of one of these UAVs."

      You couldn't even if you wanted to: there would be an active TFR in the area(s) that the UAVs would be flying around. You do check TFR's before you fly, don't you?

      If you don't, I would suggest you quickly start before you find yourself in the middle of an NTSB/FAA court proceeding and finding out that your license has just been suspended for the next 90 days.

      A quick check of the FAA's Graphical TFR List, a call to your local FSS, or getting flight following from the nearest ARTCC will generally keep you in the clear.

    2. Re:Licensed Pilot and am concerned by stovetop · · Score: 1

      The whole point of the NC example was that there WASN'T a TFR. The locals were flying the thing on their own volition using their own rules.

  78. It Figures by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

    Unmanned aerial drones will complement nicely the mindless drones in Congress who approve of this stab in the back to democracy.

    --
    It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
  79. Re:Scared? Hell no. by turkeyfish · · Score: 1

    Not once the hackers get into them and fly them into ... dare I say the "wrong" targets.

    Besides, why should I cry, I'm invested in Boeing! I suggest building large nets of fine wire to catch them in midair. That way they will have to build more.

    No point praying. It isn't doing anyone any good.

  80. Re:BY and FOR the people? by ElephanTS · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I'm afraid you're wrong there. Plenty of scientists and engineers have expressed serious doubts about the 'fire collapse' theory.

    No steel framed buildings have EVER collapsed due to fire before 9/11 even though much fiercer and hotter fires have occurred within them.

    Here's a link to respected scientist Dr Steven Jones paper on his doubts. http://www.physics.byu.edu/research/energy/htm7.ht ml

    Simple physics tells us the melting point of steel is 1100-1600C and a kerosene fire can go up to 600C with good oxygen flow. Why did the ( heat shielded) steel buckle? No warping of the buildings structure was observable before collapse.

    --
    spoonerize "magic trackpad"
  81. '77 Hilarity or Airplane Hilarity? by jd · · Score: 1
    (The first being an obscure reference to a cult air disaster movie.)


    Do the drones have Mind Control, and could this be the Real Reason for the recent screw-up over confusing an overgrown village airfield with a national airport?

    --
    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)
  82. Just amazing by CXI · · Score: 1

    Did anyone bother to even read TFA? Here's the first paragraph:

    A House of Representatives panel on Wednesday heard testimony from police agencies that envision using UAVs for everything from border security to domestic surveillance high above American cities. Private companies also hope to use UAVs for tasks such as aerial photography and pipeline monitoring.

    It mentions the federal government is only interested in using this to replace existing flights by manned aircraft at over 12,500 feet, with filed flight plans. This is your own local officials doing this backyard surveillance, not "the big evil Bush" that everyone seems to like to blame for everything. But MAN does throwing "the Bush administraion" in the summary really catch eyeballs, regardless of whether it's true or not.

    *sigh* Typical slashdot.

    1. Re:Just amazing by Ph33r+th3+g(O)at · · Score: 1

      What does it matter if the facism is at the federal, state, or local level? It's still Herr Bush that ushered it in with the 9/11 excuse after having falsely assumed office and engineering a phony "re"-election.

      --
      I too have felt the cold finger of injustice.
    2. Re:Just amazing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know nothing about how domestic spying works. Your local police department is the one spying on you, not military intelligence. What happens is that your local cop gets done listening to Sean Hannity, and then decides how he's going to "protect" America from them damn liberals, and hops in his car with the Clinton-pelled-with-a-hammer-and-sickle bumpersticker, and drives down to the park to write down license plates of "trouble makers." Then he changes clothes and decides to join his local "Operation Truth" group and at every meeting suggests that they should go out and take "direct action" (i.e. bomb something).

      Then sends reports like "Joe Smith has an "Impeach Bush" sticker on his car, and his wife Jane said that Iraq was a mistake" into TALON, which is simply John Poindexter's outlawed "Total Information Awareness" only with a new name. Everything is marked as "a credible threat", and now Joe and Jane Smith are now "persons of interest in a classified investigation."

      Now we have "defense contractors" (i.e. mercenaries) providing security in Iraq, training our army, running the supply lines for our army, provinding "domestic security analysis" for our government. They're immune to open government laws, and in many ways are more free to act than the government. And best of all, the government can say "Oh it's not us. It's a private entity," thus ensuring (im)plausible deniablity.

      You really need to learn about the illegal domestic spying during the 60s. What's old is new again.

      Yes. The Bush adminstration is breaking the law. Bush even admitted to it in a radio address. Yes. They're facists. More precisely, crypto-facists.

  83. Just another reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to get the fuck out of this shithole. 1984?

  84. In God We Trust by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    As soon as Bushworshipping Republicans roll over for unmanned drone spying over the US, Bush will stick RFIDs up our asses. Literally.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  85. hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ill be sure to catch one and use it to take over the world. I did it 40 years ago in germany, but shit didn't work properly :(

    no but really if someone like me lays hands on one of those things, they will be able to mod it and make it their own. What then???

  86. A pilot's perspective by stovetop · · Score: 3, Informative

    Full disclosure up front -- I am an AOPA member.

    The issue with UAVs from a pilot's point of view (OK, THIS pilots pov) is mostly one of safety. One of the AOPA articles referenced noted the creation of a TFR, which is a flight-restricted zone of the national airspace. (TFR stands for 'Temporary Flight Restriction')

    If a TFR is created, it is the responsibility of the pilot to determine its existence before venturing into that airspace. This is burdensome, but is not difficult. Literally hundreds of resources are available online and via the phone to help pilots plan flights.

    For me it isn't a big deal to fire up the computer and check to see if anything is going on that might make for an overly adventursome day in the sky. (I live 100 miles from DC so it is also a way of life for pilots here.) Older pilots, however, have great difficulty adjusting to these TFRs.

    Most non-pilots have absolutely no idea how unregulated the vast majority of our airspace is. For example, there is no requirement whatsoever for a personal flight conducted in good weather (VFR) to communicate with air traffic control unless the aircraft ventures into the airspace near a busy airport or flies above 17999 feet. Hell, you are not even required to HAVE a radio or transponder to fly into most of our airports. If you have such equipment (and most planes do) you still don't have to use it unless the specifics of the situation demand it. (Another disclaimer - I do not believe that minimum adherence to the rules results in the safest possible flying conditions. In other words, if you've got a freakin' radio, use it.)

    The idea that some podunk police department in NC (not far from where I live!) could have one of these things cruising around at 1000 ft or more is absolutely frightening. Even if I make the required inquiries about how to safely conduct my flight, a non-FAA-regulated aircraft could ruin my day in a hurry, and the podunk police department in question would almost certainly bear no legal liability for my demise since they were operating their UAV in compliance with established law. To their credit, the podunk police department agreed to operate their drones according to the requirements for model aircraft (below 400 ft). This is below the minimum altitude for safe, legal operations unless going that low for reasons necessary for the safe conduct of the flight, i.e. taking off or landing.

    On the larger, more philosophical question of whether unmanned spy vehicles should be welcome over our homes, I tend to think the answer is NO. On whether information about all such activities should be made as readily available to pilots as the weather forecast, the answer is undoubtedly yes. And that means national coordination, and that means the FAA.

  87. Well said . . . by ElephanTS · · Score: 1

    Got no mod points but I agree with you 100%. It's also slightly scary to post this kind of thing round here as you know you're going to battered for it.

    I can't comprehend how this has happened so quickly and feel so sad for what's been lost.

    --
    spoonerize "magic trackpad"
  88. WHAT IS WRONG WITH THESE MORONS? by constantnormal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Somewhere between 99.999% and 99.99999999% of the terrorists (call it an educated guess, based on the number of suicide bombings and other terrorist attacks that have occurred in this country since 9-11) are outside this country -- probably in Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and Iran -- and we're spending serious effort on domestic surveillance?

    What this says to me is that the Bush administration is fscking terrified that the tall grass is full of terrorists, and that we have zero resources capable of dealing with them in their own space (the CIA having been preoccupied with telling the boss what he wants to hear), and have so pissed off our former friends who might actually have some field intelligence, but would now prefer to see us twist in the wind, making an excellent target to draw out the terrorists.

    Actually, that last bit doesn't hold water, 'cause plenty of European nations have been hit since 9-11. If anyone had any field intelligence, it would be used.

    But why aren't we deploying surveillance drones over Saudi Arabia, or at least Pakistan? And we certainly ought to have every pile of rubble with a roof over it in Afghanistan bugged.

    But this continued insistence on domestic surveillance looks for all the world as if the Bush administration is on the side of the terrorists, or is at least gearing up to declare martial law and replace our broken, wobbly charicature of a representative democracy with a theocratic monarchy.

    Either that, or they're just incredibly, unbelievably inept.

    1. Re:WHAT IS WRONG WITH THESE MORONS? by ByteGuerrilla · · Score: 0

      What it tells me is that they could give a shit about terrorism. The important thing to them is achieving the mass mindrape. Watch everyone, exploit everyone, fear no one.

      --

      A block of code, sufficiently well-written, is indistinguishable from magick.

    2. Re:WHAT IS WRONG WITH THESE MORONS? by dajak · · Score: 1

      But why aren't we deploying surveillance drones over Saudi Arabia, or at least Pakistan? And we certainly ought to have every pile of rubble with a roof over it in Afghanistan bugged.

      But this continued insistence on domestic surveillance looks for all the world as if the Bush administration is on the side of the terrorists, or is at least gearing up to declare martial law and replace our broken, wobbly charicature of a representative democracy with a theocratic monarchy.


      Is that really the biggest problem for 'all the world'? Don't you think, taking into consideration that Afghans can't vote for the US government and can't be part of it, that bugging all houses in Afghanistan, and not in the US, would show total disregard for human dignity to all the world? Few countries in the world really care about what happens in other countries as long as it is homegrown unpleasantness and it doesn't directly threaten international stability or the economy. Entertaining the idea of regime change in faraway countries is something only superpowers do. It's OK if the US becomes a theocratic monarchy, as long as it will be an isolationist one and it doesn't use WMD.

    3. Re:WHAT IS WRONG WITH THESE MORONS? by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 1

      It's OK- we may not be flying them overseas per se, but the job of controlling them here will be sold to United Arab Emirates :D

    4. Re:WHAT IS WRONG WITH THESE MORONS? by BCGlorfindel · · Score: 1

      What this says to me is that the Bush administration is fscking terrified that the tall grass is full of terrorists I think it's more likely intended to make sure the general public is terrified that the tall grass is full of terrorists. There's a commie, er I mean terrorist, behind every Bush. Every good patriot knows that giving our government extra powers is better than the terrifying alternatives.

  89. nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear by Rooked_One · · Score: 1

    except getting your rights systematically striped away. I can't believe this is happening - no wait, I can. I hate to get a little of topic, but with movies like "V for Vendetta" people will start to think about revolution, and with this sort of technology mounting, it will not be hard to supress a small uprising (that could be good or bad) from turning into a nationwide revolution (which I think we need, but thats really quite besides the point).

    1. Re:nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      except getting your rights systematically striped away.

      I wasn't aware there was some sort of right against having airplanes flying overhead pointing cameras at you. I'm sure celebrities would love to have restrictions on photography in public places, as it would help them fend off papparazzi, but as far as I know, no such restrictions exist.

    2. Re:nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 1

      I'm glad you don't view your own backyard as private any more.

      Next time you trot out there naked behind your 8' high fences, we'll send someone by to pick you up-- pervert.

      You have no idea of what may be retroactively defined as a crime.

      Hopefully I am old enough that I'll die before it gets really bad.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    3. Re:nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      I'm glad you don't view your own backyard as private any more.

      Last I checked, there wasn't some sort of magical protection field preventing people from seeing what was in my backyard, particularly if they own trampolines. ;)

    4. Re:nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear by Rooked_One · · Score: 1

      I make exceptions for my neighboors to see my dong. Geez... how pathetic is this, i'm joking around about a serious issue becuase for the most part, its pointless.

  90. Don't our cell phones have GPS? by jcs9000 · · Score: 1

    Don't all of our cell phones now have GPS transmitters in them? I guess now they will have video to go along with the satellite imagery and personal lojack systems that we all carry.

  91. Judas Priest by Analogy+Man · · Score: 1

    It's starting to sound like a Judas Priest song.

    --
    When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
  92. how combinish by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you know if you shoot one of those UAV just right the battery pack will fall onto you and give your suit a boost of power.
    Also you can grab them with the gravity gun and use them as weapons.

  93. SUAVs by wytcld · · Score: 1

    Can you bring these things down with birdshot? I foresee a lot more bird hunting. Too bad it'll be tough on the birds. They can't outlaw Cheney's own sport.

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
    1. Re:SUAVs by Tassach · · Score: 5, Insightful
      They can't outlaw Cheney's own sport
      Silly peasant. Don't you realize that the law doesn't apply to you if you're well-connected or filthy rich?
      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    2. Re:SUAVs by RedOregon · · Score: 1

      I wonder how effective a Wrist Rocket would be?

      --
      Skivvy Niner? Email me!
      HEY! Look left just ONE MORE TIME!
    3. Re:SUAVs by GundamFan · · Score: 1

      Hum... Canned UAV hunts? Naw... that would never work.

      --
      I don't give a damn for a man that can only spell a word one way.
      Mark Twain
    4. Re:SUAVs by don.pratt · · Score: 1
      They can't outlaw Cheney's own sport
      Silly peasant.
      Shouldn't that be "Silly pheasant"?
    5. Re:SUAVs by operagost · · Score: 1
      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  94. See a UAV? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Use your 2nd Ammendment right to owning a firearm to shoot that fucker down. Fuck surveillance on american citizens!!!!

  95. good times by boojumbadger · · Score: 1

    Hopefully they'll cross the border into Canada so we can take target practice on them. Skeet shooting anyone?

  96. obligatory post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one welcome our new Aerial Drone Overlords..

  97. excellent resolution? by wardk · · Score: 2, Funny

    I hope they can see well enough to get a good up close view of my middle finger. I'll even isolate it for them to make it easier.

  98. Shouldn't be a problem?!? by babbling · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Shouldn't be a problem for who?

    Are they armed? How long until they are?

    1. Re:Shouldn't be a problem?!? by lymond01 · · Score: 1

      No problem. Just hand me a gravity gun, or better, a crowbar. That'll take care of those flash-bulbing, existence-monitoring machines!

    2. Re:Shouldn't be a problem?!? by TheQuantumShift · · Score: 1

      And when they are, what card carrying NRApublican will defend me when I shoot one down for infringing upon my civil liberties?

      --

      Shift happens. Fire it up.
    3. Re:Shouldn't be a problem?!? by operagost · · Score: 1

      It has been established by judicial precedent that one doesn't own the airspace above one's land. I wouldn't defend you for shooting at news choppers and commercial aircraft, either.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  99. Orwell, our hats are off to you... again by hacker · · Score: 1

    Black helicopters, anyone?

  100. Parent post summarized in one sentence: by mcc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "I don't see these measures as an infringement on personal freedom, because the measures will target people I don't like."

    1. Re:Parent post summarized in one sentence: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I don't see these measures as an infringement on personal freedom, because the measures will target people I don't like."

      Oh please. Parent is saying that UAVs will allow people involved in criminal acts will be arrested before they can cause too much damage. The only "freedoms" being infringed upon are the "freedoms" of drunken hooligans to smash stuff and of stupid college kids who see political protests as an excuse to get violent.

      It's interesting to note that the parent is getting modded down exclusively with 'Overrated' hits so meta-moderators can't correct the abuse of the system.

    2. Re:Parent post summarized in one sentence: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Parent is saying that UAVs will allow people involved in criminal acts will be arrested before they can cause too much damage. The only "freedoms" being infringed upon are the "freedoms" of drunken hooligans

      How wondrous this modern image processing must be, that it is able to film the ground from high up in the air, but somehow is able to only capture drunken hooligans, neatly cropping all law-abiding citizens out of the frame. Do they use some kind of infared camera that maps the blood alcohol content of the ground or something?

    3. Re:Parent post summarized in one sentence: by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      "Parent is saying that UAVs will allow people involved in criminal acts will be arrested before they can cause too much damage"

      And when the criminal act is whistleblowing on a corrupt govt?
      The system is set up so that you are a criminal already. If you look hard enough at anyone you can find them doing something illegal eventually. its only a matter of time.

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
  101. what happens when... by josepha48 · · Score: 1
    someone hacks the frequence that these things are running at and takes them over and sends them all at the white house...

    one can hope.. but no really are these unmaned drones robots or remote controlled? If they are remotely controlled, can they be hacked? If so what would a hacker do with a fleet of unmaned drones?

    --

    Only 'flamers' flame!
    Does slashdot hate my posts?

    1. Re:what happens when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If so what would a hacker do with a fleet of unmaned drones?

      Send them into the girls' locker room.

  102. Google Earth, maybe? by iknowcss · · Score: 1

    Though at first the idea of being watched in your own country seems unsettling at first, maybe these UAVs could help Google Earth's picture database? Sure it's a long-shot, and I'm probably only saying this because my house/neighborhood is in low-res, but c'mon, that might be cool, right?

    --
    Life is rarely fair. Cherish the moments when there is a right answer.
  103. Monitoring? But can't we do more? by Pedrito · · Score: 1

    I mean, I think it's great that we're using UAVs to monitor these rowdy crowds, but I think we really ought to follow what we did in a Iraq and Afghanistan and make sure the UAVs are armed with air to ground missiles as well. After all, when those crowds start getting out of control, you don't want to risk putting actual police in danger. I like to call it push button crowd control.

  104. I've got news for you simpletons by doug141 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's quite clear that Automated Google Crawlers will, in the future, log all your anti-establishment comments. Only people doing something wrong are afraid of law enforcement. I, for one, welcome our future law-enforcing overlords.

    1. Re:I've got news for you simpletons by Braino420 · · Score: 1

      Only people doing something wrong are afraid of law enforcement

      Keep saying it and maybe one day it will be true. Have you ever thought of what happens when maybe law enforcement is doing something wrong? It does happen.

      --
      They call me the wookie man, I guess that's what I am
  105. So obvious by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    What needs to happen for us to wake up?

    Red pill man, red pill.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:So obvious by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      I always wondered what would have happened if he had taken both pills at the same time.

  106. So much for my dream of joining a nudist colony by Bushido+Hacks · · Score: 1

    I had hoped once that I would join a local nudist colony just for one weekend. But now that Big Brother is flying overhead, I think I would fancy shooting down any UAV that spies on my bare ass. Perverts!

    --
    The Rapture is NOT an exit strategy.
  107. Why, though? by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1
    WHY should people who watch MTV protest the G8 summit or the World Bank? That's what's not being disseminated.

    "Go! Protest! It's bad for you!"
    "Why is it bad?"
    Because! Now go! Protest!"
    "OK"

    'Causing mayhem' is entirely incorrect, if it is not for the right reasons. What the G8 and World Bank do may well be 'bad'. Or it may not be. But do the 'useful fools' who are protesting really know? I doubt it.

    1. Re:Why, though? by Darby · · Score: 1

      But do the 'useful fools' who are protesting really know? I doubt it.

      In fact, a lot of them do. Those are exactly the ones who will not be interviewed about the protest.

  108. Streetsweepers to the rescue by PokerAndroid · · Score: 1

    Streetsweepers pretending they're smart. God I despise these lazy little men playing make believe with the taxpayers money.

  109. You're right, and that's the reason you're wrong. by CyberNigma · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You're right. Technology is a tool that can be used for both good and evil. Surveillance is something that can be used for both good and evil. However, early Americans believed (from history, I imagine) that is most cases it will be used mostly for evil, thereby increasing the risk vs the benefits that it may be used for good. If it were the other way around, it would be more than fine to disarm the public (because the government will protect us), allow the police to install cameras in all homes as a requirement (it will only be used to good purposes), and so forth. Early on people decided that the best government is one that you do not trust, so that the your trust cannot be abused. Hence, we have various checks and balances in our system, including a right to privacy from others and the government. If there is a need to violate that right, a warrant will be issued, which is perfectly legal.

    Also, he wasn't giving those as examples of why UAV surveillance is evil. He was giving them as examples as to why nobody will stand up to the government if they believe that UAV domestic serveillance is evil. One of the reasons peaceful protests are a thing of the past are because people are quite ignorant. You just helped that point along. Read his statement carefully. Heh, and I'm not even for OR against this as I haven't looked it up. This pertains more to your response to his response.

  110. Re:BY and FOR the people? by failure-man · · Score: 4, Insightful

    -You don't need to melt a truss, you just need to soften it. If it softens the geometry changes and the strength drops.
    -I don't know what the ends were on the floor trusses, but a sagging truss will put them in tension. I doubt they were designed for this.
    -Heat shielding doesn't stand up too well to an exploding airplane.
    -The design in question is not typical of steel buildings, which tend to be latticed structures rather than tubes.

    Note that it's the floor collapsing that starts the process. A load-bearing exoskeleton is an inherently unstable design prevented from buckling only by the floors forcing it to stay aligned.

    As you say, no warping was observed before collapse. It was the internal structure that failed before the collapse. As soon as the external structure drifted out of alignment it was over. Instantaneously. This is how buckling behaves.

    (Oh, and this guy isn't much of a scientist. "Nobody has a good idea what happened. IT MUST HAVE BEEN THERMITE!" Typical crackpot paper . . . . . . )

    (Science aside, how the hell could a deliberate demolition be pulled off without anyone finding out before or finding actual evidence after? Such things take rather a lot of setup to pull off.)

  111. video.google.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    agreed. watch loose change 2nd ed. on video.google.com or google the martial law preview

  112. MOD PARENT UP by magicchex · · Score: 1

    I wish I had mod points to give ya cause I'd gladly hand some out.

    --
    How many fulltime jobs can one man have?
  113. Re:BY and FOR the people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No building has been hit by a 747 at roughly ~600 mph either. You need to take into account that the WTC towers lost ~40% of their internal supporting columns. Previous buildings had their structures intact during fires. Also a factor was the sprinkler system being destroyed and the spray on gypsum coating on the steel being scrapped off. The fire rating of unprotected steel is 1 hour. That is how long they stood. One last thing is that there wasn't just kerosene burning in the towers, there was the entire contents of the offices.

  114. Put them on the Border! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously - put these drones on the US/Mexican border.

  115. Whoa! by Short+Circuit · · Score: 1

    Whoa...a drunk gets a +5 insightful. What is this, Fark?

  116. Your dog wants a Fark.com cliche... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... and Ric Romero's on the story!

  117. Degradable by SEWilco · · Score: 1

    Make the drones so they can be consumed by jet engines and let nature take its course.

  118. I've done it by macdaddy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As a little kid I actually tried put this myth to the test it worked flawlessly.

    1. Re:I've done it by rachit · · Score: 5, Funny

      > As a little kid I actually tried put this myth to the test it worked flawlessly.

      Where's that -1 Evil moderation when you need it?

    2. Re:I've done it by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Cool. Now can you verify what happens with a hamster in the microwave?

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    3. Re:I've done it by courtarro · · Score: 1

      Does that mean he went to sleep and let himself be boiled? It doesn't count if you just put the frog in a boiler and didn't let him escape. Either way, it's sick.

    4. Re:I've done it by macdaddy · · Score: 1

      I was 7 or 8 in a very small rural town with nothing to do. That's the norm. I was too small to haul hay and the town was too small to support a mowing service. What else are you going to do in a town of 200 people in the middle of a 100+ degree summer but make mud pies, fry worm, boil frogs, and go fishing?

  119. Re:BY and FOR the people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I shouldn't even be wasting my time replying to your post. Watch the PBS NOVA documentary, Why the Towers Fell.

    The parent poster mentioned only part of the story. The fire was to blame in part, yes, but also the unique design of the WTC buildings. Jesus Christ, for all the coverage over the past 5 years, you don't know this? Do you read much beyond the back of your cereal box in the morning?

    No steel framed buildings have EVER collapsed due to fire before 9/11 even though much fiercer and hotter fires have occurred within them.

    Exactly. But you didn't finish the sentence (because you don't have a clue what you're talking about). I'll do it for you:

    No steel framed buildings have EVER collapsed due to fire before 9/11 even though much fiercer and hotter fires have occurred within them, BECAUSE NONE OF THOSE FIRE-AFFLICTED BUILDINGS HAD THE SAME, UNIQUE STRUCTURAL DESIGN USED IN THE WORLD TRADE CENTER BUILDINGS, NOR DID ANY OF THEM HAVE THE FIREPROOFING BLOWN OFF OF MULTIPLE FLOORS BECAUSE A FREAKING JET WAS BLASTED INTO THEM.

    To have written what you wrote ... wow, you're just not very bright.

    The design of the WTC, with a central core of supports and an outer shell of supports -- with open space between -- is another major part of the story here. No other building of that design had been through "much fiercer and hotter fires". And there has never been another building of the WTC design and size on fire as a result of an impact with a passenger jet. The planes punctured the outer shell, weakening the structure. The shockwave from the initial impact blew the fire-proofing off horizontal steel girders on the impact floors. The fuel from the planes burned only for a short time. But the massive amounts of paper, office furniture and other combustibles that were present in the buildings continued to fuel an inferno, further weakening the already damaged structures.

    No warping of the buildings structure was observable before collapse.

    There is no hope for you. If you can write that sentence after 5 years of accounts from people who were actually there who have said otherwise ... yeah, there's no hope for you. If you care -- and I doubt you do because it will ruin your spooky conspiracy theory -- you can start by reading the firefighter and office-worker accounts of obvious changes to the weight distribution of the buildings inside the stairwells. Then go and read about the analysis of the video taken that day that shows the exterior of the building buckling before the collapse.

    I can't believe you wrote that crap. Seriously. How can you apparently be interested in this subject and have clearly read so little, after all this time?

  120. Re:BY and FOR the people? by whitehatlurker · · Score: 1
    engineers have expressed serious doubts about the 'fire collapse' theory.

    Perhaps, but what sort of engineer? It was my first thought when they came down.

    Why did the ( heat shielded) steel buckle?

    The "heat shielding" was knocked off the steel by the impact, reducing its effectiveness, and the fire went on for some time. Both of these would promote heating of the steel.

    With all due respect to your physics prof (why do we always that before...) the metal doesn't have to melt before it loses stiffness, and buckles. His point seems to be around molten metal at the base of ruins. I don't know what that really has to do with the collapse.

    --
    .. paranoid crackpot leftover from the days of Amiga.
  121. These things crash A LOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    We had a chem/uav unit attached to my scout squadron while i was in the Army. In three years, they crashed four of them. They were completely destroyed. It wasn't always due to pilot error either. Just slightly bad conditions.... like a little wind. In one situation one crashed on this abandoned AF base we were using for urban training... one of our officers was about 100-200 meters from where it crashed... it took out a bunch of a glass in the building in front of it, shrapnel, and whatnot... big mess.

  122. In Soviet Russia ... by MrNougat · · Score: 1

    ... the government surveilles --

    HEY WAIT A MINUTE

    --
    Web 2.0 == Giant Blogspam Circle Jerk
  123. classic "Look! There's Bigfoot!" Defense by Scudsucker · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Ah, a classic example of the right wing's "Look! There's Bigfoot!" Defense, not to be confused with the Chewbacka defense. When some GOP or conservative shenanigan comes to light, right wingers point off into the hills and yell "Look! There's Bigfoot!", hoping to distract people long enough to get away. The media falls for this every time.

    Take for example, the latest Downing Street memo. It revealed that prior to the invasion of Iraq, Bush thought the evidence of WMD was so weak that he suggested tricking Iraq into firing on a U-2 spyplane painted with UN colors. Wingnuts like Confederate Yankee dismissed the memo as nonsense, primarily on the grounds that you wouldn't be able to see the plane at it's operation altitude from the ground. That's a Bigfoot moment, because the fact that U-2's fly at 70,000 does nothing to debunk the idea that "putting food on our families" Bush wouldn't have hatched the scheme in the first place.

    It mentions the federal government is only interested in using this to replace existing flights by manned aircraft at over 12,500 feet, with filed flight plans. This is your own local officials doing this backyard surveillance, not "the big evil Bush" that everyone seems to like to blame for everything. But MAN does throwing "the Bush administraion" in the summary really catch eyeballs, regardless of whether it's true or not.

    More "Bigfoot" nonsense. Dismissing the involvment of the Bush Administration by talking about locals in this is like trying to claim that the Administration and the GOP majority in Congress didn't have anything to do with the Patriot Act because it is used & abused by local law enforcement. And you conviniently ignored the quote that was in the summary:

    "A top Homeland Security official told Congress today..."
    This might be news to you, but the Dept of Homeland Security is part of the Executive Branch, headed by a Cabinent-level official, with all top level officials either being directly appointed by Bush or appointed by appointees of Bush, which makes it part of the......drumroll please....Bush administration.

    *sigh* Typical slashdot.

    No, typical kneejerk defense by what appears to be a member of the Church of Bush. There have been many times when you guys end up falling all over yourselves in the rush to defend our dear president, only to be proven wrong later. See the Katrina video or the Downing Street memos, for example. And that's just what's filtered out through a stonewalling GOP government. If the Dem's have the balls to actually go out and win the Senate or the House AND investigate the White House, the shit is really going to hit the fan.

    Bush is draging this country down, and guys like you are helping him.
    1. Re:classic "Look! There's Bigfoot!" Defense by CXI · · Score: 1

      A) Nice try by throwing in the word "Bigfoot" as a way to discredit the argument without any real facts. It seems various people have even allen for your trick, which is sad.

      B) "Dismissing the involvment of the Bush Administration by talking about locals" Did I say that? No. In fact in the very quote you included in your post I explain that "It mentions the federal government is only interested in using this to replace existing flights by manned aircraft at over 12,500 feet, with filed flight plans.". So, thanks for mentioning knee jerk reactions, kettle. I didn't ignore the federal government or what they were planning. I explicitly stated it, and you apparently go a little to worked up to notice.

      C) Blaming everything on Bush and ignoring the fact that local, state and federal governments are indepenantly elected and that people at various levels actually do make decisions themselves without calling up Bush on the phone and making sure it fits into his evils plans is stupid and naive.

      Did I say I liked Bush? No, I said go and deal with the problem in your local area where you actually might have a little more effect than bitching at me on Slashdot. Once again, quite typical.

  124. So They Are Using the UAV's from Stargate SG-1? by wolverine1999 · · Score: 1
  125. not "unmanned" in the usual sense by Eil · · Score: 3, Informative

    I agree with the sentiment that this whole plan infringes most grievously upon our freedoms, however, this comment is a more than a little asine:

    But what happens when lots of relatively dumb drones have to share airspace with aircraft carrying passengers?

    UAVs are unmanned in the sense that there is no pilot aboard the aircraft itself. NOT in the sense that they're flying around up there on autopilot, oblivious to other air traffic. A UAV is operated by a trained pilot on the ground. I don't know about these civilian jobbies, but the military ones have radar and IFF transponders so that the pilots can see other aircraft in the area and, just as importantly, other aircraft can see the UAV.

    Summary of differences between normal aircraft and UAV:
    - UAVs cost far less (no need for a cockpit)
    - Pilot avoids hazards normally associated with flying, most of them involving gravity

    1. Re:not "unmanned" in the usual sense by anubi · · Score: 1
      I just hope these things are not noisy.

      I have seen small planes, ( like other small-engined things like motorbikes, leaf blowers, and lawn mowers ) that emit tremendous amounts of noise... like those small planes that carry advertising banners overhead at sports events.

      Helicopters already get away with hovering at low altitudes over residential areas, and as most know, helicopters are incredibly noisy.

      I forsee these spy planes may omit the mufflers so they can get more airtime per tank. I do not welcome a sky full of noisy airplanes buzzing overhead at low altitude run by the "authorities".

      It annoys me when some kid gets one of those incredibly noisy gasoline powered skateboard thingies and spends the afternoon repeatedly going up and down the street. Maybe he only used a gallon of gas, but I find the incessant noise quite irritating.

      How would the "authorities" handle stuff like this invading their "airspace"?

      I already have to put up with a damned helicopter the neighboring city's police department bought, and they train over MY neighborhood. Believe me, these things can be incredibly noisy, and no-one seems to have the authority to tell a law-enforcement agency they can't fly those damned noisy things wherever they want.

      My only hope is if they will annoy ENOUGH people, we can nix ANY proposition on the ballots to fund them - but so far they seem smart enough to pick out ONE neighborhood and give us the works - and do it in an adjacent city so they don't piss off their local voters.

      Please forgive my language, but every time I think about that damned noisy machine I can't do anything about, I start getting riled. It seems the only way I am going to get any peace is to move out to where it will just be economically infeasable for the authorities to go all the way out there to hover their noisy machines.

      --
      "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]

    2. Re:not "unmanned" in the usual sense by Eil · · Score: 1

      foresee these spy planes may omit the mufflers so they can get more airtime per tank. I do not welcome a sky full of noisy airplanes buzzing overhead at low altitude run by the "authorities".

      I don't think the UAVs are all that noisy. One article used the term "stealth" or "stealthy". Wouldn't make a whole lot of sense for a "spy" plane to announce audibly announce itself every time it flew over unless its sole purpose is to tell citizens, "I'm watching you."

      Please forgive my language, but every time I think about that damned noisy machine I can't do anything about, I start getting riled. It seems the only way I am going to get any peace is to move out to where it will just be economically infeasable for the authorities to go all the way out there to hover their noisy machines.

      Maybe you give up too easy. There are certainly others like you in your neighborhood, so maybe you could get a group together and very publically ask the police deparment if there's somewhere else they can train. Failing that, get in touch with the local government, the FAA, and any local aero clubs and find out if there's a way to get an ordinance passed to prohibit these guys from training over populated areas. Or at least from training over the same area every single time.

      It has to be possible, because Albuquerque's two runways are shared by commercial airlines and the military. The airport is in close proximity to more than a few neighborhoods. Commercial jets can land and take off however they please, but the Air National Guard's F-16s are only allowed to use one runway because some kind of local noise ordinance prohibits them from ascending and descending over heavily populated areas.

    3. Re:not "unmanned" in the usual sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      UAVs are unmanned in the sense that there is no pilot aboard the aircraft itself. NOT in the sense that they're flying around up there on autopilot, oblivious to other air traffic. A UAV is operated by a trained pilot on the ground. I don't know about these civilian jobbies, but the military ones have radar and IFF transponders so that the pilots can see other aircraft in the area and, just as importantly, other aircraft can see the UAV.

      BZZZT!! WRONG! Nearly all UAVs have autonomous capability, only the most primitive systems do not. This is true especially for the case of military UAVs, where the military would prefer to have pilots whose workload is given primarily to the task that the UAV is performing, i.e. surveillance, and not to actively managing the flight of the thing. Program it to fly, control the sensor to look at interesting things in its flight path. These UAVs also have manual control ability, but they would prefer these UAVs not be flown manually as it is a distrating task when you've got bullets flying overhead.

    4. Re:not "unmanned" in the usual sense by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      Flight at the level these things will be operating is see-and-avoid to prevent collisions. When you often see closing speeds well in excess of 300 miles an hour between airplanes, it doesn't give someone much time to react, especially if that someone is busy concentrating on the camera that points down at a "suspect" rather than off at the horizon where other planes will be.

      PLUS, they'll probably start popping up temporary flight restrictions to try and prevent this sort of collision happening, but it's hard to run a TFR on a moving target, and harder yet to avoid violating it.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
  126. The Constitution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Technology is a tool. It can be used for good or for evil."

    While your statement is correct, and your example is interesting, it would never fly in the US and would be struck down by the supreme court. Why? Because the Constitution and the bill of rights are a system designed to limit the usage of any said tools for evil. They do this by prohibiting government control or interference in certain areas and _specifically_ saying that these areas are _not_ exclusive. The role of government errs on the side of restriction because tools like government can be abused. In fact, courts have already struck down automatic red-light cameras for violating due process (presumed guilt and burden of proof)...and even these stationary cameras are widely considered big brother or an invasion of privacy due to potential misuse. And if you want examples of misuse of cameras, try the UK.

    IAAMPA

  127. Re:BY and FOR the people? by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 2, Interesting
    yes. lets try a little science.

    All I saw you responding with was an almost verbatim repitition of a NOVA story on the subject of the rafters being the cause of the building failure. A theory that has since been realized to be faulty in many ways, by such 'radical crazies' as, FEMA, and the NIST. For instance, the NOVA video shows nothing of the 47 steel pillars in the center of the building. The pillars are completly left out of the video(actually its a computer animation, you shouldnt be using that as 'evidence' to begin with).

    Also, as a result of simply repeating what you have been told(thats science to you?), you seem to be missing the obvious point you are making about the buildings collapse. In one statement, you claim that the exoskeleton of the WTC towers is what supported all the weight(false, 47 center pier pillars did), and when the trusses on those failed, the whole building collapsed. And not a few sentences later, you use fire damage to explain the collapse of WT7. Yet that building was not what you claim to be an 'exoskeleton' framed building.

    There are enough questions, and enough contradictory explanations in my mind to warrant further inspection of the conjecture that the US government actually was involved in this, or is at the very least involved in not telling the whole truth. And when you come to argue the point of such questions by demanding science, and then simply repeating a story you heard someone else tell you upon which you did no further investigation on, hardly gives me the impression that you are aware of what science actually is.

    Perhaps before you approach different ideas with a condescending attitude of 'lets try science' you should be aware exactly what science is. Dont believe me? Tell you what, you research what I said, and I will research what you said. Although, it may be hard doing research on some of your facts presented, as one of the sources is said to have been 'if I remember correctly'.

  128. Personal freedom? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How exactly is increased surveillance when you are in a public place an infringement on your personal freedoms? If they were talking about putting UAVs in your house, then you'd have a point. For being a technology website, this place has got the highest concentration of luddites I've ever seen.

  129. And yet... by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    Simple physics tells us the melting point of steel is 1100-1600C and a kerosene fire can go up to 600C with good oxygen flow.

    And yet for centuries man alloyed and shaped steel by the heat of fires they themselves created--of materials that all burn at a lot less than 1100C.

    In other words, there is more to understanding heat than simply looking up the burning temperature of various substances.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:And yet... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you may be thinking of Iron, which has been shaped by man for years. Steel is Iron with a high Carbon content to make a harder material. In fact, Steel wasnt mass-produced until the mid 1800s when Bessemer perfected his process of blowing oxygen through it.

  130. I for one by Facekhan · · Score: 1

    I for one welcome our new robot overlords.

  131. Re:BY and FOR the people? by deesine · · Score: 1

    So what downed WC7, which was not hit by a plane? And why did it fall in the same way as the towers?

    --
    damaged by dogma
  132. Cyberdyne Contractor? by p0z3r · · Score: 1

    Are they employing Cyberdyne Systems Corporation with the contract to build these things?

  133. I, for one WELCOME our new UAV overlords! really.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    YAY!! Americans are attacking their own freedom! What need is there for Al-Qaeda to even exist when the same hatred and aggression that the US has shown the world over is now in the process of engulfing itself, with the beauty of it being that it is very happily supported by it's own population. The dumb fucks deserve it too.

    I say, "Bring'em on!", can hardly wait till MY county orders a few. Gives a whole new meaning to "domestic" terrorism. Duuuh, Beer and Football anyone? Sit back, relax, and enjoy the American dream.

    You know, in some cultures there is an undertone to teachings that when one villifies and harms others, one ultimately harms themselves.

  134. Re:BY and FOR the people? by Layer+3+Ninja · · Score: 1

    Obviously fires on the 7th and 12th floors. At that, only sections of those floors, not evenly spread throughout the entire floor, would make a 47 floor steel structure fall symmectrically, in less than 10 seconds. Obviously there is no other explanation. :) cheers.

    --
    Power corrupts. Absolute power...is even more fun.
  135. no, he's right by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

    Blue states do pay the most in taxes and red states take the most. Another fun fact: remember the anti-gay marriage hoopla that swept through the red states a couple years ago, under the guise of "protection of marriage"? Except that red states have the worst divorce rates, while blue states have the best. In fact, the state with the best divorce rate is Massachusetts, which started the wingnuts on their crusade in the first place.

    1. Re:no, he's right by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      In fact, the state with the best divorce rate is Massachusetts, which started the wingnuts on their crusade in the first place.

      Have you seen how divorces work in Massachusetts? They've got some puritanical divorce judges to go along with their silly ultra-concervative blue laws.

      Be careful how you draw the line between red and blue. It's not as black and white as the mainstream entertainment networks wish it was.

  136. Sounds just like a helicopter by ChePibe · · Score: 1

    Goodbye, karma (if anyone reads this, that is):

    I mean, honestly? What's the difference between this and a helicopter? Why are slashdotters so paranoid over this?

    In every major demonstration, car chase, manhunt, police action, etc. helicopters with searchlights, cameras, etc. are called in for observation. These can be used to target trouble makers in a demonstration (anarchists, a la Seattle), hunt down a vehicle fleeing from a crime scene, felons escaping from prison, etc. Not to mention the media's own helicopters.

    In my opinion, what we're looking at is essentially a helicopter that costs a hell of a lot less, requires much less upkeep, has a longer loiter time, and doesn't put the lives of any crew at risk (powerlines, nutjobs that try to shoot at them while escaping, etc.). Lots of benefits, no real loss of "privacy" than previously existed under helicopters.

    If there's a story here, it's the question of UAVs sharing civilian airspace. Now that's a concern. As far as the surveillance goes, I see little difference between what is already expected and legitimate.

    1. Re:Sounds just like a helicopter by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      What's the difference between this and a helicopter?

            These things are cheap enough to have CONSTANT surveillance. Your helicopter needs trained pilots and maintenance crews, and is subject to a lot of down-time.

            In theory there is no problem with police surveillance. Until they start peeping through your windows and telling you what to do, or issuing speeding/parking tickets to generate revenue. See this is a lot easier than actually catching real sociopaths. As for crime prevention, well, the catch is you have to wait until the crime is comitted before you can catch someone for it. At least that's the way it used to be.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  137. Who is flying them? by sampas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why not remote control cars, too? We could change traffic rules to give priority to robot police cars, which could observe us, too.

    It's a clear violation of airspace safety in which the pilot is ALWAYS reponsible for avoiding other aircraft. It's the most basic rule you learn when you become a pilot, and it's what every examiner checks for before each maneuver during the practical exam. Unfortunately, the engineers designing these things aren't pilots or air traffic controllers and have no idea how our airspace works. (They work fine in Iraq, but that's a war zone with no civilian aviation.) Apparently engineers do know how to weasel our tax dollars to fund their overpriced remote control toys.

    If AI was smart enough to fly an airplane, why aren't they flying airliners? They'd be way cheaper than pilots. If there's no pilot, there's no see-and-avoid. When a camera can see and process as quickly as a human, then it might work, but before then, the only way to do this is to not allow them to fly anywhere near humans fly.

    There's currently no FAA-approved technology to relieve a pilot of her duty to see and avoid other aircraft whether or not the AC is on an IFR flight plan. Next time you're on an airliner, listen to the channel with the pilots talking to TRACON or CENTER. There's a lot of human interaction.

    In the late seventies, CIA funding changed from human intelligence gathering to satellite intelligence gathering. We can see every place in the world and pick up all their signals, but we still couldn't tell India was testing an Atomic bomb. With all the billions of dollars spent on overhead technology, we still haven't found Osama. Now the people selling the things tell us how similar technology will solve our crime problem...

    1. Re:Who is flying them? by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 4, Informative

      I'd say it depends. If you have a human monitoring the UAV from the ground, including the ability to detect its position relative to other normal aircraft, then this issue would be less of a concern - except, of course, that its unlikely the UAV could be maneuvered as well as a piloted craft. There is also the issue of whether the pilots of normal aircraft would be able to see it as well as larger aircraft in order to execute THEIR responsibility to see and avoid.

      If, however, these things are AI-controlled, that is just braindead. Sooner or later, they'll crash into something they shouldn't. The AI just isn't going to be good enough without decent conceptual processing algorithms.

      I'd also say that from the viewpoint of civil rights, the notion that these things are "just another pair of cops eyes" is too simplistic. With sensors and other technology, plus their vantage point, there are considerably more invasive than your average cop on the beat.

      I'd suggest everybody watch the movie "Blue Thunder" - this is where the US is heading and it's not a good idea.

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    2. Re:Who is flying them? by bigpat · · Score: 1

      If, however, these things are AI-controlled, that is just braindead. Sooner or later, they'll crash into something they shouldn't. The AI just isn't going to be good enough without decent conceptual processing algorithms.

      Well, they are going to have some AI for collision avoidance and what not. But I expect that generally they will be under the direction of a controller. But if the radio link goes down, they need to not fall from the sky. The vehicle needs to be able to react safely.

    3. Re:Who is flying them? by ePhil_One · · Score: 1
      If AI was smart enough to fly an airplane, why aren't they flying airliners?

      In general, they are. Autopilots can fly the plane in a way that humans can't that saves a few percent on fuel usage. When you are measuring fuel in tons, this adds up quick. For now, most pilots are still handling landings and takeoffs, but most new aircraft I believe have autopilots capable of handling this as well, but they are not yet "trusted". The main reasons pilots are there is to handle emergency situations. and verify everything ground radar and onboard instrumentation is telling them.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisted little posts, all alike.
    4. Re:Who is flying them? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, the engineers designing these things aren't pilots or air traffic controllers and have no idea how our airspace works.

      That's certainly not true (if from nothing more than a probablitiy of intersection of two sets perspective).

      In addition, I am a robotics engineer, and I am also a pilot. I also know many other engineers who are the same. In fact, the kind of people who are drawn to robotics engineering are very often the same type of individuals that are drawn to airplanes and end up getting their pilots license.

    5. Re:Who is flying them? by zardo · · Score: 1

      If AI was smart enough to fly an airplane, why aren't they flying airliners?

      Unions.

    6. Re:Who is flying them? by jt2190 · · Score: 1
      I'd suggest everybody watch the movie "Blue Thunder" - this is where the US is heading...

      IIRC, the helicopter in Blue Thunder wasn't meant to be fiction but actually based on technology that existed when the movie was made.

    7. Re:Who is flying them? by SpyPlane · · Score: 2, Informative
      "Unfortunately, the engineers designing these things aren't pilots or air traffic controllers and have no idea how our airspace works. (They work fine in Iraq, but that's a war zone with no civilian aviation.) Apparently engineers do know how to weasel our tax dollars to fund their overpriced remote control toys."


      So what you are saying is that you think engineers at defence contractors design these vehicles all on their own? So much so, that they don't get *any* input from the US Air Force or FAA? You sir, are a fool. If you do think they get input from the Air Force, do you then think that the Air Force doesn't care about airspace?? I'm wondering how posts like this get modded insightful, really. Have you even read about the Global Hawk or Predator? I'm not going to transcribe their fact sheet here, considering you'll probably not even read it anyway, you'll just not educate yourself and keep posting FUD. Just so you know, the FAA doesn't bend their rules for defence contractors, these UAV's have to abide by every rule a passenger plane does.


      If AI was smart enough to fly an airplane, why aren't they flying airliners?


      Great logic there, you are like a slashdot troll extraordinaire!
      Your answer: because the public doesn't even trust computers to handle their banking let alone fly a plane. Trust me, you might have a pilot up there, but many of those planes can handle fine all on their own if the pilot was being lazy. The Global Hawk, when it was still in it's infancy, flew from the U.S. to Australia all on it's own (ok well, not completely true, I think a route had to be picked) setting tons of records for UAV's. Concerning see-and-avoid: what does a human do that's so unique that a UAV can't do?

      Here are some links, not that you will read them:
      http://www.af.mil/factsheets/factsheet.asp?fsID=17 5
      http://www.dsto.defence.gov.au/news/3300/
      --
      "We need a fourth law of Robotics: Stop Fingering My Wife"
    8. Re:Who is flying them? by sampas · · Score: 1

      Surprisingly few of our Defense Contractors' engineers are actually qualified pilots. That's why our DC ANG F-16 pilots complain that the F-16 is an airplane "designed by engineers, not pilots." That's why Lockheed had to pay so much money to the wives of German fighter pilots after the F-104 fighter failed so miserably as to break up under stress. (Our own government didn't do anything extra for the US F-104 widows.)

      The Boeing B-1 Lancer was a good plane when they designed it, but the engineers then overloaded with so much gear that they either stall on climb or go into an unrecoverable dive. Naturally, the Reagan DoD claimed we needed the B-1 to win the Cold War. I guess that's why they're still flying B-52s.

      Pointing to a DoD press release doesn't help your case, and neither do ad-hominem attacks, (to which I shall never stoop). This is the same DoD that claimed we had a missile gap in 1960, that East Germany had a higher standard of living than West Germany in the 1980s, and that we're winning the war in Iraq. The first version of the M-1 tank couldn't even shoot and move at the same time. The Bradley Fighting Vehicle? Another triumph of military engineering so great they had to make a movie about it.

      The Moab desert robot drive challenge was successfully completed only last year. AI isn't as advanced as you might think. UAVs certainly do NOT have to follow all the rules of passenger aircraft under Parts 61, 91, 141 or 142 of FAA regulations. When UAVs fly, the FAA issues a NOTAM and restricts the airspace around it so no airplanes with humans on board fly anywhere near them. A surprisingly large amount of U.S. airspace is restricted, including most of the airspace over Nevada, for instance. Thus, the military and defense contractors get whatever exemptions they want from civil airspace rules. Don't believe me? Fly over Area 51 and see what happens.

      The FAA controllers regularly complain about military bozos who want to restrict all US airspace to military traffic only. After 9/11, the Pentagon almost seized Washington's Reagan National airport and were stopped only when members of Congress figured out how long it would take them to drive to other airports.

      Those of you who are ready to fly in airliners piloted by AI should:
      1) take a class in AI
      2) get a pilot's license, or at least take a flight lesson.
      I have done both (not at MIT, though), and those designing these aircraft, for the most part, have not.

      The main point of this is, don't believe everything you read in a press release.

  138. Totally agree, and there's more... by snowwrestler · · Score: 4, Insightful

    - "They looked like controlled demolitions"...but what is the basis for comparison? How many people repeating this line have ever witnessed or even seen video of an *uncontrolled* demolition of a skyscraper--other than the WTC buildings? In other words the visual similarity is TRUE, however it is not necessarily UNEXPECTED. ALL demolitions of tall buildings will look similar, regardless of how they are initiated. Even if you blow out one side first, the building won't tip over like a coat rack. Remove support and the mass being supported falls--straight down.

    - The buildings did not fall neatly into their footprints. Look at this picture:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:World_Trade_Cen ter_Site_After_9-11_Attacks_With_Original_Building _Locations.jpg

    - There were thousands of people in the buildings that day. The first attack took place around 9am--after many people had arrived at work. In fact the estimate is that at least 10,000 people were in WTC 1 and 2 when the first plane hit. They had arrived by subway, walking, cab, and driving--some had parked in the garage. They proceeded through the building that morning as normal. After the first hit, most of them evacuated safely--almost everyone below the point of impact in both buildings. YET not one of them has come forward with stories of seeing the building pillars in the parking garage wrapped with drums and det wire. No one had stories of elaborately laid wire harnesses throughout the floors of the building. Not that morning or any morning previous.

    Wiring a building for controlled demolition is not a quick thing. It takes a long time to load in the explosives and wire it all up safely and reliably. And it's not something easily hidden. It's hard to bring down buildings like the WTC-- a big truck bomb won't do it. You have to distribute a lot of explosive around a lot of the support structure and set it all off in just the right sequence. It would probably be impossible to hide, especially in a building like the WTC towers, where the outer shell carries so much of the weight.

    Yes, the firefighters heard noises that sounded like explosions. But I'm not interested in hearsay--I want to hear from the people who eye-witnessed demolition charges and equipment set that morning. Until then I'm not buying it.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:Totally agree, and there's more... by 4D6963 · · Score: 0, Offtopic
      ALL demolitions of tall buildings will look similar, regardless of how they are initiated

      What about these? http://www.physics.byu.edu/research/energy/htm7_fi les/image008.jpg http://www.physics.byu.edu/research/energy/htm7_fi les/image010.jpg

      Btw, I fail to see how these 3 buildings didn't fit into their footprints. WTC1 and WTC2 just look spilled all over the ground, but WTC7 fits.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    2. Re:Totally agree, and there's more... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I agree that the current evidence for a controlled demolition of WTC 1 and 2 is thin and practically nonexistant. Your lack of thought on the subject is clouding your judgement.

      Any operation like this would have been planned heavily, with contingencies in place. Why would anybody wire up the building that day? Construction workers, Office workers, and maintenance Workers went through that building every day, I'm willing to bet that the staff was large enough that nobody would notice a new plumber, or engineer or electrician bumming around in the support passages. Considering the size of that building there were probably dozens of different trades going in and out of that building daily.

      The evidence is thin, and practically non-existant, but then again, Troy was just a myth, until a wacky archeologist managed to look in the right place.

      There's alot of smoke around 9/11, alot of it undoubtedly due to an incredibly shocking and hectic day. But just because a reasonable explanation can be found, does not mean that other explanations are not valid.

    3. Re:Totally agree, and there's more... by replicant108 · · Score: 1

      Yes, the firefighters heard noises that sounded like explosions. But I'm not interested in hearsay--

      The firefighters' evidence is clearly not "hearsay".

      It is the first-hand testimony of expert witnesses.

      I want to hear from the people who eye-witnessed demolition charges and equipment set that morning.

      Why are you assuming that charges would be visible to the public?

      Until then I'm not buying it.

      There are plenty of people who will never buy it.

    4. Re:Totally agree, and there's more... by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

      It is the first-hand testimony of expert witnesses.

      Hearing loud noises that sounded like explosions is the testimony of an eye-witness. However in the context of a controlled-demolition theory, it is hearsay. A number of things sound like or cause explosions; firefighters are not experts in controlled demolition. I'm not questioning what they heard; I'm questioning the use of it as absolute proof of a controlled demolition.

      Why are you assuming that charges would be visible to the public?

      Because as far as I know it's not possible to turn hundreds of 55-gallon drums and miles of wire invisible. This is what it would take to bring down buildings the size of WTC 1 or 2 or 7 by controlled demolition. And it's not just the amount of equipment, it's the time needed to set it all up, troubleshoot, and test to make sure it will work when they press the button. Tens of thousands of people moved throughout the WTC buildings every day, presumably including a maintenance staff of hundreds for the building facilities in the core and behind locked doors. You're asking me to believe that somehow no one saw anything, or that they were all in on it.

      There are plenty of people who will never buy it.

      I'll buy something if it's well sold--this theory is not. But let me turn this around--what would convince YOU that the controlled-demolition theory is wrong? Keeping in mind that the vast preponderance of evidence and expert opinion already points that way. Please be specific about what evidence you still require.

      --
      Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    5. Re:Totally agree, and there's more... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Because as far as I know it's not possible to turn hundreds of 55-gallon drums and miles of wire invisible. This is what it would take to bring down buildings"

      didnt you see fight club? they brought down every building with just van bombs.

      and here you are also asuming that the US govt doesnt have something stronger in a secret lab somewhere. What if its just a sort of explosive paint? were the buildings painted recently? i bet they were...

    6. Re:Totally agree, and there's more... by friendswelcome · · Score: 1

      Many people want more evidence. A recent CNN poll showed that 82% of the public believes the government covered up some of the 9/11 events.

      > I'll buy something if it's well sold--this theory is not.
      The truth is rarely well sold.

      > Please be specific about what evidence you still require.
      First the Bush Administration tried to block a 9/11 investigation. The investigation that finally was conducted, by a government team, stated that they did not get the budget they required. They only got a couple million; less then was spent investigating former president Clinton's sex scandal. In the least, a new investigation should take place and it should get the funding it requires. If we can spend a Trillion dollars on Iraq and Afghanistan because we were upset about 9/11. Then we should be able to set aside a billion dollars to check under Washington rocks for scum. Or at the least we should spend as much money as we did investigating Clintons Cock.

      Sorry. But until then you may as well be covering up the truth. The investigation was inadequate and did not sufficiently address the following 11 points.

      > firefighters are not experts in controlled demolition.
      You aren't supposed to pull buildings in NYC without supervision by police and fire. If anyone on the scene has watched over controlled demolitions in NYC it is their firefighters. And what they heard reminded them of their experience observing controlled demolitions. But that is only one fish in the fish market.

      >> Why are you assuming that charges would be visible to the public?
      > Because as far as I know it's not possible to turn hundreds of 55-gallon drums and
      > miles of wire invisible.
      This is a very good point, but the WTC was one of the few buildings that could make this possible.

      1. Miles of Wires: WTC was on of the most wired set of buildings in history, phone company wiring headquarters, stock exchange and government offices... Also lets remember that reliable control signals can be transferred in many ways in such buildings. Wifi, network cabling, electrical wiring, infrared though windows if you want to be tricky, infrasound if you really want to do things the hard way, and of course micky-mouse clocks with wires stuck to the handles. I don't see arranging control systems to be a problem.

      2. Where would hundreds of 55-gallon drums be? The answer: real-estate. The WTC was built at the worst time in the worst location. There was and still is a glut of office space on Wall Street and they were never able to fill the trade centers. Most of the levels were empty and there were the machine levels, installed security equipment... So these buildings had lots of space. Space coincidentally secured by relatives of the president.

      3. The security company that looked over the trade centers happens to be owned by relatives of President Bush. Of course President Bush also happened to be business partners Osama Bin Ladin, who as you know happened to be involved with the collapse. Those are just some facts, not proof of anything. But very strange facts.

      4. People- The buildings did not constantly have people going in and out. Several weeks before the attacks one of the buildings was completely powered down for a weekend and vacated. All the security systems the building were off. This is very unusual. No video, no business people, just Bush family security staff. Would this have been a time they could have moved in explosives to unoccupied floors?

      I don't think so, because that wouldn't have been necessary. The simpler way to carry that out would be: Somewhere a couple people had a military job loading boxes with explosives for storage in a warehouse. A normal thing... Then make it part of their job to put an inventory control "tracking device" in each box. If the tracking device was a wifi explosives control system... Then you have a where-house loaded with sealed unmarked boxes to be moved anywhere you like. Tell a second loading crew they are loading boxes of government

  139. problem is not 'accidental' by nido · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's a multifaceted problem, and no solution is readily available.

    The way I see it, the problem is by design. It's well known that there's been a lot of "media consolidation" over the past few decades, so that the major outlets are controlled in the hands of a few corporations (e.g. Clearchannel).

    John Taylor Gatto tells us in his books & presentations that the government's schools were set up to provide workers for industry. Before government schools, the American dream was an independant livelihood. After government schools, the expectation shifted to finding employment with a good company with good benefits.

    The problem is that the same group of people are behind both efforts. Is it really so odd to propose that a small, dedicated group of families has been steadily concentrating wealth in their own pockets for centuries?

    Furthermore, why is it that the same group of rotten scoundrels install themselves in government? George H. W. Bush was in the CIA at least as far back as the 60's. Head of the CIA, Vice President for 8 years, president for another 4.

    Donald Rumsfeld was in the Nixon, Ford & Reagan administrations, according to Wikipedia. He even got his picture taken with Saddam Hussein back in 1983. Now he's secretary of defense. Dick Cheney was Secretary of Defense under Papa Bush, and before that he got himself elected as representative from Wyoming.

    I'm sure there are more examples. The problem, as I see it, is that the same rotten bastards keep getting recycled through the political system. Watch for the keywords: Project for the New American Century, Bilderburg Group, Trilateral Commission, Council on Foreign Relations, etc... And that's not even mentioning the more secretive enclaves. See The Controllers: Secret Rulers of the World for a timeline of the consolidation of power over the last 100+ years.

    What's more, anytime this sort of observation comes up, the masses have been conditioned to just snicker and dismiss the messenger as a "conspiracy theorist". But how do said masses know that there is no conspiracy? They don't "know", but social conditioning has implanted a nearly impervious belief.

    Expose the so-called "illuminati" and their plots, and the problem will begin to go away.

    --
    Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
    www.teslabox.com
    1. Re:problem is not 'accidental' by ByteGuerrilla · · Score: 0

      Bingo. Most sensical post I've seen so far in a /. comments dominated by politics. Bravo, sir, for having the guts say those facts despite the slanging match that may result from the right-of-field.

      Remember, folks, "Just 'cause you're not paranoid, don't mean they're not after you."

      --

      A block of code, sufficiently well-written, is indistinguishable from magick.

    2. Re:problem is not 'accidental' by uglyduckling · · Score: 1
      "Just 'cause you're not paranoid, don't mean they're not after you."

      I can't quite work out if you're intentionally mis-quoting but... its "just because you're paranoid" - the whole point of the lyric is that apparent paranoia doesn't necessary mean that the opinions held are incorrect. Someone with an apparently irrational fear of heights may still fall off a building.

    3. Re:problem is not 'accidental' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Intentional misquote. Just because you refuse to believe they're not out to get you doesn't mean they aren't. Just because you call any theory about such a thing a conspiracy theory and laugh at it doesn't that there aren't small groups of people collaborating out of the public eye to sieze power and control the government.

    4. Re:problem is not 'accidental' by SoulRider · · Score: 1

      Actually there will always be small groups of people trying to sieze control of any government in this world. That is the nature of power. It's not a conspiracy, its a given.

    5. Re:problem is not 'accidental' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm. Okay, I'm about as anti-bush as they come, but there is a reason people at the top of government have been in government a long time, and it isn't some secret society. You have to work your way up the ladder there, just as you would in any industry. The American people aren't going to elect some no-name hobo with no government track record to high office. Presidents aren't going to pick running mates and cabinet members with absolutely no experience. When we start getting people in these offices with NO prior official records (or obviosly fake records), we can start talking secret societies.

      Although I don't agree with his methods, I'm under no delusion that Bush is actually "evil". He honestly thinks he's doing the best thing for his country (or at least the class of people he cares about).

    6. Re:problem is not 'accidental' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm. Okay, I'm about as anti-bush as they come, but there is a reason people at the top of government have been in government a long time, and it isn't some secret society. You have to work your way up the ladder there, just as you would in any industry.

      Such ladder system is a problem. In closed systems where your success depends on the criteria set by people previously higher than you, you end up in government where the top management represent the biggest cocksuckers, and the biased system is difficult to repair. In other industries it's more up to the candidate's real-world success than meeting internally set unrelevant criteria or sleeping with everyone around.

      The American people aren't going to elect some no-name hobo with no government track record to high office.

      Better to elect some hobo with a track record of destructive management, eh?

      I mean, Bush's first term wasn't especially shiny, with the laws giving goverment departments a mandate to intervene and lock up people for anything, creation of concentration camps against the Supreme Court and UN rulings, publicly encouraged censorship and increased propaganda budgets, bombing one country and then focusing on oil and other profits instead of providing the basic life requirements to it's citizens, getting the entire world pissed off, pissing off business leaders not related to oil or arms, taking huge debt, being unhonest in multiple important occassions and actively avoiding any political responsibility.

      Presidents aren't going to pick running mates and cabinet members with absolutely no experience.

      But why to pick up those with experience in oil corporations or arms trade to dictators and warlords? Why Eric Schmidt or some of those smart government agency executives don't qualify, unless their previous job was at UNOCAL's board of directors or wiping out Iraqi cities with the latest U.S. made chemical weapons?

      When we start getting people in these offices with NO prior official records (or obviosly fake records), we can start talking secret societies.

      Everyone has a track record. The real question is what those track records are: what jobs, and with what success.

    7. Re:problem is not 'accidental' by jafac · · Score: 1

      Donald Rumsfeld was in the Nixon, Ford & Reagan administrations, according to Wikipedia. He even got his picture taken with Saddam Hussein back in 1983. Now he's secretary of defense. Dick Cheney was Secretary of Defense under Papa Bush, and before that he got himself elected as representative from Wyoming.

      Karl Rove was also part of Nixon's administration.

      Reagan himself, was pretty much an outsider in the neocon cabal, but he was a useful puppet (for a while anyway, until Bush Sr. tried to have him offed).

      The problem is that these relationships are very clear - but we still have people in this country who believe that Nixon did not do anything wrong, and that it was a "liberal media" that hounded him out. Now they're trying to re-fight the domestic political battle that was Vietnam - to try to undo their loss. The children of the Baby Boomers have done a very poor job of picking up where they left off in the counter-culture movement of the 60's. And the hippies of the 60's all got suits, shaved, and are now working jobs with just a few more years until retirement - they're not willing to sacrifice for the cause anymore. (at least until Bush showed that he is working to take away their social security benefits - THEN they finally started to show some fight).

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    8. Re:problem is not 'accidental' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent "Funny"

      No one "tries" to remove freedoms, just like rain doesn't "try" to smooth the mountains. It's just a series of small trade-offs and trade-ons we make on a daily basis in government and society.

      Today, we have more trade-offs than ons, because the country is a shade more conservative right now. But in November that may change, and new policies akin to the Freedom of Information Act might be implemented. Few countries permit as much legal freedom as the United States does. France, Great Britain, Germany, Japan, India, let alone Russia or China - all the major powers are more restrictive than the US in law and in society. That doesn't excuse us from our role of setting new trends toward a greater freedom, but it doesn't happen overnight, or over one decade.

      Conspiracies are very difficult to maintain or operate. Information is very easy to leak, and any organization has office politics and failures that prompt retaliation and leaks. The White House always has leaks to reporters, as does the military, and these are some tightly controlled institutions.

      Also, when "conspiracies" don't actually do anything illegal in influencing government, they're called "political movements." PNAC is certainly not the most admired political group, but it even has a website, so it's no conspiracy secret. I don't like them, and I think they tarnish the Republican Party, and American Politics, but I have respect for their right to exist.

      That being said, if anyone has any evidence of any illegal activity by any politically active group, for the love of God, bring them to justice.

    9. Re:problem is not 'accidental' by ByteGuerrilla · · Score: 0

      I was intentionally misquoting, but I was accidentally quoting, if you get my meaning. I didn't actually mean to enquote the phrase, just to put it in italics... I meant that just because people refuse to believe it, (i.e. they aren't paranoid/concerned about it) does mean that it is not happening.

      --

      A block of code, sufficiently well-written, is indistinguishable from magick.

    10. Re:problem is not 'accidental' by ByteGuerrilla · · Score: 0

      Oh deary me.

      *does not mean that it is now happening

      Apologies.
      --

      A block of code, sufficiently well-written, is indistinguishable from magick.

  140. Drones over U.S. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Though not yet fully autonomous - UAVs will be coming back from the war on terror for duty over the homeland. I thought this ties in well with the DARPA Grand challenge and the implications of technology on our lives. The first wave digital technology gave power to the people, with desktops and notebooks we can compute and communicate like never before. Now these new advancements are owned mostly by the good old boys. The amateur and hobbyist robotics scene is surging, but a few thousand dollar budget is a far cry from multi-million dollar machines the government is deploying.
    http://globethistle.blogspot.com/

  141. This news seems late to me... by DustyShadow · · Score: 1

    The Global Hawk has had approval to fly in US airspace for a couple years now and it is flown over the US quite often. Same thing with other manned surveillance aircraft. Where do you think they test those radars?? Also, I believe the Predator (or other UAVs) was used in New Orleans after Katrina for recon. Why didn't anyone bitch then?

    So no one is on the plane...that doesn't seem much different to me than having a manned aircraft fly around and watch what you are doing. Highway patrols have been doing this for years catching speeders.

  142. Leavin on a jet plane, crashin into UAV's by Konrad9 · · Score: 1

    Mooooooooooving to Canada.

  143. I'll believe you when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You explain to me how jet fuel can melt steel. The math of 911 doesn't add up.

  144. Drop down your weapons, you have 5 seconds ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why don't they just equip them with guns while they're at it? It will follow the suspects (who are of course guilty anyway, otherwise they wouldn't be suspects), and if you already have them in your sights... Besides, it will save lifes! Yes, first the police won't endanger their officers, second the suspect will know that he has no chance against an armed flying drone, so he'll just give up.

    Deploy armed flying surveillance drones now! For great freedom!

  145. mmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In halflife2 they were easy to shoot down :)

  146. hold your horses... by graveyardduckx · · Score: 0

    How is this any different than putting cameras outside of buildings or putting those cameras at intersections to keep people from running red lights? It's not like they're buzzing these things through your house. Are any rights really being violated here? It's no different than a cop driving by and taking a look.

  147. dictatorship by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in the years since Bush took over the office we seen US slide into dark ages, and some sort of a dictatorship! and starting 2 wars......

    i pitty you poor americans

    your getting screwed left right and center by your Big Brother :(

  148. Two words by Nethead · · Score: 1

    laser pointers

    --
    -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    1. Re:Two words by scdeimos · · Score: 2, Informative

      (Waypoint) UAV's tend to navigate via GPS or beacon telemetry, so laser pointers will do squat to them navigation-wise. You'd still have the FAA on your ass for lasing an aircraft, though.

    2. Re:Two words by Nethead · · Score: 1

      Will they be required to be FAA certified? Then will they have N----- numbers on them?

      --
      -- I have a private email server in my basement.
    3. Re:Two words by scdeimos · · Score: 2, Informative
      Will they be required to be FAA certified? Then will they have N----- numbers on them?

      I don't believe that's relevant. I see no mention about aircraft registration requirements in FAA's Procedures for Handling Airspace Matters, Chapter 29, Outdoor Laser Operations, mainly laser operation restrictions within certain ranges of airports.

    4. Re:Two words by KDR_11k · · Score: 2, Funny

      Those aren't any fun until you mention the second part: laser-guided missiles.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    5. Re:Two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small Solid Fuel Rocket (Estes type) with some sort of guidance? Or even dumb. What happens tp a UAV wacked by a 2-3 oz rocket...

    6. Re:Two words by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right about the UAV not being hurt by laser pointers. But under FAA rules, according to AOPA, they're not aircraft. So perhaps they'd be legal to, ah, lase.

    7. Re:Two words by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Most video cameras can be temporarily blinded by laser pointers. It might not harm the UAV, but it might interfere with it's recon.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  149. Revolution is now much harder by Animats · · Score: 1
    If law enforcement had had the power and technology in the 1960s they have today, the black and gay revolutions would have smashed flat before they even started.

    They didn't even have SWAT teams back then. There were several critical occasions on which cops backed off in confrontations (the Black Panthers, Stonewall, big demonstrations). Today, they'd bring in SWAT, bring out the armored personnel carriers, use the rubber bullets, arrest everyone, identify them all, sort out the ringleaders, and over time, prosecute everyone involved.

    1. Re:Revolution is now much harder by Rooked_One · · Score: 1

      this is what i'm afraid of. Our founding fathers are rolling over in their grave right now. Its one of our rights to revolt if things aren't going well, and now that right is becoming smaller and smaller.

    2. Re:Revolution is now much harder by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You have the right to revolt; just not necessarily the guarantee of success.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  150. The Power of Nightmares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the past, politicians promised to create a better world. They had different ways of achieving this, but their power and authority came from the optimistic visions they offered their people. Those dreams failed and today people have lost faith in ideologies. Increasingly, politicians are seen simply as managers of public life, but now they have discovered a new role that restores their power and authority. Instead of delivering dreams, politicians now promise to protect us: from nightmares.

    They say that they will rescue us from dreadful dangers that we cannot see and do not understand. And the greatest danger of all is international terrorism, a powerful and sinister network with sleeper cells in countries across the world, a threat that needs to be fought by a War on Terror. But much of this threat is a fantasy, which has been exaggerated and distorted by politicians. It's a dark illusion that has spread unquestioned through governments around the world, the security services and the international media. This is a series of films about how and why that fantasy was created, and who it benefits.

    At the heart of the story are two groups: the American neoconservatives and the radical Islamists. Both were idealists who were born out of the failure of the liberal dream to build a better world, and both had a very similar explanation of what caused that failure. These two groups have changed the world, but not in the way that either intended. Together, they created today's nightmare vision of a secret organised evil that threatens the world, a fantasy that politicians then found restored their power and authority in a disillusioned age. And those with the darkest fears became the most powerful.

  151. Details on WTC collapse by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

    A team of well-qualified experts including one from Controlled Demolition supplied data and insight for an (IMHO strident) article about the WTC collapses. The current leading theory is erosion of safety margin when structural steel was weakened by prolonged fire, followed by increased stresses from thermal expansion.

    Notice that since the jet fuel burned out after about ten minutes, the temperature of a kerosene fire is irrelevant.

    WTC 7 was on fire after structural damage from falling objects, and was well past its design tolerances because the design case assumed that there would be living firefighters to control any blaze that got started.

  152. Re:Can we have Jessica Alba take 'em out when need by DrJimbo · · Score: 1
    If we can watch Jessica Alba ride around on one and surf it through a window then I am all for 'em!

    --
    We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
    -- Anais Nin
  153. Re:BY and FOR the people? by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 1, Informative
    how the hell could a deliberate demolition be pulled off without anyone finding out before or finding actual evidence after?

    Well, you show me the people that had access to the wreckage afterwards, and who inspected it, and what they inspected it for. Put simply, if someone HAD inspected it, we wouldnt be talking about 'theories' of what caused the building to collapse. We would be looking at their emperical data and argueing over that.

    Such things take rather a lot of setup to pull off

    I guess it would be an advantage if your brother was a principal memeber of the board for the company that provided electronic security to the WTC towers...

    But hey, why shouldnt I trust a government? Its not like they never lied about things before

  154. Well known for a while... by Down_in_the_Park · · Score: 1

    I can't remember were I read it, guess it was slashdot... but

    http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200501/clarke

    did mentioned UAVs to conduct reconnaissance in the United States, and it also described how well it (and all coming patriot acts) protected America against, well, against whom?

    --
    "People who are willing to sacrifice essential freedoms for security deserve neither freedom nor security."

    B F
  155. For pity'sake by aepervius · · Score: 1

    Ever saw a burned down building with the steel structure contorted in every direction ? Well i have a news for you, LONG before melting point , metal soften up and stop supporting as much strength. Why is this so hard to understand ? Ever thougth why blacksmith heat up metal before hammering it ? I've got a news for you it is to soften up and form it.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
    1. Re:For pity'sake by deesine · · Score: 1
      Look here. See the yellow-hot molten steel being pulled from debris? I think the GP was asking how did it ever get that hot.

      Also, according to your simple theory, we would expect to see other buildings that have succumbed to fire damage, their steel softened, and thus fallen. But WC1 WC2 & WC7 are the only modern, steel-reinforced high-rises, to have ever collapsed because of an uncontrolled fire. Ever.

      --
      damaged by dogma
  156. Re:BY and FOR the people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " and if I remember rightly number seven was heavily fire damaged as well" you remember wrongly! read the accounts again and make another stab at it, eh?

  157. as a private pilot by iogan · · Score: 1

    I really agree with the AOPA on this one. Keeping them out of "commercial", or controlled airspace isn't really going to do the trick, since most private flight takes place outside of controlled airspace too (except for business jets etc). Collision avoidance in uncontrolled airspace is 100% the responsibility of the pilot.

    The question is, what happens when there is no pilot? Who will be at fault if there is an incident where one of these things cause a plane to crash? The "advantage" they have in being hard to notice is hardly an advantage for us...

    I guess I'm lucky I don't live in the states, that is until our government promptly follows suit, as they often do..

  158. Skynet? by master_p · · Score: 1

    What will happen in the future? since technology progresses rapidly, how impossible is to replace police with UAVs? with a small progress in AI, UAVs can patrol neighbourhoods and immediately deal with thefts, drugs, smoking a cigarette, wearing a t-shirt with 'legalize it' logo, rapping in a corner, saying the word 'bitch' etc.

  159. OH BOY OH BOY by mgabrys_sf · · Score: 1

    Now all my rants about black helecopters will be modified insightful. It's another notch on the old belt - yessir!

    Oh it's a hap-hap-happy dayyyyy......

    Now if only my tinfoil hat dreams could come true.

  160. "illegal invasions" clarified by StupidKatz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Whatever else the invasions in Iraq and Afghanistan were, they were undeniably not illegal.

    I'm less clear on the Afghanistan front, but the gov't there was officially harboring the group which killed ~3,000 civilians on our soil, etc.

    As for Iraq, that is easy. The USA has been in the region since '91-ish, which if you recall, was when Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait and was making eyes at Saudi Arabia next. Iraq was the military powerhouse in that section of the world, and no one there had the military might to stop Iraq. That's where the USA came in. Saddam surrendered and signed a peace treaty, the violation of which legally allows the USA to continue the previous war as though it had never ended. If you watched the news during the early '90s, you most assuredly saw near-constant reports of missiles fired at our patrolling planes, etc., in violation of said treaty.
    Sure, maybe the given reasons for the Iraq invasion were a mistake, intelligence failure, lie, whatever... but whatever else the Iraq invasion is, it is most certainly not illegal.

    1. Re:"illegal invasions" clarified by gowen · · Score: 1
      That's where the USA came in. Saddam surrendered and signed a peace treaty, the violation of which legally allows the USA to continue the previous war as though it had never ended.
      That's an opinion. However, it's not one shared by any experts in International Law, except those employed by the Bush Administration, and certainly not that of the UN (under whose aegis and specific license Operation Desert Storm was fought [by a genuinely multilateral force, I should add]).

      Your repetition of that as an uncontrovertible facts tells us all we need know about where you get you information from, and how critically you care to look at that information.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    2. Re:"illegal invasions" clarified by 4D6963 · · Score: 1
      Whatever else the invasions in Iraq and Afghanistan were, they were undeniably not illegal.

      At the risk of breaking Godwin's law, I'll say that everything Hitler did was legal.

      I'm less clear on the Afghanistan front, but the gov't there was officially harboring the group which killed ~3,000 civilians on our soil, etc.

      That makes me wonder, if the terrorists who performed the 911 had been found to belong to the egyptian jihad or whatever they got over there, do you really think we would have invaded Egypt? Can you imagine that? I can't!

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    3. Re:"illegal invasions" clarified by plumby · · Score: 1
      making eyes at Saudi Arabia next.

      Any evidence for this (other than the faked satelite photos from 1990)?

    4. Re:"illegal invasions" clarified by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They were and remain completely illegal. Why else was there a succession of incompetent excuses submitted by the US government, with a new one made up each time a previous one was disproved?

      If you think that your unilateral assertion that a treaty was broken entitles you to invade anyone you like, what rights do you think the Native Americans have at the moment?

      The US has been in the region since 81-ish, not 91-ish. For the first ten years they were arming Saddam so that he could invade Iran for them. Your lying, partial presentation of the facts, and your ability to go suddenly blind whenever an inconvenient fact presents itself makes me think you must be in American Politics...

      George... is that you?

    5. Re:"illegal invasions" clarified by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

      You're correct. The Iraqi surrender apparently resulted in a cease-fire agreement, not a peace treaty.

      What is in dispute here? That Iraq surrendered and agreed to a cease-fire?
      That Iraq subsequently violated the cease-fire? (Note that the coalition commanders claimed that the squashing of the Kurdish uprising was also a violation of the cease-fire agreements.)
      It's a pity I'm not easily finding any good, detailed reports of Iraq's actions against US/UK aircraft patrolling the designated "no fly" zones, but I highly doubt that was ever in question.

      Or is it the fact that the US grabbed the UK and went off to clean up its mess without the agreement of the toothless UN (reminds me of the League of Nations, honestly)? I'll admit that could be an issue for the lawyers - I don't know.

      If anything, the real item the disgruntled folks should be focussing on is the reason the war was sold to the general public: that Iraq had or was going to have nukes/WMD, and we need to do something now-now-now! Then again, since "intelligence" is, by nature, uncertain, that ultimately wouldn't get you very far, either.

    6. Re:"illegal invasions" clarified by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It wasn't a treaty. It was a cease-fire. Item 3a, if you don't want to read the whole bloody thing.

      I'd love to see some evidence showing that the 2003 invasion of Iraq was "illegal". Seriously.

    7. Re:"illegal invasions" clarified by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Smarter folks than I disagree with you.

    8. Re:"illegal invasions" clarified by Shajenko42 · · Score: 1

      You're seriously referencing the Heritage Foundation? What's next, a cite from Pravda?

    9. Re:"illegal invasions" clarified by greenrd · · Score: 1
      Well no, the real item is the way they obviously decided to sell the war based on lies and misinformation. Take the Downing Street Memo. Take Powell's presentation to the UN, which was a pack of lies. Even one of Powell's subordinates has said "We bullshitted the American people".

    10. Re:"illegal invasions" clarified by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ask, and you shall receive.

  161. Oh really? by scdeimos · · Score: 1
    From TFA:
    Currently there is no recognized technology solution that could make these aircraft capable of meeting regulatory requirements for 'see and avoid,' and 'command and control,'" said Nick Sabatini, associate FAA administrator for aviation safety.

    Obviously this character has never heard of TCAS (Traffic alert and Collision Avoidance System) - no wonder there's so many prangs in US air space. Oh but hang on, TCAS was allegedly developed by the FAA!

    What additional rules should affect pilotless UAV's (ie: not remote controlled planes, often termed SUAV's):

    • UAV's should be fitted with self-illumination including beacons. This allows them to be seen by other aircraft.
    • UAV's should be fitted with TCAS. This means that their collision-avoidance procedures will be consistent with those of GA aircraft - no mid-airs because the UAV went up (instead of down) when the other aircraft was supposed to go up. It also means this will place a minimum size limitation on UAV's (which can only help to make them more visible to other aircraft operators).
    • UAV's should be fitted with altitude-transmitting transponder ID tags. This allows them to be detected and monitored by ATC. Further, the transmitted ID should contain the current (programmable obviously) telephone number of the reponsible operator - allowing ATC to contact the operator to remove the UAV from conflicting airspace.
  162. Firearms are American by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

    you don't care that you have a completely insane attitude to firearms (everybody should have one (which the rest of the world sees as ludicrous))

    "America" really doesn't much care about what the rest of the world thinks. We have our culture, and it suits us just fine, thank you. Some of us still remember that the average Joe at the time of our country's founding owned the modern-day equivalent of a .50 caliber BMG sniper rifle inasmuch as long-barreled rifled muskets were top-of-the-line firearm technology of that time. Yes, even though there has been much infringing of it going on, the second amendment to the US Constitution states that "the people", individuals, which are all members of the militia (even still, according to current-day US law) have a God-given right to own and carry any and all arms without restriction. For clarification, an "arm" is a term meaning "man-portable weapon", so this does not appear to give individuals the right for howitzers or Abrams tanks, but does mean they can own a fully automatic M-16, AK-47, 40mm grenade launcher, etc. Don't like it? Don't worry - you don't live here.

    Sadly, many of your other points are fairly accurate. It all stems from the decline of personal responsibility, in my opinion.

    1. Re:Firearms are American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "America" really doesn't much care about what the rest of the world thinks.

      Again, this pathetically fake cocky attitude is part of of the problem. We know you live in fear, we watch your news sometimes too. That's no way to live.

      We have our culture, and it suits us just fine, thank you.

      You aren't alone on this planet. You share it with many other people. You have to learn that your actions affect others and that how you are seen by others does matter. That's personal responsibility.

    2. Re:Firearms are American by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

      Again, this pathetically fake cocky attitude is part of of the problem. We know you live in fear, we watch your news sometimes too. That's no way to live.

      Actually, you are incorrect. There is a big difference from "living in fear" and being aware of the nature of humans. Now, I can't speak for all Americans, but a sizable portion of us know full well that the mainstream media likes to ladle things out of its crock-of-poo constantly.

      You aren't alone on this planet. You share it with many other people. You have to learn that your actions affect others and that how you are seen by others does matter. That's personal responsibility.

      You're overlooking the disconnect between the American people and its government. There are quite a few things that the American government is doing, and I don't just mean right now with the current President and his administration, that many of the American people do not agree with. One of the major problems is that nearly all the politicians here are dirty rats, so voting the rats out is a slow, painful process. Part of the peoblem is that an organization can do quite a few things with 2.4 trillion-ish dollars forcibly collected from its populace... and that doesn't include the legit state taxes.

  163. McCarthy by accessdeniednsp · · Score: 1

    Senator McCarthy? Is that you?

    Have you left no decency, sir? At long last, have you left no sense of decency?

  164. Re:BY and FOR the people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thank you from the bottom of my heart for saying this :)

    Please continue to post it as many places as you can on the web, write to newspapers, talk on radio and appear on television. Shout it out loud on the streets if you have to. Dig deeper and expand your conclusions as far as you can. Never stop, encourage your friends to do the same.

    Don't be perturbed by all the nasty things people will call you, how they will ridicule your logic and rationality, how they will scoff at your experts, how they will say that even ordinary people can see that you're wrong.

    Because I want to see a republican elected as president in '08 and '12 and '16 and... :)

    p.s. vote for McCain or Rice!

  165. Yes, it did happen. by sita · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No steel framed buildings have EVER collapsed due to fire before 9/11 even though much fiercer and hotter fires have occurred within them.

    Not true. I doubt you heard of it, but in 1993 the tennis hall of SALK, a large tennis club in Stockholm, was destroyed in a fire. The hall collapses because the steel frame that span the roof is softened by the fire. The frame, which was curved in a semi-circular fashion, bends near the ground, exactly where you would expect from your solid mechanics course (if you took one).

    Just because you never saw it before it doesn't mean it has never happened before.

  166. I tell you what happens by AlgorithMan · · Score: 1

    "But what happens when lots of relatively dumb drones have to share airspace with aircraft carrying passengers?"

    the same thing that happens when relatively dumb presidents have to share groundspace with citizens: they clash

    --
    The MAFIAA is a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes
  167. Google vs UAV's by Netsensei · · Score: 1

    Given that companies actually use Google to assess sollicitants and employees, I'd rather worry about the pervassiveness of the Web over some robot drone flying over our heads.

    If anything, these days, there's no such thing as privacy. And you can't blame just the current administration for that.

  168. Cool! by vaceituno · · Score: 1

    Hey, drones are cool! Remember Terminator Part I?

  169. Better Late then Never? by tacocat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I know they had something like this in Orwelles 1984, I guess it just took us a little longer.

    At this point, Bush should probably just go for broke and insert RFIDs into everyone scalp. I don't think he's gong to stop until this is implimented. So go for it. Hopefully we'll have sufficient liberal backlash to bring the country back into line with reality. At this rate we'll surpass most police states in a decade. I'm not exactly a liberal or a conservative, but this stuff is getting out of hand.

    1. Re:Better Late then Never? by Hershmire · · Score: 1

      Hopefully we'll have sufficient liberal backlash

      You have your terms way out of whack. "Liberals" want to further change in laws and societal norms. "Conservatives" want to keep things as they are. Suddenly instituting automated survellience over the nation is not "conservative," it is radical*.

      Don't get caught into the "US VS THEM" mindset! It has only brought us to where we are now.

      *and irresponsible and unnecessary; but I digress.

      --
      if(!toilet_paper) roll.replace(new roll); //Stupid roommates.
    2. Re:Better Late then Never? by tacocat · · Score: 1

      Good point. I guess it might be reasonable to consider Bushes actions something of a radical departure from what used to be considered the Conservative Republicans. Unfortunately with the Christian based religious right taking up all the good air in the Republican party, the Republicans are starting to very radical and highly religiously driven.

      I sometimes wonder if the idea of fighting the terrorists isn't really a fight between two really fucked up religious views, both of whom are terribly wrong. Consider that we've decided that Arab nations can't be business holders for the US ports for... No good reason thank you...

      Oh the heck with it. If you pay attention to anything, you'll quickly realize that everyone who is sitting around rattling their sabers, be they Isrealis, Palistinians, Jews, Muslims, or Christians, they are all working on the doctrine that the Ends justifies the Means with the gaurantee of a lot more pain and suffering in the world than any of these religions are founded upon.

      We are being over run by the assholes of the world.

      Where do I get off?

  170. Why all the fuss? by AfricanImpi · · Score: 1

    Let's get back on topic here, the Orwellian overtones in this thread are becoming slightly overdone.

    What's being proposed here is hardly a new thing. South Africa was one of the pioneers in this, and the SA Air Force has been operating the Seeker UAV in civilian areas for over a decade now. In fact, the Seeker was the first UAV to be cleared for operations in controlled airspace, with the creation of a set of rules and requirements that are only beginning to be explored by most countries now. So long as the requirements are met, it is just as safe to fly a UAV in controlled and civilian airspace as it is to fly ordinary manned aircraft. Don't believe the "but they'll crash into passenger planes" balderdash.

    Secondly, this is hardly an Orwellian undertaking. It's no more sinister than police helicopters, or the border patrol aircraft that fly along the border. In fact, these UAVs will fulfill essentially the same role, it'll just be cheaper. So this is NOT the same as wiretapping, searching library records and whatnot, at least not unless you're one of those who regard even police helicopters as sinister...

    I'd even go so far as to say the deployment of UAVs in a police capacity can reduce the often stifling police presence at some public gatherings. For example, during S.Africa's inaugural democratic elections in 1994 the Seeker system was deployed around the country to keep an eye on polling stations, and to spot violence breaking out (as it did back then). Police could then be directed in to the specific area they were needed, instead of just having thousands of cops inefficiently trying to blanket the area.

    So I really don't see anything wrong with this at all, considering I've seen for myself how such a system has been implemented and operated. All these UAVs will do is replicate an existing capability while making it cheaper to do so. Surely that's a good thing, considering it means the government actually saves money for once?

    1. Re:Why all the fuss? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Surely that's a good thing, considering it means the government actually saves money for once?

            You expect them to save money? You yourself admit that this would be the first time. Just another excuse to raise taxes/fines/speeding tickets...

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  171. Good idea put some stingers on them too. by PermanentMarker · · Score: 1

    Finally a good idea. It's no longer if your not with us your against us. No this politic can turn potentialy much more effective Vote for Bush or we give you our latest aerial cover, homing in on your cellphone. oh and BTW check the anarchist cook book for a cracking guide on those drowns.

    --
    I know you're out there. I can feel you now. I know that you're afraid. You're afraid of us. You're afraid of change.
  172. Re:BY and FOR the people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If that is the case, why did the building with the least hot least fierce least long burning fire fall first, and the building with the most hot most fierce most long burning fire fall second? Also, at least one of the two buildings fell at almost terminal velocity, implying next to no resistance from structural collapse (which would be expected if the picture you paint were correct). However, it is consistent with a controlled explosion.

  173. Here's hopin' for Civil War! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    As a foreigner, I am likely not the only one hoping your rights will be continue to be taken away until there is open revolt and enough violence that you can straighten your shit out.

    Frankly, I hope most of you Christian right-wing assholes die in the process. Conservativism is fine, but that anti-sex, pro-war, anti-'thinking for yourselves' attitude has got to go.

    1. Re:Here's hopin' for Civil War! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here here...you said a mouthful brother.

  174. Re:BY and FOR the people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, you take a look at the Loose Change video and then try and tell me that it's BS. I for one liked how it had shown many other building that were on fire for way longer than the 2 towers and they did not collapse. It was set up and like many other Americans and other 1st world nations, are too fucking stupid to see it. Do you have no clue about how fucking greedy Bush and his masters are? Do you know how hard it is to get the people to get into a war? You have to create a problem so that the public will cry for bloody murder. How else can you excuse starting an UNJUSTIFIED war?

  175. Re:Personal freedom? WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure, it will start off as just another tool to keep riots and other public disturbances at bay. But will it stay that way? Judging by the trends of the past 5 or 6 years, no. In fact I wouldn't be surprised if it didn't start off as just a nifty little tool for riot control. I would put absolutely nothing past this administration to use and abuse any and every power legal or illegal for whatever purposes seen fit at the time. We've already seen it countless times. They just keep pressing forward though. Nothing seems to stir the crowd enough to back them back down. Sooner or later though, they'll push it an inch too far and that will be when the whole deck of cards falls.

  176. Do you just ignore the facts???? by technoextreme · · Score: 1
    No steel framed buildings have EVER collapsed due to fire before 9/11 even though much fiercer and hotter fires have occurred within them.
    No but a steel frame bridge ending up buckling because of a tanker fire. It's prety much the same concept and by your logic should have never happened.
    --
    Ooo man the floppy drive is broken. No wait. The computer is just upside down.
  177. The elections will return GOP, guaranteed by Quizo69 · · Score: 1

    ....and here's why:

    Immigration Law - it's the hot button/diversionary tactic vote grabber for the 2006 mid-terms.

    Gay marriages - that was the 2004 hot button/diversionary tactic.

    Iraq's WMDs - 2002 hot button/diversionary tactic.

    Need I go on? Simplistic generalisation I know, but basically with each successive elections since GWB was supposedly elected, the GOP have tightened their grip on power thanks to fearmongering and divisive issues. Why would they stop using a successful tactic this time around?

    Watch for Iran to be hit shortly as well, probably with "precision" strikes using nuclear weapons, the second time the US will have used them (no other country has ever USED their nuclear weapons). It has to be done in the next couple of months because after that the Iranian oil bourse will likely be fully operational and the mid-terms will be too close to jeopardise with a new, dragged out war.

    America's ONLY potential saving grace is that her citizens are armed to the teeth. Not to defend from outward aggression, but to defend the Constitution against domestic enemies who wish to destroy its principles.

    Sadly many will die before your Constitution is restored....

    1. Re:The elections will return GOP, guaranteed by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      Why would they stop using a successful tactic this time around?


      Oh they definitely will use it... the question is, will it still be successful? From what I've been hearing lately, the bloom has largely come off that rose. Bush's approval ratings are in the mid-30s (Cheney's at 18), and a majority of Americans polled now trust the Democrats more than the Republicans on just about every issue, even (gasp!) national security. Even the conservatives have lost faith in him. But I think the most telling aspect is that Bush goes on TV about once a week to talk up the war, and nobody listens to him at all. I think people have finally figured out that there is no point paying attention to those noises that keep coming out of his mouth, since they have no relation to reality.


      That said, I suppose one can never be too cynical... but I think there is some room for hope here.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    2. Re:The elections will return GOP, guaranteed by Johnny5000 · · Score: 1

      America's ONLY potential saving grace is that her citizens are armed to the teeth. Not to defend from outward aggression, but to defend the Constitution against domestic enemies who wish to destroy its principles.

      Unfortunately, the most hardcore gun-nuts are Bush supporters.

      --
      The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
  178. wtf? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Did i just timewarp into Nazi Germany or something?

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  179. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? - Talk about Guns by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You don't care about corruption at home (e.g. Florida vote rigging), you don't care about inaction at home (e.g. New Orleans), you don't care that you have a completely insane attitude to firearms (everybody should have one (which the rest of the world sees as ludicrous)

    While I do agree with your sentiments for the most part, I just wanted to clarify something for you...

    Because I DO care about "corruption at home" is the reason everyone should have the right to bear arms. I'm not advocating civil war or anything, but when it really comes down to it and when the shit really hits the fan, an armed society may be the only way to remove said corruption.

    There's a famous American saying, which I'll paraphrase for you:
    "In times of trouble, there are three boxes one can use- the soap box, the ballot box, and the ammo box- use in that order."

    I'm no rabid NRA fan, but I understand that this is the exact reason the Founding Fathers wrote into the Constitution the "Right to Bear Arms".

    Any strategist, (be they political, military, or religious) knows that to defeat a political movement, an enemy invader, or a native populace (say for example, German Jews) you remove their tools. The FBI silenced the Weather Underground, The Church burned its detractors (and many loyalists, too) alive, and the Nazis disallowed the owning of weapons by the Jews. This is the first step to destroying your opposition.

    If and when the Neocon-agenda succeeds in removing our right to peacably assemble, to carry arms, when the presses fall silent except for "approved" literature, when Haebeous Corpus is suspended, and I no longer have the right to petition my government for redress---

    YOU are going to want us to have those guns, I guarantee it. The present Administration would like us to believe "democracy is contagious", while they would like us to forget that CORRUPTION IS CONTAGIOUS, too.

    That Neocon-agenda I mentioned earlier? There are some among us who are paying attention who feel that those days may have already come- that we are so mired in corruption, deceit, betrayal, and TREASON, (remember that part in the Presidential Pledge of Office about "upholding and protecting the Constitution"?) that the fetid stink of it all wafts from the top of the Capitol Dome all the way down to every city council and county board in the land.

    It's hard to pick out that stink sometimes- it's so interspersed with the filth of corporate corruption in this nation that it's become nigh impossible to discern one from the other- for indeed they are both the same.

    Don't begrudge me my guns- someday you may want me to pass one to you- you may "aim to misbehave" as they say. ;-)

    I love America, (for all it's horrible, evil, and destructive history) and I believe in the American Dream and the American ideal that is written into the Constitution- that the beautiful language and ideals on those parchments stand for something, something unique and special, something that all men can aspire to.

    The way the Neocons have sold my beloved nation away makes me want to cry- each and every day I read of the Fed reaching it's hands further and further into peoples homes, bank accounts, family life, credit history, etc. Common People just want to be free- the Neoncons just want Common People to be slaves.

    TO BEGRUDGE US OUR GUNS IS THE LAST STEP TOWARDS MAKING US ALL SLAVES.

    I know this sounds melodramatic, but in reality, this view is NOT: insanity, paranoia, conjecture, theory, conspiracy, or conspiracy theory- this is simply the history of mankind- of all groups who sought to control another.

    So if you don't want the right to carry arms, fine. I realize most people don't- in fact, the only firearm I own is one given to me as a young man- a small, single-shot .22 I've only ever used for target practice. In fact, I've never taken a single shot at anything that was alive, and I prob

  180. Rebellions aren't always right by Jasper__unique_dammi · · Score: 1

    "Won't the weapons come in handy when rebelling? In fact, isn't that the reason the right to bear arms is constitutionally protected, so that the people will be able to overthrow their government?"

    Right.. then (mostly) badly trained cilivilians can fight the militairy while being bombed and the enemy has tanks, thats going to work. Even if they win there is a good chance the rebelion will fall apart into smaller groups that just fight eachother. (like often seen in africa)
    Meanwhile, before the rebellion, thousands are dying accidentally because monkeys have the right to bear arms.

    As guns for personal defense.. doubt many people can keep their guard up all day, and will be cought off guard when they need the gun. (i know, parent post ichigo didnt say anything about that, needed to be added)

  181. Re:BY and FOR the people? by Aceticon · · Score: 0

    "Science aside, how the hell could a deliberate demolition be pulled off without anyone finding out before or finding actual evidence after? Such things take rather a lot of setup to pull off."

    Obviously you've never heard of the Bush administration's elite team of invisible ninja implosion specialists which during the Bush senior's administration were stollen from abortion clinics during attacks by anti-abortion groups as fetuses, then secretly bred in artificial wombs, raised in the Rockies all the while being trained in imploding the Twin Towers using virtual reality software which is so way beyond what's commercially available that they managed to be sexually satisfied all the way through their teens.

  182. MOD PARENT UP!!!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MOD PARENT UP!!!!!!!!!

  183. Re:BY and FOR the people? by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

    If the WTC-collapse was indeed some sort of conspiracy, why make it so obvious? Had I been in charge, I would have made sure that the collapse of the buildins would be as chaotic and "messy" as possible. Last thing I would do is to make them look "clean". If you do that, you have bunch of lunatics running around shouting "conspiracy! It was a controlled demolition!". And that would be the last thing I wanted.

    --
    Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
  184. A Young European's View on Things by MikTheUser · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm quite impressed with this Slashdot article, not because of TFA, nor because of its content.

    But I am surprised how many of you realize the problems that your society is having (Yes, I am adressing US citizens). We, in Europe, often speak about those issues of freedom being taken away in the name of a so-called War on Terror, and we see the same roots of the problem, being the media providing bread-and-games distraction, partial/idealistic education and other things.
    But, I have come to realize, we unfairly generalize the US citizens, as if all of you didn't realize what's going on. But then, I see stuff like Sorry Everybody, and I am reminded that lots of you don't like the system either. And most of the comments on this article (which have been modded up) express an understanding of what is going wrong.

    People - you have to do something!. I am not in the position to be lecturing you (since I am but a 19-year-old German student), but I wonder how come that so many of you see the problems, and yet Nothing Ever Happens. I wonder if it is because there's no way for the "extraparliamentary opposition" (read up on the German one) to express itself, or because there simply is no movement which unites people who feel like you do, and like I do, too. What I see is a great potential for protest, but only in places like Slashdot does it become aparent.

    There really is no important bottom line to this. It's what I perceive and what I wonder about.

  185. Why not Civil Air Patrol? by richieb · · Score: 1
    Why not use Civil Air Patrol for this? There are plenty of private pilots who would be more than happy to fly such missions using their own airplanes. It would cost less, because the goverment would only have pay for the gasoline.

    --
    ...richie - It is a good day to code.
  186. Oh come on.... by AnswerIs42 · · Score: 1

    Next you will be telling us that Homeland Security is tracking people with GPS enabled cell phones to know where they are!

  187. Surveilance by NitsujTPU · · Score: 1

    Ahh, I feel much freer now knowing that there will be cameras watching my every move.

  188. In USSR^H^HA by SilentReproach · · Score: 1

    The skies watch you!

    --
    Religion is the opium of the people. Evolution is the opium of scientists.
  189. Brave New World by xerid · · Score: 1

    This sounds a lot like "Brave New World"

  190. Send in the gun nuts... by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1
    Isnt about time eric raymond and charlton heston exercised the 2nd amendment and cleansed the whitehouse of power-hungry fascists in a hail of assault weapon fire?

    PS, that was a joke.

    PPS, the fact the "free west" is turning into a fascist police state is chillingly far from a joke. I recommened anyone to read (dont watch) V for Vendetta. It throws conceits of security vs. freedom into stark releif.

    --
    (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
  191. Here's an idea... by PatTheGreat · · Score: 1
    You know what would be cool? If they did this UAV surveillance, but then required that the video information be publicly available!

    If they required, for example, that all the UAVs have streaming video to the internet, or that TV Channels 300-400 or whatever were dedicated to broadcasting the video from these planes, we could keep tabs on government surveillance. Plus, we could see all the crazy shit our neighbors were doing. I would watch that all the time.

    Imagine the screen savers...

    --
    Google: "All your data are belong to us."
  192. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? - Talk about Guns by Shajenko42 · · Score: 1
    "In times of trouble, there are three boxes one can use- the soap box, the ballot box, and the ammo box- use in that order."
    Actually you forgot one - jury. As in jury nullification, that the courts would love to make illegal, but can't quite yet.
  193. Try a different word. by hey! · · Score: 1
    First it was the domestic wiretap issue; the administration not only didn't deny doing it, they flat-out flaunted it.

    To be entirely accurate they denied it when it was a suspicion, and flaunted it when it was shown to be fact.

    "Security" doesn't make it all OK of course. It wasn't as if the framers of the US Constitution were unfamiliar with this argument; the proof is this:


    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.


    Stepping back a bit from technicalities of what applies in what situation, the basic philosophy is clear: the government is given the power to pursue the legitimate ends of a government, but is subject to restrictions, tests and limitations which prevent it from using these powers to its own ends. It's a very moderate philosophy, and it's a courageous one, one that believes that reason can accomodate any practical need without sacrificing principle. "Conservatives" and "Liberals" alike would do well heed this.

    So, to answer your rhetorical quesiton, obviously no, "Security" doesn't make anything the government does reasonable. However, there is another word that does. Try this one on for size.

    Accountability.

    So, you need to tap domestic phone calls because of "security". Well, without accountabiliy, how does anybody know that's really why? How does anybody know what you do with the data you collect? FISA seems like a very reasonable compromise, much in line with the basic philosophy of the framers.

    The same applies to the Patriot Act. If you actually study it's provisions, it doesn't really fix the problems that lead to our failure to stop the 9/11 attack. However, assuming those problems are fixed, what the Patriot Act does is provide the government with powers to react quickly in a "ticking timebomb" scenario. And as by in large these are things that the government would probably try to do anyway under a documented and imminent threat, it's potentially a very good thing to have these powers spelled out explicitly. HOWEVER, the big fault of the Patriot Act is that it has no provisions for accountability. It just gives the executive branch powers and does not lay out how the branch will be monitored, limited or the consequences of abusin its new powers.

    Lack of accountability is dangerous because the prevailing judicial philosophy with respect to powers granted is this: once a power is granted for one purpose, it is granted for any purpose, even purposes contrary to the intent the power was given. The best examples of this are copyrights and patents. Congress was clearly given the power to establish these things in order to promote scientific and cultural development. However, it is under the current philosophy free to use it to create a fundamental, perpetual, extra-constitutional right to intellectual property, so long as the laws it passes have a certain form (e.g. "forever" is not allowed, but 1000 years would be).

    So, in principle, I have no fundamental problem with UAV's being used for domestic recon, given that we are doing domestic recon we might as well choose the most convenient and cost effective method. However, without specifications, restrictions, and above all documentation which is reviewed by a trusted party, I think it's a bad thing. Not because surveillance is bad, but because unlimited government power is bad.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  194. Spawn more overlords! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Spawn more overlords.

  195. Bush by certel · · Score: 1

    Two words: Big Brother. Any one else see the future of freedom being reduced?

  196. WTF by denjin · · Score: 1

    I am going to puke if I hear this "Post 9/11 Society" crap too much more...wtf.

  197. Re:Personal freedom? WTF? by Stiletto · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How exactly is increased surveillance when you are in a public place an infringement on your personal freedoms?

    Are you joking? OK, one example off the top of my head. There are plenty more.

    You are in an unfamiliar neighborhood. You pull over and waive someone down and ask for directions. He comes up to your car and you ask him for directions to the hotel. He points and gives you directions and you drive off.

    That man later turns out to be a terrorist or drug dealer.

    Now, thanks to ubiquitous surveilance, you are on videotape associating with a terrorist. This information can and will be taken out of context and used against you if, say you ever run for office or are accused of a minor crime.

  198. Orange Revolution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Won't the weapons come in handy when rebelling? In fact, isn't that the reason the right to bear arms is constitutionally protected, so that the people will be able to overthrow their government?

    100 million people on the streets with guns are a mob or an army, not like you or me. 100 million people without guns are the voice of a nation, speaking louder than gunfire can drown out.

    There will always be those who cleave to their guns like comfort blankets, but for the big things, they don't really need them. The truth is the people simply need to stand up en masse and tell those who no longer represent them, "Stop or I'll say stop again".

    1. Re:Orange Revolution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      100 million people without guns make an easy target. Look at Africa, the people with the guns, dictators and warlords, push around the unarmed people that greatly outnumber them with ease. Look at China, the people stood up in the streets and demanded democracy and were merely run over with tanks. Your saying "Stop or I'll say stop again" will be met with a "Shut up or we'll shut you up permanently" and you won't have a way to even resist them.

    2. Re:Orange Revolution? by Espressoman · · Score: 1

      I completely agree with your sentiment. Keep talking :o)

  199. Oh god not a collision! by Xichekolas · · Score: 0
    But what happens when lots of relatively dumb drones have to share airspace with aircraft carrying passengers?
    Somehow I think that a 747 could hit a dozon UAVs without even noticing... unless the UAV somehow flew into one of the engines... but hey, that is what redundancy is for right?
    --

    Self-referential Sigs are cool on /. these days...

    54

  200. One Nation Under Survalance by aka_big_wurm · · Score: 1

    Time to break out some old Public Enimey tapes, Watch some X Files, and good ol tin foil hat.

  201. Why are America's leaders so cowardly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two F-2 tornados tore through my town a couple of weeks ago. My neighborhood was the hardest hit.

    Walking through the disaster the next day (you couldn't drive, all the streets were blocked by trees, utility poles, power lines, roofs, etc) I couldn't believe the incredible destruction, even as I was seeing it with my own eyes.

    The thought occurred to me that if Osama Bin Laden had seen the mess, he would not only be jealous, he'd just give up. "We can't hurt these people!"

    Yesterday I went to renew my car's license plates. I had to go through a God damned metal detector, there was only one door to go through (around the other side of the building).

    You know what? Your damned metal detectors might stop a human terrorist, but it won't do jack shit about a tornado or an earthquake.

    It also occurred to me that Americans aren't being protected, only their cowardly politicians.

    Three thousand Americans have died at the hands of Bin Laden this decade. Over two thousand American soldiers have died in the Iraq folly, and another thousand died from the Bush incompetence during Katrina. I'd say Bush is beating Bin Laden by three or four hundred dead Americans.

    9-11 was an authoritarian's wet dream. Could at least a few of you grow a spine?

    (Still no internet at home yet, don't know my /. pass, mcgrew here.)

  202. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? - Talk about Guns by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

    Sounds good but can the average citizen get his hands on anti-tank and anti-aircraft weaponry?

    --
    Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  203. Israel doesn't have the GA population of the US. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you read the article, the AOPA is talking about GA aircraft. Most of these aircraft are lucky to get to 8,000ft let alone the flight levels that airliners are on.

    The problem is that these UAVs will most likely be flying below the flight levels also. Now you have a bit of a problem. One aircraft that effectively can't 'see' any aircraft around it. With a piloted aircraft you have a person looking every which way to avoid other aircraft and a set of rules to help avoid eachother.

    Now you have to worry that this UAV might cross your flight path without warning, because its on a pre-determined course.

  204. Re:BY and FOR the people? by replicant108 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What do you think happens when you heat and soften the trusses on an exoskelital building? (I'll tell you because you obviously don't know.) The trusses sag and fail causing the outside, load bearing members buckle without their lateral stabilization, the top falls, and the whole thing comes crashing inward.

    Since this is something that you claim to "know", perhaps you could point to one other example of a fire causing a building to collapse in such a fashion.

    And if this never happened anywhere else ever, you might want to ask why it happened three times on 9/11.

  205. Cool just like in HL2 by solipsist0x01 · · Score: 1

    That's awesome, just like in HL2! Machines are going to be flying around taking pictures of us, how cool is that.

  206. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? - Talk about Guns by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    No need to make it illegal. Just screen out jurors who would invoke jury nullification. It's common practice for judges and lawyers to, during the jury selection process, ask things like "Will you decide on the instructions of the judge?". While this sounds legit (because the judge is on the side of individual liberty, right? right?), it actually allows them to "instruct" them to decide a certain way. For example, telling a jury you must convict on a charge of drug possession if there is evidence (which there would be), but quell attempts at jury nullification if one believes mere possession of an object with no unlawful actions against another isn't a crime.

  207. My support goes to the FAA by Zitchas · · Score: 1
    Well, since it's flying, I hope the FAA enacts (or has enacted for it) strong legislation regulating these things. And enforcing legal requirements.

    For one, (using Canadian flight legal code, aka the TC AIM, I quote: section reference

    [523-VLA.1385 Position Light System Installation]

    [Aeroplanes intended for VFR night or IFR operation shall meet the following requirements:

    [...]a)[...]

    (b) Left and right position lights. Left and right position lights shall consist of a red and a green light spaced laterally as far apart as practicable and installed on the aeroplane such that, with the aeroplane in the normal flying position, the red light is on the left side and the green light is on the right side;

    (c) Rear position light. The rear position light shall be a white light mounted as far aft as practicable on the tail or on each wing tip; and

    (d) [...]


    This is the relevant excert from the Canadian code, and I'm fairly sure the US has a similar section. That being said, lightining meeting these requirements makes almost anything extremely visible at night. (the technical requirement for light intensity requires them to be visible from at least several miles away. Same brightness as for those jet's you can watch go overhead at 30'000 feet or more away...) On the same token, those lights do almost nothing during daytime (and in fact, don't need to be on during day time either).

    So we end up with a situation where they are extremely visible during night time (so no covert surveillance at night when most crime and stuff happens anyway), and still remain invisible enough during daytime to pose a serious threat to air traffic.

    It should also be noted that, while flying objects stand out really well against the sky, small flying objects (and I'm including things as big as large geese at more than 30' distance, or large aircraft at a mile or more) are quite hard to see against the ground.

    Net summary: At night they are extremely visible to everyone. During daytime they are extremely visible to anyone on the ground, and well-nigh invisible to anyone in flight.

    We have problems enough with recreational pilots flying those paragliders and small A/C, let alone unguided things that are even smaller. Thus we need the relevant aviation authorities to take a firm hand on these things and keep them where they belong: At very low altitudes. As in under 500', and preferably a very long way outside any aproach/departure path where a/c routinely fly below 500'.


    Oh, and someone above called the people of /. luddiets due to the lack of support/enthousiasm for tech projects such as this. I disagree with that assessement. We're not luddites, we're advocates of the NIOBY (Not In Our Back Yard) theory. I like the technology, but I don't want to run into it (litterally or figuratively). Same probably applies to almost everything else surveillance related. I like the tech, but I hate the applications being made with it.

    Oh, and many pilots consider auto-pilots to be the bane of the industry: Not only do they reduce the need for pilots, but they render the plane less safe, since the pilot is no longer actively involved in the flight of the a/c, thus more readily distracted by others in the plane, or whatnot. Ideally it would giving the pilot the chance to focus on his surrounding instead of on the mechanics of flight, but this rarely happens. And lastly, as has been mentioned, how many airports come equiped with the high-precision landing guidance systems required for those things? very, very few. Not even all the international caliber airports have them, although many do. And we *really* don't want those things taking up airspace there.

    --
    Z
  208. low-quality history lessons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I read up on the Gestapo in Wikipedia recently and was surprised that it was (in sheer numbers of people devoted to task types) mainly an overworked, understaffed bureacracy trying to sift through mountaints of evidence of treason given to it by outsiders.

    The key feature was that a law was passed exempting it from judicial oversight. All the famous horrors seem to be able to be traced back to that law, and to have been committed by an extremely small percentage of the staff, most of whom were law-abiding, patriotic desk-workers.

    It sounded strangely familiar. But I'm pretty sure I never learned that in school.

  209. Terrorism is a tactic, not a group by delcielo · · Score: 1

    The idea of winning a war on terrorism is ridiculous. Terrorism is a tactic. It may be a desparate and unreliable tactic; but it is indeed a tactic. Any people will resort to terrorism should preferred methods for achieving their goals fail. I like to think (I would in fact hope) that if the U.S. were invaded and our government fell, that we would also engage in terrorism against our invaders.

    Understand that I'm not trying to justify or defend the "insurgents" in Iraq, or the Taliban or any other of these current terrorist groups. I'm simply saying that you can't defeat terrorism any more than you can defeat war itself. They are means to ends, processes, not individual targets.

    --
    Hot Damn! It's the Soggy Bottom Boys!
    1. Re:Terrorism is a tactic, not a group by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Desperate, yes. Unreliable, no. Contrary to what persons in power want you to believe, historically terrorism is an effective method to force the status-quo's hand. Consider Israel for example. The Palestinians have zero leverage in getting what they want. Yet there have been numerous attempts at peace negotiations and Israel has offered to make concessions and compromise. Granted, I'm greatly simplifying a very complex situation, but do you really think Israel would be giving the Palestinians the time of day if they just persistently asked nicely? Terrorism and torture are both barbaric, but only torture is ineffective.

  210. Steel weapons and armor by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    Were used throughout the middle ages in both Asia and Europe. You don't think knights were wearing cast iron do you? The use of steel in Japanese swords dates back at least 500 years from today, for example.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  211. The PILOTS are worried?! by burnunit0 · · Score: 1
    The article's intro asks this:
    But what happens when lots of relatively dumb drones have to share airspace with aircraft carrying passengers? A pilot's association is worried.

    Jeezum crow! The pilots association is worried? What happens to the airspace? These are the wrong freaking concerns! These are the wrong freaking questions! Or at least they're questions about practical things which should be a little further down the list of priorities right now. Concerns that totally ignore the far far more disturbing fact that the government would like to spy upon and menace citizens and dissenters using any and all available means. Trees, meet forest!

    Nothing comes of the president's revelations about illegal wiretapping. Nothing comes of revelations about external prisons and detention camps. Nothing comes of any of this crap! David Cross was right, what does this guy have to do, eat a Jewish baby on live tv or something? My fellow americans, I'd like ot talk with you about civil rights and the constitution... rrarrr...MMM...that's good Jew baby...

    I guess this is what is meant by "We've earned political capital in this election and I intend to spend it." Spending political capital means running the whole bloody country straight into the bowels of hell, apparently. I feel like I'm taking crazy pills!

    --
    yes. that's all I'm going to say in all comments from now on.
  212. I completely agree with you by EvilPickles · · Score: 0

    Nido, I have to completely agree with you. The basic reaction you recieve from something so proposterous to the average joe, is so common, and so stupid. I cannot stand retards who make fun of you and completely scoff at something so serious, and so true. I have wanted to punch these stupid mother fuckers in the face, tie them to a chair, and tell them everything wrong with the world they are to stupid and assuming to believe, and not only that, but force them to listen. I have been outright insulted flamed and ostracised from every community I have ever joined online, and the moderators of these communities not only let the other members completely break the rules, and disrespect me, they banned me just because they felt like it. The moderators also joined in on the hate fest. I say this, your stupidity will kill us all, wake up or die like the rest of the human race in a nuclear blast. President GW bush's obsession with nuclear defense, his membership in the cult Skull and Bones, and the fact that that cult is bent on the declination of the worldwide population, down to 2 billion concerns me. Various facts have me convinced that there will indeed be a nuclear war soon, maybe in the next 6 years. People say the world will end in 2012, the year the mayan calender ends. I wonder if this conspiracy could be that old, that the mayans really did know this would happen. The motives behind people's unwilinigness to believe, and even scoff and openly insult free thinkers, and this conspiracy confuses me. It confuses me a lot, I do not see how someone can just dismiss something so serious, so easily. I have been hated and driven out of communities, no matter what I say, they will complain about stuff I never said, assume because I never said that that I never did, or thought it. They have complained about to much information, complaining that the majority of my post is to off topic, that I go off on random areas. Free thinkers can never win, because people are to fucking stupid to listen. But that's no one's fault except the consprists, the evidence is out there, they have manipulated the social climate, with simple multimilion dollar Movies, Music, and Media. At present I am no where near old enough to move away and build a house in the country side, or build nuclear bomb shelter. If it does happen, in 6 years, I will be 22 years old. I have not thought much about what might happen if said nuclear war happens, I find increasingly more evidence every day. The environment is poisoned, you cannot drink the water in lakes and streams anymore. There is to many people, no one knows how to hunt for food anymore, there are no forests. Imagining you surived a nuclear blast, there would be anarchy afterwards, radiation poisoning would sink in if you could not find shelter, others who survived would do Whatever-The-Fuck-They-Want. They might kill you for food, or just for the hell of it. People would do things just because they are normally against the law, and they know they can't be punished.

    1. Re:I completely agree with you by nido · · Score: 1

      Good sir,

      The Mayan calendar doesn't "end" in 2012, it starts over again. In Mayan cosmology, everything moves in cycles. 2012 is both the end and beginning of an era. Look into the Hopi worldview too - we're said to be in the "Fourth World", and the prophesies indicating the end of that world have mostly come to pass already. "Thunder sticks" (white man's firearms), cattle (different than the buffalo), etc... The Hopis describe a "Fifth World" to follow.

      The years to come won't be easy, certainly, but it is still an exciting time to be alive.

      You might find Michael Mandeville's work interesting. Also investigate John La Tourrette's Nightengale Connant course - Silva Ultramind RV/RI.

      :)

      Send an email if you'd like more suggestions. I don't check that account all too often, but I do keep it active.

      --
      Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
      www.teslabox.com
  213. NASA was studdying the problem by ibm1130 · · Score: 1

    There was a NASA program called something like ACCESS5 which in part was supposed to study the impact of UAVs operating in the National Air Space. I think it went south last budget though.
    On the other hand, Global Hawk flight plans can now be filed just exactly like those for any other aircraft.

  214. Translation for non-pilots by swillden · · Score: 3, Informative

    TFR == Temporary Flight Restriction, a short-term restriction on flight in a specified area.

    VFR == Visual Flight Rules. Flying by looking out the window rather than using instruments to maintain separation from terrain and other aircraft.

    ADIZ == Air Defense Identification Zone. Airspace which is prohibited to aircraft who have not obtained prior authorization. In theory, violators will be shot down.

    Part 121 traffic. Dunno.

    Part 135 traffic. Dunno.

    Class B airspace. Dunno.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    1. Re:Translation for non-pilots by GigG · · Score: 2, Informative

      Part 121 Traffic = Scheduled Airlines

      Part 135 Traffic = Commercial Charter

      Class B Airspace = The airspace around the nation busiest airports.

      --
      Is buying a Harley Davidson as your first motorcycle since you were 16 at age 49 a midlife crisis issue?
    2. Re:Translation for non-pilots by voidptr · · Score: 3, Informative

      Part 121: The section of the Federal Aviation Regulations specifying rules for regularly scheduled commercial airliner traffic. Delta, AirTran, etc. operate under these rules.

      Part 135: The section of the Federal Aviation Regulations specifying rules for non-scheduled Charter/Air Taxi operations. These range from anything from large piston singles to Lear Jets being operated on a for-hire basis as-needed.

      Class B Airspace: Airspace designation around large major airports or clusters. BWI/Dulles/National and JFK/Newark/La Guardia are each under B airspace. It has certain control requirements for any pilots wishing to enter, including clearance and two-way radio contact from the ATC facility controlling it and an altitude-encoding transponder.

      --
      This .sig for unofficial government use only. Official use subject to $500 fine.
    3. Re:Translation for non-pilots by PPGMD · · Score: 2, Informative
      Part 121 is the section of Federal Aviation Regulations (FARs) that covers scheduled air carrier service (think Delta and the like)
      Part 135 is the section of FARs that covers charter service, these are mostly smaller operators
      Other examples you might here is part 61, this is the section that deals with the certification of pilots, part 91, contains most of the flight related law for most pilots, pilots flying under part 121 and part 135 still follow all of the same rules under part 91 (though some rules might be stricter under part 121 and 135).

      You can read all of Title 14 of the Code of Federal Regulations here, that contains all of the FARs.
      http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx?&c=e cfr&tpl=/ecfrbrowse/Title14/14tab_02.tpl

      Class B airspace is a type of airspace, it requires a transponder squawking (transmitting) a unique code, and constant contact with ATC, PITA to fly in, because of it's actual requirement of clearance to enter, which can be hard to get on busy days. Personally I avoid flight in Class B and busy class C airspace when I am flying VFR.

    4. Re:Translation for non-pilots by tgrigsby · · Score: 1


      Part 121 traffic. Dunno.

      Part 135 traffic. Dunno.

      Class B airspace. Dunno.


      Why can't they just use one code for "Dunno"?

      just kidding... ok, going back to work now.....

      --
      *** *** You're just jealous 'cause the voices talk to me... ***
  215. Hellfire! by RoboProg · · Score: 1

    The Predator is armed with 2 Hellfire missiles.

    The Global Hawk is between the size of a large attack craft (F-111 or so?) or small commercial airliner. While it goes nowhere near Mach, it can go anywhere on the globe (one way) on a tank of gas. The article has no mention of its weaponry, but its big, so do the math. No pilot to feel any remorse in the next blitzkrieg...

    --
    Yow! I'm supposed to have a plan?
    1. Re:Hellfire! by operagost · · Score: 1

      A sub-Mach craft isn't going to be blitzing anything. And I invoke Godwin's law on your subtle Nazi reference.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
  216. Israel has no official state religion by ianscot · · Score: 1

    "Note: Officially, Israel has no state religion or established church. A few personal status laws, in particular regarding marriage and divorce, are governed by state-recognized Jewish, Muslim, Christian, and Druze authorities. As the Jewish state, however, its de facto state religion is Judaism."
    -- Wikipedia

    --
    "Fundamentalism" isn't about divine morality. It's about human authority.
    1. Re:Israel has no official state religion by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Only Jews have the "right of return". And right now there's serious debate about whether the wall should exclude "Israeli Arabs" as well as "Palestinians". Anyone suggesting Judaism isn't the state religion of the Jewish state is kidding, a Talmudist, a fool, or all of them.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  217. California Building Code by delcielo · · Score: 1

    My brother was doing some welding in a new strip mall in the L.A. area about ten years ago, and noted that it being built with wood timbers. When he asked about it, the contractor told him that wood beams that were properly treated would take longer to break during a fire than it would take for a steel beam to deform and fall.

    This is obviously anecdotal and third hand; but it also isn't the first time I've heard that.

    --
    Hot Damn! It's the Soggy Bottom Boys!
  218. Re:BY and FOR the people? by deesine · · Score: 1

    Thus, WC7 goes down in history as the only tall steel structured building to ever collapse from a fire. Hmm. Guess I'm just a little more inquisitive than most.

    --
    damaged by dogma
  219. UAV's in the US (Chicago-land area) by shaggin_78 · · Score: 1

    Guys,

    I live a bit out of Chicago, and I have seen on 3 separate occations UAVs flying overhead. Specifically near the Lewis University Airport in Romeoville. I know it sounds crazy, but 8 weeks ago when I saw the first one in early evening I told everyone. It was flying at an altitude of 500 to 800ft and was clearly a UAV. Take it or leave it.. Because I have seen this 3 times, my guess is that it is taking off from Lewis University airport. Each sighting was from the Weber/I55 area with the first being right next to Lewis.

  220. Benjamin Franklin said... by Josiah_Bradley · · Score: 0

    They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty or security

    This is exactly whats happening today. Maybe George Orwell was off by a hundred years because of technology and Big Brother will be around in 2084.

  221. Videofeed hell... Armed Drones for Security by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    useful if you're using the videofeed from an SUAV to direct police to intruders.

    Nah, we need hellfire missles and machinegun strafing to secure our borders!!!

    Make a neutral zone between Mexico and US. Kill anything that moves! Oh, and we can be "Green" about it too. Import some endnagered crocodiles from the Nile and put them in the Rio Grande! They used to eating dark meat.. be a bit spicier but they will adapt nicely!

  222. Intelligent much? by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    Intelligence of the craft doesn't seem to be the problem half as much as sensing what is out there. A UAV uses GPS to tell it where it is, but that doesn't tell it about anything else. That information needs to be shared among all aircraft.

    1. Re:Intelligent much? by nigelc · · Score: 1
      What about TCAS which most/all commercial carriers should have?

      This is basically a system where a system on the air vehicle notices a nearby air vehicle and can recommend avoiding action. For a UAV, this could be hard-wired into the on-board system or at the very least monitored back at the operator's workstation. Bear in mind, these things are basically large radio-controlled aircraft with some limited auto-pilot/loiter capability -- it's not RoboFighter or Stealth or whatever that crap movie was :)

      Yes, Joe Pilot pottering along VFR listing to Howard Stern instead of Center will be somewhat at risk, but that's often the case even when flying a regular small air vehicle.

      Also (depending on the operational theater) yer actual UAV pilot has more of a God's Eye View of the world than the nose-gunner in a fast jet. There are/will be more people watching what's happening (AWACS, ATC at various levels, Mk 1 and Mk 2 eyeballs, telemetry/imaging data in all directions) to reduce the chances of target tunnel vision.

      I'm not sure whether I like the idea or not (well, as someone who worked on UAVs a while ago, I sort-of do for purely selfish reasons) but I don't see it impacting air safety much.

      --


      Cthulhu Barata Nikto
  223. Support George W. Bush: +1, Helpful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Call 1-800-ALQ-AEDA and ask to speak to

    President-VICE Richard B. Cheney.

    Cheers,
    Kilgore Trout, C.E.O.

  224. for security reasons by dpilot · · Score: 1

    So to take over the plan, you crack the pilot, or crack the command channel.

    It would be interesting to do a rigorous security analysis of the 2 options.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  225. ILS Category-III Autoland by robathome · · Score: 2, Informative

    Aircraft that are rated for ILS Cat-IIIa/b/c approaches can autoland with flare and rollout. The only thing that the pilot needs to do is pull the throttles over the numbers, and the plane will flare, settle to the runway, and rollout with autobraking (provided that brakes are armed). Cat-IIIc approaches are zero/zero - no decision height and down to zero visibility.

    A Cat-III-rated aircraft has multiple, redundant autopilots, at least two of which must be functional and locked in to autoland. There are crosswind limitations, but your example (30KTS at 35 from centerline) is a headwind component of 24KTS and 17KTS crosswind component, both of which are within (for instance) the Cat-III autoland restrictions for the 747 (25KT headwind, 25KT crosswind).

    --

    At 3 A.M. you can see people's auras; at five you can see their contrails...
  226. It is inevitable... by RexRhino · · Score: 1

    Sure, people might complain about this technology when it is being used "to catch terrorists" or something like that... but all they have to do is give it some politically correct spin, say it is "to catch polluters who are destroying our enviornemnt", or tell people "we will use these over parks and playgrounds to track pedophiles", or "to monitor buisnesses so we can collect taxes and support our social welfare system"... or simply that these things will "aid in urban planning"... and the same people who protest the Patriot Act or whatever will gladly accept these things.

    In the same way people who supposedly support free speech can be convinced to support government censorship by selling it as "banning hate speech", or "campaign finance reform", or some other politically correct cause... in a couple years, when they are able to find some kid who fell down a well with a UAV, all of you will be screaming and holloring that only "cold blooded conservatives" would be against these "public services".

    In the same way people won't shop at Walmart because "it is a big multinational corporation that irresponsibly makes cheap consumer items overseas, and sells them in big box stores that undermine local buisnesses, and pays it's workers low wages, etc., etc.", have no problem shopping at Ikea (which does the same thing), because Ikea is much better and managing it's image... all of you will support Big Brother once they are able to figure out how to sexy it up.

    And in 20 years, our children will learn in public schools about the "horrible dark ages" and "terrible oppression" before mass government survalence programs.

  227. Limit their power! by gone.fishing · · Score: 1

    Does anyone else feel a little uneasy about using drones to monitor citizens? On one hand, they are just another tool that can be used by police and other agencies to do a job. They are probably a lot safer and cheaper than putting a pilot and an officer in an airplane and an aerial view is a great way to get "the big picture." In many ways this is less intrusive than using a larger police presence on the ground and is really no less unsettling than pole mounted cameras. I understand all of this and acknowledge that people in public really have no right to privacy. Used properly, these tools appear perfectly legitimate for public safety use.

    My concern is that in a very real sense, these things are spy planes. If a police agency is going to search your property, they need probable cause and must usually obtain a search warrant. These are protections afforded to citizens to protect them against unreasonable searches and seizures. Our forefathers understood that a strong government can easily become an oppressive government and built in this mechanism to limit their powers. It helps to protect us from having our government become a police state while still providing the government with enough authority to do the work they need to do to keep society safe. Courts have previously held that police do not need warrants to use aircraft to observe a property (mostly because the airspace above a property is not owned). One would have to assume that these unmanned craft would also not require search warrants.

    Aircraft fly a few hundred feet off of the ground, the unmanned craft can fly much lower and slower, some of them are helicopter like and can hover. It is conceivable that they could fly below treetop level. Using powerful optics they could look in windows. Using infrared cameras they could see through walls. They could even deliver acoustic sensors that could listen to people's conversations, monitor traffic and so on. This is a slippery slope, one that I doubt has been tested by the courts.

    Using the technology to get bad guys is something that I am all for. Using it to expand police powers is something that I am uncomfortable with. I know the good guys need all the help they can get but, there need to be stringent limits to keep the good guys from becoming bad guys. If they are going to use these tools to obtain evidence, they should obtain warrants to justify their actions.

  228. Browncoat Sentiments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's getting awfully crowded in my sky...

  229. Isn't it obvious? by kimvette · · Score: 1
    But what happens when lots of relatively dumb drones have to share airspace with aircraft carrying passengers? A pilot's association is worried."


    In Bush's mindset the answer is easy: simply issue an executive order outlawing general aviation, and commercial aviation for companies worth less than $5bil. That'll definitely solve the problem.

    I used to like Bush, but with the way he's been treating the Constitution of The united States of America like toilet paper, I actually have become somewhat of a fan of Clinton. Although he (allegedly) sold secrets to China, abused his privileges in the white house by getting interns to, uh, "service" him, and so forth, at least he wasn't squashing essential liberties left and right. I've grown to truly hate George "Dubya" Bush, and I now think the two-faced jackass from my state (Taxachusetts) would have been a better choice in 2004 - there's only so much damage that someone who misses 2/3 to 3/4 of his meetings can actually do.

    Sorry, if it comes to choosing between morals and essential liberties, I'll take the liberties every time. Besides, people who want a moral society should lead by example, not through legislation and executive orders.
    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  230. Found a photo of the prototype by Mr.Surly · · Score: 1

    Searching the web, I found a page with a photograph of the new surveillance drones.

  231. Re:BY and FOR the people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "-Heat shielding doesn't stand up too well to an exploding airplane."

    strange then, how the buidings didnt collapse right away (while they were still on fire) but long after the fires had been put out.

    Strange also that we can see in pictures and films that books & loose papers survived in these same rooms where exploding airplanes melted through heat-shielded support structures.

    What a shame that all the rubble was immediately carted away & melted down before any investigation could be (or was allowed to be) started. We may never know.

    every time 100 people die in an airplane crash the NTSB spends 2 years hunting down every last nut & bolt & peicing it all back together, even if they have to go scuba diving to get it. thousands die when 2 airplanes crash into buildings right in the middle of manhattan & not the slightest thought is given about examining the wreckage.

    Odd isnt it?

  232. All aboard...? by cr0sh · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Do you want to know what we are? We are the gear oil in the differential. We are perceived as the nasty stuff that has to be in there in order for it all to work. The greater American society knows this, and they despise us for it. They know, at some visceral level, that intelligence, reason, and logic is needed for the society to run, but it needs to be marginalized from the greater society lest it take over. We are the geeks. Here in America, we probably account for 1/10 or less of 1 percent of the entire US population. Furthermore, I doubt that even this number all have /. accounts.

    American society despises intelligence, despises reason, despises logic. Is it any wonder when we laud and fawn over our sports "heroes" and entertainment "stars"? When more people vote for the next "American Idol" than vote for the person in charge of the entire nuclear arsenal of the United States (and then get a former coke addict and alcholic), we geeks realize there is something wrong. However, no matter what we say or inform our supposed non-geek peers about this and other issues, we are looked at with derision, with contempt. How dare we say they are wrong! How dare we upset the curve, once again!

    Ultimately, the problems we see, the problems we know can and will grow larger, if only we controlled or eliminated them today (and they go way beyond mere societal issues), are all small and insignificant on the radars of the larger American society. For there to be any great change, the problems need to affect way more of the population, beyond just us little piss-ants of geekdom. Unfortunately, we geeks also know, given the technology and controls now in the hands of the controllers, that even if the problems become huge and unwieldy - so big as to drive stakes through the hearts, minds, and lives of the greater society - that ultimately there might not be a way out except through gross and sheer death. Millions of deaths. Those that die will be suicides, or worse.

    I think I hear the trains pulling into the station - do you hear them...?

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  233. Unmanned Aerial Drones Coming Soon Above U.S. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have met the enemy and he is Our Government :-(

  234. the best slavery is the one people wish to live in by nietsch · · Score: 1

    (ok the quote is probably not quite correct, pedants can quote the correct version below)
    Your love for guns blinds you from the obvious: You end up with a country full of losers if you start to use them in a political conflict. Your boxes quote sounds nice, but have you realised it may actually be wrong? Let's take two examples: Sudan & Ukraine. One a bloody civil war, the other a peacefull eviction of a corrupt leader/party. What do you think would have happened if those people in the streets would have been carrying guns? The fact that some folks in your country where pretty bloodthirsty 200 years ago does not mean those words apply now.
    Maybe 'first they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win' is more applicable. Ghandi beat the british too, but without any violence on his part.

    --
    This space is intentionally staring blankly at you
  235. Keep in mind... by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    If we're taking our cues from South Park, then in reagrds to the above post, I'll quote this bit if wisdom

    "Shut your fucking face..."

    It seemed about as appropriate as your quote.

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
  236. I'm confused by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    Are you for US intervention

    "Where the fuck was the US in the 50s, the 60s and the 70s when the smaller countries tried to throw off the Soviets? Where the fuck was the almighty US when tanks were smearing protesters in Budapest all over the streets?"

    or against it?

    "As for the rest of the world, I think the US record speaks for itself. Funding death squads in Latin America in the name of anti-communist ideology, or napalming thousands of asian people for the same reason, that's nothing to be proud of."

    Well, which is it? Do you realize how ridiculous you sound bitching about not intervening and intervening in the same post?

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
  237. I believe that... by cr0sh · · Score: 1
    My wife and I were driving back home after going to a friend's house. It was pretty late in the evening, around midnight. So, we are going down the freeway, when behind us there goes the blue and reds flashing. We are wondering, "what have we done? speeding? maybe. taillight out? possibly...".

    So, we pull over to the side of the road, and wait for the officers to walk up. They stop behind us, get out of the car, walk on both sides of us, and ask us where we are going, and where we are headed from. "Home, from a friend's house" we both reply.

    We are now thinking "this is odd", when one of them asks us (I shit you not) "so, why did you pull over and stop?" WTF?! We tell them point blank "because you were directly behind us in the far right lane with your flashers on, we figured you were pulling us over". They then tell us "no, we weren't", and we were like "but...we are here now, so what is going on?". They tell us "you are free to go". We got the hell out of dodge.

    Mind you, this was late at night, on a freeway in the middle of Phoenix, Arizona. As far as I am aware, we weren't speeding, we didn't have any lights out. They pulled us over, then tell us they weren't, and let us go without any rhyme or reason. To this day, it makes no sense at all, and I haven't got a clue why this was done. We were never asked for licenses or registration. My wife and I think we were either pulled over by them because they wanted to do as you noted - "find a reason" - and then realized by the end of it all that we were pretty much "squeaky clean", or they were looking for a vehicle and occupants similar to us in the neighborhood, and given the late night, thought we were a match. Even so, it doesn't make sense that they would deny that they were pulling us over, when the reality was that they did (talk about cognitive dissonance).

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  238. UAV's... of course by Cervantes · · Score: 1

    Is anyone really surprised? The NeoCons have been pushing unmanned for years.... here's how it works:

    With the Korean and (especially) Vietnam wars, the primary protests weren't "We shouldn't be here", it was "lots of people are dying". This proved an important point to the neocons... Joe Public doesn't care about overseas wars, Joe Public cares about overseas wars //that affect him//. If he is forced to go, if his kids get drafted, if his brother dies... then he protests, makes noise, and brings attention onto your motives for being there in the first place. If it doesn't affect him, he sits and home and watches gleefully on the news.
    Unfortunately, they didn't see a way around this... but then, in the 80's, videogames got popular. Technology advanced so that longer range wireless control was possible...
    Then, in the First Gulf War, millions of americans sat at home, watched the pretty explosions on TV, cheered at gun camera footage from Apaches, went "oooOOOOOoo" at the nosecam footage from guided bombs... and not many soldiers died, and they cheered and everything was double-plus good.

    And then it clicked for someone. If we make war like a video game, the public doesn't care. If we show them pretty pictures, they think it's cool. And if we don't put our people in danger, they don't protest and question our motives.

    So, we come to Now ... unmanned attack vehicles. They tried it out in the middle east, they used them to assassinate "suspected terrorists"... in countries they didn't have a right to be in, killing people without any trial or due process... and Joe Public didn't complain. They went "ooOOOoo, kewl!"

    The next step? Get the public a little used to these things being around... then they understand that there's no people in them, even the dumbest will clue in that these are remote control... and HomeLand Security (tm) is the perfect guise to get the public used to these things.

    And next? War by Remote Control. Fewer troops put in danger, unmanned aircraft, unmanned tanks... kill your enemies from the safety of your Carrier Group. A whole generation of kids, raised to play games, kill things on the screen, and not think about it, will do the exact same thing... playing video games with R/C vehicles, killing what's on the screen, not thinking about it.
    And with no/low body counts... Joe Public won't complain.

    And there you have it, folks. The perfect ability to wage war, on whoever you want, whenever you want, with none but a small 'crackpot' minority making any noise. Iran pissing you off? Syria needs a kick? Time to permanently solve the Israel/Palestine problem? Decided you want to control some African country with lots of diamonds? Send in your R/C fleet, the kids will happily play video games, Joe Public will watch on TV and cheer, mothers and wives won't complain because no-one (on our side) has been killed, and you can do what you want.

    I'm sorry folks, a heavy body count is the only thing left to make the public care about foreign policy. It's sad but true. When the troops stop dying, the public will stop caring, the miliary will do what it's told to, and those in charge can attack and kill whoever they want, and the only ones to complain will be world media that ya'll don't listen to anyway.

    And that's why R/C /anything/ in the military is bad.

    --
    If I knew the wedgies I gave you back in 6th grade would have resulted in this . . . I might have taken a moments pause.
  239. Manhacks? by Braino420 · · Score: 1

    Will they look like this?

    It's feeling like City 17 a little bit more each day.

    --
    They call me the wookie man, I guess that's what I am
  240. Iranian Bourse? by Dareth · · Score: 1

    For those wondering what the Iranian Bourse is?

    It is simply an oil exchange that accepts Euros for oil instead of US dollars.

    Author makes some interesting points. Although last paragraph summarized it all nicely:

    About the Author: Krassimir Petrov (Krassimir_Petrov@hotmail.com) has received his Ph. D. in economics from the Ohio State University and currently teaches Macroeconomics, International Finance, and Econometrics at the American University in Bulgaria. He is looking for a career in Dubai or the U. A. E.

    Full article
    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article11 613.htm

    --

    I only look human.
    My mother is a halfling and my dad is an ogre, so that makes me an Ogreling
  241. Re: Some security! by RomulusNR · · Score: 1

    What more do you need? The ability to control them from the ground? That's being worked on for security reasons.

    So all this means is that the next set of terrorists trained by a former US-funded resistance fighter will be going to h/cracking schools instead of flight schools.

    --
    Terrorists can attack freedom, but only Congress can destroy it.
  242. Oh knock it off by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    "So instead we have an increase in religious discrimination"

    Catholics weren't discriminated against a hundred years ago? Of course they were.

    "exploitation of anybody with a low income"

    And that didn't happen previously, you know when there wasn't a 40 hour work week, no unions, no OSHA, etc?

    "the inability to effectively protest without being labeled a terrorist"

    Bonus riots, Haymarket riots, Kent State, etc. It's happened for hundreds of years.

    "and people living to work not working to live."

    Read this. I think you'll be amazed at how you've overstated your position, and at how little you know about the subject.

    http://www.chipublib.org/004chicago/1900/fam.html

    The other guy is right. Things were much worse in the past. That doesn't mean that we shouldn't try to make them better, but let's not act like we're living during the Inquisition.

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
    1. Re:Oh knock it off by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      Catholics weren't discriminated against a hundred years ago? Of course they were.

      So reversing that descrimination makes it right?

      And that didn't happen previously, you know when there wasn't a 40 hour work week, no unions, no OSHA, etc?

      You're obviously not a salaried tech worker - I work much more than 40 hours a week and get paid for only 40. If I don't want to get fired on some lame excuse that's what I have to do. And while you are correct that there were worse laws to prevent things like this take a look around you - companies are gradually stripping the labor laws, the whistleblower laws, and anything else that prevents you from being effectively an indentured servant. Add nasty credit bills, high medical and insurance bills, corrupt unions making the situation worse, and corrupt companies that you don't have a choice but to work for if you're going to pay all your bills.

      Bonus riots, Haymarket riots, Kent State, etc. It's happened for hundreds of years.

      And this is an excuse to spy on everyone? To remove all possibility of privacy? That's what they want - you might disagree but I refuse to sugarcoat this government's intentions.

      Read this. I think you'll be amazed at how you've overstated your position, and at how little you know about the subject.

      Ummm...hello!? With inflation taken into account as well as our serious credit issues as consumers we still have the same type of money problems if in different amounts. A man often still gets paid much more than a woman and much less than he needs to survive. It's happening every day. I will admit that for most people the standard of living has risen quite a bit but a quick look in any city will reveal slums filled with people who have little or no chance, barring extraordinary measures, of becoming effectively anything but slave labor. I'm not talking about the people that sit on their butts and collect welfare checks but the ones that actually try to better themselves. There are ways out of the problem for them but they are few and far between. Sounds very 1900's don't you think?

      My grandmother used to tell us stories of the depression and how grandfather took all sorts of dangerous jobs - coal mining in PA for example - just to make ends meet. My mother would be teased for having mud on her shoes because she had to walk through mud to get to school rather than be able to ride the bus. They couldn't afford the bus fees. And how she smelled like the farm that she helped with so they had food to eat. My family on my mother's side has never been even close to flush. They've always been scraping for money even before I was born so I know a bit more about it than you think.

      The other guy is right. Things were much worse in the past. That doesn't mean that we shouldn't try to make them better, but let's not act like we're living during the Inquisition.

      While I will agree that some things were worse in the past some more things are worse NOW. And if we don't scream loudly and take action then those that created that nasty past will create an even worse future. As for living in the inquisition - try openly claiming to be Muslim and get a job somewhere like the airport. Or in fact any good high-level job where the government is involved. I'm betting that you don't know the levels to which the government will stoop to check your background. And I'm also betting that if you're openly Muslim and openly speak out against the government you will not get a high-paying position if they have any say about it nor a security clearance. Sounds like they inquire quite a bit and you'r punished if you don't pass...

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
    2. Re:Oh knock it off by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

      "So reversing that descrimination makes it right?"

      What the fuck are you talking about? Catholics are STILL discrimnated against, that's the point.

      It's obvious from your reply that you're only interested in continually restating your position without justification. Nothing you've said refutes me in any way, and your rambling paragraph about Granny only proves my point.

      I don't know why you think you've made a case for anything, but you haven't. You've only wasted my time, and you'll get no more.

      --
      "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
    3. Re:Oh knock it off by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      What the fuck are you talking about? Catholics are STILL discrimnated against, that's the point.

      EXCUSE ME???

      So a president that's intent on bringing Catholic values into the white house and every facet of government is discrimination against Catholics? If that sort of stuff gets put into place then it won't be safe to be anything BUT Catholic. I would say that's reversing the discrimination quite a bit!

      It's obvious from your reply that you're only interested in continually restating your position without justification. Nothing you've said refutes me in any way, and your rambling paragraph about Granny only proves my point.

      The point of that paragraph was to show that I did have some knowledge of what I'm talking about which you claimed I did not.

      I don't know why you think you've made a case for anything, but you haven't. You've only wasted my time, and you'll get no more.

      Fair enough. You've closed your ears and insulted me so I too will waste no more time on you.

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
  243. Ok, who's up for crossbow practice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oops, hit a UAV. Oh, well.

  244. Unmanned Aerial Drones Coming Soon Above U.S. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Will they be using the same unmanned drones currently seated in Congress?

  245. You seem to be uninterested in the physics. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1

    You seem to feel very superior. You seem to be uninterested in the physics.

    You said, "But the massive amounts of paper, office furniture and other combustibles that were present in the buildings continued to fuel an inferno, further weakening the already damaged structures."

    Massive amounts of paper? Have you ever tried burning paper from a file cabinet? It doesn't burn easily.

    You are saying that office chairs and file cabinets are fuel for a fire? That's disgusting.

  246. FINALLY! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We can get UAVs to track all our government officials!

    I'd also like to see every one of them get a mandatory GPS collar!

    It's for their own safety!

    If they're not doing anything wrong, why would they object?

    google wiki for Sousveillance

  247. I don't like you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    bye bye

  248. Wow are you thick by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    "So a president that's intent on bringing Catholic values into the white house and every facet of government is discrimination against Catholics?"

    He's not a Catholic, he's a Methodist if I recall correctly. In case you were unaware, they don't see eye to eye, so the "Catholic values" you're talking about, well, what the fuck are you talking about?

    "The point of that paragraph was to show that I did have some knowledge of what I'm talking about which you claimed I did not."

    And it appears, based on the most recent post, that I was exactly right.

    At least do a little fucking research before you spout off.

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
    1. Re:Wow are you thick by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      He's not a Catholic, he's a Methodist if I recall correctly. In case you were unaware, they don't see eye to eye, so the "Catholic values" you're talking about, well, what the fuck are you talking about?

      Fair enough. Perhaps a better term would have been "Christian values". Still you have yet to prove to me that Catholics are discriminated against. From all my experiences in life Catholics and Baptists seems to be able to worship freely and even inject their faith and dogma into every aspect of their jobs, including government positions, and not be questioned about it despite many jobs requiring objectivity as far as religion is concerned. I'm willing to understand and believe but not until you can prove it to me.

      And it appears, based on the most recent post, that I was exactly right.

      You know - not once have I claimed to be a definitive source on any matter here. Nor did I claim that my information was all inclusive or even 100% correct but merely that I was informed on the subject. You keep claiming that because I have one fact wrong it invalidates my entire argument and it does not.

      At least do a little fucking research before you spout off.

      You are correct that I need to do more research - everyone does. But again that in no way invalidates my entire argument. The point that we should either fight or leave still remains the same no matter how much you try and focus it towards one argumentative agenda.

      Wow are you thick.

      Not once in this entire argument have I insulted you. Nor have I insulted anyone else in this forum during a serious discussion. I ask that you respect my point of view as I have respected yours. But maybe that's too much to ask...

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
  249. *APPLAUSE* by Spaceman40 · · Score: 1

    That is all.

    --
    I [may] disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.
  250. My guess... by SlashSquatch · · Score: 1

    Is if the bastards are publicly talking about it, chances are they are already doing it. Note the non-partisan terminology - bastard and fucker apply equally to all politicians.

    --
    Autonomous Retard -- Is your camp safe? UnsafeCamp.com
  251. What can we do to prevent this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Our senators and congress-people are obvious choices. But is there a specific organization that deals with the threat (and current) domestic spying? Or does this fall to the ACLU and EFF?

  252. No by GuloGulo · · Score: 1

    "You are correct that I need to do more research - everyone does. But again that in no way invalidates my entire argument"

    Actually, that's exactly what it does. You've made factually incorrect statements, which upon refutation, you stand by. That speaks to your (lack of) credibility, which directly effects the validity of ALL of your arguments.

    "You keep claiming that because I have one fact wrong it invalidates my entire argument and it does not."

    Nope, what I keep claiming is that you could be reasonably expected to show the same level of accuracy across your arguments. With no other standard to judge you by, one grossly inaccurate statement (followed by an exclamation, then an assertion of accuracy) calls all of your arguments into question.

    In other words, why believe anything you say when you've already demonstrated a willingness to be... flexible with the facts.

    "But maybe that's too much to ask..."

    How about this, no more derogatory comments from me, as long as you agree not to post anymore grossly inaccurate assertions. Deal?

    --
    "The government grants you rights, not the other way around."-- beav007. Yes, these people really exist...
    1. Re:No by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 1

      Actually, that's exactly what it does. You've made factually incorrect statements, which upon refutation, you stand by. That speaks to your (lack of) credibility, which directly effects the validity of ALL of your arguments.

      No. I made A factually incorrect statement. One failure to have correct data before placing an argument does not invalidate the entire argument. Even without any other standard of judgement. Each point in the argument must be taken as a separate piece of data. I feel that despite not knowing the president was Methodist instead of Catholic is not enough to invalidate the entire argument of leaving this country or staying to fight for our freedoms.

      Nope, what I keep claiming is that you could be reasonably expected to show the same level of accuracy across your arguments. With no other standard to judge you by, one grossly inaccurate statement (followed by an exclamation, then an assertion of accuracy) calls all of your arguments into question.

      In other words, why believe anything you say when you've already demonstrated a willingness to be... flexible with the facts.


      What I showed was a willingness to correct data that, thanks to you, was found to be incorrect. You have yet to attempt to do anything but badger me on that one point.

      How about this, no more derogatory comments from me, as long as you agree not to post anymore grossly inaccurate assertions. Deal?

      Hmm...I think I will finally, after wasting time I said I would no longer waste, sink to your level.

      *ahem* Fuck you and the horse you rode in on! *ahem*

      There? You've proven that I am an unwashed know-nothing heathen out to do nothing but waste your time. Satisfied Troll?

      --

      "Bah!" - Dogbert
  253. Intervention by k2r · · Score: 1

    >> Funding death squads

    >Are you for US intervention [...] or against it?

    So basically what you say is that funding death suaqs and napalming people and similar crimes are the only ways of intervention the world can expect from the US of A?

    You're even more cynical than I am, why do you hate America so much?

    k2r

    1. Re:Intervention by zardo · · Score: 1

      You haven't lived long enough. You can't bluff everybody. We're over here in America making bigger better bunker busters to use against Iran. We make it public. If Iran wants to see us use them, it's all up to them. What's your bright idea? Economic sanctions???? *laugh*

    2. Re:Intervention by k2r · · Score: 1

      > You haven't lived long enough.

      Maybe you're just too old to care about the future?

      Since you invaded Iraq there is no "bright idea"-way left. You fucked it up. You invaded your buddies (http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB82/) country although you knew that there were no WMD (http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-1593 607,00.html).
      You lied to everyone and nobody trusts you anymore. You did this purely for economical reasons (Enron et al.).
      Now you're spending your childrens educational and healthcare future and consitutional rights on a war you cannot win.
      Meanwhile educating every other evil empire that they a) neeeeed nuclead wapons b) haaaate the US and will support any stupid suicide bomber.

      Obese bunker busters are the last thing that will help your country but the hammer that makes you see everything as a nail.

      And no, there really is no bright solution to the problems left. And no, you are not really bright.

      k2r

    3. Re:Intervention by Espressoman · · Score: 1

      Replace your leadership with worthy individuals. The rest will follow.

    4. Re:Intervention by StupidKatz · · Score: 1

      Replace your leadership with worthy individuals. The rest will follow.

      I agree. The whole of the House and Senate need booting out and replacement with people who actually 1. read what they sign and 2. don't ignore the limits imposed on them by the US Constitution. Unanimous 'yes' votes for the "PATRIOT" Act (with one abstention, probably on vacation), my rear end.

      One problem though: we'll have nothing but more dirty rats lined up to replace them.

    5. Re:Intervention by zardo · · Score: 1
      Enron??? LOL. Don't you mean Halliburton? You're getting your liberal propoganda mixed up.

      There is no bright idea coming from you. Admit it. You're a moron.

    6. Re:Intervention by zardo · · Score: 1

      That sounds remarkably similar to the Iraq war strategy. "Replace THEIR leadership with worthy individuals, the rest will follow".

  254. Brilliant by theolein · · Score: 1

    I think you touched on a sore spot there, for which a whole load of people will flame you, but well done for saying it! It's about time.

  255. Understand the Technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm quite disappointed at the lack of people here who actually understand UAV technology. I've read a great deal of inaccuracies here regarding the operation of UAVs. As a professional and a researcher in this field, I'm going to try to fix some of those.

    1) Many UAVs have pilots. This is true for some military UAVs, but there are also those that are completely autonomous.

    2) UAVs really do "know" where they are going. Its not hard to integrate a GPS guidance system with inertial navigation referencing into a UAV. With the power and miniaturization of computers, you can do just fine even if someone is jamming your GPS signal. Students all over have been building systems like this for a while now.

    3) UAVs are not all going to shoot you. In fact, most UAVs are not designed for armament. Obviously few people here understand aircraft weaponeering. It is not as easy as you think to arm aircraft. You can't just bolt on a gun or missile. There are concerns regarding CG travel, and moments that can seriously affect the stability and control of the aircraft.

    4) The people who are building UAVs really do know what they are doing. I've built UAV flight control computers using simple off the shelf components, and my gear has been tested to be just as good as FAA certified equipment.

    5) UAVs do not crash all the time. Almost all of the UAV crashes in battle have resulted from improper maintenance. There have been only two documented collisions, and those were with remotely piloted UAVs.

    Don't think about what I say here because I say you should. Think about it because I have developed autonomous flight control systems for the Yamaha RMax UAV, the Raptor 50 UAV, and several custom fixed-wing UAVs. I have cooperation from the Army and the Air Force to use their restricted airspace for UAV test flights. I work for a well known aerospace engineering consulting and aircraft design company. Its too bad that so many people are willing to believe anything they hear, and even worse to know that so few people truly seek to understand things.

  256. Not quite accurate by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    When one can openly display leavened bread for sale during the passover, then I will agree with you. Forcing religious observances on the entire population is at least a de facto *establishment* of religion, formal or otherwise.

    In essence this would be like requiring public schools to teach the Protestant view of Easter...

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  257. Re:BY and FOR the people? by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

    Okay, name one other example of a skyscraper that was on fire with thousands of gallons of jet fuel burning inside it. The Towers didn't fall from "just a fire" they fell from a fire that was a few thousand degrees hot, IIRC.

  258. Don't agree by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    The problem is a lack of deep understanding and a willingness to stand up strong for what one believes. Your post does not demonstrate this and instead just demonstrates that these engines help direct where and how young people let out their anger.

    I remember reading about how, in the PRC, the government uses the internet to channel youth protests in the same way you describe MTV doing it. The goal is to make people feel empowered while not actually helping address the substantive need for freedom.

    Personally, I think the best way to deal with the problem is to make becomming a foreign exchange student for two years mandatory.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  259. The real question by sflory · · Score: 1

    Will they get to carry hellfire missles?

    --
    IANALBIPOOGL (I am not a Lawyer, but I play one on GrokLaw.)
  260. Re:BY and FOR the people? by deesine · · Score: 1

    Stay with the program here. Jet fuel burns quickly, very quickly. Don't think I've read any estimates that place the jet fuel burn time at more than 5-10 minutes. Also, WC7 had no jet fuel, yet burned and fell pretty much just like the towers.

    --
    damaged by dogma
  261. OT: Your sig by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    Why do the folks who insist on keeping "God" in "one nation under God" want to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?

    The answer is simple. Liberty and Justice are pagan goddesses and have no place in a Christian state.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  262. Re:BY and FOR the people? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fires were put out? Really? By who, David Copperfield?

    No, what's odd is that you ever managed to figure out how to use a computer. I smell a conspiracy!

  263. keep commercial / private planes away by pensivemusic · · Score: 1

    assuming the DOD and the FAA coordinate where planes can and cannot fly, this is manageable.
    the prolems i have heard discussed are when these drones fly ad hoc missions on short notice ... or when they malfunction.

    as long as my family can sue the crap out of the feds for messing up, i am happy with their mistakes.

  264. Put me in that 82% by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    Of course 82% of the people think the government covered up some of what happened on 9/11. The question is so broad as to mean nothing--I would answer yes to such a broad question, and I think all the big conspiracy theories are nuts. I just happen to think that the administration has squashed some of the details of how poorly prepared they were and how poorly they responded.

    As for the rest, I don't really care about supposition, vague connections, and unanswered questions. It's not exactly a revelation that certain people have profited in the wake of 9/11...however that has little to any bearing on the question of what brought down the WTC, as it could just as easily be the result of good response as opposed to good conspiracy. People profit during every war; but it is false logic to conclude that therefore those people must have started each war.

    The government and military plan for eventualities; but it is wrong to therefore assume that everthing that happens is the result of a military or government plan. The government can plan a plane crash, and a plane can crash--the two are not necessarily connected. Substitute "sneak attack", "insurgency", or "hurricane" (or any other force majeur) into that sentence if you like. Similarity or congruency are simply coincedence in the absence of evidence that proves a direct connection.

    I noticed you did not answer my question about what evidence would change your mind on this theory. Here's mine: Present me with real conclusive proof of this specific conspiracy theory and I will sit up and take notice: a person who helped set the charges...paperwork showing that thousands of pounds of explosives were delivered to the WTC by a military contractor...maintenance workers who saw barrels of explosives in empty offices...etc. I need direct, cause-and-effect evidence...often referred to as a "smoking gun." Allusion and supposition don't do it for me.

    How about you?

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:Put me in that 82% by friendswelcome · · Score: 1

      First let me point out (moderators) that this post directly relates to peoples concerns about Drone Planes.

      Declassified document shows government plan to stage terrorist attacks with Remote Control 747's in 1962.
      "Destroying an unmanned drone masquerading as a commercial aircraft supposedly full of 'college students off on a holiday'. This proposal was the one supported by the Joint Chiefs of Staff."
      -Wikipedia

      For all those who don't know, Wiki or Google for 1962 Operation Northwoods.

      This is unsettling but important to my argument in that the Pentagons documented plan to attack US citizens with remote control planes establishes reasonable doubt.

      > The government and military plan for eventualities... ...Substitute "sneak attack", "insurgency", or
      > "hurricane" (or any other force majeur) into that sentence if you like. Similarity or congruency are
      > simply coincedence in the absence of evidence that proves a direct connection.

      The Operation Northwoods proposal was not a preparedness plan for hurricanes. It uses plain language proposing terrorist activity led by the Pentagon using remote control planes. It was an action considered by our government and the document is now available to the public. The thing we don't know is, if fifty years ago the government was considering staging terrorism using 747's to start a war, would they do it today, and did they. That is a smoking gun.

      > I noticed you did not answer my question about what evidence would change your mind on this theory.
      > Here's mine: Present me with real conclusive proof of this specific conspiracy theory and I will
      > sit up and take notice: a person who helped set the charges...paperwork showing that thousands
      > of pounds of explosives were delivered to the WTC by a military contractor...maintenance workers
      > who saw barrels of explosives in empty offices...etc. I need direct, cause-and-effect
      > evidence...often referred to as a "smoking gun." Allusion and supposition don't do it for me.
      >
      > How about you?

      What you are asking for, is the same as I said I would want, but we used slightly different words. I outlined the bizarre unanswered questions of 9/11 and the fact that the 9/11 investigators stated that they did not have enough funds to complete a full investigation. I don't have a billion dollars in my bank account to do it myself. But generally what you are saying in the above comment is that you would require these things to be checked in a full investigation and I feel the same way.

      How the towers fell is only one problem with 9/11 and as I said, they certainly would not have required explosive in the shape of barrels to bring them down. But investigating military contracts would be a smart place to start looking. Also needing investigation are the presidents connections to the Binladins, Osama Binladin being the leader of the terrorists. And considering that planes were used, perhaps we should investigate the governments past documented plans to use airliners in terrorist attacks.

      Regarding allusion, it can be appropriate when making an argument. For example: Two men and a woman in a room, the lights go out. The lights go on and two men are alive and the woman is shot. One is a white man fresh out of jail for attempted murder. One is an black man fresh from college. The police let the white man go without questioning? The white man is an allusion for the Pentagons past planning of Operation Northwoods.

      Getting back to the article. In the future could "Iranian Terrorists" lour in remote control police drones and digitally hijack them? Could our government stage a "false flag" operation using drones and lour us into war? These questions must be asked for a country to be secure from tirany as well as terrorism. It may be that we are safer not having police drones just as we are safer not having off switches around all our necks.

      Will

  265. On Nation Building by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
    First, and least important at this point I think, was your statement that I think indicated that the US 'stopped' Hitler. This was a general statement and thus not very precise, so I think you can understand why everyone said you were wrong. But, obviously, without Hitler's defeat Europe and the rest of the world would be very different.

    Now, as for UAVs and fighting an asymetrical conflict. Looking at the historical precedents of 'intervention' does show us where the pitfalls are, and it also shows that only in rare instances are military interventions sucessful in not only merely queling violence, but in actual state building. It's just hard, and it's almost impossible to define a Democratic state at the end of a rifle barrel. Germany and Japan are often trotted out, but these are examples of a homogenous culture, exhausted by war and handily defeated who already had the economic and social experience to define a new state. And remember that this still took time and treasure.

    We also have to remember that the Mid-East is screwed up because of previous machinations which failed and merely brought about different problems, we exchanged Russians for the Taliban in Afghanistan for our trouble.

    Furthermore, Vietnam was not 'lost' because of bad policy, but because of strategic mistakes made before Kennedy decided that 'advisors' should set foot in the country. If President Wilson had acted on Ho Chi Minh's request for help against the French, and later the Japanese, things might have gone different, but by the time our advisors arrived, the Viet Cong and NVA had been fighting for essentially 20 years against foreign armies. We should have avoided the fight entirely, allowed the French to fail, allowed the North to invade and unify the country, and then let the same kind of detente that is slowly remaking China into a Democracy foster there as well. Instead, we invaded, killed thousands, and still lost.

    Intervention is dangerous, expensive, and often prone to failure. Should we always avoid intervention? No, but we need to be very choosy or aware of just how damn difficult it is.

    Now, as for technology, survellience can be very useful, but someone can always hide, they can always move underground, and they just have to wait and find that soft-spot to hit you. Knowing that the explosives came from Person A who bought it from Supplier H is useful, but it only allows you to react and only if you have all the right information. This also assumes that someone doesn't take a SAM to the drone, or mortars the drone's base and the communication trailers. Remember your enemy is smart, knows the terrain, and is willing to do *anything* to win.

    Technology will help, but the notion that any state can be fixed by an invading army has been proven wrong many, many times, and only in the best intances does it work.

    Personally, I think an Iran left alone by the US, or engaged diplomatically and culturally, will be far more likely to change that an Iran under threat of force. Cornering an animal only makes it more dangerous.

    --
    Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    1. Re:On Nation Building by zardo · · Score: 1

      Personally, I think an Iran left alone by the US, or engaged diplomatically and culturally, will be far more likely to change that an Iran under threat of force. Cornering an animal only makes it more dangerous.

      You may be right, but in this case that is not the pressing issue. It's whether or not Iran can be allowed to have nuclear weapons. Taking into account what their leaders have been saying lately, and their support for terrorism. A military strike on Iran is bound to cause social unrest (much moreso than Iraq, who's people are "exhausted by war" as you put it), but that's the price for national security.

    2. Re:On Nation Building by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
      I disagree, I think a military strike will poison whatever chance we have to 'deal' with the mullahs because it will polarize the youth vote, a rising and massive demographic that will at some point begin to take control of their country. By attacking we merely prove the mullahs right, that the US wants to hurt Iran and thus they must own the biggest scariest weapon. And this is of course assuming our strike is sucessful and breaks the back of their nuclear program.

      With Bush's capitulation to India we have shown that our 'allies' can have nuclear weapons, thus rendering the whole moral "nukes are so dangerous no one should have them" to a good-old boys club. The Iranian mullahs like the nuclear program because it terrorizes the west, proves the need for their leadership, and could create a 'crisis' allowing them to hold the reins a little longer. Military strikes would just push this further.

      I think the best way to deal with Iran is to paint them into a corner, let the Russians sell them technology that can't be used for nukes, offer help to build other kinds of infrastructure, and make the Mullahs admit that they want nukes as a weapon, then offer a treaty of non-aggression (we are afterall on both sides of their country) or some other deal. The minute that NK, Pakistan, and India had nukes the cat was out of the bag, now is time for damage control rather than some unilateral strike that will make things worse.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    3. Re:On Nation Building by zardo · · Score: 1
      Well, look at the history of the region, Christian/Islamic prophecies, and statements coming from Iran's president. If they wanted nuclear weapons to secure their future, there is no need to threaten the destruction of Israel, in fact, it hurts their efforts toward stability. I'm convinced they would use a nuclear weapon to destroy Israel. Right now it looks like the policy is simply that "Iran will not have a nuclear weapon" and if diplomatic means fail, then a military strike will prove necessary.

      I'm all for diplomacy, but it appears you're ruling out military preemption, which would certainly be a mistake. Diplomacy works a lot better when military preemption is on the table, and it doesn't work to bluff all the time, sooner or later you've got to throw down, so to speak.

    4. Re:On Nation Building by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
      Think of it this way, we're a big 6" guy and we trip over some mean little guy and spill his beer. He starts raving at us about his beer and how he's going to kick our ass. Now, we know we can wail on this kid for sport, we can probably break his arm with a thought and drop-kick him for the big finish, but we also should remember that this guy is mean, he's been in lots of fights and he doesn't have much to loose. He might even enjoy the fight, and he's always got a sucker punch and a little knife tucked in his sleeve. So, should we proceed to beat his ass, or do we offer him a new beer, brush him of, apologize. Now he's got nothing to fight about, and now he looks bad because he wants to fight. We make him throw, then we hurt him, but we don't really want to fight, because it's going to ruin our night no matter what and we might get hurt over some watered-down beer.

      Between you and me, diplomacy is our best option, we want to show Iranians that their government is theirs and it their problem to fix and we won't interfere, unless someone makes us. Force is great, but you can't just stand there and threaten someone, you have to give them a carrot too. Give that little guy a choice between a free beer and an ass-kicking because you want him to choose the free beer.

      As for Israel, this is the equivalent of saying 'ladies and gentlemen' in a political speech, they say this all the time and while I think some of the mullahs mean it a lot of people don't. Plus they know any attack on Israel will cause not only a retaliation by Tel Aviv, and the mullahs know the Israelies have more than one nuke, but a response by the US and NATO, even the Russians. The mullahs have a tenuous grasp on their country, they rule by force and propaganda and they use the Israelis as a distraction to the real problems of the Iranian people.

      The Mullahs want us to react a certain way, they want the US to threaten Iran and corner it. We can't afford a war, we don't have the men, the equipment, or the stamina to wage war in Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, at the same time. We will loose and the Mullahs aren't stupid. They're crazy and dangerous, but not stupid.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    5. Re:On Nation Building by zardo · · Score: 1
      Well, I think your analogy is off. The little man isn't threatening us, he's threatening our little brother, unprovoked. Personally I'd knock his block off and enjoy it, but whatever. You let little man bully everyone and eventually someone else is going to get hurt, for no good reason at all. People remember you had the opportunity to stop him, and wonder why you didn't take advantage of it. How about this analogy. You say you're sorry and buy little man a beer, he buys you a beer and you think everything is hunky dory until you discover there's poison in your beer, and death is imminent.

      You're wrong about us not being able to afford a war. A ground war is one thing, and the largest price there is troop morale. If troopers are dieing left and right, nobody will fight the war. A second ground war would likely require a draft. An air war is dirt cheap in comparison, it's quick and easy.

      Long ago they cancelled the nuclear bunker buster research, but I think they went ahead and developed it as a "black" project, I read something to make me think that a while back. It certainly would be useful in a apocalypse scenario. Another option we may have already (but may not consider using for it's strategic importance) is the so-called "finger of god" which is a tungsten rod launched from outer space, capable of penetrating the deepest bunkers.

      It's definately a messy situation, there's no guarantee an air war would work, and if it does, Iran is likely to continue to pursue nuclear weapons, with deeper bunkers. The situation would likely escalate. But if we do nothing, as you are advocating, Israel is determined to stop them because they're the one's who are most likely to get nuked. They have stated their determination publicly. If Israel attacks Iran it will turn into an ugly mess and we will have to get much more involved than a quick and dirty air strike. That's probably what Iran wants is a ground war with Israel.

      On a side note, did you see the Iranians claimed to have the fastest torpedo's in the world yesterday? We developed more advanced, faster torpedo's decades ago but quit testing them for the "save the whales" crowd. They are extremely hard to aim, nearly impossible to use active guidance, have a very small warhead. Not capable of destroying our war ships. They also tested some shitty missile saying it can evade radar and counter-measures. I'd like to see it put to the test, heh heh.

    6. Re:On Nation Building by idsofmarch · · Score: 1
      My point is not disengagement, but rather engagement with diplomacy and with a promise that we won't just decide to start pounding the place. An air war is cheap for us, but expensive for civilians and we at best get a very angry and polarized populace and a delay on Iran's nuclear program. We also get an Iran that reasonably fears another attack and so quietly goes about building up its nuclear program with aims to actually use it. We also get to infuriate the rest of the hornets in the Mid-East who will also make us pay.

      I may be wrong, but Iran and others always threaten Israel, it's saber rattling and we can't just attack Iran because they're doing the same thing that Pakistan, India, and others have.

      As for the Iranian navy, there's more firepower on Lake Havasu during Spring Break, and if that's a true indication of their military, I think Israel will be fine. Also, Iran can't really invade Israel, there's more than a few countries in the way and they don't have the logistical tail necessary, plus the Israelis will get to plant their flag in Tehran.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    7. Re:On Nation Building by zardo · · Score: 1
      In the short history of Israel (as we know it since WW2), they have been in a constant state of war. Each time they are invaded they push the enemy back and take more land, and it makes the enemy mad but they are still defeated. That war has evolved into terrorism, the one, sure-fire way to destroy israel is with a nuclear bomb.

      They would get in through Syria, their home-boy. It will happen, you have to get into the minds of these religious extremists. They have a lot of power over there, Hamas, Hezbollah, they're all bent on destroying Israel. Israel will likely launch nuclear weapons and destroy most of the Arab world. Actually I am not so certain about that, but who knows with Sharon gone, anything could happen.

  266. "Next step is to show Iran who's boss." by k2r · · Score: 1

    > I was comparing two situations where action vs. inaction made a hell of a difference.

    Yes, you did. The problem is that these situations aren't very similar. Acting wrong knowingly under wrong premises is usually worse than acting late but rightly. On the other hand there might be parallels: Both situations (Hitler taking over Europe without much intervention) (flaky religious dictatorships in the middle east) arouse partly because of economical interest.

    "Next step is to show Iran who's boss."
    Well, that is a very good summary of the level of US foreign politics the world got used to.
    This position makes people perceive the US as the largest risk for this planet.

    If your country wouldn't have acted criminally in so many countries the last decades, supporting not peace and democracy but mostly supporting oppressive regimes because of economical or political interests you might be in a more plausible position.

    Who installed the brutal Shah in Iran in 1953 for 25 years because the elected (nationalist) leader nationalized your oil-company?

    You are in no position to lead anyone by example but you are just bigot and the bully on the schoolground beating up the enemy du jour leaving anything tainted that you touch.

    k2r

    1. Re:"Next step is to show Iran who's boss." by k2r · · Score: 1

      I might add that I'm absolutely aware of the fact that some of these opressive governments served and serve my country's economical interests very well.

      k2r

    2. Re:"Next step is to show Iran who's boss." by zardo · · Score: 1

      Acting wrong knowingly under wrong premises is usually worse than acting late but rightly

      I don't know where you get a generalized notion like that, but in this case it is the exact opposite. The problem is clear as day. If you allow Iran to develop nuclear weapons, they are very likely to use them! Look at recent threats made against Israel. You think that's just hot air? If, at some future time, we decide that Iran is wreckless and dangerous, it is too late to do anything about it!

      Well, that is a very good summary of the level of US foreign politics the world got used to.

      I know it makes a lot of people angry that the United States is the lone superpower. That's fine. You can't please everybody! It may only be coincidence that the United States happens to be the best country in the world, more people want into our country than any other. Go figure. Reminds me of when OJ Simpson ran from the law, people went and stood on the freeway to cheer him on. Go Juice go! Stick it to the man!

      Who installed the brutal Shah in Iran in 1953 for 25 years because the elected (nationalist) leader nationalized your oil-company?

      We did. Around that time the entire world was changing, great Britain was granting independence to all of their off-shore colonies. We're not the same country we were 50 years ago, neither is the world the same place. Time you quit dwelling on the past. I am never expecting to hear asinine comments like that, from anybody, yet I am constantly bombarded with them. You never hear people in the public sphere say "Remember what America did 50 years ago?" to support their argument for inaction, nevermind what we did 60 years ago, and the political precendent that WW2 set in terms of foreign policy, and what that means for the action vs inaction argument.

  267. En- & Moron by k2r · · Score: 1

    Yes, I mixed up the names of those two american companies - and it's funny because both are just such beautiful and prototypic symbols for different aspects of the US-American achievements in making this world a better place.

    > You're getting your liberal propoganda mixed up.

    Uh, "liberal propaganda" is a Fox News phrase that doesn't make much sense in any country but in the US.

    > You're a moron.

    Well, I'm a drug-addicted moron now, if I got your last two messages right. How impressive.

    k2r

    1. Re:En- & Moron by zardo · · Score: 1

      Uh, "liberal propaganda" is a Fox News phrase that doesn't make much sense in any country but in the US.

      It makes perfect sense, think about it. You know what propaganda is, liberal propaganda is a subset of that.

      Yes, you're a moron. I could be wrong about your drug addiction. Just say "I'm not a drug addict" and I'll believe you. Something tells me you want to argue to benefits of marijuana and that nonsense.

  268. Different "Pravdas"? by k2r · · Score: 1

    AFAIK the Pravda online has got nothing to do with the printed pravda we know from cold war times. "Pravda" just means "truth" (?) and pravda.ru is just as relevant as any other weird online tabloid.

    Could somebody in the know tell if there are any connections?

    k2r

  269. Re:"Security" makes it all OK? - Talk about Guns by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you shop smart, and shop S-mart!