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Australian Extradited For Breaking US Law At Home

An anonymous reader sends us a link to a report in The Age about an Australian resident, who had never set foot in the US and broke US intellectual-property laws in Australia, being extradited to the US to face trial. Hew Raymond Griffiths pleaded guilty in Virginia to overseeing all aspects of the operation of the group Drink Or Die, which cracked copy-protected software and media products and distributed them for free. He faces up to 10 years in a US jail and half a million dollars in fines.

777 comments

  1. Why is this news? by Umuri · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why is this news? Sounds to me like he broke a US law that the AU has an equivalent law about, and the us wants him to be on trial here first. Plus the AU has agreements with the US to comply. Sounds like SOP to me.

    --
    You never realize how much manually made unmanaged "linked" lists suck, till you have src.link.link.link.link...
    1. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Perhaps the fact that he isn't under US jurisdiction?

    2. Re:Why is this news? by unapersson · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well the US is not the World Police. He also broke Australian law, and the crime was committed on Australian soil, so should have been charged and tried there. A sovereign country's citizens should be tried under that country's law, unless the US fancies an international court to handle international crimes.

    3. Re:Why is this news? by mrchaotica · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Assuming you're American, would you want to be extradited to Australia for breaking an Australian law in the US even though you'd never been to Australia?

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    4. Re:Why is this news? by Voice+of+Meson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Griffiths appears to have been singled out by US authorities. British-based members of Drink or Die were reportedly tried in Britain. I think I remember another recent situation where British citizens were dealt with by their own government while Australians were sold out by their Government and left in the hands of the Americans.
      He may well be a prolific software pirate but this seems fishy to me, and the precedent it sets worries me more. "Any Australian who has pirated software worth more than $US1000 could be subject to the same extradition process as Griffiths was." Thats a whole lotta Aussies right there.
      --
      Dammit! I had a good one.
    5. Re:Why is this news? by timesearch · · Score: 1, Insightful

      There is a long standing precedent for extradition. It has existed for longer than the United States has existed in one form or another. Frankly, I'm glad the bloke was extradited and will be tried by a court in the country of the injured party. If you've ever been ripped off or otherwise disappointed by a person in another country, you know exactly how I feel about it. I'm cheering the US on in this matter. Props to AU for seeing it their way too.

    6. Re:Why is this news? by value_added · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A sovereign country's citizens should be tried under that country's law, unless the US fancies an international court to handle international crimes.

      They do.

      Just so long as it doesn't involve US citizens. Or military personnel.

    7. Re:Why is this news? by lime_red · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Agreed there. If you can use a similar situation, the Swedish police had a go at The Pirate Bay, after great pressure from the United States -- otherwise, they probably would have left them alone. However, I doubt the Swedes would roll over and send the individuals over to the US for charging, just because the US asked. Similarly here, he may or may not have been charged under an Australian law covering the same thing as the US law, but we changed our mind because the US asked us to.

      The Australian government lacks the backbone to stand up to other (bigger) countries like the US and Indonesia in any meaningful way.

    8. Re:Why is this news? by spiritraveller · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Typically, countries will assert jurisdiction over acts committed within their geographic territory or acts committed by their own citizens wherever they may be. Sometimes a country will assert that a foreign national--though not actually setting foot in the country--has reached out to its jurisdiction by some act, thus invoking "the long arm of the law." Examples would include sending a mail bomb, or breaking into a computer over the internet.

      This case does not appear to be based on any of those theories of jurisdiction. According to the article, the US charged Mr. Griffiths with conspiracy. Under conspiracy, any one conspirator is liable for the acts of any other person in the conspiracy.

      This is very troublesome when applied to such a mundane crime as copying works and giving them to people who never would have bought them in the first place. The actual effect of the conspiracy is arguably insignificant. It doesn't seem as troublesome when applied to something who planned the 9/11 attacks, where the effect is very significant. But the theory of jurisdiction is the same: conspiracy with people who committed criminal acts inside the prosecuting country.

    9. Re:Why is this news? by Dr.+Hok · · Score: 1

      At least this is news to me, because German law explicitly prohibits extraditing German citizens to other countries. Instead, they are punished here (in DE) by a German court according to German law. You wouldn't want to be extradited to Singapore for spitting chewing gum on the pavement, or to Saudi-Arabia for jacking off.

      --
      Say out loud: I'm an Aspie and I'm somewhat proud, I guess. Uh. Can I write an email in all caps instead? Hm...
    10. Re:Why is this news? by riff420 · · Score: 1, Funny

      fuck yeah, at least i wouldn't have to pay for the flight. shit's expensive now, aye?

    11. Re:Why is this news? by Bob+MacSlack · · Score: 5, Funny

      You'll be hearing shortly from the government of Nigeria. Your comments about their citizens were deemed to be illegal under Nigerian legal code Section 13.43b and you will be extradited to face criminal charges there.

      Have a nice day.

    12. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Perhaps the fact that he isn't under US jurisdiction? He ran an organization which operated in the US. This is no different than drug lords in Columbia being wanted by US authorities. It's also the same as legitimate companies being liable for what their company does in every country they operate.
    13. Re:Why is this news? by Geekenstein · · Score: 0

      And assuming you're American, would you want someone to be able to blatantly flaunt our laws and cause harm to Americans and American interests simply because they aren't on our soil? Extradition treaties exist for this very purpose.

      (Please for the love of the FSM don't try to turn this into a "it's just Intellectual Property, not murder" argument).

    14. Re:Why is this news? by Opportunist · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How do you break a law of another country without being there?

      Can we now ask the US to send over all those people selling Nazi-Flags and WW2 memorabilia because it's illegal to have and sell them here?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    15. Re:Why is this news? by MichaelSmith · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And assuming you're American, would you want someone to be able to blatantly flaunt our laws and cause harm to Americans and American interests simply because they aren't on our soil? Extradition treaties exist for this very purpose.

      If an American currently in Australia is mugged then that crime is comitted in Australia. The fact that American interests (people) were affected does not mean that the offence was comitted in the USA.

      The global nature of the Internet does make the location of some crimes ambiguous but that doesn't make it right to just go ahead and pick a jurisdiction.

    16. Re:Why is this news? by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And assuming you're American, would you want someone to be able to blatantly flaunt our laws and cause harm to Americans and American interests simply because they aren't on our soil?

      Uh, yes, actually, it's called "sovereignty" and other countries get to have it too! Sucks for us, don't it?

      If you want to stop "harm to American interests" then the appropriate method of doing it is to deal with the UN and international law, not to bully other countries into following our national ones.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    17. Re:Why is this news? by Detritus · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      If I was the kingpin of a criminal enterprise that operated in Australia, among other places, I wouldn't be surprised if Australia requested my extradition. The point being that I would have knowingly committed criminal acts on Australian soil, even though I was physically somewhere else. If I give orders to the Melbourne branch office of Trolls 'R Us, to break John Doe's legs, does it matter whether I'm in Australia or not?

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    18. Re:Why is this news? by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oh, by the way, I'm sure you and just about every other American has done enough things that are illegal in some country that we'd be locked up for life, or worse, if we were extradited there. Have sex outside of marriage, or in some "deviant" (i.e., anything other than missionary) position? I'll bet that's a capital offense in some religion-infested place. Spit on the sidewalk? That'll land you in prison in Indonesia. Drive on the right side of the road? Ooh, that's a severe violation in England and Japan! Remember, it doesn't matter that you were driving down Route 66 at the time...

      Now, think of the madness that would ensue if everyone were as stupid and shortsighted as you are. Aren't you glad you're not in charge?

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    19. Re:Why is this news? by Macthorpe · · Score: 1

      You can say that, but seeing as the US treats copyright infringement as theft nowadays (and apparently Australia agrees), if someone steals a lot of money off an American company it would make more sense to try that person in America.

      Please note I'm not going to get into an argument about whether it really is theft or not. There's plenty of places to have that discussion.

      --
      "It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
    20. Re:Why is this news? by asuffield · · Score: 1

      Frankly, I'm glad the bloke was extradited and will be tried by a court in the country of the injured party.


      Foreign citizens extradited to the US do not have the right to a trial. He may get one, but there's no guarantee of it. You don't know that it will happen. They can simply lock him up and throw away the key, if they want to.
    21. Re:Why is this news? by Heir+Of+The+Mess · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Good thought. There's a few directions you can go with this.

      What about an American Journalist being extradited to China for criticising the government there.

      What about being extradicted to a non-secular country for saying something against their religion.

      But we are talking IP. What about an Indian being extradited to Sweden for copying IKEA furniture. Even though there are no IKEA stores in India. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2 006/02/12/MNG41H6PEF1.DTL.

      Someones crossed a line here, but then many lines have been crossed in this war of IP holders vs the people.

      --
      Australian running a company that does C# / C++ / Java / SQL / Python / Mathematica
    22. Re:Why is this news? by freakxx · · Score: 0, Troll

      Australian government is already known as an US-pet. Nothing is surprising here...it doesn't deserve to be a news at all...

    23. Re:Why is this news? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't be surprised if Australia requested my extradition.
      Yeah, and I could "request" that Bill Gates give me his fortune and become my personal slave. That doesn't mean any sane person would agree that my request was justified, or that Bill would be obligated to grant it!
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    24. Re:Why is this news? by Mistlefoot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes. Someone should be able to flaunt our laws while outside America provided that what they are doing is not against the law there.

      A gentleman was recently sentenced to 10 years in Thailand because he defaced a picture of the King of Thailand while in that country. If I, while in the US, create a website that defames the King of Thailand do you expect the US would send me there to do my time? What if my website where written in the Thai language with the blatant intent of being available not only to Thai citizens, but for Thai citizens?

    25. Re:Why is this news? by Archtech · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Well the US is not the World Police".

      Many Americans believe that it is. But only in the sense that anyone, living anywhere in the world, should be subject to US justice for breaking US laws. Lesser breeds are welcome to cheat, rob, assault, murder, and torture one another - indeed, this is often positively encouraged - as long as no American loses out in the process.

      There are two logically distinct and incompatible positions being confused here.

      1. The USA is the world's most progressive nation, in the sense that it is the first and best democracy, the country in which the rule of law is most clearly supreme, and generally the most virtuous. Therefore it has a moral right, or even an obligation, to lead others towards the light (at least, those of them who survive the trip).

      2. The USA is the world's most powerful nation, armed with weapons that could easily destroy any other nation utterly within less than a day. It can also launch bombs, missiles, or just thousands of heavily-armed soldiers, anywhere in the world. It even lays claim to military supremacy in space. Therefore, as the world's biggest gorilla, what it says goes; and it uses this dominance to further its own interests (including those of US corporations and citizens).

      Either of these can be readily supported by various logical arguments. Unfortunately, they cannot both be true, as (2) gives the USA licence to disregard the supposed rights of other individuals, corporations, and nations where they clash with its own. However, many Americans tend to transpose deftly from one to the other in the same context - sometimes even within the same sentence. It would be nice to know which is the official position.

      --
      I am sure that there are many other solipsists out there.
    26. Re:Why is this news? by Pc_Madness · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Doesn't US copyright/patent law apply in Australia because of the free trade agreement?

    27. Re:Why is this news? by stewwy · · Score: 1

      There is a joke going the rounds in the UK at the moment, based on some facts coming to light

      The US embassy in London is selling of one of its annexes for some reason, various comedians have proposed that they move into their alternative premises, but Gordon Brown says NO as he wants to move in there shortly.

      (For non-UK residents, Gordon Brown is the anointed successor to our current 'Glorious Leader' and number 10 incumbent )

    28. Re:Why is this news? by packeteer · · Score: 1

      Selling Nazi flags is not illegal in the USA. Therefore the USA is not going to send out its citizens for doing so. Now if it WAS illegal in the US AND in another country and an American citizen was running an operation that involved smuggling flags out of the USA into the other country there would be a problem.

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    29. Re:Why is this news? by mattjb0010 · · Score: 1

      A sovereign country's citizens should be tried under that country's law, unless the US fancies an international court to handle international crimes.

      He's not an Australian citizen. He's British.

    30. Re:Why is this news? by westlake · · Score: 1
      Assuming you're American, would you want to be extradited to Australia for breaking an Australian law in the US even though you'd never been to Australia?

      There is no compelling reason to allow the U.S. to become a safe haven for high-tech crimes that impact other jurisdictions.

    31. Re:Why is this news? by gnasher719 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      ' If I, while in the US, create a website that defames the King of Thailand do you expect the US would send me there to do my time? '

      In Germany, the rules for extradition (from Germany to another country) are:

      1. It must have been a crime according to German law, but committed in the country that asks for extradition. As it is relevant in this case, the location where a crime is committed is the place where it takes effect, so it would be _possible_ for someone being physically in Australia to commit a crime in the USA.
      2. The person to be extradited must be able to expect a fair trial.
      3. There is no "cruel or unusual" punishment for that crime. This prevents death sentence for anyone extradited from Germany to the USA.

      And a few minor points, like the country asking for extradition must show enough proof that German prosecution in the same situation would put the case to a court, and you can't get extradited for anything minor, where the extradition itself would be more punishment than the crime is worth.

      So for defacing a picture of the Thai king, you wouldn't be extradited. (Note that insulting foreign heads of state might get you into trouble in Germany. Obviously you can't get extradited for that, because Thailand cannot claim that you are insulting a foreign head of state. )

    32. Re:Why is this news? by gnasher719 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      ... and one guy exporting Nazi literature for the US to Germany made the mistake of traveling to Denmark, which promptly extradited him to Germany.

      Now I personally think since he was so happy with the way the Nazis ran Germany, they should have treated him how the Nazis would have treated him (most likely death through hanging, which they used to do with people distributing pamphlets against the current government), but they just put him to jail for a few years, and you won't find anyone named Bubba in a German jail...

    33. Re:Why is this news? by Dark$ide · · Score: 1

      If you're thinking of the NatWest Three (Google for the story). Then you're wrong. They screwed Enron while working for National Westminster Bank (a UK company) and are now sitting in jail in Texas waiting for the American justice system to lock them up for decades or send them home.
      Extradition should be a fair and just system, whether it is a question to be debated here.

      --

      Sigs. We don't need no steenking sigs.

    34. Re:Why is this news? by someone1234 · · Score: 1

      Last time i knew, Australia wasn't colonised by the US. An US citizen can kill an Australian in Australia, or anywhere else, and the US won't extradite the murderer.

      --
      Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
    35. Re:Why is this news? by Kokuyo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Religion-infested place? You mean unlike America?

    36. Re:Why is this news? by kubrick · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, but the idea is that we Australians introduce our own versions of the US laws, we Australians break them here and then we get tried in Australian courts. All of Drink or Die's crimes would have happened before the FTA was signed, anyway.

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
    37. Re:Why is this news? by xtracto · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah, every US American should be extradited to Singapore for chewing gum, go ahead, you all are breaking Singapore law and should be fined AND jailed. It does not matter if you are chewing gum in New York underground, you are still breaking a Singaporean law and should be convicted!.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    38. Re:Why is this news? by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      -1, You Don't Get It

      The concept you're missing is that it has to be illegal in both places, so generally none of your examples are even remotely applicable.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    39. Re:Why is this news? by bjourne · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Remember that "The USA" is not really equivalent to the US nation and its people. The foreign and domestic politics of "The USA" are designed to maximize the wealth of a few dozen families that controls Congress and most big business in the US. At the expense of millions of Americans that has to do with living on minimum wage. The USA as the World Police is a construction created to serve these families interests, not the American people. The American people are just as much the victim of it as everyone else.

    40. Re:Why is this news? by Voice+of+Meson · · Score: 1

      No actually, I was talking about the treatment of British gitmo detainees compared to Aussie ones. Maybe should have spelled that out more. Oh well.

      --
      Dammit! I had a good one.
    41. Re:Why is this news? by zero_offset · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Once again, you're overlooking the requirement that the person in question broke a law that exists in both countries.

      Criticizing China is not a crime in the US, so there would be no reason to extradite. Additionally, extradition laws typically require that the defendant can expect a fair trial (not the case in China) and may contain other requirements (prohibitions against cruel and unusual punishment, for example).

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    42. Re:Why is this news? by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      Actually, extradition proceedings typically involve agreements that specify exactly how the person will be treated, and generally speaking the right to a fair trial, a guarantee that he will not be subject to cruel and unusual punishment and similar items are part of that agreement. They don't just throw the person on a plane and hope for the best. It's a very complex, expensive, time-consuming process.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    43. Re:Why is this news? by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      because German law explicitly prohibits extraditing German citizens to other countries

      Not according to this German:
      comment 19018473

      Lots of people seem to be overlooking the fact that the accused must break a law that exists in both countries. Your marathon masturbation sessions are safe. Proceed.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    44. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      He's called "Heinz".

    45. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the JEWS, stupid...
      Who stands to gain from this? Who sits on their asses all day, and never do any manual labour? Who try to OWN everything in the world, including YOUR country, so THEY can leech off the fruits of YOUR hard physical labour? The JEWS, stupid!

    46. Re:Why is this news? by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Well, I'd be pretty strongly popposed to someone being tried in Australia if they happened to send a copy of GTA3 there or something else that was banned.

    47. Re:Why is this news? by lattyware · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If it is illegal in both places, why is he being sent to the US? He should be charged in Australia.

      --
      -- Lattyware (www.lattyware.co.uk)
    48. Re:Why is this news? by Gorshkov · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And assuming you're American, would you want someone to be able to blatantly flaunt our laws and cause harm to Americans and American interests simply because they aren't on our soil? Extradition treaties exist for this very purpose.
      I'm a Canuck. Every time I light a Cuban cigar, I'm "blatantly flaunting American law". Tough noogies.

      Every time a Dutch citizen avails himself of a prostitute, he's "blatantly flaunting American law". Tough noogies.

      Every time a British citizen drives on the left side of the road, they're "blatantly flaunting American law". Tough noogies.

      How many more examples do you want?

      Extradition treaties exist for this very purpose.
      Extradition treaties exist to get people who committed a crime IN a country, BACK TO the country, if they've since left. This guy has never been in the USA, and broke no laws in the USA.

      I don't think people should be focusing on the USA here in any case - you can't really blame them for trying. The party people SHOULD be pissy with is the Australian government, for going along with this shit and not telling the Americans to go hump a roo.
    49. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      The American people are just as much the victim of it as everyone else.

      Bullshit, the American people are the ones who voted these clowns in office. Twice.

    50. Re:Why is this news? by Lucky_Norseman · · Score: 1

      So, if your state has a sleeping law making it a crime to be unfaithful to your wife, then it is ok to extradite you to an arab country where you can be stoned to death for your sins?

      Or if you commit blasphemy, which I believe is a crime many places, they can send you to whatever country in the world that has the harshest sentence for blaspheming against that particurlar religion?

    51. Re:Why is this news? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      This case does not appear to be based on any of those theories of jurisdiction. According to the article, the US charged Mr. Griffiths with conspiracy. Under conspiracy, any one conspirator is liable for the acts of any other person in the conspiracy.

      This is very troublesome when applied to such a mundane crime as copying works and giving them to people who never would have bought them in the first place. The actual effect of the conspiracy is arguably insignificant. It doesn't seem as troublesome when applied to something who planned the 9/11 attacks, where the effect is very significant. But the theory of jurisdiction is the same: conspiracy with people who committed criminal acts inside the prosecuting country.


      No, it's very troublesome overall. Using that logic, plenty people should be shipped off to China to face trial for conspiring to subvert the Chinese government. Using conspiracy you can drag people that have committed no crime, or a lesser or equal crime in their home country to face prosecution abroad. If a bunch of local and Italian mafia was caught, I normally expect the local mafia to be presecuted here and the italian mafia to be prosecuted in Italy, even if you might say they've both conspired to do mafia business.

      I'd that to use conspiracy against foreigners you need a really strong locality of the crime. 9/11 is a good example, since it was very specificly targeted. But if the logic is "we have an international warez network here, and since the US is involved we're going to drag all the others here on conspiracy charges" then that is plain wrong in my opinion. Assuming they warezed in both the US and AU, any reason Australia couldn't just say "No, they were conspirating with him, you extradite your US citizens to us and we'll prosecute them."

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    52. Re:Why is this news? by ozmanjusri · · Score: 1
      No. Australia agreed to align it's laws to those of the US as a result of the AUSFTA. The legislation, and the legal framework they apply under are Australian.

      Hew is in a Virginia prison because our justice minister of the time, Chris Ellison, believed his crime was evil enough to warrant his extradition to stand trial under US law.

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    53. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      except in this case the US doesn't have extradition treaties to indonesia for spitting on the sidewalks in the US. He did something bad, in his own country, one of the consequences of which is he's then subject to treaties his country makes which aren't nullified by the constitution of his country. Ultimately, this may be fortunate for him. Given his apparent situation under Austrailian law, the US courts may well be far more sympathetic, and his extrordinary circumstance afford him a visiablity which may well, and perhaps rightly so, attract him aid for his plight. This is one of those circumstances where a Constitution like the US has is powerful, say in your hypothetical islamic adultery example. Were Osama to buy a treaty with Saudi Arabia for facilitating the excecution of fornicators, the Constitution would prevail, requiring it's alteration, a far more daunting proceedure, even in the dead of night, even in the current climate of law for sale. I personally think it's a stupid treaty to have, what a moronic way to spend political capital. But being that it is a treaty, it's Austrailian law at work. I can't imagine a US judge it going to appreciate this expansion of laws ment to take down drug cartels and organized crime. I would have to imagine that they'll want to know that somehow, somewhere, someone was bleeding as the result of rampant copyright violations.

    54. Re:Why is this news? by entrox · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Eh, maybe you should mention that German citizens cannot be extradited as per Article 16 GG. The only exception is the extradition to an international court e.g. Den Haag. There may be possibilities to extradite German citizens to other EU nations (Europäisches Haftbefehlsgesetz), but such laws have either been ruled to be unconstitutional in the past or they wouldn't apply in this case.

      --
      -- The plural of 'anecdote' is not 'data'.
    55. Re:Why is this news? by fsmunoz · · Score: 1

      Same laws here in Portugal... although I have been thinking on one thing: the "cruel and unusual" punishment that you refer does in fact prevent death penalty, but it doesn't stop there... I think our laws are equal - most in Continental Europe are - and generally a judge collective or some other group will also have to take into consideration the conditions of the jails, risk of torture, etc, etc. This has been actually applied by several countries...

      Now, the US Prisional system is one of the worst in what relates to prison rape. Any minor crime could turn - if the sites I have read are to be believed, and the stats - into an opportunity to be raped in prision. Isn't this enough for someone to succesfully block any extraditation to the USA?

    56. Re:Why is this news? by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1, Troll

      You've obviously never been in involved in getting somebody elected to Congress. (Or if you have it was with a in effective party such as a Green or Lib. ) So you have no idea what the fuck you're talking about.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    57. Re:Why is this news? by toQDuj · · Score: 2, Funny

      Except if you pay a sum of $203.000,- to free the assets of Abrahim Bruhaha, my father..

      Nigerian scammers take another leap.

      --
      Every experiment which ends in a big bang is a good experiment.
    58. Re:Why is this news? by benneja1 · · Score: 0, Troll

      You sir, are an idiot. How did this even sore 5, insightful? You all are idiots.

    59. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you guys seriously misunderstand the way the law works and the way international relations works. Just about every country has extradition treaties with most other countries. You can not break a laws of one country and seek shelter overseas. It seems this guy intentionally broke U.S. law, victimized U.S. businesses, and targeted the U.S. market with his illegal products. If that's true, the U.S. has every right to convict him of his willful violations of its laws. What if he had ran a drug-selling operation that mailed deadly, altered pharmaceuticals to American companies? Or mailed a bomb to the U.S.? Australian law doesn't necessarily allow conviction for crimes that culminated elsewhere. Thus, Australian courts can't convict him of murder because their laws only cover deaths on their soil. Likewise, Australian courts can't convict criminals of violating U.S. copyright law on U.S. soil.

      This has nothing to do with Bush, the Patriot Act, or Australia being America's poodle. We're talking about centuries-old legal standards. It's completely reasonable for this guy to have his day in court.

    60. Re:Why is this news? by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      No, for a number of reasons. Stoning someone to death is cruel and unusual punishment, and we don't have blasphemy laws.

      US extradition laws require that both countries have the same law in place, it requires a minimum sentence before extradition is an option (e.g. you can't be extradited for littering), and it requires the guarantee of a fair trial and protection from cruel and unusual punishment.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    61. Re:Why is this news? by gravesb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, the crime committed was under the Council of Europe Cybercrime treaty, and one of the provisions is extradition. It merely makes sense in our networked world to have treaties that allow for extrajudicial criminal invesitgations. Otherwise, criminals would sit in a country with the most lax laws, and conduct obviously criminal activities against other nations, whose hands would be tied. With regard to hate speech, that was placed in a seperate treaty so that the US would not have to sign it, or more accurately, so the US could sign the other provisions of the treaty. As hate crime legislation is against the 1st Amendment in the US, even if the Senate ratified the treaty, the Supreme Court would hold it invalid. So, that is why there is a difference.

      --
      http://bgcommonsense.blogspot.com
    62. Re:Why is this news? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      If it is illegal in both places, why is he being sent to the US? He should be charged in Australia.

      It's called an extradition treaty. The particulars of where a prosecution for a crime that both parties recognize as such are set out in a treaty, or the treaty indicates that the particulars can be determined on a case-by-case basis. If someone was sitting in the US, cracking into Weta's facilities Down Under to cause trouble or steal material, it's a fair bet that person would be finding themselves in hot legal water Down Under. And extradition would kick right in going the other direction.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    63. Re:Why is this news? by asninn · · Score: 1

      The official position - that which is being claimed - is the first. What's actually being followed, of course, is the second. It's a classic example of someone's words not matching their deeds.

      --
      butter the donkey
    64. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    65. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The US is surely not the "best democracy" but one of the absolute worst in the that it does not uphold the most basic democratic principle of allowign it's citizens to vote for it's leaders (unless you call it voting when your cast vote is discarded). The electoral college system where each state is winner-takes-all vs proportional representation means that if I am a democrat living in a state with a 51% republican majority then my vote in presidential elections is being turned by the US "democratic" process into an electoral college vote for the republican candidate! Doesn't seem very democratic to me. Since most (all other?) democratic countries do allow their citizens to vote (meaningfully) for their leaders, then it's absurd to call the US system the best - it is in fact one of the worst in the world. The US also has a higher percentage of it's citizens in jail than any other country in the world, which also doesn't speak very highly of it as a democratic country. It's really a fools paradise - a highly controlled society full of sheep who for the most part don't realize that it's self-generated "freedom/democracy" propaganda is BS and that citizens in the rest of the civilized world are much freer.

    66. Re:Why is this news? by v1 · · Score: 1

      I believe they are making an argument for "criminal trespass" on a network in the united states maybe? Nowadays, logging into a server in another country is often viewed as actually BEING there, and they try to hold you accountable by their laws for anything you do while logged into that server. Then extradition treaties kick in and you find yourself on an airplane in cuffs.

      It's as though you hopped on a plane, went to the US, broke a law, (for which there is an extradition treaty) and then flew back to AU.

      Although I question the sensibility of considering logging into a server as "criminal trespass" and also question the necessity of cybercrime being part of an extradition treaty.

      Nowadays it appears that the inclusion of a crime in extradition treaties depends not on the severity of the crime, but in the amount of money some powerful people stand to lose.

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    67. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is absolutely false. You're right that many "enemy combatants" (accused of violations of the law of war rather than criminal law) that the U.S. caught in war zones have been locked up for quite a long time. But the Supreme Court said even they need to get trials as soon as practicable.

      As for people extradited for crimes in the criminal system... it's completely different. They are protected by the right to a speedy trial, the right to an attorney, the right to confront and cross-examine witnesses against them, the right to Miranda warnings, the right against self-incrimination, etc. etc. etc.... they have ALL the rights of any other criminal defendant. Of course, some extradition treaties require an even higher standard of due process than Americans would get! It's completely irresponsible of you to make things up, saying that foriegn citizens can be locked up indefinitely without a trial.

    68. Re:Why is this news? by grymwulf · · Score: 1

      Paranoid aren't we?

    69. Re:Why is this news? by TheJasper · · Score: 1

      Well the US is not the World Police. Many people seem to like saying this because they don't like the U.S. now, but 30 years ago people would've said 'yes they are, and a good thing to". Now I don't condone recent U.S. policy, but I also don't condone the constant U.S. bashing which quite often is used to divert attention away form your home countries problems. Especially Europe needs to remember that the U.S. certainly saved our bacon way back. Yes, Europe also helped the U.S. on many occasions, and yes alot of it happened long ago, but we all fared better working together. So stop the bashing and start thinking rationally.

      discalimer: IANAL (I am a devoted know it all, so you probably should start ignoring me now)

      As for now, this extradition, while worrisome, is not all that shocking..or at least not for the reasons I seem to be reading. The fact that someone is extradited while the offense is punishable under australian law isn't shocking, its a requirement. Most countries won't extradite someone for something they don't consider criminal. The most shocking thing is that the crime wasn't committed on U.S. soil. However, you *can* break laws of a country without being in that country. Some countries consider any crime against humanity their jurisdiction (Belgium for one). I'm sure a real lawyer could give more pertinent examples. The real precedent isn't that he's charged under U.S. law, it's that of his extradition, which is a big shame on Australia. I do think the U.S. gov't should've told the companies involved in the charges to seek punishment under australian law and I do doubt the jurisdiction of the U.S. courts, but apparently Australia doesn't.

      Of course, my own country (the netherlands) is also guilty of some highly dubious extraditions to the U.S.. Especially since the U.S. has threatened to invade if any of their citizens end up in the international court (which happens to be here). Considering that I would say rip up all extradition treaties with the U.S., for us anyway. Aside from that we have handed over people without proper assurances that they wouldn't be tortured or unfairly treated. In fact, most people would consider being jailed in the U.S. unfair treatment. Compared to dutch jails, US jails are hellholes.

      Oh, just to clarify. As I understand it extradition is to get people who have escaped your justice back to your country. When you get your citizens to serve jail time in their home countries rather than where they were convicted, that isn't extradition but something else.
    70. Re:Why is this news? by WH · · Score: 1

      I doubt the Swedes would roll over Tell this one to the Norwegians out there. :)
    71. Re:Why is this news? by asninn · · Score: 1

      This prevents death sentence for anyone extradited from Germany to the USA.

      Actually, this can't happen, anyway - as another commenter pointed out further above, the German constitution apparently stipulates that "[n]o German may be extradited to a foreign country. A different regulation to cover extradition to a Member State of the European Union or to an international court of law may be laid down by law, provided that constitutional principles are observed" (Article 16). Since the USA are neither part of the European Union nor an international court of law, no extradition to the USA is possible - at least as long as you're a German citizen.

      Note that insulting foreign heads of state might get you into trouble in Germany.

      Just out of curiosity, do you have a reference for that?

      --
      butter the donkey
    72. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The USA (Al Gore) invented the Internet, and now controls the Internet, so let's just face it, they OWN the Internet. As soon as the dude used the Internet to committ a crime, he stepped into USA turf.

    73. Re:Why is this news? by WH · · Score: 1

      That's not illegal anymore.. step into the 21st century please.

      (You can chew gum there now, you just have to register first.)

    74. Re:Why is this news? by utnapistim · · Score: 1

      1. The USA is the world's most progressive nation, [...] Therefore it has a moral right, or even an obligation, to lead others towards the light (at least, those of them who survive the trip). 2. The USA is the world's most powerful nation, [...] Therefore, as the world's biggest gorilla, what it says goes; and it uses this dominance to further its own interests (including those of US corporations and citizens). [...]It would be nice to know which is the official position.

      The official position is the first; The unofficial (and true) position is the second.

      --
      Tie two birds together: although they have four wings, they cannot fly. (The blind man)
    75. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The funny part is. the USA dont dare do this to a Citizen of China. We only pick on the small countries that we can easily bully around. China would kick our ass so hard that the rest of the world would say " what was THAT!"

      WE could whip the Australian Army+navy+Airforce in about a 20 minute war. China is a completely different story.

      Disagree with me fellow Auzzies? then why are you not in the streets up in arms over this???

      It's because the USA owns your ass. so be good little kids in our southern colony and do what you are told.

    76. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think at this stage it's pretty clear that (2) is, and anything americans may say that suggests (1) is just propaganda.

    77. Re:Why is this news? by Zaatxe · · Score: 1

      Thanks heavens I live in a country where the constitution forbids extradicting its national, no matter what's the reason.

      --
      So say we all
    78. Re:Why is this news? by HalifaxRage · · Score: 1

      AMERICA, FUCK YEAH!

      --
      bomb the us up set someone
    79. Re:Why is this news? by wykthorr · · Score: 0

      1. The USA is the world's most progressive nation, in the sense that it is the first and best democracy, the country in which the rule of law is most clearly supreme, and generally the most virtuous. Therefore it has a moral right, or even an obligation, to lead others towards the light (at least, those of them who survive the trip) What is the light. As far as I know I'm free to chose my own way. Since when is "The USA" the keeper of the "light". Second I've not voted for Bush and as far as I am concerned he can kiss my posterior. You voted for him you keep him. We've got enough imbeciles no need for more. The USA is not so happy to let US citizens be trialled in another country even if they commit a crime on that country's soil. I've said it before and I have to say it again. You really have big problems there. Try solving yours before you show us the light.
    80. Re:Why is this news? by Tuoqui · · Score: 1

      Ok lets get this straight. The guy is an Australian citizen who has never been to the USA. This means that presumably the guy does not have any citizenship or dual citizenship with the USA that would place him under US Law formally in any way, shape or form.

      The guy pirated some stuff and/or helped other people pirate stuff. I'm not saying piracy is good or anything, I'm sure every one of us has at least one piece of shareware/nagware or out and out pirated copy of something on out machines. Either way this guy broke Australian law, on Australian soil.

      About the only way I could see there being a case for extradition is if his website was hosted on a server in the USA (Although I imagine a guy as smart as this would have been smart enough to avoid the use of an American webserver). Which would place his content on US soil (despite never having set foot there) and thus have it subjected to the laws of the USA meaning the big bad DMCA.

      Of course if the US wants to enforce the DMCA worldwide, all they have to do is make sure they bomb every single webserver in existance :) or strong-arm countries like Australia into coughing up their citizens when its convenient for the US.

      --
      09F911029D74E35BD84156C5635688C0
      +2 Troll is Slashdot's way of saying groupthink is confused
    81. Re:Why is this news? by baffled · · Score: 1

      Have sex outside of marriage, or in some "deviant" (i.e., anything other than missionary) position? I'll bet that's a capital offense in some religion-infested place. The Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), U.S. military law, specifies up to 1 year confinement for adultery, and up to 5 years for "unnatural carnal copulation" which includes oral and anal acts.
    82. Re:Why is this news? by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 1

      Then this looks like a case for Lady Sovereign.

      "If you hate me then fuck you!"

    83. Re:Why is this news? by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      So why do people get extradited from Scotland/England to the US for allegedly defrauding the Royal Bank of Scotland while employed for them in England - when the Met Police investigated it and decided there was no case to answer, and when the US has the death penalty, which is not permitted under the European declaration of human rights. Search for "Natwest three" to find out more.

    84. Re:Why is this news? by androse · · Score: 1

      Not after G. W. Bush was reelected by the American people.

    85. Re:Why is this news? by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

      Drive on the right side of the road? Ooh, that's a severe violation in England Actually it isn't. It's perfectly legal to use the whole carriageway as long as it's safe to do so.

      --
      Deleted
    86. Re:Why is this news? by smchris · · Score: 1

      Another non-American in denial apparently. Yes, we _are_ the de facto World Police. That's the thuggish reality of globalization: Europe provides the finance, Asia makes the stuff, the U.S. polices the operations -- Noam Chomsky in lecture I attended circa '96. If you don't like it, talk to _your_ government about why they let the U.S. act that way.

      It's no sense talking to Americans. It's half true that we have a rogue government running, if not elected, without controls. Congress passes a law and instead of executing it like the Executive Branch should, Bush adds a signing statement about what the law means to him and what he'll do with it. It's also half true that enough Americans couldn't care less that they aren't going to come together to take any actions against it. What's not to like about Empire? Today. As long as we're putting the oil wars on the credit card, the media conveniently censors the horrors of war so we can maintain a clear conscience, Bush is telling us it is our patriotic duty to go to the shopping mall and nobody's getting drafted because the people who are supposed to be our National Guardsmen are pulling their third tour in Iraq it's great. We're pissing money for war instead of something like national health care but we've never had that so we don't miss it. Of course, the 800 lb gorilla is that the bills will come up for collection on these actions in many ways in the lifetime of most of us.

      And, no, we don't fancy an international court. We have our own law circa 1998 making actions like torture capital crimes. See how well that worked too?

    87. Re:Why is this news? by digitrev · · Score: 1

      Since most (all other?) democratic countries do allow their citizens to vote (meaningfully) for their leaders
      Umm, you looked at Canada lately? We have a very backwards way of electing our government. We have 308 electoral ridings. In each riding, you vote for your Member of Parliament. Some of them represent a national political party, such as the Liberals, Conservatives, or the NDP, whereas others represent local parties, such as the Marijuana party, or simply run as independents. In each riding, the candidate with the most votes wins the riding. In some ridings, this means as little as 40% of the voters. In a country where only about 60% of people vote, that's precious few people who voted for them in a given riding. After the voting is completed, the party with the most MPs gets a chance to make the government. In Canada, it is very much possible for a government to form a majority (>50% or 159 seats) with considerably less than half the popular vote.
      --
      Cynical Idealist
    88. Re:Why is this news? by Barny · · Score: 1

      The real matter (that you both, and many others are overlooking) is that the guy did not break the law in america, he broke an australian law (which happens to also be a law in america) IN australia, so why is he being trialled in america and not the country he broke the law in? Are the plaintiffs (prosecutors/whatever) afraid that our laws are not going to be tough enough?

      The only reason I could see for him to be extradited in such a way is if he used servers in america to comit the crimes, in which it would usually still be trialled in australia.

      Just some speculation (IANAL) but could it be that whatever particular law he broke is a civil matter only in australia but a criminal one in america?

      --
      ...
      /me sighs
    89. Re:Why is this news? by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      People keep saying this, but he ran against Kerry. While I voted for him as an "anti-Bush" vote, I certainly can't feel too much malice towards anyone who didn't. The man's behavior since the election makes me wish that I'd just chucked my vote at some third-party. I'm not sure that we'd be any better off today with Kerry at the helm.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    90. Re:Why is this news? by cryptoguy · · Score: 1

      It would become much more obvious why this is news, if the extradition had happened in the opposite direction. IOW, how would you feel about American citizens being extradited to China for trial on charges of assisting Chinese citizens to bypass their censorship firewalls?

    91. Re:Why is this news? by zero_offset · · Score: 2, Informative

      The short explanation is that the charge and investigation originates in the US.
      I go into slightly more detail here.

      I am also not a lawyer, although years ago I dated one from South Florida who happened to deal with extraditions, mainly South American stuff, so I heard a lot about it. Regarding your speculative question, generally extradition laws also require that the punishment guidelines in both jurisdictions be reasonably similar.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    92. Re:Why is this news? by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      Explained here. Basically it comes down to who is levying the charges and who conducted the investigation.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    93. Re:Why is this news? by smchris · · Score: 2, Informative

      1. The USA is the world's most progressive nation, in the sense that it is the first and best democracy,

      From what I remember about rankings last time I looked at various world surveys:

      one of the most disliked nations on the planet
      about 130th in citizen happiness
      53rd in literacy
      45th in press freedom
      lower 30s in math and science literacy
      high teens in longevity
      About seventh in social mobility
      Gross Domestic Product: http://www.econbrowser.com/archives/2007/01/the_di stributio.html

      The South African constitution explicitly protects gays and they are one of several countries with gay marriage
      one of the greatest income disparities in the world
      one of a couple of the 35 industrialized nations that still executes citizens
      one of a couple of the top 7 industrialized nations without national health care
      highest per capita imprisonment in the world

      Are most new democracies choosing a republican government or a parliamentarian government? And why?

      And Switzerland might have a word to say about the "world's first democracy".

      Sociology and Political Science grad here. Just saying.

    94. Re:Why is this news? by datnigga · · Score: 2, Insightful

      hmmmm...as far I can tell from the article, he didn't operate anything within the U.S., unless the Internet is only within that country. ... he did however crack software owned by U.S. companies.

      --
      i can dig it...just choose not to
    95. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about using Cuba instead of Thailand?

      Many Cubans, whether in TUSNAC* legally or illegally, put down Castro. In fact, many of the things they do in regards to Cuba is illegal in Cuba. Do we send them back to Cuba for trial? Yes, we do send some back, not for trial, but due to not being a legal alien.

      *These United States of the North American Continent.

    96. Re:Why is this news? by kabocox · · Score: 1

      Either of these can be readily supported by various logical arguments. Unfortunately, they cannot both be true, as (2) gives the USA licence to disregard the supposed rights of other individuals, corporations, and nations where they clash with its own. However, many Americans tend to transpose deftly from one to the other in the same context - sometimes even within the same sentence. It would be nice to know which is the official position.

      You missed it. We are all equal, but some are more equal than others. Ideally, all humans are the same and have the same rights and blah, blah, in practise US, UK, EU citizens have more rights and benefits than Africans, Asians, and Middle Easterners.

      Apply that logic to all things. Sure we'll let any company play game here, but US businesses have an advantage over nonUS businesses in the US. The US government will always work to bring more rights and benefits to US companies and not to non US companies. This is perfectly inline with number one. If your country morphes itself into a clone of the US than your businesses/citizens are treated more like our own. The thing is there is such a stark difference in the casual freedoms that we allow foreigners and what they are generally allowed, that even our restricted freedom that we grant them is far more than they usually encounter. That's always been our moral trump card.

    97. Re:Why is this news? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, they cannot both be true, as (2) gives the USA licence to disregard the supposed rights of other individuals, corporations, and nations where they clash with its own.

      Actually that's not incompatible with (1). If you presuppose that your country is the best in a moral sense, then what it does must be right by definition. Individuals, corporations, and nations with rights or values that clash with the US are therefore, by definition, inferior to the US and those rights and values can be disregarded at will.

      In fact, the more I think about it, the less I see any difference between your (1) and (2).

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    98. Re:Why is this news? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Seriously, what kind of a sick country would kick someone with a giant boot?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    99. Re:Why is this news? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Compelling reason? How about sovereignty? If the people of the US thought it should be a crime, then their government would have made a law against it. Since they didn't, it's NOT a crime, no matter what a bunch of foreigners think.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    100. Re:Why is this news? by xtracto · · Score: 1
      Oh really??

      Chewing gum is banned in Singapore under the "Regulation of Imports and Exports (Chewing Gum) Regulations." Except for chewing gum of therapeutic value, the "importing" of chewing gum into Singapore is absolutely banned.

      A common misconception among citizens is that personal use quantities of chewing gum are allowed into Singapore. However, according to the set of Regulations, "importing" means to "bring or cause to be brought into Singapore by land, water or air from any place which is outside Singapore ..." any goods, even if they are not for purposes of trade. The set of Regulations also does not make any provisions for personal use quantities to be brought into Singapore. Therefore, bringing chewing gum into Singapore, even small quantities for whatever purpose, is technically prohibited.[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chewing_gum_ban_in_Si ngapore
      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    101. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      But the District of Columbia is part of the US, so I don't see what the problem is...

      Oh, sorry, you meant Colombia! Sorry, I forgot that misspelling names of other -- ie. non-US -- countries is perfectly acceptable. They're only foreigners after all.

    102. Re:Why is this news? by rgravina · · Score: 1

      Then why don't you do this? I've never understood why people feel the need to vote for one of two parties only. We have the same system here in Australia. I'd really like someone to explain to me how this works - I thought democracy was supposed to be about voting for the representative of the party which you feel will do the best job of running your country. This concept of freedom to vote for whomever you want, as long as it's one of these two guys, just doesn't make any sense to me.

    103. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Religion-infested place? You mean unlike America?

      Sadly, there are few religious people in America. The churches are full, but for the most part those people aren't Christians. They're there because they're supposed to be; they're expected to go to church so they go. But they don't have a clue what Christ was about. Bush pretends to be a Christian, yet as Governor of Texas he executed more men than any other Governor of any state, ever, despite Moses' command that "thou shalt not kill" (and he's killed how many people in a senseless war in Iraq?) Pat Roberston as well, calling for the assassination of a foreign leader because of that leader's politics - and this man is supposed to be a preacher! Like the Reverend Jesse Jackson and the other black Reverend Whatsisface who were calling for Don Imus' firing for saying "nappy headed" when they both have publically called Jewish people "Hymies".

      No, there are a lot of people here who would like you to think they are religious, but most are the wolves in sheep's clothing that Christ warned about. A clue is around their neck. The necktie is the symbol of wealth and power, which is the antithesis of Christianity. It is Satan's leash. Never trust a "Christian" who wears one.

      The same could likely be said about Muslims in the middle East, who share the same Old Testament as Christians and Jews. Truly religious people do NOT call for the deaths of their fellow human beings. Period. If George Bin Laden orders someone to kill someone else, then Osama Bin Bush is neither Christian, Muslim, nor Hebrew (nor Bhuddist; Bhuddists worship life itself).

      The Popes who ordered wiches to be hung were not religious. The kings who ordered the Crusades were not religious. The Muslims who crashed airplanes into buildings were not religious, and the Jews who order the bombings of Palestine are not religious.

      Much evil has been done throughout history in the name of God, but the people who did this evil were not of God. They are wolves in sheep's clothing. Don't judge me by people who pretend to be like me.

      -mcgrew

    104. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Every time a British citizen drives on the left side of the road, they're "blatantly flaunting American law". Tough noogies.

      Bad example and it keeps getting repeated. Whatever road you drive on, you are expected to follow the rules of that particular road. The 75 mph speed limit on the interstate does not justify my going 75 mph in a 25 mph neighborhood. A better example would be getting extradited for vehicular manslaughter as that is more general and not specific to any one road.

    105. Re:Why is this news? by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      The two are not logically incompatible, if you look at it correctly. The official version of what you just said, from the website of the Project for a New American Century, is:

      American leadership is good both for America and for the world; and that such leadership requires military strength, diplomatic energy and commitment to moral principle.

      Number 2, as you state it, in it's total complete selfish form is only held by a small minority of the US. The rest, who think about it, believe it must be tempered by unselfishness. It is really an attitude that stems back probably to world war II, when arguably we DID help the world by getting involved in everyone's business.

      --
      Qxe4
    106. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seeing as the state that decided it was pretty filled with shady practices by the Republican-operated election committee, I'm not convinced that he actually legitimately won. Of course, proper social grace dictates that we not discuss this specific instance of election fraud, so I'll stop now.

    107. Re:Why is this news? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      You know, they do call it United STATES for a reason. It's not just that we are this huge mess of provinces that doesn't have it's own distinct outlook or history. There isn't anything keeping each of the states from being more equitable when it comes to college electors.

      Although that's all just a smokescreen to obscure the fact that we just don't have very compelling candidates these days. And it's not even restricted to the USA. France has the same problem. France's very own clone of Bush managed to get into office even with French style runoff elections.

      So don't try and pretend that some "great travesty of democracy" in the form of the Electoral College is responsible for the current mess in the US.

      Sarkozy should be proof to anyone that electoral colleges aren't the problem and runoff elections are no panacea.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    108. Re:Why is this news? by jaxent · · Score: 1

      The victims are in the US. If you have not had the rewards months of work taken away from you by a some punk who thinks that your work should be free, you may not fully understand that there are victims of software piracy. If you want to put your own work out for free that is your choice, I do some of that as well. But most programmers, musicians and professionals in the movie/tv industry do their work to support our families. Baby needs new shoes.

      We have created a way to erase borders in where we live and work. We have also erased them in where crime is committed. We have to erase them in how we protect victims of crime.

      I am a US citizen and I would expect that if I committed a crime against anyone (a company is just a group of people, it is not faceless) it would be punishable by that country. You should not be able to hide behind a keyboard.

      Before you start, I think that the people in the Bush administration that knowingly went to war under false pretenses should be tried in an Iraqi court first since that country has the most victims.

      --
      "I was gratified to be able to answer promptly. I said I don't know." Mark Twain
    109. Re:Why is this news? by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Usually, I act idealistically and vote for the candidate that I think is best. Sometimes, I don't like any candidate and so I pick any random third-party candidate as a "protest" vote. In rare cases, such as our last presidential election, I dislike a candidate enough that I will vote for the guy most likely to beat him.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    110. Re:Why is this news? by euxneks · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is no different than drug lords in Columbia being wanted by US authorities.

      Interesting how you equate something like breaking copyright to a much more heinous crime like illegal drug manufacturing. Dude, seriously, it's goddamn software.

      --
      in girum imus nocte et consumimur igni
    111. Re:Why is this news? by bestalexguy · · Score: 1

      Have a look at USA's behavior when their soldiers are responsible of crimes like murder and rape. And I'm not talking about countries where the USA are at war. Just places where there are American bases, in friendly states. Do they ever get estradite to the places where there committed these crimes?

      The point is, murder, drug trafficking and IP infringment should have neither comparable punishments nor should those charged with these counts get comparable treatment. Period. Ever heard about hanging a guy for fishing a trout in the King's pond?

    112. Re:Why is this news? by freeweed · · Score: 1

      Considering you don't generally get arrested for pre-marital sex in the US, um, yes.

      I heard a rumour that women are allowed to walk around with their heads uncovered in the States, too.

      --
      Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
    113. Re:Why is this news? by illegalcortex · · Score: 1

      Then why don't you do this?
      Because sometimes (many times) the other opponent from the main party is bad enough that you want to be damn sure they don't get elected. I think you'd feel the same way, you just appear to have a different line you would draw.

      If Hitler was running against John Howard and polls showed they were neck-and-neck, would you still vote for some other candidate?

      I thought democracy was supposed to be about voting for the representative of the party which you feel will do the best job of running your country. This concept of freedom to vote for whomever you want, as long as it's one of these two guys, just doesn't make any sense to me.
      It's never been just about that. Democracy (or republicanism) has always been a process about limited selection. It's always been about who is willing and able to run. That in and of itself is a bit of a selector for the qualities you don't want in a elected official. What democracy in winner-take-all elections has always been about is majority rule. So if you are in a minority, you need to align with other minorities in order to make your vote matter.

      In reality, the majority of people simply based on tradition, peer pressure and image. They do not listen and research the substance of a candidate. These people will always be hard to sway to vote for an obscure candidate because they really aren't fundamentally engaged in being good citizens. Voting is somewhere on the list of priorities between mowing the lawn and picking up some milk on the way home.
    114. Re:Why is this news? by Coraon · · Score: 1

      some "deviant" (i.e., anything other than missionary) position? Sorry to burst your bubble but there are states in the US that still have simular laws on the books...I've been in 'parishes' in the states where my fiance and I were informed of that. This was the same road trip in the southern US that we escaped an angry mob when we informed the plesent towns people that the reason we didnt goto curch on the sunday is because she is jewish and I am a Astaru/Wiccan. (didnt know that was a lynch aboe offence, we are from toronto canada) Look I think honestly the Aussies should have tried they guy for the USer's because simply put where are americans going to get him a jury of HIS peers?
      --
      -Ours is the wisdom of Solomon, the magic of Merlyn, the fall of Icaris.
    115. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming you're American, would you want to be extradited to Australia for breaking an Australian law in the US even though you'd never been to Australia?

      Hell, yes. The weather is nicer, and I'm sure the tucker is healthier!

    116. Re:Why is this news? by kjart · · Score: 0

      Interesting how you equate something like breaking copyright to a much more heinous crime like illegal drug manufacturing. Dude, seriously, it's goddamn software.

      I find it equally interesting that you indicate that making/selling drugs is a 'heinous' crime.

      Note: I don't do drugs, but I find the whole war on drugs to be pretty ridiculous.

    117. Re:Why is this news? by Ernesto+Alvarez · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The USA is the world's most progressive nation, in the sense that it is the first and best democracy...


      Another poster addressed the "first" issue. I'm going to argue about the "best".

      In what way is the US the "best" democracy?
      As I see it, you just have two political parties in practice, and they make sure the situation remains like that. Those two parties are almost the same.

      Here in Argentina, we cover pretty much anything from left to right, in Spain it is pretty much the same, and governments regularily go from left to right and viceversa. In the US you've got right and extreme right, and frankly, it is getting harder to see the difference.

      Your system is designed to make sure the minorities have no say in the government. At least in Argentina we have a couple of deputies for the minorities, and that sparks some debate in the house, so you can see how important it is for them to be there.

      You have a government that spies on their own and sends people to Guantanamo prison without trial and just because they claim they're "terrorists", for fuck's sake!

      I'd say the US is not the "best democracy", but something pretending to be that (and not doing a very good job).

    118. Re:Why is this news? by Nazlfrag · · Score: 1
      Likewise, Australian courts can't convict criminals of violating U.S. copyright law on U.S. soil.

      Yet, it seems U.S. courts can convict criminals of violating Australian copyright law on Australian soil. Your argument falls down where you say "You can not break a laws of one country and seek shelter overseas." He broke Australian law on Australian soil, at no time setting foot in the US, any US laws broken should have been inconsequential, irrelevant and dismissed immediately.

    119. Re:Why is this news? by Dread_ed · · Score: 1

      Not a good analogy. You completely ignore the crux of the matter which is the offence in question has effects that go well beyond the borders of Australia. Not to mention the motivation of the person comitting the act. I am sure this guy didn't accidentally violate these IP laws as a matter of daily convention (driving on one side of the road, making out with his girlfriend, etc.)

      Now if you were standing just outside the borders of Indonesia and continually spitting over the line onto their country's streets, that might be objectionalbe in similar manner. Or if you were projecting pornographic images onto buildings in a border town of Saudi Arabia from another country, again this might be a closer analogy as well.

      Forget analogies, lets go to the apparent facts (not yet bourne out in court). This guy was breaking US (and AU) IP laws in a country that has extradition treaties with the US and is on generally good terms with the US. What did he, and now you and everyone else, expect?

      Furthermore, if you look closely at Australia they are fast becoming a powerhouse of IP creation themsleves. They could be in a quid pro quo situation with the US very soon. Chances are the AU government made this decision for good reason, even beyond the fact that protecting a criminal is beneath them.

      Whatever the reason for your obfuscation and apparent lack of rigour there appear to be many like minded and sympathetic souls here on /. for you to feed.

      Personally, I can't get past the fact that people will jump up to the soapbox to defend the actions of a suspected criminal whose own country has rejected his appeals for clemency. Then they will condemn his own country for not putting their integrity on the line for a suspected criminal, and worst of all, they overwhelmingly condemn the offended party for asking for justice.

      --
      When the only tool you have is a claw hammer every problem starts to look like the back of someone's skull.
    120. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quit making excuses. Quit voting for the fsckers.

      Sincerely,

      The World.

    121. Re:Why is this news? by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1
      Two things:

      Are most new democracies choosing a republican government or a parliamentarian government? And why?

      Mostly because most people worldwide think that government is supposed to be DOING something. The US government was designed to make it as hard as possible for the government to do something. Lots of checks and balances. Alas, if Roosevelt could decide that growing your own hay for your own cows is a violation of the Interstate Commerce clause, then all hell's out for noon.

      And Switzerland might have a word to say about the "world's first democracy".

      And Periclean Athens might have a word to say to the Swiss on the subject as well.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    122. Re:Why is this news? by WH · · Score: 1
      Holy crap! If Wikipedia says something it MUST be true!

      It only takes umm.. approximately 6 seconds to load Google and do a search for "chewing gum site:*.sg" to come up with factual information rather than Wikipedia. Stop being a lemming, do your own work.

      For example, here's info from http://dl.nlb.gov.sg/ask/singapore/:

      Importation may be allowed for licensed chewing gums (medicinal and oral dental chewing gums that are registered with HSA) hand-carried into Singapore either by visitors/tourists or citizens returning from overseas trips provided the import quantity is reasonable, for not more than 3 months' supply for personal consumption. As a general guide, not more than 3 months' supply would be about 300 sticks or pellets in total. For more information on licensed chewing gums, please contact HSA at
      hsa_info@hsa.gov.sg.

      Except for chewing gum with therapeutic value, the importation into Singapore of any chewing gum is prohibited under the Regulation of Imports and Exports (Chewing Gum) Regulations. The prohibition on the import of chewing gum except for those of therapeutic value is absolute. Therefore, no allowance is given for any person to import them for personal consumption.

      References:
      www.customs.gov.sg under Prohibited Items
      http://www.hsa.gov.sg/prism/common/enquirepublic/S earchCCUProduct.do?action=load
      http://www.visitsingapore.com/publish/stbportal/en /home/about_singapore/faq/customs.html#0007

      All websites last accessed 12th Dec, 2006. So, again, chewing gum is allowed. Granted, it has to be for therapautic value but there's quite a number of gums that would actually fall into that category.

    123. Re:Why is this news? by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      Because generally if you don't vote for one of the two main candidates, you may as well not vote at all. Unless of course you're just voting on principle. Ultimately elections on this scale are just popularity contests. Who would actually fill the role best has very little to do with it.

      You can vote for whoever you want, it just won't matter because both of the two main candidates will always get more votes than any third-party candidate. So, most people vote for the lesser of two evils when they don't like either of the two main candidates.

      Yes it would be nice to see this mold broken, but it's not likely to happen any time soon as the barrier of entry to national elections keeps getting higher and higher.

      --
      There is no -1 Disagree mod. Slashdot.org/faq defines mod options. USE IT.
    124. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No prosecution without representation !

    125. Re:Why is this news? by xtracto · · Score: 1

      Except for chewing gum with therapeutic value, the importation into Singapore of any chewing gum is prohibited under the Regulation of Imports and Exports (Chewing Gum) Regulations. The prohibition on the import of chewing gum except for those of therapeutic value is absolute. Therefore, no allowance is given for any person to import them for personal consumption. So, again, chewing gum is allowed. Granted, it has to be for therapautic value but there's quite a number of gums that would actually fall into that category.

      Holly crap the information you posted just confirmed my previous post (from wikipedia). Read again the page you came up, what part of The prohibition of the import of chewing gum except for those of therapeutic value is absolute is not clear for you?.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    126. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The USA is not a democracy, nor has it ever been. It is a constitutional representative republic, with representatives being elected democratically. Is it the first one of those? Maybe. It is the culmination of thousands of years of western thought and at its creation was unique as the first nation to be established on the basis of natural law, personal sovereignty, and government for and restricted by the people. A democracy is a disgusting, horrible system of government in which the majority rule. Also known as "mob rule". There are no minority rights or established rights in a democracy.

      Is it the best example of this? In theory. It definitely was when it was created. A few early blemishes. Slavery. The Lincoln Administration forcibly conquering sovereign, independent states thus destroying the union, not preserving it (and strengthening the federal government and establishing the precedent that led us to our current president). Income tax. Just to name a few.

      Is it still that shining example of what a government should be? Well, it is far from perfect. Without a comprehensive survey, I'd still say it ranks pretty high (at least if you're a citizen and not deemed an enemy combatant). It definitely has large problems domestically and abroad, but so far the system is still in place for self correction every couple of years. Until Bush tries to suspend elections or Congress votes to suspend the Constitution and declare marshal law, we will be ok in the end.

      Oh, and about the actual topic. I disagree strongly with most of America's pressure around the world, (USAID does horrible things and props up horrible regimes) and I disagree with this, but the Australian government is the real culprit. There is probably a treaty that allows this, and the Australian government signed it. It's not like the US Army invaded Australia and took the man by force. Blame the facilitator for going along with the US government's stupid requests.

    127. Re:Why is this news? by adpowers · · Score: 0

      Indeed. In fact, I consider pirating music and software to be more dishonorable than dealing or doing drugs.

    128. Re:Why is this news? by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      Especially since the U.S. has threatened to invade if any of their citizens end up in the international court (which happens to be here). I'd like to see them try that. They wouldn't have a single ally left in the world; even my own government (British) wouldn't stand for an invasion of Holland by the USA; indeed I hope we'd fight alongside the Dutch army against any invasion, the French, German and almost every other European country would.
      World opinion aside, I doubt internal American opinion would let them invade another first world, free and democratic nation like Holland. Sure they'd want some heavy diplomatic pressure to be applied, but not even the most backward hillbilly redneck, would seriously think about actual invasion.
      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    129. Re:Why is this news? by NearlyHeadless · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the fact that he isn't under US jurisdiction?
      When drug cartels conspire to import cocaine to the U.S., should we just arrest the low-level smugglers who set foot here, or should we try to extradite the big fish, like Jaime Orlando Lara, Fernando Jose Flores, and Fabio Ochoa?

      If someone in Nigeria defrauds someone in the U.S. over the Internet, do you think that no U.S. law has been broken?

      This guy did not just exchange floppy disks with his neighbors, he was part of an international conspiracy whose entire purpose was to break the law, not just in the U.S., but of almost every country where they resided. They knew it was illegal in the U.S. They consciously targeted software published in the U.S. and traded files with people in the U.S.

    130. Re:Why is this news? by Conor+Turton · · Score: 1
      1. The USA is the world's most progressive nation, in the sense that it is the first and best democracy,

      You may want to take a look at your history books. I think you'll find the British Parliament preceeds your democracy by a fair bit and has been used as a foundation for many democracies across the world.

      --
      Conor "You're not married,you haven't got a girlfriend and you've never seen Star Trek? Good Lord!" - Patrick Stewart
    131. Re:Why is this news? by chefmonkey · · Score: 1

      So you're familiar with sex laws in all 50 states?

          http://www.sherlockpi.com/infidelity-cases/michiga n-adultery-law.php

      US law is hardly a cohesive system -- it's all over the map. And some states do have draconian provisions that are motivated primarily by puritanical religious convictions. Extra-marital sex a felony? That's a stretch.

      And if you think these laws don't count because they aren't enforced, I encourage you to google the name of "Lloyd Waltonen".

    132. Re:Why is this news? by Shinmizu · · Score: 1

      In Oklahoma, we were only presented with the option to vote for a Republican or a Democrat. If we wish for neither to become president, then we have no option other than not voting.

    133. Re:Why is this news? by Gorshkov · · Score: 1

      Bad example and it keeps getting repeated. Whatever road you drive on, you are expected to follow the rules of that particular road
      Actually, it's a perfect example .... you think a state trooper should have the right ticket somebody for going over 55 on the M-1? Of course not.

      BECAUSE THE M-1 IS IN ENGLAND, NOT THE USA.

      It doesn't *matter* if there are equivalent laws in both jurisdictions or not - American law simply doesn't apply in other countries.

      A better example would be getting extradited for vehicular manslaughter as that is more general and not specific to any one road.
      Regardless of how much people think Tony Blair is up Bush's butt, try extraditing somebody from England so they can be charged for vehicular manslaughter in Jersey the next time somebody runs over somebody else in London. Any bets how long it would take you to be laughed out of the country?
    134. Re:Why is this news? by Kaenneth · · Score: 1

      1. The USA is the world's most progressive nation, in the sense that it is the first and best democracy, the country in which the rule of law is most clearly supreme, and generally the most virtuous. Therefore it has a moral right, or even an obligation, to lead others towards the light (at least, those of them who survive the trip).

      2. The USA is the world's most powerful nation, armed with weapons that could easily destroy any other nation utterly within less than a day. It can also launch bombs, missiles, or just thousands of heavily-armed soldiers, anywhere in the world. It even lays claim to military supremacy in space. Therefore, as the world's biggest gorilla, what it says goes; and it uses this dominance to further its own interests (including those of US corporations and citizens).

      It's simple really, 1. is Democrats, and 2. is Republicans.

    135. Re:Why is this news? by Manchot · · Score: 1

      You forgot chewing gum in Singapore.

    136. Re:Why is this news? by Solandri · · Score: 1
      A sovereign country's citizens should be tried under that country's law, unless the US fancies an international court to handle international crimes.

      They do.

      Just so long as it doesn't involve US citizens. Or military personnel.

      When dealing with U.S. citizens (and non-citizens on U.S. soil * ), the US government (of which its military is a part) has to abide by a certain set of individuals' rights outlined in the U.S. Constitution. This includes some stringent requirements on due process. If a host country does not guarantee the same or greater rights for an accused U.S. soldier, it would be a violation of the U.S. Constitution for the U.S. military to simply turn the soldier over to the host country for trial. He needs to be tried under U.S. law first to determine his guilt (or probable guilt) thus fulfilling the U.S. military's Constitutional obligations, after which he can be turned over. Soldiers who are thusly found to be guilty are either turned over, or sentenced under U.S. law.

      The problem here is that apparently Australia doesn't have similar protections in its Constitution which prohibits its government from simply turning over its citizens to a foreign power. You are correctly pointing out an asymmetric legal situation, but from a human rights perspective the U.S. legal stance is superior - its citizens are shielded from foreign laws while under U.S. jurisdiction. In other words: Stop trying to blame the U.S. for something which is screwed up in Australia. If you have a problem with it, get Australia to fix its laws before the U.S. (or any other country) takes advantage of it again.

      * This is why Bush sent foreign prisoners to Guantanamo Bay. Technically it is not U.S. soil, it is Cuban soil, so he was hoping to avoid this "inconvenient" bit of U.S. law. Fortunately the Supreme Court of the U.S. ruled that the people detained there still enjoy the protections afforded by the U.S. Constitution.

    137. Re:Why is this news? by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

      Given the way things are going here ... maybe.

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
    138. Re:Why is this news? by Maltheus · · Score: 1

      If you include people too dismayed to vote anymore, then the majority of Americans did not vote these clowns in office. You can protest and vote third party, but at the end of the day, it won't make a difference (republicrats control the committees). And it won't matter if the next president is a democrat. Mark my words, whomever it is, they will further expand presidential authority. The executive office itself has become a tyranny, it doesn't matter who's chairing it. As more power gets concentrated in one place, more evil people will be drawn to it. Good people will stay away to avoid all of the lies and compromises they would have to make in order to satisfy the hoopleheads. America will just have to run its course at this point and hope that the next incarnation will address the current governments' shortcomings.

    139. Re:Why is this news? by Maltheus · · Score: 1

      you can't get extradited for anything minor, where the extradition itself would be more punishment than the crime is worth

      Aren't there several cases, related to holocaust denial, that have gotten people extradited to Germany? I think it's kind of stupid to deny the holocaust, but then I'd certainly consider a thought crime to be too minor to even warrant a fine, much less extradition and jail time.

    140. Re:Why is this news? by MrYotsuya · · Score: 1

      Well the US is not the World Police.

      I agree, a member of the police respects the law, jurisdictions and is accountable to a third party (say, judges). The us clearly wants nothing to do with those. "World Vigilante" is probably a closer term.

    141. Re:Why is this news? by asuffield · · Score: 1

      Actually, extradition proceedings typically involve agreements that specify exactly how the person will be treated, and generally speaking the right to a fair trial, a guarantee that he will not be subject to cruel and unusual punishment and similar items are part of that agreement. They don't just throw the person on a plane and hope for the best. It's a very complex, expensive, time-consuming process.


      This statement is entirely correct. This is the typical process for extradition. However, the US is not typical and doesn't do any of this.
    142. Re:Why is this news? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Whatever the reason for your obfuscation and apparent lack of rigour...

      It's a figure of speech called "hyperbole."

      Personally, I can't get past the fact that people will jump up to the soapbox to defend the actions of a suspected criminal...

      Here's a hint: a lot of people on Slashdot don't agree that what he did was wrong, or at least believe it should be a civil (rather than criminal) offense.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    143. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the Australian government is handing over one of it's citizen's to the US. He pleaded guilty to breaking Australian law but he's still being extradited.

    144. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The big difference is that there is a money trail back to the Colombian drug lords. In this case there was no money changing hands or anything else flowing back to the Australian. In network terms (this is slashdot) it's the equivalent of there being no back channel, so the sender is not necessarily even aware that laws are being broken in the US.

      A better analogy is if an Australian wrote some crypto software which is illegal in both countries and put it on his website. An American then downloaded it from his website and distributed it in the US. The US then turned around and arrested the Australian, who might not even be aware that the US exists or has such laws, when they should be arresting the American.

    145. Re:Why is this news? by zobier · · Score: 1

      If you don't want Australians or whomever fucking around with your Internets, put a damned firewall around them.

      --
      Me lost me cookie at the disco.
    146. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right.

      You should be extradited to china for speaking poorly of the government, put in a gulag, and killed.

    147. Re:Why is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      David Hicks is Australian, was in Afghanistan, broke no laws, is imprisoned in Cuba, and thence tried under USA laws which were not written until after he'd been arrested.

      Don't just worry about where you are when you do it, but also whether someone in the future will decide its a crime.

    148. Re:Why is this news? by urbanRealist · · Score: 1

      I agree. I actually met a father who was feeding his baby son with money he made selling crack. I have yet to meet a music or software "pirate" who could claim that much profit.

      --
      I've seen a lot of things, but I've never been a witness.
    149. Re:Why is this news? by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Now, the US Prisional system is one of the worst in what relates to prison rape. Any minor crime could turn - if the sites I have read are to be believed, and the stats - into an opportunity to be raped in prision. Isn't this enough for someone to succesfully block any extraditation to the USA? In Canada people have made this argument to stop from being extradited to the States. Seems that getting raped in jail is excepted enough down there that they have billboards saying how if you go to jail you are going to get Bubba as a boyfriend. Pretty sick country if you ask me.
      Unluckily I can't find any references on line, lots about how executing people is cruel and sentencing people to 25+ years for minor crimes (eg a bit of pot) is also cruel and unusual.
      A couple of interesting links on the subject
      http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle-old/398/marcem ery.shtml
      http://www.ratical.org/renewables/renee_boje.html

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    150. Re:Why is this news? by KudyardRipling · · Score: 1

      Too much truth in too few words. The Black Crown Vics can't arrive soon enough!

      --
      Submission as evidence constitutes plaintiff and/or prosecutorial misconduct.
    151. Re:Why is this news? by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      ... he was part of an international conspiracy whose entire purpose was to break the law, not just in the U.S., but of almost every country where they resided
      You left out "sapping and impurifying all of your precious bodily fluids"...

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    152. Re:Why is this news? by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      If Hitler was running against John Howard and polls showed they were neck-and-neck, would you still vote for some other candidate?
      Yes. Because, in Australia's proportional voting system, there remains a chance that a "3rd party candidate" (as Americans quaintly and disparagingly put it) can in fact win.

      There's also the fact that Australia doesn't have direct election of the PM (rather obviously; it's hard to imagine John Howard winning any more than a door prize on bingo night based on his charisma and telegenic properties) - if Hitler stood against John Howard in his electorate of Bennelong, and the voters there didn't like either of them, then regardless of what the rest of Australia wanted, an Independent/Green/Democrat/Raving Looney Party candidate would win - and the National Socialists or Libs, if they won enough other seats across Australia, would have to pick someone else as PM. Goering, perhaps, or Peter Costello...

      Conversely, if Bennelong did vote for one of them, then it's up to the rest of Australia to not vote for those parties. And, if they did win both their electorate and the overall party vote - well, just because you don't like the result doesn't mean it wasn't democratic (a lesson the USA could stand to learn and apply in other parts of the world - Venezuela, for instance, or certain parts of Asia & the Middle East).

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    153. Re:Why is this news? by illegalcortex · · Score: 1

      Yes. Because, in Australia's proportional voting system, there remains a chance that a "3rd party candidate" (as Americans quaintly and disparagingly put it) can in fact win.
      Ah. Well that's the problem with the analogy. In your original post, you said:

      Then why don't you do this? I've never understood why people feel the need to vote for one of two parties only. We have the same system here in Australia.
      If you have proportional voting, then you clearly don't have the same system we do.

      If you had suggested we change the voting system (rather than just "throw away" a vote by voting 3rd-party), I would agree with you. Though I prefer something along the lines of instant runoff rather than proportional voting. And I definitely like keeping our President directly elected.
    154. Re:Why is this news? by euxneks · · Score: 1

      I find it equally interesting that you indicate that making/selling drugs is a 'heinous' crime.
      Note: I don't do drugs, but I find the whole war on drugs to be pretty ridiculous.


      I guess you don't walk by people addicted to drugs every day -- I do. It's a heinous crime no matter what you may think.

      Maybe the war on it is pretty ridiculous (I wouldn't know, I don't see what they're doing to combat the problem) but the drugs themselves are doing a _lot_ of damage socially, mentally, and financially to a _lot_ of people. I doubt you could claim the same about software piracy.

      --
      in girum imus nocte et consumimur igni
  2. Listen... by Digital+Vomit · · Score: 1, Funny

    How soon until the drums of revolution stir?

    --
    Modern copyright is theft of culture from everyone and it retards the progress of the useful arts and sciences.
    1. Re:Listen... by KevinKnSC · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's not the drum of revolution, it's the contented monotony of suburban life.

    2. Re:Listen... by antic · · Score: 1

      Wish I had a mod point for you Kevin!

      --
      'Thats they exact same thing a banana wrench monkey.'
    3. Re:Listen... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How soon until the drums of revolution stir?
      Absolutely! We should all....mmmmm, donuts.
    4. Re:Listen... by labnet · · Score: 1

      I agree with Kevin, that the masses seem opiated by the mass media.
      Scratch the surface of the internet though and discontent with the US govt is deafening, but the people seem impotent to do anything about it. Even 95% of /. seem to know the USA is becoming a fascist country, but again the people seem hypnotised... or apathetic. I suppose if you have food in your belly, a roof over your head, and TV, you are not terribly motivated to change the status quo.

      It seems more and more likely 9/11 was a false flag operation to start middle east incursions to ultimately prop up the fiat US dollar by keeping oil priced in USD. I wonder how it will end....

      http://www.amazon.com/Debunking-11-Mechanics-Defen ders-Conspiracy/dp/156656686X

      --
      46137
  3. Sad by dsanfte · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's been common knowledge for years that Howard is Bush's lapdog, but if his government isn't even willing to protect its own citizens from foreign prosecutions, how can you really say Australia isn't just a puppet state of the US?

    --
    occultae nullus est respectus musicae - originally a Greek proverb
    1. Re:Sad by Nqdiddles · · Score: 2

      I do, to a certain extent, agree with what you've said. The government of Australia, my government, has for years been playing the role of the "little brother" constantly wanting to tag along and willing to do anything to please.
      I know this is oversimplifying international relations, but it still appears very concerning to a lot of Australians.
      I won't bother debating the current state of US copyright laws - it's a shambles and we're all well aware of that.
      I do have problems with a number of things though:
      Australia's inability to put into law it's own effective system of encouraging innovation and creative works in a viable environment without just "tagging along" with the (beyond) broken US laws, and the COMPLETE INABILITY of the Australian Government to take responsibility for it's own citizens - to judge them by Australian Law, in Australia.
      I find it disgraceful and am honestly ashamed that this could happen to fellow Australian, and that my government has a HABIT of dealing with things in this way.
      And yes, I am aware of the part 'Drink or Die' has played in "the scene", and this is still no excuse as far as I'm concerned.

      --
      And that kids is how I met your mother.
    2. Re:Sad by kripkenstein · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I don't know much about Australian internal politics, but in the overall picture I think you are right: the Australian government is at fault here. Why give him up?

      Now, the guy violated copyright law - Australian copyright law, as mentioned in TFA,

      [Griffiths] indicated that he would be willing to plead guilty to a breach of Australian copyright law
      However, since the unlawful act was carried out in Australia, I have no idea why he can't be sentenced there. The US argument is presumably that the copyright owners are in the US, but so what? If I injure a German person while he visits France, should I be extradited to Germany from France? This whole issue just seems bizarre.
    3. Re:Sad by Threni · · Score: 0, Troll

      > The government of Australia, my government, has for years been playing the role of the "little brother" constantly wanting to tag
      > along and willing to do anything to please.

      Hey, you get in line behind MY government. The UK were putting their citizens at risk by poodling up to Bush before yours! You're not a real poodle until you've had at least 50 civilians killed on your own mainland by religious fanatics, displeased at misguided foreign policy.

    4. Re:Sad by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      I assume from your words your Australian.
      Could you please tell; does Australia have any I.P. registration of it's own?
      Seems to me that you don't really need to bother registering patents or copyrights in Australia, if registering in the U.S. suffices to sue Australians.

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    5. Re:Sad by asuffield · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Now, the guy violated copyright law - Australian copyright law, as mentioned in TFA,


      Hrngh. No.

      The guy has been accused of violating copyright law by certain people in the US. He has not been convicted. The question of his guilt has not even been examined by a court. He has been extradited not for violating copyright law, but for being accused of violating copyright law.

      If somebody in the US accused you of violating copyright law, you can be extradited too. It does not matter whether you did it. The US extradition treaties do not operate on the principle of "innocent until proven guilty", they operate on the principle of "everybody is guilty" - proof is not required, requested, or considered. A bureaucrat signs a form and you get shipped into a US jail. (At their option, this can be a US jail that isn't located on US soil, like Gitmo, so they aren't obliged to ever examine whether you are guilty of anything)
    6. Re:Sad by kripkenstein · · Score: 1

      Ok, I agree to your correction, but do note that I said he violated copyright because he was willing to admit it. That is, there is no disagreement on the facts; the issue is only whether to extradite him or not.

    7. Re:Sad by Detritus · · Score: 1

      They don't care whether you're a Brit or an American, you're still a filthy infidel who deserves to die.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    8. Re:Sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > They don't care whether you're a Brit or an American, you're still a filthy infidel who deserves to die.

      Just like US/UK soldiers, who'll happily kill the next few Iraqi/Afghan civilians they come across after they get blasted by insurgents, you mean? "Bring it on!", as the brave commander in chief says!

    9. Re:Sad by 1u3hr · · Score: 3, Informative
      Hey, you get in line behind MY government. The UK were putting their citizens at risk by poodling up to Bush before yours! You're not a real poodle until you've had at least 50 civilians killed on your own mainland by religious fanatics, displeased at misguided foreign policy.

      Well, we had about 80 Australian tourists blown up in Bali by fanatics who wanted to protest against American policies, and thought we were close enough. Unfortunatley, while they were actually correct in that, the Americans themselves hardly noticed.

    10. Re:Sad by Detritus · · Score: 1

      If Howard is such a worthless bastard, and lapdog of the Evil Empire, who voted for him? It certainly wasn't the American public. You can blame us for Bush, but don't try to blame us for your own mistakes.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    11. Re:Sad by mgv · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If Howard is such a worthless bastard, and lapdog of the Evil Empire, who voted for him? It certainly wasn't the American public. You can blame us for Bush, but don't try to blame us for your own mistakes.


      Unfortunately, a few too many Australians. 40% of them voted for him directly, and another 6% for the national party with which they have a formal alliance. Due to the allocation of preferences this allowed them to ultimately win power. But you could not say that the majority of voters directly voted for him at the last election.

      It certainly looks like alot less are going to vote for him now for our unconditional support in invading Iraq. The disaster that Iraq has proven to be wasn't so evident in 2004 at the last election, at least to the general public.

      Its not like that many Australian companies have even had sweetheart deals with Iraq - so its hard to see even the commercial gain for the venture for Australia.

      Whilst I think that most Australians (myself included) would support the US in any war or real threat to US soil, few of us really want to go invading other countries without good reason. One of the major holidays in Australia, ANZAC day, reminds us yearly of the horrors of unnecessary wars. The words we repeat at the end of the dawn service is "Lest we forget". It reflects the Australian ethos that war is a bad thing, and we should remember this. Sadly, it would seem that John Howard did forget the horror of war when he chose to support the invasion of Iraq.

      Anyway, for the majority of Australians who didn't actually vote for John Howard at the last election, I think we are entitled to grumble a little.

      But I certainly agree with you that we have no right to blame the US for our mistakes. Including John Howard. That was all our own doing.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    12. Re:Sad by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      Strange, I don't remember the Australian government doing much about it either. Make up your mind: do you want the US to play World Police or not? Damned if we do, damned if we don't -- is it surprising that we conclude we should just do what serves our interests?

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    13. Re:Sad by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      Explained here...

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    14. Re:Sad by Dausha · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "The guy has been accused of violating copyright law by certain people in the US. He has not been convicted. The question of his guilt has not even been examined by a court. He has been extradited not for violating copyright law, but for being accused of violating copyright law."

      FTFA: "...Griffiths, 44, is in a Virginia cell, facing up to 10 years in an American prison after a guilty plea late last month...."

      This means the "accused" admitted he was wrong. Therefore, in the eyes of the law, his "question of guilt" has been examined by a court. Actually, there is not even a question of guilt, but an admission of guilt. He convicted himself in court. No need for the whole process. How many more times do I have to say he's guilty as examined by a court. A judge even has the chance to look at the facts of the case with a guilty plea and say "there's no case here, dismissed." But, that is not happening here because what occurred is legal in the US, Australia, and international law.

      Better check your facts next time. Oh, wait; this is Slashdot.

      --
      What those who want activist courts fear is rule by the people.
    15. Re:Sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No strings are needed, and we are not a puppet state. We are a tame Country, that ups and begs/rolls over if barked at, even over the phone.

      Just don't know why other bigger misfits/ S Amaerican drug lords, and Foreign Republican party donators are not rounded up, rather than pissant nobody's in Kansas/Australia.

      Wondering how this would go in France/Norway/Sweden.

    16. Re:Sad by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? He PLEADED GUILTY! How more "examined by a court" could you possibly ask for? If anything, thank him for saving the public from a long and expensive trial and admitting his guilt right away.

    17. Re:Sad by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      Strange, I don't remember the Australian government doing much about it either. Make up your mind: do you want the US to play World Police or not?

      No.

    18. Re:Sad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If somebody in the US accused you of violating copyright law, you can be extradited too. It does not matter whether you did it. The US extradition treaties do not operate on the principle of "innocent until proven guilty", they operate on the principle of "everybody is guilty" - proof is not required, requested, or considered.

      Jesus fucking christ you're an idiot. Extradition treaties usually require that a crime be committed in another country, and that the crime committed is also a crime in your country, and that the crime be reasonably serious, and that there is some reasonable evidence that you did it.

      So, lets look at the facts.

      - Was a crime committed in the USA? Yes.
      - Is this also a crime in Australia? Yes.
      - Is it reasonably serious? Ten years in prison sounds serious.
      - Is there some reasonable evidence that he did it? Yes, he confessed.

      A bureaucrat signs a form and you get shipped into a US jail.

      Not quite. You get shipped to the US for trial.

    19. Re:Sad by Twylite · · Score: 1

      1. Guilt doesn't come into extradition. You are extradited on suspicion and accusation. 2. Australian courts are not competent to rules on matters of US law. i.e. a guilty plea or verdict in Australian has no binding meaning in the US, and vice versa. 3. A guilty plea is not the same as guilt. Guilty pleas are often entered when it will be difficult to establish that the defendant is not guilty as a plea is likely to result in a lesser sentence. In this case the intent of the plea was clearly an attempt to be tried under Australian law rather than being extradited to the US.

      --
      i-name =twylite [http://public.xdi.org/=twylite], see idcommons.net
    20. Re:Sad by Hatta · · Score: 1

      But you could not say that the majority of voters directly voted for him at the last election.

      You could say the same about the US president. Actually, when was the last time ANY president had a real majority of the vote? And for that matter, why isn't there a quorum for presidential elections? It seems to me that when the majority of the voting public doesn't even think it's worth their time to show up, that's a vote of no confidence in the entire process. If we believe in majority rule, that has to mean something. An election without a no confidence option is simply not a fair election. It's little better than the magicians choice.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    21. Re:Sad by mpe · · Score: 1

      Make up your mind: do you want the US to play World Police or not?

      Most people, with the obvious exception of Zionists and some corporations, would answer "no".

      Damned if we do, damned if we don't

      Except that "damned if we don't" is hardly applicable since there hasn't been a time since the Second World War (possibly not even since the Spanish American War) when the US hasn't been "playing World Police".

    22. Re:Sad by The+Famous+Brett+Wat · · Score: 1

      40% of them voted for him directly, and another 6% for the national party with which they have a formal alliance. Due to the allocation of preferences this allowed them to ultimately win power. But you could not say that the majority of voters directly voted for him at the last election.

      He obtained 49.89% of the direct vote in his electorate of Bennelong in 2004. He obtained 54.33% of the two-candidate preferred vote. (Source) What you are talking about are the overall results for the party of which he is the leader: the Liberal party. Please do not confuse the Americans who do, in fact, vote directly for their president in a presidential election. Our prime minister is merely the leader of the party (or coalition) that has the majority of seats in the House of Representatives.

      Sadly, it would seem that John Howard did forget the horror of war when he chose to support the invasion of Iraq.

      In the face of GWB's "if you're not for us you're again' us" attitude, do you really think that (insert Labor party leader of your choice) would have done any different? Maybe you do, in which case you're way less cynical about politics in general than I am. I think if we had a Labor government, we'd be complaining about a slightly different set of things, but I'm not convinced that Iraq would be any different.

      Anyway, for the majority of Australians who didn't actually vote for John Howard at the last election, I think we are entitled to grumble a little.

      It's always the prerogative of the losing party (and their supporters) to say, "things would be better now if you'd just let us do it our way" -- no proof required.

      --
      proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
    23. Re:Sad by ockegheim · · Score: 1

      If John Howard thought he could win the next election by having sex on the lawn of Parliament House with the war criminal Philip Ruddock, he would be out there in a second. Howard persues his agenda (John Howard being Prime Minister of Australia) so ruthlessly that he is willing to lie and divide Australia to get votes.

      Last election he got votes by telling home-owners that interest rates wouldn't go up if he won and that they would go up if he lost. He won, and they went up, because Australia's interest rates are pretty much tied to rates in the US. The pathetic opposition didn't call him on this and a whole lot of people believed him.

      And he (for reasons known only to himself) thinks the sun shines out of Dubya's posterior. During one particularly nauseating trip to the US, someone back home called him an arselicker. It would have been funny if it wasn't so true. Then we followed Dubya right into Iraq.

      Please excuse the rant. Eleven years of Howard as Prime Minister will do that one.

      --
      I’m old enough to remember 16K of memory being described as “whopping”
    24. Re:Sad by asuffield · · Score: 1

      Extradition treaties usually require that a crime be committed in another country, and that the crime committed is also a crime in your country, and that the crime be reasonably serious, and that there is some reasonable evidence that you did it.


      The new extradition treaties that the US has been pushing through (like the one with Australia) don't do any of these things.

      You get shipped to the US for trial.


      They don't do that either. You only have a right to a trial if you're a US citizen standing on US soil - if you're foreign, or if they ship you to a US jail not located within the US, then you'll only get a trial if they want to give you one.
    25. Re:Sad by dcam · · Score: 1

      John Howard got back in on a scare campaign based on interest rates. There is a high level of debt in Australia, particularly for people who own property. If interest rates rise you would see a lot of people unable to service that debt. Howard ran a campaign saying under Labor (the other party) the rates would rise.

      --
      meh
    26. Re:Sad by mjwx · · Score: 1

      The sad irony is that during howard's last term, interest rates have risen 6 time. I'm not saying that Latham would have done any better but we wouldn't have "work choices" (which I think refers the the lack there of) and the Glass House would be back for another season.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    27. Re:Sad by atomicstrawberry · · Score: 1

      Voting is mandatory in Australia, so the comparison isn't quite apples-to-apples. Personally I've always wondered if a system where you vote for the person you don't want might not work better.

  4. Vice versa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Can someone point out a few cases where the news was somewhere along the lines of "American Extradited For Breaking [fill in foreign country] Law At Home" or does this business only work one way?

    1. Re:Vice versa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Don't worry. Just wait until China is boss of the world.

    2. Re:Vice versa by lime_red · · Score: 5, Informative

      A quick search turned up a story on Duane "Dog" Chapman, a supposed bounty hunter who was wanted in Mexico. I hadn't heard of this until I looked it up so I can't guarantee any facts. He was arrested by US marshals and held pending being extradited to Mexico (some TV show's coverage). It looks like they'll extradite him unless his supporters can convince the Mexican government to drop the charges (resolution here).

      I also have another one of a foreigner being sent to the US -- so it's not just Australia -- not that that's a good thing.

      Some conjecture that I can't back up follows: I've read that the US rarely agrees to send their citizens overseas, rather just denying the extradition requests when they are in the courts.

    3. Re:Vice versa by Gibsnag · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The extradition agreement with Britain is still (iirc) one sided because Congress hasn't ratified the agreement. Unless of course they have done recently and I've not heard about it (entirely possible).

    4. Re:Vice versa by xtracto · · Score: 3, Informative

      But the difference the Duane Chapman case is that he broke a law while he was *in* Mexico, bounty hunting is illegal in Mexico, he commited a crime *in* Mexico and thus Mexican justice system wants to judge him, hence the extradition.

      Whereas this case is about an Australian guy who commited a crime *in* Australia and the gringos want to fsck him just because ... because. The guy should have been tried and convicted in Australia, where he commited the crimes. I agree with the analogy made by other poster about smoking pot in Amsterdam, it is illegal to smoke pot under USA laws, they should arrest all the US Americans that go to Amsterdam just to get high when they return, because they did something seen as illegal under USA laws, no mattering the place where they broke the law.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    5. Re:Vice versa by hyfe · · Score: 2, Interesting
      America doesn't even extradite americans who commit crimes on actual foreign soil, there's no chance in hell they'd extradite on who hadn't even set foot in that country.


      As far as I know, the US has one way extradition-treates with most of Europe atleast (I know they have one with us, Norway, atleast). This is 'yet another reason' for why alot of/most people view the US as just another country, rather than the bastion of freedom.

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    6. Re:Vice versa by ZzzzSleep · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes, but "Dog" actually committed the crime in Mexico. This guy hasn't been to the US and was willing to plead guilty in an Australian court. This is a fucked up situation here.

    7. Re:Vice versa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't quite true. The US and Britain have had a ratified extradition agreement for a long time, which requires the party applying for extradition to provide prima facie evidence of the alleged crime. The one-sided treaty that's been in the news lately is an amendment to that agreement saying that this evidence isn't required for a certain offences, most of which have some relation to terrorism (as well as the one-sidedness, part of the outcry has been because most of the people being extradited under the new rules are clearly not terrorists).

    8. Re:Vice versa by mapkinase · · Score: 1

      I am surprises so many people replying to rhetorical question.

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    9. Re:Vice versa by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      Actually the "one-sided" part is that we won't extradite people for accusations that are politically motivated or for activities that are not illegal under civilian law (e.g. desertion). You can read a complete synopsis of the new treaty at the link below. Article 4 relates to the "controversial" portion:

      http://www.state.gov/p/eur/rls/fs/34885.htm

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    10. Re:Vice versa by sjf · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but I have watched plenty of Duke's of Hazzard reruns, so, I have a pretty good idea how US law enforcement works.
      If all the boys have to do to escape the clutches of the law is cross the county line, how come they wouldn't be safe in Australia ?

    11. Re:Vice versa by Ep0xi · · Score: 0

      while in jail in australia, his wife were raped and killed do you see anything in common with iraq?

      --
      ?
    12. Re:Vice versa by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Whether or not the extradition is a good thing, I can't work up a lot of sympathy for the jerk who knowingly breaks the law for years, and then gets all whiny when it's time to serve time for it. If there was some reason Australian law couldn't handle the case (maybe the software companies affected don't have offices in Australia?), then I'm glad he was tried in a court that could.

      If you want to make me feel sorry for you and go "aw, that sucks," it helps if you're not a thieving pirate.

    13. Re:Vice versa by rynoski · · Score: 1

      I'm an Australian. You can get less than ten years for murder in this country. But oh noes, he commited BS, err, IP crime, he needs to be locked away in a foreign country... yeah right. His crime was monetary, his punishment should be monetary. Do a wiki search for Bill Hicks to see how Aussies get fucked by Americans.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: 1) those that can extrapolate from incomplete data.
    14. Re:Vice versa by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Whether he killed somebody, or stole a million dollars, or whatever, I have little sympathy for people who knowingly break the law. That's the point I was making.

    15. Re:Vice versa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if it's a stupid law... Or are you just another blind lawful stupid person?

    16. Re:Vice versa by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      As I stated in another thread, he did commit an illegal act within the United States.

      The same argument could be made for Americans blogging about porn and specifically targeting or advertising the blog in, say, a country which uses Sharia law. If we had an extradition treaty with such a country, we'd be bound by agreement to extradiate, and of course the proverbial shit would hit the fan. What would happen next is anyone's guess, but probably we'd never enter into such an agreement. Even if we did, there are agreements in place between Canada and the US which evidence what the agreement might tentatively look like -- sure, we'll extradite, but when the death penalty is involved, we are not obligated. This is the case when a Canadian faces the death penalty in the US -- Canada, under the agreements, can refuse to extradite. This sort of agreement would most definitely be in an agreement between the US and, say, Iran or Saudi Arabia.

    17. Re:Vice versa by honkycat · · Score: 1

      I agree with your sentiment, but think the degree of punishment is reasonable. I wouldn't be at all upset if a murderer was sent to prison for 40 years. I would be upset if an occasional shoplifter was given that same punishment -- not because he'd been punished, but because the punishment was inconsistent with the gravity of the crime. Here, we have 10 years for an economic crime -- for me that's right at the border of justice, though I don't know how serious the economic damage was beyond the always-specious estimate of $50M over the years. Now, add in the fact that he was extradited to be sentenced in a place he'd never even been and treated as though he were somehow subject to the jurisdiction of those laws pushes me past the breaking point. US law does not extend past our borders.

    18. Re:Vice versa by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      Can someone point out a few cases where the news was somewhere along the lines of "American Extradited For Breaking [fill in foreign country] Law At Home" or does this business only work one way?

      Google is your friend. Fron just a quick skim through the first few matches searching against "US extradites" we find the following:

      2006

      2004

      2001

      2000

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    19. Re:Vice versa by elrous0 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      May I point out that not a single one of those was an actual American? They were all foreigners "hiding out" in the U.S.

      As for extradition, yes it pretty much only works one way. The U.S. only follows the law when it benefits the U.S. That's why we use "international law, the UN, and international courts to bully countries like Iraq, North Korea, and Iran--then ignore them completely when they call *US* to task.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    20. Re:Vice versa by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      It's rather more difficult to search for something that specific -- and I will definitely grant that we probably issue more extradition requests than we honor. I would be interested in seeing how many extradition requests we receive in the US, versus the number we issue to other countries.

      I do remember at least one case... an American citizen who was an IRA solider. Hmm... yeah, Google again. Here it is. 1986, so I suppose this will be discounted, but it does happen, and I no longer have any more time today to spend on this, or I'd keep looking -- it's an interesting question.

      http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A0 DE4DC1F3CF932A15753C1A960948260

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    21. Re:Vice versa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but "Dog" actually committed the crime in Mexico. This guy hasn't been to the US and was willing to plead guilty in an Australian court. This is a fucked up situation here.
      The crime was catching a U.S. convicted serial rapist in Mexico. Mexico doesn't allow "bounty hunters". Another issue is that the Mexican charge is something like "..Violating a person's civil rights..." - a non-issue in Mexico (ie, it happens alot but its like a traffic fine). The Mexican lawyer they hired said "...not an issue, pay a fine, go on home..." However for some reason the American authorities changed the Mexican charge to "Kidnapping" and started proceedings against Dog Chapman and family (a brother and two sons).

      The Chapmans have no idea why the charge was changed to kidnapping. The Mexican authorities don't know why the charge was changed to kidnapping. No one in the US Government won't admit a mistake.

      -- stj

    22. Re:Vice versa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Google is your friend. Fron just a quick skim through the first few matches searching against "US extradites" ...

      It seems that 'a quick google search' is not always the answer:

      • Not one of the cases you cite involves a US citizen.
      • All of the cases are about crimes commited in the countries requesting extradition.

      So these have almost nothing to do with the case in TFA.

      Let me construct a fictious positive example: a US citizen is arrested in the USA and extradicted to China for publishing -on US territory- material about the Chinese occupation of Tibet that is illegal by Chinese law.

    23. Re:Vice versa by sponga · · Score: 1

      Just to shake things up, I believe they already do something to the tone of this.

      There was some incidents of U.S. residents going over to Thailand for the child prostitution and were convicted in the U.S. under those charges even though they committed it in another country.

      Another incident while I am here I will support a former local bartender here in Seal Beach,CA when he was convicted of a murder of a British police officer and how he was connected with the IRA. He was up for extradition and we got everybody together to collect money for a lawyer, but in the end we lost and he was extradited.

    24. Re:Vice versa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's rather more difficult to search for something that specific

      Or, to paraphrase your response, "That question's to hard to answer, so I'll just throw out some random useless material to make myself look good. I hope nobody notices that it's irrelevant".

      The point of the parent article is that this Australian citizen has never set foot in the US, but was extradited for violating our laws. Your examples have absolutely no relation to the case at all.

    25. Re:Vice versa by Quikah · · Score: 1

      Even if that were true (all the citations I read say the treaties are bilateral), the respective governments signed the treaty. Are government officials in Europe illiterate? I thought we had it bad in the US...

      Lars Erik Gustav Lindstrom was extradited to Norway in 1999, against an Federal Appeals court order of a stay while his case was being reviewed.

      http://www.projectposner.org/case/2000/203F3d470

      I bet this guy wishes the US-France extradition treaty was one-way:

      http://www.oxfordstudent.com/tt2007wk0/news/john_w ashington_to_stand_trial_in_france

      This is a pretty crappy "one-way" Extradition treaty if you ask me...

      --
      Q.
    26. Re:Vice versa by XSforMe · · Score: 1

      Kidnapping is very illegal in Mexico; it is a criminal offense not a civil one. It does sadly, happen a lot here, but that still does not make it right or as you would put it a mere violation of his "civil rights". This guy came to play cowboy to a foreign nation, and now he is desperate to play the role of the victim here.

      --
      My other OS is the MCP!
    27. Re:Vice versa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck him. He is an organized crime figure who broke the law and encouraged and abetted others doing so for many years. PMITA federal prison for him! Please, U.S.A., keep him forever.

    28. Re:Vice versa by rynoski · · Score: 1

      I think just about every Australian has breached Australian copyright law. Until not long ago if you taped a show off TV, or a song off the radio you were breaking the law, because you didn't have consent from the copyright holder. No one ever paid attention to the law, but we still broke the law. Should we extradite millions of Australians to the US? Now, you may argue that most people didn't know they were breaking the law, so I guess I will have to bring up speeding in your car. Most people do it, every now and then. People are knowingly breaking the law. Should we send these people to the US because they broke Australian road rules? No, that would be crazy.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: 1) those that can extrapolate from incomplete data.
  5. Needs to be said by eclectro · · Score: 4, Informative

    Others, however, argue that extradition is necessary to prevent internet crimes that transcend borders.

    But yet nothing is done to catch the 419 scammers and all the spammers selling (often fake) pharmaceuticals.

    --
    Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    1. Re:Needs to be said by advocate_one · · Score: 1

      But yet nothing is done to catch the 419 scammers and all the spammers selling (often fake) pharmaceuticals.

      that would be because their victims aren't rich corporations who can buy votes...

      --
      Donald 'Duck' Dunn: We had a band powerful enough to turn goat piss into gasoline.
  6. Shafted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Time to pencil another star onto the US flag. And the Australian government wonders why anti-US sentiment is on the rise in Australia.

    Shame on Chris Ellison, the guy who handed Griffiths over, and the rest of Australia's pseudo government (the real government is across the Pacific). I hope Ellison's eldest child gets busted for downloading MPAA movies.

    Couple this with cases such as David Hicks and you can see why the average Australian is questioning the worth of Australian citizenship and whether the US is a friend or coloniser. Australia is a bitch and the US is well and truly on top screwing away.

    1. Re:Shafted by fractoid · · Score: 1

      Pretty sure we don't get a star. I'm not a US-political-system buff but don't the stars represent states which have some kind of representation in the US federal government? If so we obviously don't have any such say so we'll just get pencilled up somewhere in the paperwork as a lackey state. :/

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    2. Re:Shafted by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

      No, Aussies don't get a star, just a brown dot... ;)

      --
      Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    3. Re:Shafted by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      If so we obviously don't have any such say so we'll just get pencilled up somewhere in the paperwork as a lackey state. :/

      The technical term is "territory;" you'd be just like Puerto Rico. No representation in Congress, but you don't have to pay Federal taxes either.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  7. This is bullsh*t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is bullshit.
    US "law" doesn't recognise that it stops at the US border.
    All Free Trade Agreements with the US end up with the other parties getting screwed over, even the supposed "Coalition of the Willing" allies you seem to want so desperately.
    Three cheers for allofmp3 and thePiratebay for telling the greedy US corporate interests and their US politician whores to go shove it.

    Soon, with China and India, the South Americas and so-on, we can finally ignore the US once and for all. Well, not totally ignore, but when the paid lapdogs of the US corporate elites come whining we can just kick them in the arse and ignore their plaintive yelping.

  8. Huh? by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most countries have extradition treaties, meaning they've specifically agreed to send citizens to foreign countries to face prosecution if a formal request is made. You actually want it this way. Wouldn't be much fun if criminals could commit crimes with impunity just because they weren't physically in a country. Now I'm not saying software piracy should be one of those crimes, but let's be real here. What if there was an organized crime boss, living in the US, ordering the deaths of Australian citizens? Would you want the US to extradite him to face justice or would you want them to say "Well he wasn't committing any crimes here, and since he's not in Australia you can't have him, sorry."

    Since we don't want criminals using national borders to shield themselves, a large number of nations have extradition treaties with each other. There are restrictions on those treaties, for example Canada can refuse to extradite in cases where the person would face the death penalty, but in general if it is a legit request, the extradition is honoured.

    1. Re:Huh? by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      What if there was an organized crime boss, living in the US, ordering the deaths of Australian citizens?

      Wouldn't the only actual crime committed be done by the people in Australia that actually carried the orders out? It seems like a pretty bad example to me...

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    2. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would want the US to try him under US law for the crime of murder.

      British members of Drink or Die were tried in Britain. The Australian government is too cowardly to do the same. He's one of ours and allegedly committed a crime on our soil so we should deal with him. There is no way to justify this forfeiture of Australia's sovereignty. Whoever authorised the capitulation should be lined up and shot for treason.

    3. Re:Huh? by Bob+MacSlack · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Except in your example the crime boss is committing a crime under US law on US soil. I don't believe the law differentiates who is being killed in that case. I honestly can't think of any reason why someone should be extradited in this way. If you are doing something which is legal in your home country, should another country be able to extradite you? No. It's not illegal. If you're doing something that is illegal in your home country, should another country be able to extradite you? No. You should be charged under the laws of your own country.

      The only reason any of this seems OK is because it's going on between countries with similar laws. If the laws of two countries are too different nobody would thing it was a good idea. It would be like the US trying to extradite someone from Amsterdam for smoking pot. What if Iran decided it wants to extradite someone for breaking their laws? Doesn't seem like such a good idea does it?

    4. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Conspiracy to commit murder comes to mind. Or is that not a crime in Oz?

    5. Re:Huh? by asuffield · · Score: 1

      What if there was an organized crime boss, living in the US, ordering the deaths of Australian citizens? Would you want the US to extradite him to face justice or would you want them to say "Well he wasn't committing any crimes here, and since he's not in Australia you can't have him, sorry."


      Quite aside from the question of what you want, the US does not permit extradition requests from foreign countries (although they may deport non-citizens at the request of their home country). Extradition with the US is entirely one-sided. They expect everybody else to do it for them, but they refuse to reciprocate. So your example isn't really relevant.

      Yes, this is stupid and wrong, and yes, the Australian government got a lot of bad press for signing that treaty. They don't appear to care.
    6. Re:Huh? by paxundae · · Score: 1

      Fully agree with Bob. The U.S. is (arguably) still in a hegemonic position, meaning it can exert tons of political and economic pressure to force other nations, e.g. Australia, to hand over citizens for trial in the U.S., should the U.S. decide they've done something objectionable. We're not quite at the level of passing formal laws that only affect foreign nationals, but we're getting frightening close. We're essentially trying to enforce U.S. law throughout the world, and there's no theory of law or justice that provides backing there. Where you're dealing with a foreign threat, the theory says you either go to war or negotiate a political solution. Simply treating it like a domestic issue because you have the power to compel others to permit you to violate their sovereignty doesn't lead anywhere good. If you keep going down that path, you will really get a revolution of sorts at some point. Not necessarily violent, but you could rapidly find yourself cut out of the world political and economic scene. Not a good result for anyone.

    7. Re:Huh? by x_MeRLiN_x · · Score: 1

      I'm not so sure about that..

      Google search for "extradited from the US": http://www.google.co.uk/search?q=%22extradited+fro m+the+US%22 (12,400 results)
      US-UK extradition treaty: http://www.fco.gov.uk/Files/kfile/USExtradition_21 0503.pdf (PDF)

    8. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So could me point to a recent case where an US Citizen was extradicted from the US? (Italy would wellcome the extradiction of some kidnappers for example!)

      Most countries only extradict non-citizens, but to compensate for the problem you sometimes charge their citizens for things, they did elsewhere.

    9. Re:Huh? by consonant · · Score: 1

      It would be like the US trying to extradite someone from Amsterdam for smoking pot. What if Iran decided it wants to extradite someone for breaking their laws?
      Uhhh...wrong analogy.

      Country X will never accept any sort of an extradition treaty where the terms would allow Country Y to haul in someone for something that is legal in Country X. If the laws of two countries are way too different, then there generally wouldn't exist an extradition treaty, because they could never agree on way too many points.

      In summary, good show on the first paragraph, OP, but the 2nd para's just too much of a disconnect :-)

    10. Re:Huh? by mgv · · Score: 1

      What if there was an organized crime boss, living in the US, ordering the deaths of Australian citizens? Would you want the US to extradite him to face justice or would you want them to say "Well he wasn't committing any crimes here, and since he's not in Australia you can't have him, sorry.


      Ok two questions here.

      If the crime boss went to a country that didn't have an extradition treaty, would that make it ok?

      If the crime was more than just murder, say organising the overthrow of a government would that make it ok to extradite the persons doing this?

      And if you agree to this, then how will you respond to a law passed (for example) in Iran seeking extradition of the President of the USA for planning an invasion of Iran? (Leaving aside Iraq, as the ex-ruler of that country isn't passing any laws anymore).

      Now I'm not saying that I support Iraq or Iran, but rather have a degree of respect for their rights as nations. Freedom of religion and all that. Once you start saying that US law should apply anywhere to anyone, its hard to justify why US citizens shouldn't comply with laws from all countries in the world.

      This is the dilemma that is faced here.

      I don't really know the right answer to this one.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    11. Re:Huh? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 1

      Are you seriously claiming that what this guy did does not break Australian law ? I mean come on.

    12. Re:Huh? by dajak · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It would be like the US trying to extradite someone from Amsterdam for smoking pot.

      The Netherlands does actually get dozens of US extradition requests a year for drugs related crimes, and regularly does extradite Dutch citizens for engaging in drugs transactions with Americans and in some cases even with DEA agents operating on Dutch soil. It's a major political issue here, but the major (conservative) government coalition parties apparently basically tolerate this kind of activity because it creates a possibility to use forms of entrapment that would otherwise be illegal here, and it is easier to get people in jail in the US, particularly through plea bargaining, which is also illegal here. Just smoking pot is safe, though.

    13. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Osama is that you? I knew you were innocent!

    14. Re:Huh? by mikand · · Score: 1

      Doh!! What part of extradition treaty did you not get? The U.S. doesn't have an extradition treaty with Iran. It does have an extradition treaty with Australia. Have a nice day.

    15. Re:Huh? by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      I think you misread what he posted -- he agrees with you:

      "The only reason any of this seems OK is because it's going on between countries with similar laws."

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    16. Re:Huh? by siddesu · · Score: 1, Troll

      Nah, this isn't about people trying to run away from crimes.The US Attorney General has put it eloquently:

      "This extradition represents the (US) Department of Justice's commitment to protect intellectual property rights from those who violate our laws from the other side of the globe," US Assistant Attorney-General Alice Fisher said.

      This is all about extending US legislation all over the world because the US can still do it.

    17. Re:Huh? by zero_offset · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I honestly can't think of any reason why someone should be extradited in this way.

      At first glance, it's difficult to imagine why country A would send a person to country B for prosecution, when the person did something that is also illegal in country A. The answer relates to everything behind that single word: prosecution.

      In this case, the United States has all the evidence and has conducted the investigation and is the entity making the accusation.

      This is part of the reason extradition agreements are so complex. The Australian government has reviewed the United States' case against the accused and believes it has merit. That combined with the other standard rules of extradition treaties (such as a guarantee to a fair trial, protection from cruel and unusual treatment, etc) are the reasons governments will extradite their own citizens.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    18. Re:Huh? by adarklite · · Score: 1

      I don't know of any extradition treaty with Iran right now in the US or Australia. That's what it is....a Treaty.

    19. Re:Huh? by drgonzo59 · · Score: 1
      Alright, so if you don't fast on Ramadan, should US extradite you to Iran so you can get beaten to death? The point is that the person was in Australia. Australia can at least protect its citizens agains other countries just requesting extradition because they broke some law some place in the world. Oh, I forgot, US is 'God's country' so our laws are more just and more special than any other laws...

      It would have been an easy clear cut case if he was on US soil while he commited the crime (just like the US tourists in Indonesia how get caught even with small amounts of drugs can get to spend their lives in a prison there), but this guy was on Australian soil. It does seem like the Australians are US puppets...

    20. Re:Huh? by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      If a crime boss went to a country without an extradition treaty, that would probably shield him. I wouldn't call that "making it ok" but he wouldn't face extradition. Of course, there aren't many modern, Western-friendly countries that don't have extradition treaties, so the supposed crime boss would very likely be assuming other non-trivial risks.

      The part you're overlooking is that the activity must be a crime in both nations. Iran can't seek the extradition of anyone because Iran and the US don't have an extradition treaty.

      Nobody said US law should apply anywhere to anyone.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    21. Re:Huh? by juuri · · Score: 1

      This is completely untrue. The US has a well defined path for extradition:

      Foreign Country Requests through their Embassy --> State Department --> Justice Department --> Local US Attorney who begins proceedings for extradition.

      The test for extradition is "probable cause to believe an individual has commited a crime covered by an extradtion treaty with country X".

      --
      --- I do not moderate.
    22. Re:Huh? by asninn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You actually want it this way. Wouldn't be much fun if criminals could commit crimes with impunity just because they weren't physically in a country.

      I don't know about you, but actually, yes, I'd want it that way.

      Think about it for a moment. Did he break any Australian laws? If the answer is "yes", then I don't see what the problem is with putting him on trial in Australia; certainly, if an Australian citizen breaks Australian law while on Australian soil, putting him on trial before an Australian court (and possibly sending him to an Australian prison) is a natural thing to do. If the answer is "no", on the other hand, then what legal basis is there for arresting and extraditing him? If he didn't break any Australian laws, then he didn't break any Australian laws, and there is no justification for an extradition: otherwise, the USA could just as well extradite US citizens to Turkey because they talk about the Armenian genocide, for example. I think it's obvious that this is not a good idea.

      So what *is* the justification for extraditing your own citizens to a foreign country they've never been to? I could understand extradition if a US citizen who committed a crime in the USA fled to Australia; I *might* accept it if an Australian citizen committed a crime in the USA and then returned home (although I'm not really sure about that); but extraditing an Australian citizen who committed a crime in Australia and never visited the USA *at all*... that's simply unacceptable.

      --
      butter the donkey
    23. Re:Huh? by jabuzz · · Score: 1

      As congress has refused to ratify the US-UK extradition treaty, the US still refuses to extradite people to the UK. During the troubles in Northern Ireland, the US where noted for refusing to extradite people accused of terrorism offences including murder.

      In the UK we have been sold down the river by Blair, who refuses to even consider suspending the treaty till it is ratified by the US.

    24. Re:Huh? by mgv · · Score: 1

      The part you're overlooking is that the activity must be a crime in both nations. Iran can't seek the extradition of anyone because Iran and the US don't have an extradition treaty.

      Nobody said US law should apply anywhere to anyone.


      I'd be inclined to agree with you.

      However, the US government has been happy to charge non-US citizens in countries that don't have extradition treaties for crimes against US laws, and retrospective ones at that.

      The US extradited this person, held them in custody for 5 years whilst they drafted laws that he then pleaded guilty to - and when they had 5 years to figure out what activity to declare illegal, its no surprise he didn't fight it. The Australian government wasn't exactly innocent in all of this, so I'm not saying that we are on the moral high ground here.

      However, our governments would be up in arms if Iran/China/Cuba/Afganistan did the same to one of our citizens.

      You have to wonder how we can justify this sort of behaviour to other countries.

      Michael
      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    25. Re:Huh? by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      The Hicks situation wasn't an extradition scenario, he was captured in a war zone fighting against US troops.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    26. Re:Huh? by mgv · · Score: 1

      The Hicks situation wasn't an extradition scenario, he was captured in a war zone fighting against US troops.


      He never fought against US troops.

      At best, he was fighting some coalition forces

      The US bought Hicks off some Afganistan warlords who captured him for $1000 USD.

      The charge to which he pleaded guilty to was aiding terrorism. Frankly you could charge several million Iraqi citizens with this offense, if the US had the interest in doing this. You could also charge most foreign intelligence organisations, including the CIA, with this same charge.

      Michael
      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    27. Re:Huh? by Aceticon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As someone which has lived in Holland for many years and just recently left the country due to it's high taxes, ever decreasing public services and progressive leaning to the conservative right (Note: as a foreigner i couldn't vote) allow me to point you that the Dutch did it to themselfs (and just recentely did it again by re-electing the same moralist, religious right-wing conservatives).

      In a sense, the scenario in Holland is very similar to the one in Australia - a conservative, right-wing party got to power just when the economy was bouncing back from recession, proceeded to pass moralistic laws, rules and regulations and has hold on to power by claiming the results of the economic recovery as their doing (when in fact that would have happenned anyway, even if the government was made up of semi-trained monkeys).

      I'm happy i'm an experienced migrant with highly portable skills, though concerned for my friends in Holland and their families.

      Let's hope that the next recession won't end up being harder on both countries than it should've otherwise.

    28. Re:Huh? by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      So what *is* the justification for extraditing your own citizens to a foreign country they've never been to?
      I don't have a source off-hand, but I seem to recall that this guy set up the warez servers in the USA, so technically he has been to the US, as far as the common law is concerned.

      The analogy goes like this: If you stand just Nevadan of the NV-CA border, and shoot someone just Californian of the border, where did you commit the murder? No one in NV was shot and killed, so not in Nevada! You committed the murder in California as far as the common law is concerned, and thus can be tried under California jurisdiction for murder. Reference.

      Australia and the US both have common law court systems, so this analogy carries over very cleanly to the internet -- if you never set physical foot in the US, but the illegal act you perform occurs in the US (the servers are in the US), then you fall under US jurisdiction. One might even go so far as to say that you used the internet (the gun) to fire the bytes (bullets) to commit copyright infringement (murder).

      England, Australia, the US, Canada, and quite a few other countries use this system. Map of common law countries.
    29. Re:Huh? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      And in this case the man is also breaking Australian laws as well as US laws.
      In reality you would want the US to extradite someone that was in the US that broke Australian laws. If the US refused then people would scream that the US was ignoring international treaties.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    30. Re:Huh? by dajak · · Score: 1

      As someone which has lived in Holland for many years and just recently left the country due to it's high taxes, ever decreasing public services and progressive leaning to the conservative right (Note: as a foreigner i couldn't vote) allow me to point you that the Dutch did it to themselfs (and just recentely did it again by re-electing the same moralist, religious right-wing conservatives).

      What basically happens is that the responsible politicians just stand idly by while overzealous police officers (as it seems on both sides of the ocean, and cooperatively, although that is hard to prove) exploit loopholes created by treaties to get to evildoers they otherwise would not be able to get convicted. Is this political risk avoidance or intent?

      They certainly wouldn't dare to bring legislation to the same effect openly through parliament. An external scapegoat is always convenient, and conservatives have a habit anyway on blaming everything on the EU.

      As an excuse for the politicians one could argue that the Dutch government is very easily blackmailed by the US in treaty negotiations, since lenient treatment by US customs of cargo containers from Rotterdam is absolutely essential to the Dutch economy: customs can hold up shipments from the ports of a specific country long as they please, and the trade will just go somewhere else where the government is more cooperative with the US. Since cargo handling is obviously related to drugs smuggling it is easy for the US to connect those issues without being an obvious bully. Not complying with US demands is a major risk.

      The EU also works very hard to create a race to the bottom with its European arrest warrants. Other Europeans are hardly better protected by their own governments, who subscribe to equally dangerous treaties (for instance by exposing their citizens to a Dutch arrest warrant, who might then at a later stage extradite them to the US). The issue I brought forward is about exploiting differences in admissibility of evidence, and entrapment involving foreign police officers. Public debate always seems to focus on differences in what kinds of activities are criminal, which makes harmonization in law enforcement seem much easier than it is.

      The Dutch police just happens to be in a good position to make use of the possibilities (let's call it an 'international outlook' on law enforcement) and traditionally attracts a lot of attention by law enforcement organizations in other countries. Maybe it will be the first to start extraditing citizens of your country to third countries that your government wants to please.

    31. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As congress has refused to ratify the US-UK extradition treaty. . .

      Oh, really?

    32. Re:Huh? by Aceticon · · Score: 1

      ... the responsible politicians just stand idly by while overzealous police officers ...


      Judging by the highly publicized raids on "hemp farms" and closures of "rose buurts" (red light districts) i would say that the politicians are activelly supporting the police on this kind of measures. Couple this with active support of Bush's invasion of Iraq and a pattern of right-wing, neocon-style moralism starts to emerge.

      As a liberal on moral issues (eg, liberal european style) i'm deeply disapointed with the turn Holland took. More so 'cause i was living there at the time.

      I can understand the level of shock for most dutch people (hey, i was shocked and i'm not dutch) when it turns out that dutch tolerance was being used and abuse by intolerants bound on violently forcing the world to follow their beliefs (i'm thinking the murderers of Theo Van Gogh and their ilk here). Still, I don't exactly see how the "War on Drugs" and the "War on Sex" have anything to do with fighting intolerance.

      It saddens me that one of the few western nations with a culture of "If it doesn't hurt anybody and i don't have to see it, you can do whatever you want" is responding to religious intolerance by becoming intolerant themselfs (doing it by proxy - such as through extraditing locals to places with stricter rules - is in practice the same).

      Just makes me think that Freedom (the real one, not the "you're free to do what if it doesn't break our rules" sold but power-hungry politicians the world over) is a hard to get and easy to loose thing.
    33. Re:Huh? by dajak · · Score: 1

      Judging by the highly publicized raids on "hemp farms" and closures of "rose buurts" (red light districts) i would say that the politicians are activelly supporting the police on this kind of measures. Couple this with active support of Bush's invasion of Iraq and a pattern of right-wing, neocon-style moralism starts to emerge.

      There is a big difference: this is about the rule of law falling apart. Few politicians want to openly take credit for that. In the early nineties we also had a major scandal involving the use of illegal methods by the police to catch criminals (entrapment, obtaining confessions illegally). At that time the liberal parties were stronger, and they introduced new legislation to counteract it. The point is that the police will do this all by themselves, if you just give them the opportunity. They have to be kept in check.

      Raiding hemp farms is different, because they really are a nuisance for neighbours. It's pretty pointless, as they will simply move and the police has better things to do, but it is not very shocking. Same with red light districts: you make the people who live near those areas happy, and few people stand up to defend the red light district, particularly if you justify your actions as protecting oppressed women from their customers (which is of course unlikely, since you don't display women who are coerced into prostitution in the window).

      Conservative politicians do that openly. It's just populism. The opinions of most of the population haven't changed very much on these issues: it's the politicians that changed since the "Fortuyn revolution" and they are now more willing to make empty moralist gestures for their voters. Historically "Dutch tolerance" is more a (pre-democratic) style of administrating the country than a special characteristic of the population at large, who are no more tolerant than the rest of the European population in my view. "Dutch tolerance" finds its basis of support in the universities and the traditional regent class, and it shares in the general malaise of progressive and liberal parties worldwide.

      Also don't underestimate the importance of placating important foreign powers for Dutch government, which traditionally feels very vulnerable. We return to an old, anxious conservative style instead of the progressive/liberal (purple) "Holland promotion" style of feeding the world press with good news about the Netherlands. We have seen this in the evening news, with government ministers worrying about how the Netherlands is "portrayed in the US" (obviously by fellow conservatives like fox) and stuff like that, despite their prostrations to Bush.

      I can't tell which fear predominates in the mind of these politicians: of drugs, of the US, or of the voters.

    34. Re:Huh? by Aceticon · · Score: 1

      Compared with most of Europe, Holland is much more tolerant:

      Consider the support that a right-wing, populist and anti-emigrant party had (Lijst Pim Furtuyn) even though their leader was openly gay (which in most of Europe would be a big no-no for the kind of constituency they were targetting).

      I have lived in 3 countries in Europe by now (Holland, Portugal and England) and Holland is by far the most equalitarian and socially stable of the three.

      The truth is, a number of enlightned measures taken in the past made Holland the country it is today. For example, of these three countries, Holland is by far the one with the lowest amount of drug related problems - i'm thinking junkies begging on the streets and commiting crimes - and at the same time it's the only one which doesn't criminalize consumption, and tolerates selling of soft drugs (which seem to be mostly consumed by forgeign turists visiting Amsterdam ;)).

      As i see it societies go through cycles between "more freedom" and "more safety". My impression of Holland (and i lived there for 8 years until the end of last year) is that when i arrived the country was climbing to the top of the "more freedom" part of the cycle. Then came the economic recession and the side effects of the latest wave of uneducated emigrants from closed, intolerant cultural backgrounds started to be felt - so the cycle turned in the direction of "more safety". The discovery of the malign cancer which was developing within some closed communities of the latest-wave emigrants (eg islamic extremism) just increased people's yearning for "more safety".
      I expect that at some point, the side effects of a "control society" will start to be felt as the increasingly restrictive rules and laws passed by the "power hungry" and "i know best" members of society increases the frequency of the exposure of the common people to "unfair", "agressive" and "abusive" actions by the enforcers of the law. At that point, the cycle should start to turn.
      Unfortunatly, it usually takes a whole generation (since today's teenagers, being natural rebels agains the "old rules" and "authority", are disproportionally the ones that suffer the side effects of "too much law") for this kind of cycle to turn.

      I reckon this idea neatly dovetails with your point that it's the police that's "abusing" the rules - the police tends to attract people with a judgemental temperament who believe people must follow a strict set of rules and are the first group people turn to for "more safety". In that sence, the police's "sterner" (from their point of view, other people might call it "excessive") enforcing of their interpretation of the law is the natural consequence of laxer oversight (which in turn is the natural consequence of populist politicians giving people what appears to be "more safety" in order to get re-elected).

  9. Glad to be German by Nahooda · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm a bit stunned that Australian law obviously allows extraditing their citizens to other countries. Here in Germany such action is _strictly_ prohibited by the German Constitution.

    --
    Sigs suck!
    1. Re:Glad to be German by Nqdiddles · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yet again a post comparing copyright infringement to pedophilia or murder.... /sigh

      --
      And that kids is how I met your mother.
    2. Re:Glad to be German by rve · · Score: 1

      No civilized country would ever extradite their own citizens. I'm pretty sure the US wouldn't.

      My country however regularly extradites citizens to the US without protest. Only recently, a citizen of Iraqi descent was extradited to the US on very vague suspicions of terrorist sympathies. No evidence was offered or required for his extradition request (it was supposedly a national security secret).

    3. Re:Glad to be German by razguz · · Score: 1

      I agree with you .. Although we are part of continetal judicial system
      like Germany, I can't belevie that Australia didn't judge him at first ... It sounds like a joke.

    4. Re:Glad to be German by Xonea · · Score: 5, Informative

      That is no longer true; the german constitution has been changed recently and now allows extraditions of germans to other countries of the european union or to an international court. You can't be extradited to the USA though :)

      (This is specified in Art. 16 (2) GG: http://www.datenschutz-berlin.de/recht/de/gg/gg1_d e.htm#art16 )

    5. Re:Glad to be German by schmu_20mol · · Score: 1

      He will be judged according to German law, which also prohibits pedophilia. After e.g. Vietnamese authorities accusing the guy, the federal attorney is forced to try a case against him.

      --
      "Nae Kin! Nae Quin! Nae laird! Nae master! We willna be fooled again!"
    6. Re:Glad to be German by Nahooda · · Score: 1

      In Germany, German citizens can be charged for crimes they committed outside Germany.

      --
      Sigs suck!
    7. Re:Glad to be German by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He would stand trial and go to jail in Germany, of course

    8. Re:Glad to be German by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Yet again a post comparing copyright infringement to pedophilia or murder

      But the post I replied to was about Extradition, not any specific offence.

    9. Re:Glad to be German by asuffield · · Score: 1

      No civilized country would ever extradite their own citizens. I'm pretty sure the US wouldn't.


      The US won't extradite anybody - they only bring people in, they don't send them out. It's got nothing to do with being civilised, it's about being a bully.
    10. Re:Glad to be German by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Afaik there is a law specifically for such cases. In essence, it says that if you do something abroad that would be a crime in Germany, you will be tried in Germany as if you had done this crime there.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    11. Re:Glad to be German by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Insightful

      [The US] only bring people in, they don't send them out.

      Well actually they do, but call it "extraordinary rendition" instead.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    12. Re:Glad to be German by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      Wait in Germany you can be tried for something that happened in another country? Wow!

    13. Re:Glad to be German by devitto · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah,
      Well as a UK Citizen, we signed an agreement that allowed USUK extradition.

      However, the US hasn't, and won't sign their half !!!

      In contract-law speak, this is called being 'screwed over'.

      Blair (et al.) doesn't have the balls to revoke our ratification, despite the fact that several high-profile extradition cases have gone to the high court, and several high profile US->UK cases are just piling up, e.g. US servicemen causing in a large proportion of UK military deaths and casualties in Iraq/Afghanistan.

      To quote one US airman, who had just strafed and killed solders in a UK convoy - "Man, we're going to jail.". But luckily, US laws only apply when/where they say it does.

    14. Re:Glad to be German by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I am German, too. And don't feel to safe: AFAIK you're only safe if the country demanding extradition is not within the EU, because for all EU countries, there's the assumption of getting fair trial there, too. So, Spain could demand extradition of a German citizen - and get it. Already happened.

      Doesn't mean you're not being punished whatever you do outside the EU: German laws apply for Germans in and outside Germany (as with child molesters - usually happens to sex tourists, who then find themselves before a GERMAN court).

    15. Re:Glad to be German by pjt33 · · Score: 4, Informative

      However, the US hasn't, and won't sign their half !!!
      Actually, see this press release from a week and a half ago:

      The United Kingdom and United States have today ratified a bilateral extradition treaty
      Took them a long time, but they've finally done it.
    16. Re:Glad to be German by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To quote one US airman, who had just strafed and killed solders in a UK convoy - "Man, we're going to jail.". But luckily, US laws only apply when/where they say it does.


      Nice way to peak emotion without putting facts into context. Just a few quick "context" points to add:
      -The area was said to be clear of friendly forces by both the US and UK commanders.
      -The convoy was miles from where it was supposed to be.
      -As soon as the pilots found out it was UK friendlies, they immediately requested the status of those on the ground.

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,,2006879,00 .html
    17. Re:Glad to be German by hamburger+lady · · Score: 1

      if you're a german citizen, yes.

      the dude in TFA isn't american. he's australian.

      --

      ---
      Is this the MPAA? Is this the RIAA? Is this the DMCA? I thought it was the USA!
    18. Re:Glad to be German by cvb90ugnldgsf · · Score: 1

      Pedophilia is a crime in Germany? That's fucked up.

    19. Re:Glad to be German by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why it's called "USUK" (u suck)

    20. Re:Glad to be German by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know how glad I would be as a German,still being occupied by a foreign Power 62(sixtytwo)Years after the War. I would also not be too glad to be a German, being send to Afghanistan or for that Matter anywhere in the World to be shot at,for the benefit of the ruling international Gangster Elite.

  10. He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why is this news?

    Perhaps the fact that he isn't under US jurisdiction?


    He most certainly is under US jurisdiction. We own the Australian government, which means we own Australia, which means we own your ass. Break our laws and we'll slam you in our prisons, because we can, and it makes us money to do so.

    Welcome to the new world order, Bush (Sr., Jr.) and Clinton style.

    Until Australia (and, for that matter, the UK) learns to stand up to the world's biggest bully (what to my immense shame is what my country, the United States, has become), they and their people will be under our jurisdiction, subject to our laws on their own soil, and with no protection from their own governments. Just like the soviet satellite states of the last century, we'll let you wave your own flags and call yourselves whatever you like, but fuck with us and our cash flow, and we'll slam you into our gulag.

    You want this to not be the case? Then elect and demand a government with some backbone that will tell the United States exactly where it can get off.

    1. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      +1, the truth

    2. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by TGTilde · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Flamebait or not, the parent is right. Our government has gone overboard with things like this in the recent past. I just hope that the pendulum swings back sooner rather than later. Too bad I used up all my mod points earlier today.

      --
      --- Bah, who needs a sig?
    3. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by ozmanjusri · · Score: 5, Insightful
      This may be shameful, but it most certainly doesn't deserve a "Flamebait" mod.

      The US, at the moment, is not behaving as befits a leader in freedom and human rights. It's traditional allies should stand up and refuse to endorse the excesses. We are not helping our friends in the US by pandering to their government and corporate world's ugly abuses.

      If you were to suffer a mental illness and set fire to your own house, who would be the better neighbor; the one who tried to stop you, and tried to extinguish the fire, or the one who followed you into the flames?

      --
      "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
    4. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by dyftm · · Score: 1

      Mod this person up, this isn't flamebait, unfortunately it's the truth.

    5. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No Western country will or can stand up against US pressures in foreseeable future. However, this is not as much a matter of sovereignity - after all, "First world" countries share most of their mindsets and could more or less share the same law norms. This is about representation - remember the famous "No taxation without representation!" slogan? Taxation is just one of several instruments of government, all of them requiring representation if you live in democracy and call yourself free.

      Based on this case, Aussies should have the right to vote for American president and to have their elected representatives in US Congress and Senate - If a Law applies on you, you should be entitled to participate in electing the lawmakers. Law is not law and justice a justice if we didn't agree upon it in a democratic process. Else, it is not called law, but tyranny.

    6. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by kestasjk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If someone kills another person they shouldn't be able to be untouchable by crossing some imaginary barrier; the US doesn't "own" Australia, what does that even mean? We sell a lot of minerals to the US and the Australian government taxes the trade. That's not exactly being "owned", is it? Our economy is also very independent of the US; we have huge mineral deposits and we sell to everyone. How are we "owned" again?

      We're a similar culture, a similar government, a common language, but the US doesn't "own" us any more than we "own" the US.

      Just because we don't agree with the law being enforced doesn't mean we should complain about common laws being enforced across borders, it means we should be against that common law.

      International cooperation is good, the law is bad.

      --
      // MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
    7. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by zero_offset · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You had a good angle going, but you blew it at the end.

      You're right, this is about representation first and foremost -- but the responsibility lies with citizens of other countries to ensure that their own governments protect them.

      US laws -- and constitutional rights -- apply to US citizens. I'm not especially concerned about what other countries allow us to do to their own citizens. That doesn't mean I like it or condone it, but quite frankly these are the same people who deride us and our country on a regular basis. It strikes me as a little odd that their own paradisaical existence can be so terribly flawed as to permit them to be bundled up and submitted for processing by the big bad United States. Huh, maybe problems of government aren't unique to the US? Imagine that.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    8. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by kestasjk · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I don't like to comment on moderation, but how is being the only person who doesn't agree with the GP redundant, while everyone who says "I agree" is insightful? Notice that there is no "-1, Disagree".

      --
      // MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
    9. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah, an imaginary line, like, oh I don't know, THOUSANDS OF MILES OF OCEAN?

    10. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Gorshkov · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Welcome to the new world order, Bush (Sr., Jr.) and Clinton style.
      This has nothing to do with Clinton or either of the Bushes. The USA has been trying to assert it's laws over other countries for a very, very long time. Take any number of attempts by the USA to tell Canadian companies that they can't have business dealings with Cuba, just because they happen to be owned by American companies. Other examples would be the (attempted) enforcement of American policies regarding exportation of goods to certain countries, etc.

      This "New World Order" goes back at LEAST 60 years .... and without having done any research on the topic, I'm willing to bet I could find examples going much farther back.

      I will say, however, that this is the first time I've heard of anything involving extradition for violating US law when the person involved has never set foot in the US, and the crimes never took place on US soil.
    11. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you were to suffer a mental illness and set fire to your own house, who would be the better neighbor; the one who tried to stop you, and tried to extinguish the fire, or the one who followed you into the flames?

      A very apt description of the relationship between Australia and the US, Howard and Bush.

      And since John Howard is another Bush-like proto-fascist authoritarian, it should not surprise that his administration would play fast and loose with outdated concepts like "rights" and "sovereignty".

      John Howard has chosen to lead Australia by following George Bush into the flames of his phony "war on terror", and the rest of us will have to live in the hell they leave behind.
      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    12. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by metamorfoza · · Score: 1

      Maybe it dosen't. But certanly Howard goverment is behaving like it does (Iraq, Kyoto, Hicks, being non-asutralian vs being non-patriotic, ect...). Basicly, mirroring whatever US do or/and say. Hence the impression of the GP that US "owns" Australia. Its not his mistake, nor its yours. Its just the way it is.

    13. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by rbanffy · · Score: 1

      We should be able to increase maximum mod limits. +1 true

    14. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by smchris · · Score: 4, Informative

      Truth hurts.

      Fascist America, in 10 easy steps

      From Hitler to Pinochet and beyond, history shows there are certain steps that any would-be dictator must take to destroy constitutional freedoms. And, argues Naomi Wolf, George Bush and his administration seem to be taking them all


      http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,,2064157,00. html

      Hope is very pleasant and all but once a nation starts down a road it can be hard to reverse course. Things can get _much_ worse. Empire is incompatible with democracy.

    15. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then elect and demand a government with some backbone that will tell the United States exactly where it can get off.
      Such as?

      Not trolling, I honestly want to know. The next federal election is the first one in which I'll be old enough to vote, but it's near impossible to find any information on what any of the major parties' positions are on the issues that the average slashdotter would care about (such as this).
    16. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by AJH16 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Only one issue with your post. It makes us no money to try and hold him in our own country. There is no way we will get enough money out of him to pay for the investigation, the legal fees, the courts and the prison time. Which really only adds insult to injury as the US tax payers now get to pay for this "War on Piracy" when the bill could and would have easily been paid by Australia. The move simply makes no sense other than to try to intimidate and waste tax payer's money.

      --
      AJ Henderson
    17. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "US laws -- and constitutional rights -- apply to US citizens. I'm not especially concerned about what other countries allow us to do to their own citizens. That doesn't mean I like it or condone it, but quite frankly these are the same people who deride us and our country on a regular basis."

      Well, we in other countries are terrified of the US. That's why we 'deride' you - out of fear. Yes, the US owns our governments (at least they do here in the UK, oh and they also own our defense tech, nuclear weapons, surveillance systems, etc, etc) - and the only way to get out of that situation is to have an armed revolution. At that point, the US would come in to 'stabilise' the situation and we'd all die, or at least become like Iraq. Caught between a rock and a hard place - and the common denominator is the US.

    18. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by walt-sjc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While it is true that it's not purely a problem with Bush / Clinton, the power of lobbying groups and corporations has increased at an accelerated pace under their terms. By not using the power of the Veto, they have allowed congress to run amok destroying our freedoms, civil liberties, etc. Personally, I think Bush has done more of this activity personally rather than congress doing it (which was the case with the DMCA / Bono copyright act), but this wouldn't be a problem unless they were all conspiring together. If congress wants to stop Bush, they have the full power and authority to do so.

    19. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by zerkon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      My only disagreement is simply, with the world wide nature of the internet, how can we say that he never set foot in the US? I mean literally, sure, he never set foot in the US, but his actions were crimes under US law and did harm to individuals/corporations that are protected by US law. Just because he didn't physically commit the crimes here, doesn't mean he's exempt from accountability for his actions. Isn't that the whole point of laws, Government protecting the rights of individuals and corporations? Isn't it possible in the internet age to commit all your crime on the internet? Say he hacked into the Bank of America, and stole a million bucks, again never having set foot in the US, would we still be having this conversation? I don't agree with every policy the US makes, however this one seems like a good idea to me. In the era of the WORLD WIDE web, how can we not support those that would use it to cause harm being held accountable for their actions? Of course, the US should be held to the same standards...

    20. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by BigDogCH · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Agreed. I think there should be a +1 Disagree, for this purpose. Maybe there should be a +1 Disagree and a -1 Disagree. There have been many times where I disagreed with a comment, yet it was a good point and contributed highly to the discussion.

    21. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by kestasjk · · Score: 1

      So someone commits a crime, crosses an ocean, and suddenly they can't be charged? At which point during their flight are their crimes mysteriously absolved?
      Do they gradually fade into insignificance as they cross thousands of miles of ocean (a serial killer slowly becomes a murderer, then from murder to manslaughter, manslaughter to rape, rape to littering, in a steady continuum), or is there an imaginary line where the criminal is suddenly no longer a criminal?

      Or to boost the hilarity:
      So, someone, y'know, commits a crime, like, crosses an ocean, and, oh I don't know, THEY CAN'T BE CHARGED?

      --
      // MD_Update(&m,buf,j);
    22. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Darundal · · Score: 5, Insightful

      See, I almost agree with you. However, your imaginary murderer would only be able to be extradited to the States if he committed the murder on US soil. If he murdered someone in Australia, he would be tried in Australia under Australian law. If a 16 year old from the US goes to Germany, and drinks, then when he returns to the US, he isn't charged with anything because he didn't break US law on US soil. The problem is, this guy didn't break any US copyright law in the US; he broke US copyright law in Australia. If this guy can be extradited for breaking US law in his own country (regardless of whether there are similar laws in his country or not) then theoretically we could demand extradition of anyone who has broken any US law anywhere in the world, including all the 16 year olds in Germany who drink. Basically, the whole problem in this case is that US law is being used as International Law. The people talking about representation have a valid point here; IF US law is to be elevated to the status of international law, than those nations should have representation within our government.

    23. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Zemran · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And if you write something that breaks China's laws should your country extradite you to China? Or how about Suadi Arabia or even Iran? If the idea is good for the US it is equally good for the rest of the world...

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    24. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by sabre86 · · Score: 5, Informative

      US laws -- and constitutional rights -- apply to US citizens. Wrong. Well, not wrong as a statement, but too limited in scope. The U.S. Constitution doesn't create the rights it talks about, it specifically excludes the U.S. government from infringing on them, and not just for U.S. citizens, but for everybody. The Bill of Rights is a set of Limitations on the government power, not an instantiation of Rights. Those rights already exist. The underlying assumption, as expressed in Declaration of Independence and other works, is that those rights are inherent to each and every human being, and that governments are only just and legitimate when they respect those rights. It never refers to "citizens," but always to "people." Thus, the protections in the Constitution apply to everyone the U.S. government interacts with. To argue otherwise, that Constitutional protections apply only to Citizens, destroys the whole idea of democracy by creating the ruling class and allows for fun things like slavery -- "of course slavery is legal, the Constitution applies only to citizens and the slaves aren't!"

      Unfortunately, our current government has decided that it is not in fact a limited government and has repeatedly ignored the Constitution. Even the courts have noted this. Hopefully, hopefully we will be able to steer things back on course before it's too late. But that hope strikes me as dim, given the fact that Congress, for instance, has so much it can impeach the president for -- Gitmo, Warrantless searches, authorizing torture, denying habeus corpus, etc -- but has done nothing.

      --sabre86
    25. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      I will say, however, that this is the first time I've heard of anything involving extradition for violating US law when the person involved has never set foot in the US, and the crimes never took place on US soil.

      Manuel Noriega, Carlos Lehder and a number of other drug dealers have been extradited to the US for trial. US isn't the only country who does it, as France is currently trying to extradite Noriega for money laundering.

      --
      Qxe4
    26. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by grimwell · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If someone kills another person they shouldn't be able to be untouchable by crossing some imaginary barrier That is a bad analogy. To kill someone, one generally needs to be in the same physical location as the victim.

      The Australian in question has never physically been in the US until he was extradited. The crime(from the view of US law) was committed wholly outside of US borders.

      Just because we don't agree with the law being enforced doesn't mean we should complain about common laws being enforced across borders, it means we should be against that common law. Since the crime occurred in Australia, then it follows that Australia should be the entity that prosecutes the law breaker. Yes?

      This extradition is dangerously close to Australia subjecting their sovereignty to the US.

      --
      If the govt becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law, it invites man to become his own law, it invites anarchy
    27. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by The_Wilschon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Thing is, in this case, the guy being charged didn't cross any oceans. He stayed in one place. This is as if you stole a piece of bread in New York City, and then suddenly found yourself arrested by the LAPD, and whisked off to stand trial in LA (only worse, because at least NYC and LA are both in the US). It is a matter not of whether or not the man should be punished, but where he should be punished and whose laws he should be punished under. He is an Australian. He stood on Australian soil and broke Australian laws. He was never under US jurisdiction at all until we picked him up and brought him here without any justification. He should be charged. If convicted, he should be punished. IN AUSTRALIA!

      --
      SIGSEGV caught, terminating

      wait... not that kind of sig.
    28. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by sholden · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So if you send, say a cartoon picture of Mohammad, to someone who happens to be in Iran when they view the email. You should be extradited to Iran to face charges of insulting Islam since your action was a crime under Iranian law, and did harm to individuals that are protected by Iranian law?

    29. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      I have to say, this is a somewhat naive point of view. If you look through the history of the world, The United States is one of the most benign superpowers ever. Are we as bad as the Romans, British, or even the French when they were colonial powers. We are not even attempting to be a colonial power like any of those nations. If you don't like the current administration, fine don't support them, but please don't pretend like they are these horrible outrageous people. They are following the policy and path that several generations of Americans have REQUIRED of them. That is why they were elected.

      Perhaps some of the countries who are accusing us of being horrible people would feel a little bit better if they didn't outsource all of their defense and government obligations to us over the last 60 years. "We don't like how you are protecting us, so spend your money in the way we see fit." All of these countries were our bestest buddies in the whole wide world when the Russians were breathing down their necks, but like teenagers who have no memory and can't see a minute in front of them, they have completely forgotten.

      I can't even really address the human rights violation part because it is so silly. Are you referring to the dreading things going on at Gitmo? It's awful that we feed people there so they gain the "Gitmo 20" I know. I also can't believe we give them the religious material of their choice and allow them to exercise their religion while they are there. Oh and don't forget the dreaded pink belly technique that we use on them. I could go through the list of names to highlight why were are the angels in this situation (see Nick Berg), but I don't think it would be worth wasting my breath. I'll just end with this simple question:

      Who would you rater be?
          a. an Iraqi/Jordanian/Egyptian freedom fighter captured by the US
          b. A US/British/insert nationality here soldier or citizen captured by al queda or other islamic terrorists?

      Point made?

    30. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by sincewhen · · Score: 1

      I will say, however, that this is the first time I've heard of anything involving extradition for violating US law when the person involved has never set foot in the US, and the crimes never took place on US soil.
      Enemy non-combatants?
      Rendering?
      Gitmo?
      --
      -- Braden's law of data: All data spends some of its lifetime in an excel spreadsheet.
    31. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by kabocox · · Score: 1

      The USA has been trying to assert it's laws over other countries for a very, very long time. Take any number of attempts by the USA to tell Canadian companies that they can't have business dealings with Cuba, just because they happen to be owned by American companies. Other examples would be the (attempted) enforcement of American policies regarding exportation of goods to certain countries, etc.

      That's a bad example. Most people would support the US government trying to force US owned foreign companies to conform with US laws. Why? Because there could be a country out there that has slavery, serfdom, or some other similiar policies and it's perfectly "legal" there. If a US company goes over to that country and does business, they are expected to obey US laws and any businesses that they buy and own should be run as much as possible under US law.

      You are bitching and moaning because the US is trying to get its foreign owned, but based in "first world" countries like Canada, UK, EU, or Au to follow US law. Hey, for the most part I don't blame you because their existing laws should be very similiar to US law any way. Why the US does this is for places like the Middle East, Africa, and Asia (think China) so that they'd confirm to US law and not have their individuals in serfdom/ near slavery. Well, we can't treat countries too differently so we treat everyone that way.

    32. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      John Howard has chosen to lead Australia by following George Bush into the flames of his phony "war on terror", and the rest of us will have to live in the hell they leave behind. Yes, Howard sure has. Now here's the thing... we (by which I mean Australia) have an election this year. We now have the chance to change things! Don't like Howard (hell, I sure don't)? Then vote him out. Vote green. Vote Democrat. Vote independent. Vote for a member with some backbone. Vote for someone who isn't beholden to the libs and the pseudo-libs (labour), someone who can hold the balance of power and force some accoutability for a change. Vote on the issues, not on ill-defined fear and hip pocket jitters. But most importantly... think about how you vote. Get informed. Do some research. Buck the trend, don't just blindly follow your fears and prejudices. Just for once, make an informed, considered decision about what sort of future you want.
    33. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by jmac1492 · · Score: 1

      Take any number of attempts by the USA to tell Canadian companies that they can't have business dealings with Cuba, just because they happen to be owned by American companies. If they "happen to be owned by American companies" how are they Canadian companies?
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    34. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by durin · · Score: 1

      I will say, however, that this is the first time I've heard of anything involving extradition for violating US law when the person involved has never set foot in the US, and the crimes never took place on US soil.

      Have you ever heard of a place called Guantanamo?

      --
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    35. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Federal prison? More like a retirement home for Noriega. Noriega worked with the CIA in their drug dealings. He was brought here and given his own private Federal Penitentiary built just for him, do some research. The US government wants to keep him and his story under wraps, he will never be allowed to stand up to the charges on him elsewhere and thus the story will likely stay buried or at least in the denial range.

    36. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Hatta · · Score: 1

      I'm not especially concerned about what other countries allow us to do to their own citizens.

      Human rights apply to all humans. None are free so long as any are oppressed.

      quite frankly these are the same people who deride us and our country on a regular basis.

      So do I. Does that mean my rights don't deserve protection?

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    37. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by zero_offset · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I should have said something like "constitutional guarantees" -- I was intentionally trying to avoid complicating the discussion by bringing rights into my comment. Rights absolutely do apply to everyone -- but my intent was to focus on the constitutional guarantee of representation, which is not extended to non-citizens.

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    38. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by zero_offset · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Does that mean my rights don't deserve protection?

      No, it means I don't care what happens to you if you aren't willing to require your own government to protect you. Read what I said, not what you think I mean.

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      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

    39. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Tophe · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So stripping away habeus corpus, holding people indefinitely, Torture Lite (and outsourcing torture as well) is OK as long as it's less evil than what the other guys do? Sorry, I don't think so. The lesser of two evils is still evil.

    40. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Lockejaw · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Point made?
      If your point is, "It's ok because other people did worse things," then yes, you got your point across.
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      (IANAL)
    41. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by AndersOSU · · Score: 1

      I, for one, think that we should stop immigration from this country peopled entirely with criminals.

      Perhaps we should build some sort of fence...

    42. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Lachlan+Hunt · · Score: 1

      Yep! As long as Bush remains president of the US and Shrub remains prime minister of Australia, we're pretty much screwed.

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    43. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Hatta · · Score: 1

      So you have no sympathy for, say, those in Darfur who aren't being protected by their own government?

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    44. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by jedidiah · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It goes for Canada, it goes for Australia and it goes for the UK and for the rest of you to.

      When your governments don't stand up to ours it hurts us as much as it does you. ...makes you wonder if Sarkozy speaks French with an East Texas accent.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    45. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by WhiplashII · · Score: 3, Insightful

      OK, to extend the metaphor way beyond breaking...

      Now you give the murderer a BFG - he sits in Australia picking off Americans one by one via long range death.

      To you propose to let him off? He never left Austrailia, never killed anyone there, etc.

      He committed a crime in a foriegn country. Both his country and the foriegn country 1) agree that the accusation is about an actionable crime, and 2) agree that people should be tried in the country where the damage was done.

      This isn't unusual, this is how law enforcement works, people!

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      while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
    46. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by operagost · · Score: 3, Funny

      Torture Lite
      Thanks for the morning laugh. Torture Lite? A good tickling could be Torture Lite. Maintaining the phpbb code base could be Torture Lite.
      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    47. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by DJCacophony · · Score: 1

      Are you trying to claim that the people in Darfur are refusing protection offered to them by the government?
      That's what the subject is. Not people who lack government support, but those who refuse it.

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      Slow Down, Cowboy! It's been 60 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment.
    48. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by WhiplashII · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is not insightful, people! To be extradited, the same law has to be valid in both countries. Like copyright law! Trial to be done where the damage occured.

      Who in Austrailia is damaged by copyright infringement against US companies? Why on Earth would you hold the trial there? (Mind you, they do hold a hearing in Australia to make sure that the charges are valid and warrant extradition. But that won't be discussed on Slashdot, eh?)

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    49. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Endo13 · · Score: 1

      He most certainly is under US jurisdiction. We own the Australian government, which means we own Australia, which means we own your ass. Break our laws and we'll slam you in our prisons, because we can, and it makes us money to do so.

      Welcome to the new world order, Bush (Sr., Jr.) and Clinton style.

      Until Australia (and, for that matter, the UK) learns to stand up to the world's biggest bully (what to my immense shame is what my country, the United States, has become), they and their people will be under our jurisdiction, subject to our laws on their own soil, and with no protection from their own governments. Just like the soviet satellite states of the last century, we'll let you wave your own flags and call yourselves whatever you like, but fuck with us and our cash flow, and we'll slam you into our gulag.

      You want this to not be the case? Then elect and demand a government with some backbone that will tell the United States exactly where it can get off. I normally am not too fond of people bashing the US (most people do it merely because it's "the in thing" and really don't have a clue what they're talking about) but this is one time where I have to agree 100%. I wish I had some mod points for you because IMO your post is spot-on.
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    50. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Hatta · · Score: 1

      WTF are you talking about? Who is refusing government protection?

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      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    51. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by operagost · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Based on this case, Aussies should have the right to vote for American president and to have their elected representatives in US Congress and Senate - If a Law applies on you, you should be entitled to participate in electing the lawmakers.
      Australia's ELECTED LAWMAKERS approved the extradition treaty.
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      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    52. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a criminal case, not a civil case. In a criminal case it is society that is damaged. It would be presumed that the Australian society is the one that was damaged. Their store owners and software distributors were the ones out of money. Now, if in addition to this, the US companies want to sue foreign infringers, then I would agree, it should be done in US courts.

    53. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      You make a good point, but here is why this article should be important for U.S. citizens: citizens of this country are responsible for ensuring that our own government doesn't overstep its boundaries, too...as seems to be happening very often of late.

      This kind of crap pisses me off. How can I contribute to this guy's legal defense fund?

      --
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    54. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by djasbestos · · Score: 1

      Well, this has to do more with IP law than a physical crime such as murder or minor in possession, which can transcend borders. That being said, you'd have a hell of a time trying to get Vietnam or the Philippines to extradite someone to the US for copyright violation, which is, I would say, FAR more common in those two countries. Even our neighbor Mexico has tons of hardcopy, street vendor piracy.

      But I agree wholeheartedly with you that the only reason this is happening is because Australians (or John Howard and Co.) are too willing to roll over for US government and corporate interests. I believe the Brits have an expression for situations like this: "Fuck off!"

      You don't see Italy or Germany extraditing CIA agents (or asking for it) for the illegal shit they've done with "rendition"...because they know the US has a monopoly on that.

    55. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by operagost · · Score: 1

      We don't have extradition treaties with those countries.

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      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    56. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 1

      I think I would have invoke the more apt clause of the Declaration of Independence:
      transporting us beyond our seas to be tried for pretend offenses.

      A few posts back someone mentioned that the US government effectively owns the Australian government, this is probably close to true, but it does not have to be. Those of us living here in the States are screwed, we're going to have our very own police state soon, it is what the people want, after all. But with our military streched to the limit, off on military adventures around the globe, now is the time for other countries to revolt against US economic occupation. The US may not have troops in Australia, the US just has a lapdog government to keep the locals happy. Get rid of it now, before it's too late and you become just another province in the new empire.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
    57. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by metacell · · Score: 1

      OK, to extend the metaphor way beyond breaking...

      Now you give the murderer a BFG - he sits in Australia picking off Americans one by one via long range death.

      To you propose to let him off? He never left Austrailia, never killed anyone there, etc.

      He committed a crime in a foriegn country. Both his country and the foriegn country 1) agree that the accusation is about an actionable crime, and 2) agree that people should be tried in the country where the damage was done.

      This isn't unusual, this is how law enforcement works, people!

      Your metaphor is a good one. But extraditing under these conditions easily becomes absurd when the crime is something abstract like copyright infringement.

      Assume, for instance, that I give away a number of copies of a CD which contain 10 pieces of highly priced software, from 10 different companies located in 10 different countries.

      Should I then risk being extradited to any of the ten countries? Or maybe to all of them, in turn?

      Please note that at this point it is not certain that I have done anything illegal - I may have copied and given away the CDs without being aware that there was copyrighted, commercial material on them. I am only suspected of copyright infringement, not guilty.

      It's more reasonable to prosecute in the country where the suspect was located while the alleged crime was being committed. Also, in the information society, it's often very hard for a court to decide where the crime should be considered to have occured. In the case of Internet fraud, does the crime occur in the country where the servers stand? The country where the victim is located? The country where the actual monetary transaction is taking place? Determining where the suspect was located at the time of the alleged crime is much more clear-cut.

    58. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by sholden · · Score: 1

      Generally the trial is held in the jurisdiction of the offense. Said person was in Australia when committing the crime not the US.

      The Australian court system isn't crooked and corrupt, so what's the problem with having the trial in Australia under Australian law? Surely dragging someone to the other side of the world away from their friends and family to a place they have never been to potentially spend time in prison for an action they did in their home country is cruel and unusual?

      Just to be clear, you think that if someone in the US mails a death threat to someone else in Mexico, then they should be tried in Mexico under Mexican law rather than in the US under US law? Assuming such a threat is against the law in both countries.

    59. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by HolyCrapSCOsux · · Score: 1

      I like my torture with GHT

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      0xB315AA8D852DCD3F3DCA578FD2E0BF88
    60. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Except that many Gitmo detainees (especially ones from Afghanistan) eventually turn out to be completely innocent and are quietly released after a few years of torture and degrading treatment.

      But hey, who cares right? After all, they're muslims and therefore untermensch. It's not as though core principles of the US like justice and equality actually mean anything. Also, 24 is a documentary series and Fox News is completely unbiased.

    61. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by thegrassyknowl · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I shed a tear while reading that article. This is how sad the world has become. The US government worked for tens, probably hundreds of man years at a cost that would exceed the millions to import a person for copyright violation. Their law enforcement must be really good. They must have locked up all the rapists, murderers, arsonists and Muslims and run out of criminals in their own land.

      --
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    62. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by ultranova · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The US, at the moment, is not behaving as befits a leader in freedom and human rights.

      The US has never been a leader, or even decent, as far as freedom and human rights go. It was found on genocide and slavery, expanded by conquering territory by warfare, proceeded to become the only nation to ever have used nuclear weapons against humans (not to mention civilian targets), supported one bloodthirsty dictator and guerrilla movement after another during the Cold War, and continues its track record of corpse production with Iraq War and Guantamano Bay. It has the largest prison population in the entire world, and the epidemic of rape in said prisons is a running joke to its population. It is one (only ?) of the few industrialized countries which still has death penalty. Bribery is an accepted procedure of its highest levels of politics, and the highest leaders have openly declared themselves to be above the law.

      Just where did you get this utterly ridiculous idea that the US is a leader in freedom or human rights ? When has it ever stood up for those ?

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    63. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If I were in charge of Gitmo, I wouldn't give a RATS ASS to the "muslim sensitivities" of the inmate population, and I would stock the cells with pigs, dogs and monkeys. But then, the lefties would claim that would be "torture" and "cruel and inhumane".


      And what about waterboarding, what about killings and murders, what about breaking the legs of detainees ? These are all the acts of cowards. The Republican cowards who don't know how to fight and have wet their panties because they didn't have the balls to take on Pakistan and actually find Osama Bin Laden. "Waaah Osama beat me up ... I don't have the balls to get him, so I'll all go bomb Iraq and kill a few hundred thousand folks". Brilliant. What else do you expect from the Unpatriot Anti-American Party of Death - aka the Christianist Republicans.


      Oh, and I blame Cater for the whole mess in the Middle East. We should have bombed Iran back into the stone ages for what AmadJihad and his cohorts did to those American Hostages. Yes, it was THAT guy who was among the Hostage takers. Failure to act then, has a direct impact on who is running the place today.


      And I blame Reagan, the great Hallucinator, for 9/11. It was that idiot who decided it was all cool to play with the Islamofascist nutjobs in Afghanistan, arm them, and give them money. What a loon ! Sure he helped the soviet union go down a little early, but he also gave us 9/11.


      Funny ... kinda when Orrin Hatch was running for the Christianist Party's nomination for President in 2000 he was going around parroting that he was responsible for getting rid of the Soviet Union because he championed Regan's idiotic move to fund the Islamist Mujahideen in Afghanistan. Not a peep out of that tool post-9/11 eh ? Snicker.

    64. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Gorshkov · · Score: 1

      If they "happen to be owned by American companies" how are they Canadian companies?
      It's easy. It's a company, incorporated under the laws of Canada, based in Canada, who's owners just happen to be American - either private or coporate. I didn't think it would be that difficult a concept.

      Toyota is Japanese company. How long do you think it would take Americans to get their knickers in a knot if the Japanese government decided to try to enforce Japanese labour laws, and ignore American laws, in a Toyota plant in Kentucky? (Hint: Toyota USA is an American company owned by the parent company in Japan.

    65. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by shark72 · · Score: 1

      "So if you send, say a cartoon picture of Mohammad, to someone who happens to be in Iran when they view the email. You should be extradited to Iran to face charges of insulting Islam since your action was a crime under Iranian law, and did harm to individuals that are protected by Iranian law?"

      No; the US does not have an extradition treaty with Iran.

      A list of countries with which the US not have treaties may be found here.

      If you're asking on behalf of an Australian citizen, Google may help, but doubt very much that Australia and Iran have a treaty.

      I hope this helps.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    66. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      However, your imaginary murderer would only be able to be extradited to the States if he committed the murder on US soil.

      What if there are an American citizen and a Canadian citizen, each standing on their respective sides of the border, and the Canadian fires a gun at the American and kills him? Did the murder take place on US soil or Canadian soil?

      this guy didn't break any US copyright law in the US; he broke US copyright law in Australia. [...] Basically, the whole problem in this case is that US law is being used as International Law.

      The United States and Australia are both signatories to the Berne Convention, no? That means that the copyright law of the US--or of any other country that is a party--pretty much IS international law.

    67. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by AaronW · · Score: 4, Interesting
      You do realize that many people who were snatched and held at Gitmo were found to be completely innocent and were snatched by "not nice" people because Pakistan and other places were paid for each suspect they rounded up. There are many people who have been proven to be innocent there that still cannot return home to their friends and families because their home country refuses to let them back in.

      What happens to the innocent people there who eventually go home? There are many held at Gitmo who have already proven to be innocent who are stuck there because their home countries won't allow them back.

      No matter how bad these people are, we should not stoop to their level and must respect human rights, otherwise we are little better than they are. This country was founded on certain principals, and if we throw them out because of terrorists, then the terrorists have won.

      I agree we should throw the book at those responsible for terrorism, but I also believe in habeus corpus. If they're guilty, lock them up forever or in some cases death, but make sure they're guilty first. Our current behavior has robbed the US of the moral high ground in the eyes of many outside this country.

      After all, would you fully trust the word of Pakistan about who is innocent and who is guilty? After all, they were one of the Taliban's biggest supporters up until 9/11 and still support them through numerous warlords.

      As for blaming Carter, you also should blame Ronald Reagan for quietly cowing to the terrorists in Lebanon and illegally supplying weapons to Iran or supporting WMDs in Iraq and Saddam. Carter was a wimp and screwed up, but so did Ronald Reagan. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_Interventions _of_the_Reagan_AdministrationWikipedia.

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    68. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Gorshkov · · Score: 1

      While it is true that it's not purely a problem with Bush / Clinton, the visibility of the powerpower of lobbying groups and corporations has increased at an accelerated pace under their terms.
      Fixed that for you.

      As I said, it's a very, very old practice on behalf of the US government. There's nothing new about it whatsoever, nor is it accelerating - and as a matter of fact, I would say that it tends to happen less often now (here in Canada, at least) then it has in the past - directly contrary to your statements

      You can check my posting history if you want, and you'll find that I am not, in any way, one of the US bashers here ..... but in this area, American arrogance is impressive, to say the least.
    69. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by ultranova · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The difference between "good" and "evil" is good doesn't want to do evil, while evil desires to do it.

      No, the difference between good and evil is that good doesn't do evil while evil does. Evil doesn't neccessarily desire to do evil, it simply has nothing against doing it either when it will (in its subjective opinion) benefit from it. Good doesn't do evil even when it would (in its subjective opinion) benefit from it. That's why most people tend towards evil: it is the path you follow naturally if you don't care about the pain you cause; your own comments about not giving RATS ASS about "muslim sensitivities" and the acts this lack of caring would lead you to being a perfect example of that.

      But if you do evil things (such as torture people), don't lie to yourself; you are being evil, no matter how relucatantly you did those actions, because you still did them.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    70. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Conor+Turton · · Score: 1
      The United States is one of the most benign superpowers ever. Are we as bad as the Romans, British, or even the French when they were colonial powers. We are not even attempting to be a colonial power like any of those nations.

      At least with the Romans and the British, et al, you knew what you were getting. It was all up front with big armies and absolutely no pretence of what was being done. Non of this "We're here to liberate you from a dictator" when what they actually meant was they wanted control of the oil. No, it was "You have what we want and we have a better army so we're gonna take it."

      The way the US Govt is doing it everything is done by the back door so the public never gets to see the true scale of the way the US rides roughshod over other countries own judiciary.

      --
      Conor "You're not married,you haven't got a girlfriend and you've never seen Star Trek? Good Lord!" - Patrick Stewart
    71. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by shark72 · · Score: 1

      "Should I then risk being extradited to any of the ten countries? Or maybe to all of them, in turn?"

      Yes, if you distributed enough for the act to be criminal nature in all countries involved, including the country in which you reside.

      This is a tough one, because many Slashdotters see piracy as a victimless crime -- information wants to be free, and all that. Unfortunately, the laws don't always agree with us.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    72. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Conor+Turton · · Score: 1
      I will say, however, that this is the first time I've heard of anything involving extradition for violating US law when the person involved has never set foot in the US, and the crimes never took place on US soil.

      You obviously missed the story about Gary McKinnon then.

      --
      Conor "You're not married,you haven't got a girlfriend and you've never seen Star Trek? Good Lord!" - Patrick Stewart
    73. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

      That is a bad analogy. To kill someone, one generally needs to be in the same physical location as the victim.

      What about that point and click hunting website that some Texan nutter tried to (did?) set up? If someone got shot using that then where does juristiction lie?

    74. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I just hope that the pendulum swings back sooner rather than later."

      You know, it's entirely acceptable to visit Australia with a regular passport. You don't have to wait for the pendulum to swing back, break an Aussie law, and then "visit" Australia to get the hell out of the US.

    75. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by gobbo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "We should have bombed Iran back into the stone ages"

      That aggressive right-to-might belief is a fundamental strategic error, and used as a ruse to centralize power by increasing insecurity, and thus reduce the need for false flag operations.

      When you invade other countries, hell, when you put over 700 military bases in foreign countries, establish an international influence-pervert-abduct-torture network, establish a global disinformation campaign, spend more money on the rule of force than the rest of the world combined, work with tyrants, and work hand-in-hand with industry to shift capital and control away from sovereignty everywhere, well, people will be pissed off.

      When you try to crush the few extreme radicals that this naturally results in, by killing lots of civilians and destroying infrastructure (and thus ways of life), hey presto, many many more radicals with nothing left to lose. The US military is a radical-producing machine.

      When you put a military base on holy land of a competing militant religion and use it to create more displaced refugees--oh look, suicide bombers.

      Yes, I'm saying that spending a trillion dollars annually on international education/propaganda and diplomacy rather than military aggression would have resulted in greater security for the USA (but fewer riches for the shareholders of lockheed-martin and halliburton et al). Too late now, though, you got the enemies you were looking for, and it will take a generation to make peace.

    76. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Gorshkov · · Score: 1

      That's a bad example. Most people would support the US government trying to force US owned foreign companies to conform with US laws.
      Most people in the US, maybe ..... we're funny, but us folk in other countries tend to think that we have this little thing called "soverignity" over our own territory that means we can do what we can, without having to worry about what laws OTHER soverign countries pass.

      If a US company goes over to that country and does business, they are expected to obey US laws and any businesses that they buy and own should be run as much as possible under US law.
      I'll remind you that you said that the next time an employee of a Saudi-owned company in New York tells the US Justice department to get stuffed when they try to charge them for insider trading because insider trading isn't a crime in Saudi Arabia.

      You are bitching and moaning because the US is trying to get its foreign owned, but based in "first world" countries like Canada, UK, EU, or Au to follow US law. Hey, for the most part I don't blame you because their existing laws should be very similiar to US law any way.
      Similarity of laws has nothing to do with it. You can do what you want in your country, and nobody here in Canada has any right to tell you differently. The reverse is also true .... and the location of the "other country" has exactly the square root of fuck all do to with anything.

      Why the US does this is for places like the Middle East, Africa, and Asia (think China) so that they'd confirm to US law and not have their individuals in serfdom/ near slavery.
      USA: All Chinese companies owned by Americans SHALL pay a minimum of $X/hour, not employ children under 14, and not require them to work more than 40 hours/week.
      China: fuck off and die, you capitalist, imperialist running-dog pigs.

      USA: All goods produced by companies that pay less than $X/hour, employ children under the age of 14, or require them to work more than 40 hours/week SHALL be subject to duties of 2,000 percent.
      China: Hmmmm ..... Here, guys, have a raise. And take tomorrow off.

      See how that works?
    77. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by sholden · · Score: 1

      Way to miss the point.

      So Germany and sending a not about the holocaust not happening.

      of course now you'll bring up the "illegal in US as well" part, so see my other post with Mexico and death threats...

    78. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      An extradition treaty is meaningless. A US citizen has constitutional protections and theoretically can't be extradited for something that isn't a crime in the US. For example, suppose we _did_ have a treaty with Iran. Extraditing someone for "blasphemy" would be patently ridiculous, and should be enough to incite the shit to hit the fan in this country.

    79. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

      if someone in the US mails a death threat to someone else in Mexico

      In short, yes. If you commit a crime, you submit to the legal system. If your crime crosses borders, you submit to the international treaties that apply. Anything else is anarchy.

      There are agreements in place as to how to handle these matters. The agreements are pretty reasonable - especially since the acused gets a hearing in their own country first. This guy was flagrantly violating the law, and then expected to be protected by the law?

      --
      while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
    80. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by jmac1492 · · Score: 1

      Toyota is Japanese company. How long do you think it would take Americans to get their knickers in a knot if the Japanese government decided to try to enforce Japanese labour laws, and ignore American laws, in a Toyota plant in Kentucky?
      No matter your nationality, you have to obey local laws. If you have to obey your local laws on foreign soil (Toyota pays taxes on their American operations to the Japanese government because they're a Japanese company) you have to do that too, but you always have to follow the law where you're operating. (They follow American labor laws at plants in Kentucky and pay taxes to the US for their US operations.)

      (Hint: Toyota USA is an American company owned by the parent company in Japan.) Toyota USA is the part of the Japanese company Toyota that operates in the USA. It isn't a seperate company in any meaningful sense. They have to follow US laws for their US operations (including following American labor laws and paying American taxes at plants in Kentucky), but they're still part of a Japanese company.
      --
      Jenny's got a new number! 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    81. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you live in a country where pictures of Mohammad are illegal AND have an extradition treaty with Iran, that could happen.

    82. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Darundal · · Score: 1

      I believe the Brits have an expression for situations like this: "Fuck off!"

      I think we in the states used to have that one too...

    83. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd cut your throat in an instant just for your stupidity.

    84. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by shark72 · · Score: 1

      You appear to have a better grasp of the whole extradition business than was apparent with your first post. As you've correctly pointed out, it must be illegal in both countries.

      I'll read your post about Mexico if I happen to come across it, but keep in mind a couple of other things: there has to be prima facie evidence that a crime has been committed, and that extradition requests aren't punched into ExtraditionBot(tm) software which issues the approval simply based on the facts. Real judges look at the requests, and apply common sense. Each case is different, and running a software piracy ring is not making a Mexican death threat*.

      This is a straightforward enough concept. I think that what has so many Slashdotters up in arms is that running a piracy ring doesn't seem like such a bad thing to many of us -- in fact, perhaps some of us see him as a hero, and can thank DrinkOrDie for many of the warez we've gotten our hands on over the years. Thus, it seems inconceivable to even compare this to the normal situations that arise with extradition treaties -- it's taking the concept to the extreme when our own government is using extradition treaties to hurt the good guys.

      * my Mexican Death Threat recipe: 2 parts Kahlua, one part jagermeister, one part Drambui.

      --
      Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
    85. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by fyngyrz · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      The Australian court system isn't crooked and corrupt, so what's the problem with having the trial in Australia under Australian law?

      That is precisely the problem. How would we violate Australian citizen's constitutional rights (and make no mistake, our constitution does apply those rights to their citizens) if the trial were to take place in Australia? It is critical that the trial be held here so that we can bring to bear any of our ex post facto, section one, or 1st, 2nd and 4th to 10th amendment rights tramplings. Do they think it's easy taking people's rights away? Our congress critters work night and day to ensure that the Australian people have equal opportunity to be abused. It takes treaties, payola, and more. Australians should thank the corporations that see to it that our congress critters are elected. Those... those ungrateful wretches.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    86. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Gorshkov · · Score: 1

      Toyota pays taxes on their American operations to the Japanese government because they're a Japanese company
      No, actually, tbey don't.

      Toyota USA makes a profit, and declares a dividend. Toyota (parent company in Japan), being the owner of the shares, receives the dividends.

      The dividends are then declared as income for Toyota (parent company), and taxes are paid as per local, Japanese law.

      It isn't a seperate company in any meaningful sense.
      it is an incorporated US company. It has a board of directors. It has a corporate charter. Yadda yadda yadda. It is a separate company in EVERY sense.

      They have to follow US laws for their US operations (including following American labor laws and paying American taxes at plants in Kentucky), but they're still part of a Japanese company.
      They are an American company that just happens to be wholly owned by a Japanese company.
    87. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Drooling+Iguana · · Score: 4, Funny

      I thought you got sent to Australia for breaking British law.

      --
      ... I'm addicted to placebos
    88. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by shaitand · · Score: 2, Interesting

      'You know, it's entirely acceptable to visit Australia with a regular passport. You don't have to wait for the pendulum to swing back, break an Aussie law, and then "visit" Australia to get the hell out of the US.'

      Unless you visit on your own you won't be visiting Australia. I don't believe i have ever heard of a US citizen being extradited to another nation for breaking its laws while on US soil.

    89. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "completely innocent"

      Uh huh.

      "Also, 24 is a documentary series"

      I've never watched it.

      "____ News is completely unbiased"

      No such thing as "unbiased news". All News is Biased. Picking on Fox because it appears to be "right wing" is hypocritical. Compared to CBS (Dan Rather forging documents) and NBC (Dateline exploding vehicles) etc, I'm sure you'll agree.

      Noo These "news" organizations aren't "biased". Which is why I get my news from a variety of sources, and read commentary from lots of viewpoints, INCLUDING CBS, NBC and (gasp) FOX. Oh the HORRORS.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    90. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by walt-sjc · · Score: 1

      Fixed that for you.

      No. You didn't. I stand by my opinion, you are free to stand by yours.

      This is not about Canada, it's about the US.

      I agree that corporate influence has been around a long long time, but I do believe it is accelerating, as is the erosion of civil liberties, privacy, etc. I haven't seen any evidence to the contrary in the 25 years that I have been paying attention to this kind of thing.

    91. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by thetagger · · Score: 1
      Our current behavior has robbed the US of the moral high ground in the eyes of many outside this country.

      You never had it.

    92. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 0, Troll

      "your own comments about not giving RATS ASS about "muslim sensitivities" and the acts this lack of caring would lead you to being a perfect example of that."

      Define "evil". I don't care about Muslim Sensitivities because their view is that you are either Muslim or you are SHIT(Poo, crap, fecal matter). The difference is that while I don't see keeping Pigs (I keep Kosher BTW) is "evil", yet they do. So, is it evil to have pigs, eat ham sandwich on a table next to them, have a seeing eye dog trying to take a taxi, not wear a burkah if you are a female etc.

      There is no compromise with these people. It's their way (Isamofacists) or the Highway to Hell (head removed by sword or knife).

      Again, is it evil to have pigs in the same cell as muslim terrorists? Depends upon who you ask. It isn't a "lack of caring" because quite frankly, I care a great deal. I care that people like yourself can't see the forest for the trees. You think that they aren't going to push you around given the chance and if you are all "nice" and bend over for them, they'll leave you alone?

      "But if you do evil things (such as torture people),"

      Again, define torture. Is keeping a muslim in a pig pen "torture"??? I guess it depends upon who you ask, doesn't it?

      And so you know, I don't support nor condone "torture", at least my definition of it. But then again, my idea of what is torture may be different from your's . Some people think that locking a person in a cell is "torture" and "cruel" punishment.

      Whose definition are we going to use? Mine, yours, the Muslims, the pacifists?

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    93. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "When you invade other countries, hell, when you put over 700 military bases in foreign countries, establish an international influence-pervert-abduct-torture network, establish a global disinformation campaign, spend more money on the rule of force than the rest of the world combined, work with tyrants, and work hand-in-hand with industry to shift capital and control away from sovereignty everywhere, well, people will be pissed off."

      Right! I suggest that the US pull out of every country, and leave the rest of the world to its own devices and NEVER send troops anywhere, ever again, or at least until the rest of the world is killing each others.

      You forget, the reason why those troops are stationed across the ocean and on foreign soil is that we've already sent 100's of thousands over seas to fight and die in wars against dictators and fascists. Somehow, short sighted people forget about a guy named HITLER, and STALIN, and POL POT. Not to mention the Modern version of them today.

      Quit being so naive. When things go bad, who does the world come running to? Tsunami? Genocide in Darfur, Mid East, Korea ........ If it wasn't for the US, there'd be no freakin peace. We do a hell of a lot more "good" than people like yourself are capable of admitting to.

      Do we F Up? Sure we do. Could we do better? Sure we can. But to blame the US for everything wrong in the world is insane.

      "When you put a military base on holy land of a competing militant religion and use it to create more displaced refugees--oh look, suicide bombers."

      Hey, lets just kill all the Jews! Since they are the source of all the worlds problems. If they just didn't exist, the world would be much safer. The Muslims wouldn't be so angry. (/sarcasm)

      "I'm saying that spending a trillion dollars annually on international education/propaganda and diplomacy rather than military aggression would have resulted in greater security for the USA"

      Naive childlike thinking. You really believe that? You scare the crap out of me.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    94. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are an ass.

    95. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Hey Kettle, Long Time No See. Yours truly --- Pot.

      Nice Ad Hominem.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    96. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with Islam is that it's a religion of intolerance, look into the history of the 'oh-so-peaceful' Islam. What they did is conquer other countries, suck out anything they can use, and move on. The brutality of it all was disgusting, they used many grotesque and horrific tortures. Now we see Islam from the left as a peace loving soft religion that is just 'misunderstood' where in fact they're just bitter because they haven't done anything productive but kill eachother in the past 600+ years. Islam is a religion of hate, they hate their enemies and they're taught to do so. All it takes is one Imam to help define America, or Britian, or Australia, or ANY group/religion/country/etc as an 'enemy' and you have tons of people who are willing to waste their life to fight them. It's ingrained into their society: vanquish the enemy no matter the cost. Most of the 'radicals' are just normal people brainwashed by a religion of destruction.

    97. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      "flamebait"

      Yes, the truth is often incendiary. I agree.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    98. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering that Australia is nothing but a prison island anyways, seems like right at home. But I do agree - I don't see why he was extradited. If he hacked into a company in the US or something, then at least you have something to do.

      At most, the US should have told Australia "hey, we have proof this guy did these things, and he lives there - will you arrest him, prosecute him, etc, etc"...

    99. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by MrYotsuya · · Score: 1

      I believe the Brits have an expression for situations like this: "Fuck off!"

      I think we in the states used to have that one too..


      When a Brit says it, it sounds cooler and classier.

    100. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by 2bitcomputers · · Score: 1

      Does anyone know where I can get that printed on a bumper sticker...

      --
      -- Please insert another quarter
    101. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Until Australia (and, for that matter, the UK) learns to stand up to the world's biggest bully HEY!!!! I'll have you know that Canada's been the U.S.'s bitch WAY longer!

      Oh, wait, that's not something to be proud of...
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    102. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually, there is no difference between good and evil. its simply a matter of perspective. one man's evil is another man simply looking out for himself instead of the first guy.

    103. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Welcome to the new world order, Bush (Sr., Jr.) and Clinton style.

      This has nothing to do with Clinton or either of the Bushes. The USA has been trying to assert it's laws over other countries for a very, very long time. Take any number of attempts by the USA to tell Canadian companies that they can't have business dealings with Cuba I specifically remember Clinton replying to Gore that he was reponsible for that, when challenged in a presidential debate on his record when it comes to forcing the will of the United States onto the rest of the world.

      I remember because I had to shut off the TV in disgust, at that point.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    104. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      I have to say, this is a somewhat naive point of view.

      You mean your own view here right?

      If you look through the history of the world, The United States is one of the most benign superpowers ever. Are we as bad as the Romans, British, or even the French when they were colonial powers.

      Look! we are better then those who came before us, all hail us!!

      Congratulations on learning from hte mistakes of others. Now it is time however to start learning from your own mistakes. That is something all the old colonial powers had to go through as well. Them actually having learned their lesson is why Brits are quite a bit more welcome in say Afghanistan then Americans.

      We are not even attempting to be a colonial power like any of those nations.

      Using economic warfare does not magically make that the USA isn't playing colonial power.

      If you don't like the current administration, fine don't support them, but please don't pretend like they are these horrible outrageous people. They are following the policy and path that several generations of Americans have REQUIRED of them. That is why they were elected.

      Which is completely irrelevant for the rest of the world, we didn't elect them, we didn't require their current policy either. They are however trying to force it upon us (non americans), which I find completely unacceptable.

      Perhaps some of the countries who are accusing us of being horrible people would feel a little bit better if they didn't outsource all of their defense and government obligations to us over the last 60 years. "We don't like how you are protecting us, so spend your money in the way we see fit." All of these countries were our bestest buddies in the whole wide world when the Russians were breathing down their necks, but like teenagers who have no memory and can't see a minute in front of them, they have completely forgotten.

      From this statement alone speaks so much ignorance that I don't know where to start..

      But let me keep it simple, please go learn something about this world outside the USA, and about the history of the USA itself.

      Yes, the USA has been helpfull quite a few times. They also got their reward for that. The USA also has been less then helpfull at quite a few occations.

      I can't even really address the human rights violation part because it is so silly. Are you referring to the dreading things going on at Gitmo? It's awful that we feed people there so they gain the "Gitmo 20" I know. I also can't believe we give them the religious material of their choice and allow them to exercise their religion while they are there. Oh and don't forget the dreaded pink belly technique that we use on them. I could go through the list of names to highlight why were are the angels in this situation (see Nick Berg), but I don't think it would be worth wasting my breath. I'll just end with this simple question:

      Instead of answering your question, let me point you at some fundament of US society that you seem to be forgetting about:

      Untill found guilty by a court, EVERYONE is presumed innocent. Not only is this one important with regards to US society, it is fundamental for proper justice.

      Who would you rater be?
              a. an Iraqi/Jordanian/Egyptian freedom fighter captured by the US
              b. A US/British/insert nationality here soldier or citizen captured by al queda or other islamic terrorists?


      'Them are worse!!!!!' is a strawman and not a proper argument, not to mention that it is simply irrelevant. Your mistakes are mistakes because of not being right. What the rest of the world does or doesn't is simply of no relevance to that whatsoever.

      Point made?

      If your point was that you have:
      - no clue about the history of the USA
      - no clue about the world outside the USA
      - no clue about what is needed for a functioning system of justice

    105. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As an Australian, I agree with the parent poster. Thanks to that low-life PM of ours (aka. Tampa man, WMD man, Children Overboard man), we kiss American ass blindly at every opportunity.
      Now that i've vented my frustration, Can I get you a coffee? White with one sugar? We've become very good at blindly taking orders.

    106. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US constitution is indeed a very enlightened document, guaranteeing "equal protection of the law" to everyone - citizen or not - who is under US jurisdiction.

      The catch - and it's a big catch - is that only US citizens have any right to appeal or argue cases against their treatment by the US government. Foreigners have no standing to appeal to the Supreme Court.

      Neat, huh?

    107. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are so wrong. there is nothing in the US constitution that makes it an agreement between anyone but the government and the governed. that does not include citizens of other nations. if it did, we would have an obligation to go to war with the likes of China, the USSR, the Sudan, etc to protect those rights. For better or for worse, there is no such thing as universal human rights, and the US constitution sure as hell does not guarantee anything for anyone but US citizens (and even then there are very few guarantees)

      "We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."

    108. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about when over half a million Americans on the Union side died with a result of emancipating millions of black Americans?

      How about the first time the Europeans started a massive war in the early 20th century and we were sucked into their petty squabbles only to be villified for not showing up sooner?

      Then, again, less than thirty years later when Europe allowed a madman to run free with his maniacal henchmen and their "master race"?

      And, yet again, when China and North Korea tried to overrun the South in their Asian-Pacific powergrab?

      Gulf War I

      George Washington was right...we should have stayed the fuck away of Europe's (and the rest of the world's for that matter) dipshittedness.

    109. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, we don't have extradition treaties with China for exactly that reason. On the other hand, if an American performed some form of wire fraud on British citizens, the US would would happily ship their ass over to Britain for trail.

    110. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by dcam · · Score: 1

      It is also the only democracy to invade another democracy (Domincan Republic). And don't give me that rubbish about being a republic.

      --
      meh
    111. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guantanamo is where enemy combatants are placed. In WWII, if you were an enemy shooting at an army and you were wearing a uniform, you were held as a prisoner of war without any due process until the war was over. If you were NOT wearing a uniform and were trying to cause harm to an army, the Geneva convention deems you a spy, and a spy can be shot on the spot without any due process.

      The rules are very clear.

      War is ugly.

    112. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1

      Not to minimise your point but... It is one (only ?) of the few industrialized countries which still has death penalty.

      Europe and the "dominions" (canada/oz/nz) don't execute, but some industrialised asian countries do, e.g. Japan still has the death penalty, and hangs 2-4 people a year. On christmas day (!) 2006. Of course this is small beer compared to Texas let alone the USA.

    113. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1
      I believe the Brits have an expression for situations like this: "Fuck off!"

      No no no, the Brits expression is "F**k me first please Mr President!". Tony Blair has signed a similar one-sided treaty which means that the USA can extradite any Briton without having to provide evidence, which naturally does not apply the other way.

    114. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by EdelFactor19 · · Score: 1

      Your argument is horribly invalid. There was no doubt or question that the acts he committed were crimes in both countries. The companies whose rights he violated don't happen to live in the US, they are and always have been in the US. Copyright Law is different from criminal law anyhow, stop trying to draw comparisons. International IP Laws (copyright and patent) are both extremely important, think about the billions of dollars worth of pirated software that float around in places like Russia, Indonesia, and Asia. Everything you buy is charging you more to reflect that.

      This is not a case where the australian guy sent something to someone who "coincidentally" was somewhere where it was illegal, it was something that both illegal in his country and the other, and he knew exactly where it was occurring.

      Your example would be better if he sent the cartoon from China, or from some other country where the act was already illegal.

      You make it sound as if it was "by chance" that his work landed in the US.

      Secondly, he is prosecuted here because Copyright violations while carrying criminal penalties don't send the money to the government, they send the money to the company you wronged. Those bringing suit determine the venue. If he had hacked into bank of america, would BOA have to go to Australia to sue him? no, they'd sue him here where he did the damage.

      You can dislike the politics, but what sickens me is how you people try to use that stuff to make an excuse for the fact that he got caught breaking the law. You don't like the law? Too bad, you go break it if you like but don't whine when you get caught. If he didn't engage in the activities he was involved in he wouldn't be in any trouble now would he?

      Stop dragging in the fact that YOU don't like copyright law into the proper and legal enforcement of it. This isn't the RIAA here, they arent issuing blanket statements to unknown john doe's around the world who may or may not have committed the offense.

      Like, dislike or hate the copyright laws, they are what they are. Much like most other laws. You want to change them, go ahead I'm with you. But stop trying to make this about the Government over stepping its boundries trying to own everyone and bullying people when thats not the issue.

      The issue is simple. You do the crime and get caught, you do the time.
      What's worse is that this wasn't just john doe at home downloading and sharing stuff. This was organized crime with deliberate intent, and yet you defend him.

      Next you people are going to start defending the mob, after all killing people you don't like, stealing money, and beating people up for money should be legal too right?

      --
      "Jazz isn't dead, it just smells funny" ~Frank Zappa
      EdelFactor
    115. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by damista · · Score: 1

      There's only one thing to do: Let's get rid of Johnny Rotten!

      Not too sure that the alternatives would bring the slightest change. The Yanks say jump and our pollies ask how high. That's ridiculous. How can a country extradite one of their own citizens to a foreign nation for a crime that hasn't even been committed over there. Hey, let's send all our under 18-21yo to the Seppos to be trialled for underage drinking...

    116. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by StikyPad · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'm in. Where do US citizens register to vote in this election?

      Oh. Well, I just assumed since we're claiming jurisdiction...

    117. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Right! I suggest that the US pull out of every country, and leave the rest of the world to its own devices and NEVER send troops anywhere, ever again, or at least until the rest of the world is killing each others.

      Hmm.. just in case you didn't notice, the world is already killing eachother, have been doing that for a couple of tens of thousands of years at least for what we know..

      But on a more serious note, maybe it would help to look at why the USA is where it is. Helping others also happens, but a more common reason is the economic interests of the USA.

      You forget, the reason why those troops are stationed across the ocean and on foreign soil is that we've already sent 100's of thousands over seas to fight and die in wars against dictators and fascists. Somehow, short sighted people forget about a guy named HITLER, and STALIN, and POL POT. Not to mention the Modern version of them today.

      My grandfather has been in one of Hitler's concentration camps, so for me personally, I won't forget him.

      I'd like to point out however that the USA considered Stalin an ally against Hitler, and that that same USA actively supported quite a number of (fascist or otherwise) dictators including a certain Saddam.

      Quit being so naive. When things go bad, who does the world come running to? Tsunami? Genocide in Darfur, Mid East, Korea ........ If it wasn't for the US, there'd be no freakin peace. We do a hell of a lot more "good" than people like yourself are capable of admitting to.

      I can't speak for GP, but I have no problem whatsoever admitting to the good things that the USA does. This is also not the problem. The problem is that people like you fail to admit the mistakes the USA makes, and fail to realize the consequences of those mistakes.

      No, the USA isn't evil, its people are not evil, but they are human, and as a result do make mistakes. This wouldn't be so bad if they at least started to admit their own mistakes and learn from them.

      And what many forget about those who point out the mistakes, it is your friends who do that. Your enemies will abuse your mistakes instead.

    118. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      The US military is a radical-producing machine.

      BULL *FUCKING* Shit!!!!

      You need to learn a few things about radical islam, and not some anti-american bullshit you read on Slashdot. You're so Indoctrinated with BS, you're as bad as they are, only the non-violent kind.

      I suggest everyone take a look at current events around the world. Here, let me help with this link. http://www.thereligionofpeace.com/

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    119. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      US laws -- and constitutional rights -- apply to US citizens.

      Small and often forgotten detail.. they apply to every person within the borders of the USA (and possibly to everyone within all territories controlled by the USA). Citizenship only comes into play when explicitly stated by the law (ie, voting is limited to citizens, but free speech is for all, just as due process)

      The GP makes a good point. The Brits were wrong to try to have the colonies pay taxes without then getting some say in things, just as the USA is wrong to try to force its laws on others without giving those others a say in things. That you have to fend for your own rights is true, but that doesn't change the fact that the USA is wrong in this and is not acting as a beneign superpower at all. For the later, those in charge of the USA, and ultimately, those who put them in charge, are responsible, not the people or leaders of other countries.

      The argument you make is like saying 'its your own responsibility to defend yourself from my abuse'. Sure, but it is your responsibility to not be abusive to begin with.

    120. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by vux984 · · Score: 1

      You forget, the reason why those troops are stationed across the ocean and on foreign soil is that we've already sent 100's of thousands over seas to fight and die in wars against dictators and fascists. Somehow, short sighted people forget about a guy named HITLER, and STALIN, and POL POT. Not to mention the Modern version of them today.

      Bush?

      Bush is certainly no Hitler, not by a long shot. But he has a lot in common with the fascist dictators you allude to (including the certainty that he's acting out God's Will...). There is however, at least one crucial difference: He has the biggest stick. The US military is bigger than all the other despots of the world combined.

      Couple that with his lack of restraint in using it as pre-emptive "defense".
      "We have to fight them there so that one day we won't have to fight them here"

      And thats a dumb argument. If we weren't so busy fighting them there, maybe we could make peace, so we wouldn't have to fight them anywhere anymore. Muslim extremists really deep down don't give a shit about 'America' or its 'freedom' or 'democracy'. They really only care about their own freedom, prosperity, and the fact that America has been interfering in their affairs and ripping them off for a hundred years or so. Now, America can't fix that overnight, simply by pulling out, but a generation or two of honest diplomacy would work far better than 'preemptive defense' war, which only manufactures more discontent around the globe, and manufactures more enemies to fight.

      Hint: pre-emptive defense = offense.

      Thus the man who most needs to be reigned in on the world stage today is Bush.

    121. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      New Zealand has for the past 2 decades or so been at a stand-off with the US Govt as it refuses to allow nuclear powered vessels in it's waters. The US refuses to call NZ an Ally. Regardless, I feel a lot safer in NZ than Australia.

    122. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by dbIII · · Score: 1

      And don't give me that rubbish about being a republic

      It isn't quite a monarchy with an elected King yet even if it is starting to resemble it in many ways. I find it emblematic of the amount of hypocracy that the monarchists are in the Republican party. Time to think back to what the revolution was about - back then they didn't want to just replace a remote King with a local one. You can be thankful for the strongly respected tradition of term limits which means G.W. Bush would lose all but family support if he tried to exceed them.

    123. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      More importantly:

      PUT THE LIBERAL PARTY LAST ON YOUR BALLOT PAPER.

      That way if the Greens?Democrats/Independent/Labor get knocked out of the race Howard Inc. doesn't get in as a second, third of fourth choice. Strange things can happen in the preferencing system, whereby someone with a large number of say 5th preferences can win over someone with almost the same number of 3rd preferences. The only safe way is to put someone you don't want in power last on the ballot.

    124. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by shellbeach · · Score: 1

      A brief question:

      What if your parents were mistakenly arrested and placed in gitmo. You know they are being "forcibly coerced". You also know that they will never leave, since they can never provide the information sought from them, and will never get a fair trial. In the eyes of the authorities, they are already guilty. In the eyes of the populace, the fact that they are already in gitmo makes them guilty.

      If you are happy with the above as a necessary sacrifice for upholding the free world, then I will accept your point of view. If, on the other hand, you feel a bit squeamish about sacrificing your parents for the good of the world order, consider this:

      In a world where human rights no longer exist, where there is no system of justice, where the protections provided by the Geneva Convention are something to be avoided through the use of technicalities, the terrorists have won.

    125. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by zobier · · Score: 1

      You're preaching to the choir brother. Unfortunately the majority of our fellow citizens are uneducated sheep. No wonder why the government keeps education system in this country in such an abysmal state.

      --
      Me lost me cookie at the disco.
    126. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by dbIII · · Score: 1

      It's their way (Isamofacists)

      You do know that word is an utterly ridulculous recent invention that makes as little sense as the ignorant "Chindia" description from an economist that couldn't find his own continent on a map? Stand back, pay attention, and ignore the hate radio fiction and realise that you can't group hundreds of millions of people into a single neat pidgeonhole based on extremist criminals calling for the formation of the sort of government seen nowhere on earth.

      This sillyness comes from an idiot that was getting some press saying why the US was failing in Iraq. He came out with the idiocy that it is being misunderstood because some Palestinian cleric met with Hitler many times in the 1940s so all Moslems are Nazis by association. Ignore the PR pushing this garbage, pretending there is only one evil in the world is counterproductive.

      Also torture is pointless as well as being barbaric - witness the Bin Laden/Saddam connection where the USA was globally embarressed because the only evidence was the ravings of a drowning man. As for the torture - people died from it remember, sounds serious and not some pretend stuff to me.

    127. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by adona1 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the best way to get Howard out is to vote Labor. I can't say I'm enamoured of them, but it's not a case of wanting Labor in Government...it's a case of wanting Howard out.

      Having said that, voting for a minor party first, then giving your first preference to Labor and putting the Liberals last does roughly the same thing, but yeah. After 11 years, I've gotten to the stage where I'm willing to sacrifice the Democrats or another minor party to kick Howard out of office.

      --
      Between the falling angel and the rising ape
    128. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by stenn · · Score: 1
      and yet, I bet you live in the US. here's a clue, tickets are cheap. Live in another country for a while and get back to us.


      Don't let the door hit you on the way out...

    129. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by stenn · · Score: 1
      Torture lite?

      OK... sleep deprivation, loud music, panties on head, naked pig piles, shaving beards, woman laughing at naked guys, and standing on a bucket with a pillow case over your head. Hmmm... torture??

      In the US we call this college

    130. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Team America: World Police

    131. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by gobbo · · Score: 1

      Hitler was initially supported by many americans, including the Bush family and General Motors. Fascism was seen as friendly until it got out of control, and go look up Operation Paper Clip. WWII was full of much more history and cross-intrigue than your highly propagandized view of it. Pol Pot (Khmer Rouge) was arguably a direct result of clandestine american bombing "back into the stone age"--and a stone age mentality resulted. Stalin was an ally, and then the resulting cold war was a consequence of a struggle for global dominance, not justice. The modern versions of these monsters usually get American support at some stage, viz. S. Hussein.

      When things go bad, the world doesn't come running to the USA so much as the USA intercedes, often after things have been contrived to go bad. Really, you need to do better research.

      I fail to see how having a base in Arabia saves any Jews, instead of inciting hatred. Perhaps you can tidily unravel the mess that is the post-colonial middle east for us in a slashdot posting...

      And yes, I believe that a trillion annual dollars applied to diplomacy, propaganda, and education would be far more effective and efficient than bombing. Most international diplomats and scholars would agree. Why is that more scary than an excess of armaments and an enormous standing army aimed offshore?

    132. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by adona1 · · Score: 1

      Somehow, short sighted people forget about a guy named HITLER, and STALIN, and POL POT.

      Well, the US never actually went to war with Stalin, preferring to speak loudly while carrying a large stick. As for Pol Pot, American bombing of Cambodia, a further illegal act in a never-actually-declared war allowed Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge to rise to power. American never actually did anything about Pol Pot when he was in power.

      You scare the crap out of me.

      And your grasp of history scares me. America isn't the cause of all evil in the world, but your "My country, right or wrong" attitude is nauseatingly naive.

      --
      Between the falling angel and the rising ape
    133. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by timpaton · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the best way to get Howard out is to vote Labor.

      ...ahead of Liberal.

      Not necessarily first, not necessarily second.

      As long as your Labor candidate is preferenced before your Lib/Nat candidate, it is effectively a Labor vote. In almost all cases, preferences will distill out until there are only two candidates left standing. Labor and Lib/Nat. Your vote will end up on the pile of whoever you preferenced first, even if they were 7 and 8 out of an 8 candidate ticket.

      We effectively get two votes.

      As above, the main race is the two-horse race for government. Small parties are an irrelevance to this. Whether you vote them 1 and 2, 1 and 8 or 7 and 8, you'll end up "represented" by one major party or the other. That's your "lesser of two evils" vote.

      The other vote we get is for statistics. First preference is noted and used in statistics, which go toward shaping policy. If the "Green vote" - that is, people giving Greens their #1 vote - jumps from 8% to 15%, that will be noted and talked about. There's next to no chance that your Green candidate will get up and take the seat (unless you're in inner Melbourne or Sydney), but you get to contribute to the statistics.

      Likewise with other minor parties. If your local anti-immigration-pro-gun-smokers-rights-evangelica l-christian-family-values party candidate gets a good slice of primary votes, that will be pondered over by the policy makers. You can endorse their position by voting them #1, even though they have no chance of taking the seat. It's the small colourful bars on the TV graphics on election night.

      Unfortunately, nobody takes much notice of which minor party you put in at #2. They'll all be eliminated, and it will come down to the big 2.

      Unless you agree with every one of their policies (or you're in one of the very few seats that are a genuine three-horse race), giving your primary vote to either of the major parties is a waste of your statistical vote.

    134. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by adona1 · · Score: 1

      Personally, I prefer to direct to a major party (hint: not Liberal) for the House of Representatives, and give my votes (I always vote below the line) for the Senate to minors. They're more likely to win a seat in the Upper House, and your preferences aren't directed by the elderly campaigners handing out their flyers :)

      --
      Between the falling angel and the rising ape
    135. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Genocide and slavery already existed in every place on the globe and was delivered to America before the USA was even founded. It was America that was able to end these things in its short life span and become THE keystone of the free world. Just about every free country in the world has room to breath because the US was the strongest nation in the world and not any of the others who sought to dominate with one fetid scheme ot another. Only a real creep could hate the US and your seething nature revelas your a failure in life - as are most US haters. If the world were perfect you would wither in misery at the recognition of your deformed being.

    136. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'm saying that spending a trillion dollars annually on international education/propaganda and diplomacy rather than military aggression would have resulted in greater security for the USA.


      That really goes without saying. If the US government had of spent thrice that amount on hookers and blackjack in Vegas it still would have amounted to greater security for the united states than a war in one of the most stable, secular and western friendly states in the middle east.

      I am an Australian and I am disgusted at the actions of our gutless toad of a prime minister. I voted labour in 04 but alas I fear the labour party is just a whole different kind of incompetent.
      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    137. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by gobbo · · Score: 1

      Hey, extreme dogma isn't off the hook. Islam is tearing itself apart, too. You seem to think there's only one source to blame. I do revise my sloppy statement: it isn't the military that produces radicalism, but its use, so I blame the planners for making things much worse. Making unnecessary enemies to build a clandestine empire is anti-american; General Eisenhower would agree.

      I do know about the history of various radical crazies, and have read their books, have seen the dead and the terror, have crouched under curfew, have even argued with some.

      Radical christianity may like having an enemy, but doesn't produce suicide bombers. Occupation does, however. Until fairly recently, suicide bombers were almost all targeting occupiers (perceived or real) as a desperate strategy. Expect that, were the roles reversed, dispossessed delusional radicals in muslim-occupied Atlanta would be strapping on the dynamite, mujaheddin in all but name.

      Without the global spread of USA's (& the former soviet) military presence and backing of nasty regimes, terrorism would be weak and localized, and a concern for elite police, not aircraft carriers. Sunni and Shia would focus on killing each other (the endless cycle of x1 vs. x2, where x = religious dogma). Give them a global occupier and a bigger enemy than each other, and they form a global resistance.

    138. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by ultranova · · Score: 1

      and yet, I bet you live in the US. here's a clue, tickets are cheap. Live in another country for a while and get back to us.

      You lose that bet. I live in Finland which, for now, is a sovereign country in northern Europe. Altought I admit I'm wondering about that sovereignty lately, with us being part of European Union and our politicians busy implementing all the absurd regulations EU throws us way...

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    139. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by verySmartApe · · Score: 1

      As terrible as things are now, you are really going overboard (to an anti-American extreme). It's more accurate to say the US has had more or less ethical foreign policy at different times with a mixed record on human rights. Take the bombing of Hiroshima for example. I think this was probably a mistake, but you can find many well-reasoned arguments supporting it. And the fact is, the decision was made by just a few men (principally Truman) in a time of war. It's not like there was a referendum. And what do you think other countries would have done? So how are you blaming the US exactly? You also have to admit that all things are relative. In the first half of the 20th century, the US comes out looking like a saint. Remember it was just the remnants of the British empire and the US that stopped fascism and Stalinism.

    140. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by dynamo · · Score: 1

      As a fellow shamed American, I have to point out by refusing to take ownership of your opportunity to affect the government of the US, unless you've already been working to change things, you are part of the problem. A lot of people would rather sit back and call real change impossible (or "un-electable") instead of thinking for themselves and doing something about it. You may not be able to directly affect more than 100 or so people if you work hard, but if you kick ass at it, those you manage to inspire just may start to add up, once they start trying too.

      Our behavior as a country has been very, very shitty toward the rest of the world. Agreed. But when you take that and go straight to "welcome to the new world order", as if it's done and finished and nothing that *you* could affect, you're just cheating the country of a thinking citizen to assuage your own guilt for not doing that affecting in your own community.

      If you have already been trying your ass off, then.. you deserve full credit for that, and maybe an apology, but I'm sensing an armchair critic mentality here.

      Personally I don't think the solution to US national arrogance is for the people of _Austrailia_ to grow some balls and start voting for someone who might tell US off.
      The solution is for people in this country to see through this idiotic premise I see everywhere that you are voting for who you think will win, instead of who you think SHOULD win.

      It ain't Australia's problem, it's ours.

    141. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Capsaicin · · Score: 1

      ... and your preferences aren't directed by the elderly campaigners handing out their flyers :)

      Arghhhh!

      Your preferences are directed by whatever you put on your ballot paper, unless you vote 1 only above the line on the table cloth (upper house) ballots (in which case you vote is directed along the preferences registered by the party you gave 1 to). The flyers are merely suggestions to voters, they do not direct the preferences of actual ballots.

      When (If) the party you voted 1 for is eliminated your vote goes to the party you voted 2 for, and so on until only two candidates remain. The relevance of the flyers (and so-called "exchanging of preferences") is that most people get confused by the idea of preferential voting so they simply follow 'their' party's suggestions.

      Just be thankful we don't have Condorcet voting!

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    142. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by fractoid · · Score: 1

      Hell, if it comes to that... my girlfriend is 17.

      I get some funny looks online for mentioning that, too. Odd how 'perfectly normal' in one country is 'omfg u perverted pedo' in another.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    143. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by ccp · · Score: 1


      You made my friends list.

      CC

    144. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm in. Where do US citizens register to vote in this election?
      Oh. Well, I just assumed since we're claiming jurisdiction...

      Actually since we are now being governed directly from Washington, isn't it we Australians who should be registering to vote in the US federal election? Then we can regard our election kinda like a state election ... I know, I know US states suffer less direct inteference from the US feds than the Australian govt does ...

    145. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cardinal Fang, bring out the cumfy chair!

    146. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by NewsWatcher · · Score: 1

      Genocide and slavery already existed in every place on the globe and was delivered to America before the USA was even founded. It was America that was able to end these things in its short life span.

      Could you please explain which part of Western Europe delivered genocide and slavery to America? You may be interested to know that America was just about the last Western nation on earth where you could legally buy and sell human beings. Slavery by the English in the British West Indies was banned in 1833. Slavery wasn't abolished in the United States until 1865!

      and become THE keystone of the free world.
      This is just propoganda. Look at the facts, not the slogans. The most free countries, in terms of civil and human rights are undoubtedly the Scandanavian countries. They have the most open media, the best education, the lowest povery etc.

      In the United States you are free to say pretty much anything, but you aren't given the freedom of dual citizenship. For the overwhelming majority of people in big cities you don't have the freedom to walk wherever you like without fear of getting mugged. You don't have the freedom to copy your own CDs either.

      Only a real creep could hate the US and your seething nature revelas your a failure in life.
      And of course only a real sycophant would unquestioningly accept every piece of government-inspired drivel they are fed. Try opening your eyes and looking at things independently.

      --
      If the pattern goes 9am, 10am, 11am, why isn't noon 12am?
    147. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      America really needs to seriously look at its self. How many times in recently have Americans shot each other in public places? at least twice in the last month. How many other modern western countries have had shootings this year?

      Also if America keeps interfering with other countries may be it will be more then just the middle east that want to kill Americans.

      Just a thought

    148. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by dpastern · · Score: 1

      Fuck off with that shite. You don't own Australia. You might own our fucking weak, wanker pollies like Johnny "can I bend over any further for you George" Howard, but you don't own the majority of Aussies. Most aussies dislike the US government, and we think Bush Jr. is a wanker without a brain. Pommies call them types of peoples "gits". Not sure what Americans call them. Owning the government, and the people are completely two different things. Tell that to the poor Americans stationed in Iraq at the moment ;-)

      I do absolutely agree with you that the US of A is a bully, and needs to be told to fuck off and stood up to, with full economic sanctions against them. Unfortunately, countries and governments care more about trade and money than they do about what's right. The first thing that needs to be done is to remove the UN. Dissolve it. Start a new organisation, with a 50% majority rules vote on issues, and NO veto votes. It's compulsory for each member state to donate a percentage of their GDP to the running of the organisation. That's the first step. Each and every country in this new organisation is worth one, and ONLY one vote. I don't care if your China with 1.5 billion people, you are ONE country, and you only get one vote. A small country like Fiji with 1 million or so people also gets that one vote. That's the only fair and equitable way of doing it. Ban ALL 'deals', like the US did with several UN nations to entice them to vote on US led votes.

      When you've done that, then you'll start to see the small countries like Venezuela and Iran having some ability to deal with the US bully. The US can't just veto things like it does consistently with Israel. If it doesn't get more than 50% of the votes, without bribes, tough shit. That's how a REAL democracy works. If enough countries realise that they can stand up to the US, and start doing so, it'll snowball. The only way to hurt the US and make it behave is full economic sanctions. Whilst this is great in theory, it does hurt the people :( The US already has one of the worst human rights records of any civilised country, one of the most corrupt governments, one of the worst social welfare systems and also one of the worst public medical systems. Oh, and I forgot the education system ;-) Don't get me wrong, Australia isn't much better and is in some areas, worse.

      Bleh, I've had my rant :)

      Dave

      Note: I don't have anything against the American people, but I have an intense dislike and hatred of American business, American politics, and American government.

      --
      Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. --Martin Luther King Jr.
    149. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Carlinya · · Score: 0

      And your own Naive thinking scares me. Not every country comes running to the US. Why should we, since your government and foreign policy seems determined to force their own idealogies down our throat with no thought to our culture and traditions? We may trade with you, exchange ideas, but that does not mean that we will follow you.

      Somehow, short sighted people forget about a guy named HITLER, and STALIN, and POL POT.

      I'm sorry, were US soldiers the only ones sent to war during the World Wars?

      But to blame the US for everything wrong in the world is insane.

      No, but by the looks of it, the US admin wants to be cop of the world, when people don't want them to. We're perfectly capable of administering our own country; we don't need you to come and "rescue" us, like what happened in Iraq and Afghanistan. Don't delude yourself; invading Afghan and Iraq was NOT for liberation, but colonisation.

      "I'm saying that spending a trillion dollars annually on international education/propaganda and diplomacy rather than military aggression would have resulted in greater security for the USA"

      Naive childlike thinking. You really believe that?


      Yes, because it works. It's harder to change minds but worth it in the long run because less people will die and less terrorists will spring up. Malaysia's "Winning the Hearts of the People" is one example (official name forgotten, as I'm translating directly from my memory in Malay) ended the Communist Insurgency in the 1960s-70s faster (that coupled with isolation as people weren't likely to aid terrorists once they understood the consequences and the reason why it was undesirable). When you change minds, you stay far longer than if you put them to the sword.

      --
      1 + 1 = 3?
    150. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Carlinya · · Score: 0

      Right, so their mathematical and astronomy sciences were stolen from the people they conquered? And they have been completely unproductive for the past 600 years?

      In reality there are many sciences that have their foundations in Muslim scholars' studies that are not acknowledged (pardon the horrible grammar). Not to mention the beautiful architecture/ geometry art.

      --
      1 + 1 = 3?
    151. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Coleon · · Score: 1

      I read some great post. Specially this one, but im not agree with "Until Australia (and, for that matter, the UK) learns to stand up to the world's biggest bully". When i followed the elections in US, the fist time Bush won... i saw that none of the two main candidats were a good choice. One was a puppet moved by "intrests" and the other one... a little too shy to be the the president of any country. Well everyone knows that those elections were a fraud. But OK the power of the money.. bla bla bla ... only resignation. But the SECOND time????? So you begin to wonder if Northamerican really know how to vote. I think maybe no one told them that you must mark the one you WANT TO BE PRESINDENT.. not the one you DONT WANT to be president. So Every one who votes in US has some responsability with their own country and... to the rest of the world as well. So yes!!! you can blame on the other president who wasnt strong enough to stand against the only country that can turn the rest of the world against you, but also what the people of US has done and continue doing with their political class, "DEMOCRACY system", voters and non voters too.

    152. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by killminus90 · · Score: 1

      WOW, I thought for a moment that this was Hillary Clinton Posting!!!!

    153. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's prison population is high because there are around 15 million illegal immigrants are there (many who criminals in their own country and were "allowed/encouraged" to leave) and they have inflated prison population by 25 - 30%. South Africa has the highest rape rate in the worlds and it leads world in crime rate per capita - and yet one never hears anything about it because the criminals are mostly blacks on whites. When people and media focus on USA to the nth degree while ignoring South Africa it's a sure sign these people are projecting/excusing.

    154. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just where did you get this utterly ridiculous idea that the US is a leader in freedom or human rights ?

      Musta been that pesky "Bill of Rights". Or maybe the "US Constitution". Possibly the "Declaration of Independence".

      Or is there some other country founded on the belief that all men are created equal, prior to 1776, that I'm forgetting?

    155. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does your memory only extend back 4 years, or have you honestly convinced yourself that the world at large was not sympathetic with the US after 9/11, and that we did not support their initial efforts to eradicate al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan?

    156. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, since we (the Norwegians) discovered America, we own the US and therefore rule the world.

    157. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's plain to see you are talking in spite of facts. If you had to link to credible statiscs for what you say you couldn't do it. Lay off the weed and get a life.

    158. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You want this to not be the case? Then elect and demand a government with some backbone that will tell the United States exactly where it can get off."

      We tried that, elected Gough Whitlam, who demanded access to Pine Gap, a secret US spy base. The US deposed him & installed (via proxy) Malcolm Fraser, who allowed the US their private base. We've had US trained poodles ever since. Our latest poodle, "Little Johnnie" reportedly has W's used toilet paper flown in for breakfast every morning. Just can't get enough of him.

    159. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      I'm not especially concerned about what other countries allow us to do to their own citizens.
      No extradition without representation?

      It strikes me as a little odd that their own paradisaical existence can be so terribly flawed as to permit them to be bundled up and submitted for processing by the big bad United States. Huh, maybe problems of government aren't unique to the US? Imagine that.
      Yup, you're right - the problem lies with our governments. Specifically, it lies with the fact that our governments have - either through direct collusion or (economic || military) force - kow-towed to US demands and requirements. We're prepared to start trying to do something about that; how about you guys?

      BTW, it's not a Republican vs Democrat thing - both of your political parties (have exerted || will continue to exert) this kind of influence on other sovereign nations. The United States of America really needs to stop tampering with the rest of the world for their own gain. We love you, really - we respect your ideals, we like your "have a go" attitude, we admire your tenacity. What we hate is when all that combines to behave like the big dumb bully down the street - you know, the one who everybody kinda likes, but who all too often throws his weight around in a tantrum to get his own way.

      Now that the bully has gotten big enough to hurt all of us combined, we'd like him to stop doing that. Please.

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    160. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      Australia's ELECTED LAWMAKERS approved the extradition treaty.
      They also approved a "Free" Trade Agreement which immediately gave specific trading rights to American producers - whilst, at the same time, locking Australian producers out of those same rights in perpetuity (well, at least until it's reviewed after 20 years - I wonder which way it'll go then, NOT! ). And, at the same time, required Australia to near-immediately align its IP regulations with the US's (which, I'm sure most on /. would agree, are arguably the worst in the world).

      Yup, we (the people) were dumb in electing these clowns. In our defence, not a one of us had even considered that our leaders would make a distinction between "core" election promises, "non-core" election promises, things they had planned but had never even hinted about, and outright lies. But our being dumb doesn't change the fact that America didn't play fair either. We're willing to try to stop being dumb; is America willing to try to start playing fair with the rest of the world?

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    161. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      The Australian court system isn't crooked and corrupt, so what's the problem with having the trial in Australia under Australian law?
      A cynic would say "because the Australian court system isn't crooked and corrupt"...

      The slightly less cynical and more curious me wonders if there hasn't been a similar sort of cross border case - involving, say, Nazi memorabilia looted from Germany and sold in France (both of which have similar laws regarding such goods) by a French citizen - and how it was resolved.

      Or some of the reasoning behind the High Court decision in the Joe Gutnick defamation case?

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    162. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by metacell · · Score: 1

      "Should I then risk being extradited to any of the ten countries? Or maybe to all of them, in turn?"

      Yes, if you distributed enough for the act to be criminal nature in all countries involved, including the country in which you reside.

      This might lead to unintended consequences, like ample ways to circumvent the legal system.

      For instance, in Sweden it's perfectly legal to remove the access protection on a DVD in order to play it on Linux. It's also part of my free speech rights to post instructions for this on a web site.

      If I did this and the MPAA wanted me extradited, they could tell the US authorities that I had broken copyright law in several different ways, some of which were illegal in Sweden (they don't need to prove it until I'm in their courts). Once I was extradited, the US courts would convict me for the one act I actually did commit, even though it is perfectly legal in Sweden!

      That way, I could be convicted in a foreign court, even though I had done nothing more than exercise my constitutional right to free speech. By working through companies registered in different countries, the copyright holder organisations could pick and choose which legal system they wanted someone to be tried under.

      I don't think it's beyond some copyright holder organisations to circumvent consitutional rights in this manner. And I don't think it's beyond mine nor USA:s governement to bend over and let them do it.

      This is a tough one, because many Slashdotters see piracy as a victimless crime -- information wants to be free, and all that. Unfortunately, the laws don't always agree with us.

      The laws don't always agree with the copyright holders either. That's why they change them to suit their purposes. Like extending copyright to 95 years for corporations.

      I don't think people should just sit quiet and let our laws be distorted to suit the purposes of a few big corporations. When a law is passed that the majority of the people disagree with, something is wrong with the system. The laws are there to serve the people, not commercial interests.

    163. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, NZ isn't a 'western' country? It's as much a 'western' country as Australia. Go our independent brothers to the east!

    164. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by 6th+time+lucky · · Score: 1

      the best way to get Howard out is to vote Labor

      But Howard is really only a figure head... He acts how the Liberal party wants him to act or he wouldnt be "the leader". It was his party buddies that made him the leader, not the voters.

      He has next to no special powers -except for superhuman eyebrows- and cant veto anything etc... and very few Australians actually "vote for" Howard. Replacing him will not effect how the party conducts itself, as the party is already concerned with getting their own votes. So with or without him things will still run as they are now, unless they think they need to change the way they act to get votes.

      The flip side of this is that they *want* you to believe that Howard is in power, and is controlling things. That way he is the scape goat for when things go really (more so) belly up. "OH, still vote lib, it was *HIM*, not *us*".

      The system kind of sucks... And I'm mot sure if the US presidential system would give a better or worse result...

    165. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by grimwell · · Score: 1

      That is a bad analogy. To kill someone, one generally needs to be in the same physical location as the victim.

      What about that point and click hunting website that some Texan nutter tried to (did?) set up? If someone got shot using that then where does juristiction lie? generally != always

      Your example is less than optimal. The crime(or accident) clearly happened on US soil, this gives the US jurisdiction.

      The individual in the story is an Australian citizen and his crime was committed outside of US borders. What gives the US jurisdiction over an Australian citizen?
      --
      If the govt becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for law, it invites man to become his own law, it invites anarchy
    166. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by sglines · · Score: 1

      I find it ironic that US thinks it's laws apply everywhere in the world ... except in Guantanamo Bay. I am, at this moment in time, ashamed to be an American.

    167. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by AP31R0N · · Score: 1

      Wow, how pathetic are you, AC? You make a thread about the law into a political thread. This guy broke the law. Read the big warnings that come up when you watch a rented movie. There's a big warning from the FBI and Interpol. What if this guy was sending tainted medicine to our old people? We have been leaning on China about bootlegging and copy right violation for about a decade now. Protecting our people is wrong all the sudden? Should people be able to escape justice by crossing a border or committing their crimes over international lines? The US a bully? You're a coward and a twit. We no more bullies today than we were in WW1 or WW2. The only difference is now people think overthrowing mass murdering tyrants who invades his neighbors is a bad thing because of who happens to be president. Grow up soon, please. Promise us that you'll grow up before the next election. Zach de la Rocha wants his campus anarchist schtick back.

      --
      Utilizing the synergization of benchmark e-solutions to pre-workaround action items!
    168. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Musta been that pesky "Bill of Rights". Or maybe the "US Constitution". Possibly the "Declaration of Independence".

      I guess those were enforced selectively, then, since they didn't stop the genocide, slavery, and general villainy the newly-found US proceeded to engage in.

      Or is there some other country founded on the belief that all men are created equal, prior to 1776, that I'm forgetting?

      As I already stated, US was found on genocide - of the indians - and slavery - of imported africans, since indians turned out to not be as durable as slaves. If there was any believe in equality there, it certainly didn't show.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    169. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by stenn · · Score: 1
      So you were happier with the soviets breathing down your neck? Ask the Estonians what that was like (I worked in Tallinn for a while).


      If there is something going on that you do not like, don't just complain, offer a valid, alternative solution. Then work to see it implemented, peacefully. Initial actions that require violence to gain support is an indication that you may not be on the right track. Responding to violence requires a level of retaliation that stuns the attackers.

    170. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      I agree with most of what you said. It is about balance of perspective. I will take a couple things you said, and expand on them.

      "I'd like to point out however that the USA considered Stalin an ally against Hitler, and that that same USA actively supported quite a number of (fascist or otherwise) dictators including a certain Saddam."

      Enemy of my enemy is my friend. Stalin was a brutal dictator, and we knew it even during WWII. In fact, there is rumor that Paton (I think it was him) wanted to invade SU because he knew what Stalin was. But we didn't because the country was weary enough from the last war. We got 50 years of "Cold War" instead.

      The next case I'm going to use is the Shaw of Iran, which was an "ally" in the ME. Carter thought he was a rogue and dictator and refused to support him any longer, and he was overthrown in a Jihadist revolution we are still dealing with today. In fact the current president of Iran was one of the ring leaders of that revolution.

      EVERYTHING has consequences. Hindsight is always better than foresight. The biggest problem we have as a country is not who we are, it is that we have LOST SIGHT of the ideals we need to strive for. This is something both the (D) and the (R) parties have lost, since all they can see is power.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    171. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Enemy of my enemy is my friend. Stalin was a brutal dictator, and we knew it even during WWII. In fact, there is rumor that Paton (I think it was him) wanted to invade SU because he knew what Stalin was. But we didn't because the country was weary enough from the last war. We got 50 years of "Cold War" instead.

      Yes, and on top of that, quite a few of the people who worked with Hitler were found very usefull in that cold war.

      The point is that the USA supports those who come in handy for the USA's economic and political goals. This has nothing whatsoever to do with fighting for freedom or democracy, and more often then not, it works against both.

      The next case I'm going to use is the Shaw of Iran, which was an "ally" in the ME. Carter thought he was a rogue and dictator and refused to support him any longer, and he was overthrown in a Jihadist revolution we are still dealing with today. In fact the current president of Iran was one of the ring leaders of that revolution.

      And for all I can tell, Carter was right, and the fact that the Islamic revolution turned against the USA also is exactly because the USA was seen as those who had kept the shaw in power and supported the oppression that it brought.

      EVERYTHING has consequences. Hindsight is always better than foresight.

      Absolutely, but that doesn't change that some consequences are easily forseen, and some follow such a clear pattern that you can learn from example and not repeat the same mistakes.

      The biggest problem we have as a country is not who we are,

      Absolutely. As a people you are as human as all the others on this planet, making mistakes? sure. inherently evil? not unless all of us are (which I happen to not believe)

      it is that we have LOST SIGHT of the ideals we need to strive for.

      And that while they are being repeated on an almost daily basis...

      This is something both the (D) and the (R) parties have lost, since all they can see is power.

      Power corrupts, no news there.

      This is why a system that results in static political parties is doomed in the end.

    172. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by sholden · · Score: 1

      Gutnick's case was insanity I admit. Though the sort of insanity I would expect the US likes and hence wouldn't count is crookedness or corruption - just in the wrong domain (defamation not copyright law).

    173. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by biovoid · · Score: 1

      I'm not especially concerned about what other countries allow us to do to their own citizens.

      And you wonder why we deride you and your country? Here's a tip - it's because of fucked-up attitudes like that.

    174. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whenever the people had enough and did something about it... of course MLK is not the US government so I guess your point was well made. It's just in this country whenever the people get pissed off and change the status quo, our history books place the credit on "This Great Nation". I guess that's why most labor disputes are never taught in school history short of a bit about the ILWU.

    175. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.cbc.ca/consumer/story/2007/05/08/fish-f arms.html?ref=rss/

      Hopefully all the nuts (like yourself) in the big wide land of the fucked will pass away and do us all a favor. Cheers to Canada and China for doing us all a big favor.

    176. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by adona1 · · Score: 1

      Not so much....the Liberal party is different to Labor inasmuch as the leader effectively controls the party, rather than answering to caucus (looked around on Wikipedia to back that up, with no luck...so referring back to high school and university politics classes). And at this point in time, the Liberal MPs are pretty tightly in Howard's grasp.

      --
      Between the falling angel and the rising ape
    177. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by gobbo · · Score: 1

      Yes, and on top of that, quite a few of the people who worked with Hitler were found very usefull in that cold war.

      In a sly but perhaps not-so-moral move, the USA scooped as much of the Nazi scientific and intelligence system as it could, in Operation Paperclip.

      ...the fact that the Islamic revolution turned against the USA also is exactly because the USA was seen as those who had kept the shaw [sic] in power and supported the oppression that it brought.

      You forget, or didn't know, that the democratically elected and popular leader of Iran, Mohammed Mosaddeq, was overthrown in a coup by the USA ( and the UK) through Operation Ajax. This CIA operation had little to do with truth, justice, or the American Way, but oil, money, and geopolitical dominance. Because of propaganda, americans don't know this, but those in the region do. The Shah was an evil prick in comparison to Mossadeq; people suffered.

      This is all public record. It isn't just the support for the Shah, it was the attack on a functioning democracy that was so galling. It backfired: Mosaddeq came back under the Shah, because people took to the streets, and things got as complicated as any Persian plot. The current anti-americanism in the region is the predictable result of meddling like this, but do you think the US electorate knows anything of it? How would Americans feel if Chinese and Vietnamese intelligence agencies orchestrated a coup in Washington? That's what you're up against in Iran.

    178. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Ha.. think again. I live to your north, in Guam, and we get no federal votes here. Of course, if you accept statehood...

    179. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "Power corrupts, no news there."

      Indeed it does. You voting for Libertarian, where each of us is responsible for ourselves, or are you going to vote for another party that thinks it knows what is best for everyone else and use the power of the government to dictate those ideals????

      As far as I can tell, Libertarians are the only ones promoting the idea that each of us has the power and authority to be self reliant and self responsible. Greens, Peace n Freedom, Democrats, Republicans, Socialists, Communists etc all think THEIR way is the best, and will codify those beliefs into law. In a word, they all are "elitists" in one way or another.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    180. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Indeed it does. You voting for Libertarian, where each of us is responsible for ourselves, or are you going to vote for another party that thinks it knows what is best for everyone else and use the power of the government to dictate those ideals????

      No, first of all because I'm not american, second, because I don't think their idea works in todays world. I happen to live somewhere where no single party can dictate policy at any time, seems to work a bit better to curb the corruption that power comes with.

      In case of libertarians, they don't have a working solution simply because the power of your own gun also corrupts. The only way to deal with it is knowing that it happens and put a halt to it before it gets out of hand.

      As far as I can tell, Libertarians are the only ones promoting the idea that each of us has the power and authority to be self reliant and self responsible. Greens, Peace n Freedom, Democrats, Republicans, Socialists, Communists etc all think THEIR way is the best, and will codify those beliefs into law. In a word, they all are "elitists" in one way or another.

      Ah, and there is no level of 'the libertarian way is best' in your post at all...

      Pot, meet kettle.

    181. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by bandmassa · · Score: 1

      Yup, later this year vote Labor in kangaroo land.

      --
      "I hope you like Guinness, Sir. I find it a refreshing substitute for, er... food." Col. Jack O'Neil, SG-1
    182. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "The only way to deal with it is knowing that it happens and put a halt to it before it gets out of hand."

      So, you into mind reading?

      "In case of libertarians, they don't have a working solution simply because the power of your own gun also corrupts."

      Which is harder to stop, the corruption of one, or the corruption of an organized many? See Drug Cartels for example. You cut off one head, and many more replace it. See Iraq, you kill Zarkawi and three more take his place.

      As you can see, true power comes from "groups" who want to take from everyone else, not the one guy with a gun. BTW, I own two, and I've never used them to increase my power. I know this is a hard concept to explain, but I usually explain it this way. Ted Kennedy's car has killed more people than my two guns have. Who has more power? Who should have more power?

      True corruption is defined by people who think the rules don't apply to themselves. Paris Hilton? Congress, Al Gore (big eco sucking house).

      "Ah, and there is no level of 'the libertarian way is best' in your post at all..."

      Sure there is. Leave me alone, and I'll leave you alone. Mess with me, expect to be messed with back. Pull a gun and try shooting the school up, expect to be shot by 4 of your gun toting friends.

      An armed society is a polite society. Manners are good when one may have to back up his acts with his life. --Robert A. Heinlein

      Want to know why people act like assholes? Because there is no law against being an asshole. But respond to the asshole by giving him a punch in the nose, and you go to jail (Assault and Battery, causing bodily harm, 1-5 Prison). Assholes never learn this way, they just become bigger assholes (insert Goatse guy pic here).

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    183. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Vote green. Vote Democrat. Vote independent. Vote for a member with some backbone...

      ...then watch while the preference system does its thing and Howard wins again.

    184. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      So, you into mind reading?

      Into reading my own mind? sure. You should try it with yours as well..

      Which is harder to stop, the corruption of one, or the corruption of an organized many? See Drug Cartels for example. You cut off one head, and many more replace it. See Iraq, you kill Zarkawi and three more take his place.

      Drug cartels, insurgants in Iraq, they exist due to the lack of government power. You really believe that when you remove that power that all will be fine? I suggest looking at some other examples of places where central government collapsed and see how well they did..

      As you can see, true power comes from "groups" who want to take from everyone else, not the one guy with a gun. BTW, I own two, and I've never used them to increase my power. I know this is a hard concept to explain, but I usually explain it this way. Ted Kennedy's car has killed more people than my two guns have. Who has more power? Who should have more power?

      Since this is not an exclusive choice between cars and guns, your comment is pretty non-sensical.

      Regardless, the point was that not all power comes from groups, rather, usually it doesn't come from a group at all.

      By the way, how often does it happen that someone kills a group of people with a car on purpose? How often does this happen with guns?

      And no, I am not arguing to forbid all guns, I am pointing at a problem with your argument, specifically, it is simplistic and not at all related to this thing called reality.

      True corruption is defined by people who think the rules don't apply to themselves. Paris Hilton? Congress, Al Gore (big eco sucking house).

      Well, last time I checked, Paris Hilton and Al Gore aren't 'groups of people' yet..

      So what is it?

    185. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "Drug cartels, insurgants in Iraq, they exist due to the lack of government power. You really believe that when you remove that power that all will be fine?"

      Well, we have a dilemma then don't we. Everything has a cause and effect going back for eternity, so that there is no way to get people to leave each other alone (leave me alone and I'll leave you alone-rule). In the case of Iraq insurgents (Many, if not most, not actually from Iraq), they'll say that we messed with them first, to which we'll reply that Saddam invaded Kuwait and on and on backwards. Same with any other "conflict"

      And there is nothing wrong with government power as long as it doesn't become an end unto itself, as it currently is. We do need some level of societal governance, to the extent that it must exist, it should be limited.

      At some point, we must defeat all those that oppose the governance of the people, by the people. The group doesn't have the right to restrict personal freedom for the sake of the group. However the personal freedom we have, stops at our own arms length. My personal freedom doesn't mean I can punch the next guy; the moment personal liberty ends is the moment it starts affecting others.

      I may have the freedom of speech and religion, but that doesn't give me the right to make you listen or believe as I do. The case of Islamofacists is such that they want to force everyone, world wide into their particular view of things.

      My particular views also affect things such as environmentalist. Society has a right to stop a person from polluting the stream and ruining it for those that live downsriver, because while they have the right to do whatever they want, the moment it affects others, the others have the right to restrict those very actions, to the extent that it affects them.

      "Drug cartels, insurgants in Iraq, they exist due to the lack of government power."

      Actually that is the long lasting result of not applying rules of freedom and responsibility earlier. Drug cartels are there because the government seeks to restrict people acting freely, in the vain attempt of trying to protect people pro actively. If drugs were legal, and we left people to destroy their own lives, everything would be fine, no need for drug cartels, and people violently defending their livelyhood.

      "Since this is not an exclusive choice between cars and guns, your comment is pretty non-sensical."

      Not really. The result of improper use of a gun and the improper use of Ted Kennedy's car is the same. Saying one is bad (guns) while the other is okay (cars) is a gross fallacy. Both are inanimate objects incapable of acting by themselves. So the responsibility for the results goes to those behind each.

      Because you have a world view that inanimate objects are "good" and "bad" while people aren't is 180 degrees backwards.

      "And no, I am not arguing to forbid all guns, I am pointing at a problem with your argument, specifically, it is simplistic and not at all related to this thing called reality."

      Occam's Razor does apply here. Even if you don't realize it. Ever increasing complicated sets of laws isn't helping.

      "Well, last time I checked, Paris Hilton and Al Gore aren't 'groups of people' yet."

      They are singular examples of types of people (including groups) that think the rules shouldn't apply to them. I also gave a Group example (Congress). I dare say that Paris Hilton has more influence and power than I do, if only for her money, and what it buys from others who cede to her corruption and influence, for the sake of gaining wealth.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    186. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Just a few comments..

      Well, we have a dilemma then don't we. Everything has a cause and effect going back for eternity, so that there is no way to get people to leave each other alone (leave me alone and I'll leave you alone-rule). In the case of Iraq insurgents (Many, if not most, not actually from Iraq), they'll say that we messed with them first, to which we'll reply that Saddam invaded Kuwait and on and on backwards. Same with any other "conflict"

      And this means what? that we shouldn't look at the causes and effects and just assume things that sound nice or logical at first glance?

      And there is nothing wrong with government power as long as it doesn't become an end unto itself, as it currently is. We do need some level of societal governance, to the extent that it must exist, it should be limited.

      I think that you and I agree on this concept, but not on what it means in practise.

      Also, I rather believe the trick is in having measures to limit that government power because it has a natural tendency to grow.

      At some point, we must defeat all those that oppose the governance of the people, by the people.

      For the people bu the people.. hmmm, I heard that one before.. I believe it turned into 'by the elite for the elite' wherever they tried to implement it.

      The group doesn't have the right to restrict personal freedom for the sake of the group

      The group does however have every right to demand that you give up certain freedoms in order to be a member of the group.

      Not really. The result of improper use of a gun and the improper use of Ted Kennedy's car is the same. Saying one is bad (guns) while the other is okay (cars) is a gross fallacy. Both are inanimate objects incapable of acting by themselves. So the responsibility for the results goes to those behind each.

      You see, I never argued that guns are inherently bad or such, I argued that the power of your own gun corrupts. Yes, the power of your own big fast car corrupts as well, it doesn't change anything because the argument is that this has nothing to do with groups, nothing to do with parties, and everything with things that give you a certain amount of extra power having the potential of corrupting you.

      I don't know where you got the idea that I ever made that kind of argument, and if you really misread my original statement as making that argument then you really need to do something about your reading skills or your anger level or both.

    187. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "And this means what? that we shouldn't look at the causes and effects and just assume things that sound nice or logical at first glance?"

      No, but at some level, it is pointless, because it goes back ad-infinitum. Everything is caused or related to something else. At some point, we have to accept what we do going forward more than looking backwards and getting whatever pound of flesh we each think we deserve for some past wrong that someone else did 150, 500, or 2000 years ago.

      "I think that you and I agree on this concept, but not on what it means in practise."

      Problably do. I honestly think that most reasonable people have the same ultimate goals. The trick is who is going to force who to accept what. My personal philosophy is personal choice over forced compliance for most social "goals". Of course, that means certain things are doomed to failure sooner rather than later (social security, eg). Imagine if drugs were legalized and taxed like tobacco and alcohol are. Imagine income not being taxed, at all. Imagine all the social items that people agree are "bad" taxed. Nobody would be "forced" to pay any taxes, as it would be only for items that society deemed "not good", like tobacco and alcohol. We already proved that banning substances and social faux pas increases crime (prohibition).

      "Also, I rather believe the trick is in having measures to limit that government power because it has a natural tendency to grow."

      I'd support the idea of "program justification", where each program would be required to set performance measures and goals, and any program that failed to meet said goals would be abandoned. We've spent perhaps BILLIONS or more on the following "wars" : Poverty, crime, drugs. And yet we still have "poor" and crime and drug problems that fill up our welfare rolls and prisons. Something isn't working. Nobody is willing to try something completely different because they are scared. I'm not.

      "For the people bu the people.. hmmm, I heard that one before.. I believe it turned into 'by the elite for the elite' wherever they tried to implement it."

      The problem isn't the concept, it has been the implementation. The US government (best example IMHO) has breached its own laws repeatedly, most notably during the Civil War. Aside from freeing the slaves, there was nothing good about it, and it allowed the ILLEGAL increase and scope of the federal government. It is high time for the states and people to start exercising their enumerated rights and taking them back from the US Fed Gov't.

      "The group does however have every right to demand that you give up certain freedoms in order to be a member of the group."

      They don't have the right to force me into their group, either by coercion or by veiled threat. My point is all group memebership should be voluntary. Which is why when people like Al Sharpton speak for "the whole african-american community" I cringe. My darker skinned friends don't agree with that poverty pimp, and wish he wouldn't speak out for them.

      "I argued that the power of your own gun corrupts."

      The power of my gun, is easily negated by the power of yours. The power of my car is negated by yours. People driving SUVs have a greater responsibility towards those around them in their Prius'. I have NO problem with the "group" removing (by force, if necissary) irresponsible people from their inanimate objects when they abuse the power behind them.

      Part of the problem here, is that people think that they have the "right" to do whatever they want, and to hell with everyone else. Screw them! They have the right to do whatever they want, but the moment it affects someone else, that right ends. I have a right to drive big honkin SUV if I want, but I can't drive the Prius off the road because it is in my way.

      "I don't know where you got the idea that I ever made that kind of argument, and if you really misread my original statement as making that argument then you really need to do something about your reading skills or your ange

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    188. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      You made the arguement when you said that my gun and TK's car have nothing in common, which is a gross fallacy. They have much in common, but the most important isn't what they are, it is both are inanimate objects, incapable of acting by themselves.

      The problem is not the objects but how their owners/users deal with them.

      While both are objects and can be used in exercising of power, the power that corrupted one (TK), hasn't affect another(me), namely because there were other aspects of "power" that simply haven't been accounted for.

      Observe your fellow humans a bit and you will quite see how their 'power' corrupts them and how the resulting behavior afffects you. This does not come from the actual killing that both objects can do, but from that both can be used to threaten.

      That you can counter that with your own power doesn't change this, it at best negates it.

      The fact is, if I drove off the bridge in my car with a young lady and she died, I sure the hell couldn't have been elected to the Senate, even once. In fact, I'm sure I'd have been thrown in jail for it.

      The point is, I don't have "much" power, and it hasn't corrupted me. I doubt you have "much" power either, and I'm sure that it hasn't corrupted you. Restrict the power of ALL people, and there is less chance of corruption, which I'm sure you will agree with.


      But restricting the power of all people results in arbitrary rules about what power everyone can have, and that is something that we are simply not ever going to agree on, and even if we did, without some form of coercion you are not going to get everyone to comply and not try to grab as much power as they can get.

    189. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "The problem is not the objects but how their owners/users deal with them."

      I think I said as much.

      "Observe your fellow humans a bit and you will quite see how their 'power' corrupts them and how the resulting behavior afffects you."

      Agreed. But the power of the Government has restricted my ability to deal with people inflicting me with their actions. When people are arrested for doing the "right thing" (Shooting a bugler) while those who are doing "the wrong thing" are rewarded (suing a mall because you fell through a skylight) there is something seriously wrong. The fact that EITHER of these happens, even ONCE is a sign that society is screwed.

      "That you can counter that with your own power doesn't change this, it at best negates it."

      I think I said as much. This is the purpose of the Second Ammendment. However, even having guns (or mulitples of them) doesn't provide protection in all cases. See Randy Weaver, Waco for examples.

      "But restricting the power of all people results in arbitrary rules about what power everyone can have,"

      No it doesn't. You are thinking too linearly. Power is only Power when exercised. If I have guns, and cars and all sorts of stuff in my house, it doesn't mean I'm corrupt or powerful. It is only when I use those items against others that it matters. Power isn't in the form of inanimate objects. Power is related to the force of will.

      There are no Arbitrary rules in my world. Arbitrary rules are nothing more than rules without thought, or unenforceable, or only enforced when convenient. The last kind is the worst kind.

      "without some form of coercion you are not going to get everyone to comply and not try to grab as much power as they can get."

      If people realize that this was futile, it wouldn't happen. If you TRIED To grab power, and it was rebuffed by many people, then it is useless to try and grab power. Power only incresses when people cede what is rightfully theirs to another. Some are more willing to do that than others. I'm not willing at all.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    190. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Agreed. But the power of the Government has restricted my ability to deal with people inflicting me with their actions. When people are arrested for doing the "right thing" (Shooting a bugler) while those who are doing "the wrong thing" are rewarded (suing a mall because you fell through a skylight) there is something seriously wrong. The fact that EITHER of these happens, even ONCE is a sign that society is screwed.

      Lets just for a moment realize that that may be true in the USA, but it isn't in most of the world.

      Not to mention that many people do not agree that shooting a burgler is the right thing to do (and many do agree of course).

      No it doesn't. You are thinking too linearly. Power is only Power when exercised. If I have guns, and cars and all sorts of stuff in my house, it doesn't mean I'm corrupt or powerful. It is only when I use those items against others that it matters. Power isn't in the form of inanimate objects. Power is related to the force of will.

      And whatever limits you put on that is still arbitrary.

      In your book it is ok to shoot and kill a burgler on your property, in my book it is ok to chase them off, and to defend yourself from someone attacking you, but using deadly force against a burgler is not (and don't come with the 'but he threatened me' because that I already dealt with (yes, when directly threatened, you can quite defend yourself even with deadly force), or 'he is a potential threat' since there is an easy to find correlation between violent behavior from burglars and them expecting violence when caught.

      There are no Arbitrary rules in my world. Arbitrary rules are nothing more than rules without thought, or unenforceable, or only enforced when convenient. The last kind is the worst kind.

      As I just showed, there are arbitrary rules in your world.

      Arbitrary rules are those rules where it is upto the arbiter (you in this case) to decide the line. Not recognizing them as such just increases the risk on enforcement when it is convenient.

    191. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Shooting a burgler isn't arbitrary. It is the resultant reaction of a properly maintained set of rights. I have the right to stop anyone violating MY rights by whatever means I see fit. Because I have the "right" to shoot a burgler doesn't necessarily mean I have to, but then again, it is my choice.

      There are those that think that any action by a private citizen such as even CONFRONTING a burgler should be illegal, that the POLICE should handle all such matters. However, the fact remains that this society (Western Democracies in general) frown upon a private citizen from taking action to stop a violation of someone's right to privacy, including brandishing (not actually using) a weapon.

      You see, under NORMAL circumstances brandishing a weapon is an act against another's right to be secure, but that doesn't play with the burgler situation from above, in which case the violation was on the part of the burgler.

      If we continue the burgler line above, if I brandish (not use) a weapon, and the burgler flees empty handed, then my rights have been restored, and I cannot pursuit the aborted thief, just to shoot him later. It isn't arbitrary, it is very consistant.

      Lastly, I take it that you are not from the USA, or if so, you are playing to the foreign audience. It is at this point, I would like to state that most city dwellers have no idea what most of America is like. The so-called "fly over states" are mostly empty space, and the population centers are along the east and west coast (for the most part).

      Just to give you an idea, the least populated state / area is Wyoming. It has about 100k mi sq (250 km sq), and only 500k people in it. It is largely wild and empty (Chyenne, the biggest city has 55k people).

      I make this point because people have no idea what it is like in Rural anymore. In Wyoming, it is common to see people wearing guns in a holster walking down the street of Jackson or other "city". Nobody thinks twice, and people are quite polite.

      In other words ... Guns aren't the problem. People in Wyoming understand what it means to be free in ways that city folk have no clue about. I see lots of city people making suggestions for how things "ought" to be, which wouldn't work in places like Wyoming. What works in a city doesn't work in the back woods. And is a big reason why gun laws will never be national here in the USA.

      One size fits all is a myth.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    192. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Shooting a burgler isn't arbitrary. It is the resultant reaction of a properly maintained set of rights. I have the right to stop anyone violating MY rights by whatever means I see fit. Because I have the "right" to shoot a burgler doesn't necessarily mean I have to, but then again, it is my choice.

      You have the right to use proportional means to stop a burgler, not 'whatever means you see fit'.

      As a matter of fact, I believe you only have the right to use proportional means, you believe you can use whatever means you see fit, and again it is clear that your 'rule' is arbitrary. Not because you didn't think about it, but because others who also thought about it at least as well but using somewhat different assumptions, come to different conclusions.

      There are those that think that any action by a private citizen such as even CONFRONTING a burgler should be illegal, that the POLICE should handle all such matters.

      I don't, but that doesn't mean I believe I can use 'whatever means'

      However, the fact remains that this society (Western Democracies in general) frown upon a private citizen from taking action to stop a violation of someone's right to privacy, including brandishing (not actually using) a weapon.

      You may want to realize that ideas about this are really really really different between the USA and for example most of continental Europe. For that reason alone your statement above fails to make sense to me.

      What is however true is that in most places, when you end up using violence against a burglar for example, you will be put on trial to see if what you did was justified. Maybe you are confused a bit by this? It nowhere indicates that such a society frowns on taking action, it can however indicate that a society does not take lightly the use of violence and wants to investigate and see if someone crossed the line of what is acceptable.

      You see, under NORMAL circumstances brandishing a weapon is an act against another's right to be secure, but that doesn't play with the burgler situation from above, in which case the violation was on the part of the burgler.

      If we continue the burgler line above, if I brandish (not use) a weapon, and the burgler flees empty handed, then my rights have been restored, and I cannot pursuit the aborted thief, just to shoot him later. It isn't arbitrary, it is very consistant.


      You see, I do completely agree with your reasoning here, but I do also know people who don't, and who can bring up a completely consistant and well considered argument as to why they don't agree. Hence this is still arbitrary.

      Lastly, I take it that you are not from the USA, or if so, you are playing to the foreign audience.

      I am not, I believe I mentioned that somewhere, but if not, sorry, it is somewhat relevant to the discussion to know indeed.

      It is at this point, I would like to state that most city dwellers have no idea what most of America is like.

      While I am not from the USA, I have lived and worked there (Austin, TX).

      The so-called "fly over states" are mostly empty space, and the population centers are along the east and west coast (for the most part).

      And I could as easily say that most who live in the countryside have no idea what citylife is about.

      Matter of fact is, a substantial part of the people (the majority even) lives in cities, so your use of 'most' might be correct with regards to space, but not to people.

    193. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "You have the right to use proportional means to stop a burgler, not 'whatever means you see fit'."

      Actually, this is wrong in so many ways. This is the CURRENT legal system for sure, not one based upon mutual respect of personal liberty. The current system doesn't respect personal liberty at all, and it doesn't support individuals from defending their personal liberties.

      The basis for personal liberties is mutual respect, not law. No amount of laws can protect liberty, it has to be based upon mutual respect.

      "I don't, but that doesn't mean I believe I can use 'whatever means'"

      That's because you've been conditioned to look towards the government to protect your liberties, which it cannot do. When liberty is precious, you're able to defend it with extreme prejudice. When it is not precious, one cowers in the corner waiting for the police to help.

      "You may want to realize that ideas about this are really really really different between the USA and for example most of continental Europe. For that reason alone your statement above fails to make sense to me."

      Actually, I have relatives that are in Europe, and I have relatives scattered across the USA. The trend here in the US, especially in the dense left and right coasts to try and move more towards the Western European model of laws and culture.

      Again, no amount of law is going to protect liberty. And in my view of things, the government isn't going to protect liberty, because personal liberty is contrary to government power.

      "Hence this is still arbitrary."

      My reasoning isn't arbatrary, but consistent. It has everything to do with understanding what personal liberty is, where it extends to, and where it breaks. The moment my "liberty" starts affecting other's personal liberty it is no longer MY liberty that rules. It is clearly definable, and there is no arbitrary understanding.

      "I am not, I believe I mentioned that somewhere, but if not, sorry, it is somewhat relevant to the discussion to know indeed."

      I kinda figured, but you didn't say one way or another.

      "And I could as easily say that most who live in the countryside have no idea what citylife is about."

      Agreed. I grew up in Los Angeles Area, and moved to fairly "rural" Northern California during college, and remain here to this day. Needless to say, it was a culture shock of sorts. However, I still live in a "city" of 150k people (or so), so it isn't quite like Wyoming.

      "Matter of fact is, a substantial part of the people (the majority even) lives in cities, so your use of 'most' might be correct with regards to space, but not to people."

      Actually, about 50/50 split, at least according to recent national elections here, it is the whole basis for "Red State/Blue State" phenomenon we see each election cycle.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    194. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Actually, this is wrong in so many ways. This is the CURRENT legal system for sure, not one based upon mutual respect of personal liberty. The current system doesn't respect personal liberty at all, and it doesn't support individuals from defending their personal liberties.

      And I happen to believe it is right, and the 'whatever means' is wrong in so many ways.

      You see, this is why such rules are arbitrary. They are based upon belief and assumptions.

      The basis for personal liberties is mutual respect, not law. No amount of laws can protect liberty, it has to be based upon mutual respect.

      Using proportional means to defend your property still means you can defend your property, but it also means that you have to respect certain basic rights of the person who is breaking into your house. This is a strange concept for most who never really researched why laws exist as they do because it is counter intuitive. It is however fundamental to creating a society that is fair to its members.

      Proportionality is also important for dealing with crime because it makes sure that you can respond more strongly on a more severe crime.

      It is also indeed the basis of current laws (however badly implemented) and there exists a huge body of literature as to why this is. If you study a bit of world history and not limit yourself to the USA, you would have known that this concept is relatively new, and turned out to be a huge advancement in providing justice and fairness.

      Actually, I have relatives that are in Europe, and I have relatives scattered across the USA. The trend here in the US, especially in the dense left and right coasts to try and move more towards the Western European model of laws and culture.

      Just like people in the countryside in Europe tend a bit more towards your opinion and ideas about this.

      Maybe it has a lot to do with what works when you have more then a few people per square mile.

      Again, no amount of law is going to protect liberty.

      I'm pretty sure the 1st amandment on the USA constitution protects liberty, as does the 4th, so what you just said is not true.

      And in my view of things, the government isn't going to protect liberty, because personal liberty is contrary to government power.

      There is an inherent conflict between government power and personal liberty, but they do not contradict eachother directly.

      No government power means that personal liberty directly depends on having the biggest gun, which means that for virtually all people, less personal liberty then they have now.

      Too much government power limits personal liberty to a similar point where few people have personal liberties and most don't.

      So, there is an optimum for government power where you can maximize the personal liberty of the largest number of people, and it is somewhere in between no government power and a lot of government power.

      This is why it makes a lot of sense to argue the size and powers of a government, but arguing that they are inherently bad is nonsense.

    195. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "certain basic rights of the person who is breaking into your house."

      Okay, what rights does someone have when they don't respect and are actively disrespecting the liberties of others?

      Let's adjust this a bit further, say someone is shooting people like just the other week at VT. Does that person have the same "rights" as the burgler? Some people say YES (including me BTW, and you'll see why).

      The most basic liberty is the right to life; to live.

      Using the logic you've given then nobody has a "right" to take the life of another, ever or under any circumstances.

      Which is why you see people pleading with killers and 'negotiating' with them. It is pure insanity.

      I can guarantee you that if people who disrespected rights of others knew that they there was a potential to be killed while they were actively disrepecting liberties of others, there would be a much lower rate of that disrespect.

      You can see that this basic idea still exists today, in the most primitive ways among the "Gangstas" who shoot and kill for the slightest "disrespect". The problem is, that they aren't taught to respect others at all by anyone. This is how women become "ho's" and men become "gangstas". But I digress.

      Proportional response is nothing more than Political Correctness, and doesn't address the real problem. Therefore Burglary and Murder are two different responses, and yet even people actively murdering are handled with kit gloves.

      "Maybe it has a lot to do with what works when you have more then a few people per square mile."

      Perhaps. I actually think this has more to do with blended boundaries. Houses now need fences to keep neighbors from encroaching on yards, while in Wyoming fences are used to keep livestock in more than anything else.

      In cities, I don't want to hear my neighbors music played at top volumes, but in Wyoming nobody can hear it if I do play it loud etc. Again, it comes down to respect for those around you. All the laws in the world cannot teach respect.

      "personal liberty directly depends on having the biggest gun"

      No, personal liberty requires two things not taught anymore. Respect and responsibility. Both have been replaced. Laws for basic respect, and government for responsibility. And both are failing (IMHO) to do the job. Again, laws cannot teach respect, doesn't demand respect. The Government has taken much of the way of responsibility from individuals. Which is why you have "group rights" now, and people trying to form coalitions to gain "more rights".

      "So, there is an optimum for government power where you can maximize the personal liberty of the largest number of people, and it is somewhere in between no government power and a lot of government power."

      Government has no ability to rule personal liberty. Only mutual respect can do that. If you look at the Preamble to the US Constitution, you will see the proper role of government defined.

      We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

      A few of the words in that one sentence can be removed (being US Centric), but none the less is very powerful even to this day, and can be applied at any level of governance. Liberty has blessings, it is also a curse for those that cannot control themselves.

      I'll let you have the last word, then we'll close this chapter. ;)

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    196. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      Okay, what rights does someone have when they don't respect and are actively disrespecting the liberties of others?

      Right to life, right to fair treatment.

      That they would not give such rights to me really doesn't matter if I believe to be better then them.

      Let's adjust this a bit further, say someone is shooting people like just the other week at VT. Does that person have the same "rights" as the burgler? Some people say YES (including me BTW, and you'll see why).

      Guess what, I also say 'yes', but I bet we are going to disagree as to what those 'rights' are.

      The most basic liberty is the right to life; to live.

      Using the logic you've given then nobody has a "right" to take the life of another, ever or under any circumstances.


      Yes, there is one circumstance, if the alternative would be being killed by the person whom's life you are taking.



      Avoiding death row by a confession is the problem there. The death penalty itself has absolutely nothing to do with it.

      I can guarantee you that if people who disrespected rights of others knew that they there was a potential to be killed while they were actively disrepecting liberties of others, there would be a much lower rate of that disrespect.

      Oh really?

      Violent crime in the USA in the form of armed robbery, murder, rape and all those are so much higher today then they were in the 1800s for example... Oh wait, back then you actually needed to be seriously armed to have a decent chance on surviving a trip between 2 places.

      As much as intuition suggests what you say there, time and time again it turns out to be wrong. What is more, there is a very strong correlation between acting as you suggest and higher crime rates.

      You can see that this basic idea still exists today, in the most primitive ways among the "Gangstas" who shoot and kill for the slightest "disrespect". The problem is, that they aren't taught to respect others at all by anyone. This is how women become "ho's" and men become "gangstas". But I digress.

      Oh, lets take the gangsta culture as an example of one that promotes personal freedom and justice..

      Excuse me, I need a few moments to recover from that one.

      Really, all that it results in is more violence due to revenge. This is what bloodfeuds come from.

      Proportional response is nothing more than Political Correctness, and doesn't address the real problem. Therefore Burglary and Murder are two different responses, and yet even people actively murdering are handled with kit gloves.

      If proportionality was actually used, burglary and murder would get 2 different responses.

      What proportionality also does is making that a double murder gets a stronger response then a single murder. This makes it less likely that a crime goes unpunnished.

    197. Re:He most certainly IS under US jurisdiction by moldor · · Score: 1

      John Howard has chosen to lead Australia by following George Bush into the flames of his phony "war on terror", and the rest of us will have to live in the hell they leave behind. Yes, Howard sure has. Now here's the thing... we (by which I mean Australia) have an election this year. We now have the chance to change things! Don't like Howard (hell, I sure don't)? Then vote him out. Vote green. Vote Democrat. Vote independent. Vote for a member with some backbone. Vote for someone who isn't beholden to the libs and the pseudo-libs (labour), someone who can hold the balance of power and force some accoutability for a change. Vote on the issues, not on ill-defined fear and hip pocket jitters. But most importantly... think about how you vote. Get informed. Do some research. Buck the trend, don't just blindly follow your fears and prejudices. Just for once, make an informed, considered decision about what sort of future you want. Unfortunately I haven't yet seen one politician that has a backbone, let alone the cohones to tell the USA where to get off.

      Too much for them to loose - all them perks being in government... And as Australia has this wonderful COMPULSORY voting system, a lot tend to vote at random, just to get the hell out of the polling booth and on to the pub.

      Seems to me that the US actually has part, only PART, of the electoral process right - people REGISTER to vote. No compulsion.

      The Australian system needs to be similar - you REGISTER to vote, then if you want to complain about something to an elected member they require you to show your voter registration card. No card ? There's the door... Why should the politicians listen to someone who can't be bothered voting ?

      It'll never happen - too much risk of the Australian populace finding out what the politicians are REALLY up to !!!
  11. Wanna bet... by durin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... the war on terror made this extradition a lot easier?

    --
    Why, yes! I AM new here.
    1. Re:Wanna bet... by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

      Wanna back that up with evidence?

      No? Didn't think so. But hey if someone does, by all means do present it, I'd love to have some. I just own't hold my breath You see, these extraditions have been going on for years, and have been around for decades if not centuries.

      It never ceases to amuse me how both sides use precisely the same tactics whilst accusing the other of using bad tactics.

      Not everything is the fault of the WoT, or Bush, or the US. But hey don't let that stand in your way, right?

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
  12. Absolutely Disgusting by alexibu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The Aus government is working it's way to being a U.S. state.
    We are making our military hardware compatible with theirs, we are fighting in stupid profit based wars that go against the international community with them.
    They don't hand over their war criminals for international trial, and now they expect everyone around the world to respect their laws.
    Americas international standing is reducing every day. And judging by the media driven fear of the outside they are cultivating and the laughable democratic system and a retard for a president, they are well on the way to being the worst totalitarian state out there.
    We have the names of U.S states and capitals rammed down our necks by countless TV shows and movies and they don't even know we have states.

    I hope Iran/China/N. Korea gets some US citizens extradited too as part of this new high in international cooperation.

    1. Re:Absolutely Disgusting by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Americas international standing is reducing every day.

      Except in Australia, apparently!

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    2. Re:Absolutely Disgusting by gardyloo · · Score: 1

      The Aus government is working it's way to being a U.S. state. Sweet. So when I say I live in the Southwest, some smartass is sure to ask, "Is the beer as good as they say?". I guarantee you that's not the case at the moment.
    3. Re:Absolutely Disgusting by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      The Aus government is working it's way to being a U.S. state.

      Nothing new: before that, they were a British "state." Who let the Brits test nuclear bombs on their soil in the 1950s?

      -b.

    4. Re:Absolutely Disgusting by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      We are making our military hardware compatible with theirs

      That is just sound economics for efficient part inventory management and economics of production scale.

    5. Re:Absolutely Disgusting by identity0 · · Score: 1

      Don't kid yourself, they're not going to give you Congressional seats or pork-barrel projects. You'll just be another non-state territory, like Puerto Rico or Guam.

      Enjoy your servitude.

    6. Re:Absolutely Disgusting by Manchot · · Score: 1

      We have the names of U.S states and capitals rammed down our necks by countless TV shows and movies and they don't even know we have states.

      I'll have you know that off the top of my head, I knew that there was an Australian state named Queenland and one that started with "New." One and a third out of six isn't half bad. :)

    7. Re:Absolutely Disgusting by verySmartApe · · Score: 1

      We have the names of U.S states and capitals rammed down our necks by countless TV shows and movies and they don't even know we have states. This is part of a sinister plot to prepare aussies for their citizenship exam when they are finally annexed. Now repeat after me: Olympia, Boise, Salem, Sacramento, Carson City, Salt Lake, Cheyenne, Helena, Austin...
    8. Re:Absolutely Disgusting by verySmartApe · · Score: 1

      ...retard for a president, they are well on the way to being the worst totalitarian state out there. Technically I think it (meaning "we") is turning into more of a corporatist kleptocracy with imperial overtones. "Totalitarian" is far off the mark.
  13. Is Australia really an independent state anymore? by jibjibjib · · Score: 1
    The USA tells the Australian government what to do (e.g war in Iraq). Now they also sentence Australian people, who have not been found guilty of anything under Australian law, under USA law. The trial is held in the USA, and they are sent to prison there.

    Does this mean the USA has executive, legislative and judicial power over Australia, making Australia essentially another state of the USA, under the control of the US government?

  14. America's 51st state by Tama00 · · Score: 1

    Australia is just another state of America now days.

    Every law America passes Howard has to pass it as well.

    Howard is bushes lil bitch..

    The only difference is the people and these are the kind of people who wouldnt sue citizens of other countries without first fixing their own countries problems.

  15. Should've move to Russia before starting operation by Vvaghel1 · · Score: 0

    You're a woman and you want to learn? Don't live in Africa, China, etc You like having males slaves who you can abuse to the point of amputation? join the russian army etc, etc There's a time and a place for everything. This guys as smart as a PhD in ethics looking for a job in Washington DC....

    --
    Res Ipsa Loquitor "The facts speak for themselves"
  16. EU Expedited Extradition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not exactly, you signed up to the EU Extradited extradition which permits extradition for crimes including computer crimes (e.g. breaking DRM, no kidding). However that only applies to within the EU. But if the US can get a puppet government (e.g. Blairville) to issue a warrant for anyone in Europe, they can then extradite using the UK to US expedited extradition treaty.

    There's no limits on re-extradition.

    Worse, there is no judicial check in the UK, that the reasons given for the extradition, really complies with the requirements for extraditing. This is why a McKinnon (who broke US PCs into had a look around and left) is being accused of doing $5000 damage to each PC, in order for it to be a Federal crime and hence extraditable. The extradition mechanism doesn't let a UK judge check it.

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/08/25/extraditio n_hacker/

    In theory they could make any allegation against any UK citizen and get them extradited (kidnapped in effect) and the court could do nothing.

    [rant]F***ing Blair. We elected a leader, and he became a Bush follower and sold us out. I'll piss on his grave when he dies for the damage he's done to the UK sovereignty. [/rant]

    1. Re:EU Expedited Extradition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot. Blair is a great leader as is President Bush. Now, with the French President on our side we can be united against the tyranny and oppression of terror.

    2. Re:EU Expedited Extradition by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      We elected a leader, and he became a Bush follower and sold us out.

      Speak for yourself.

    3. Re:EU Expedited Extradition by asninn · · Score: 2, Funny

      F***ing Blair. We elected a leader, and he became a Bush follower and sold us out. I'll piss on his grave when he dies for the damage he's done to the UK sovereignty.

      Hear, hear. Hopefully some day we'll be able to say this (paraphrasing Lord Byron):

      Posterity will ne'er survey
      A nobler grave than this:
      Here lie the bones of Tony Blair:
      Stop, traveller, and piss.

      --
      butter the donkey
    4. Re:EU Expedited Extradition by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      " We elected a leader, and he became a Bush follower and sold us out."

      After which you elected him again for a third term, thereby proving to all UK politicians that being caught lying, selling out to foreigners, wasting vast sums turning the country into a ID card holding, constantly watched society of nannied pussies, and generally behaving like the Caudillo of a military junta is pretty much what the British people want from their leaders. And after the disgustingly craven way that their armed forces behaved with the Iranians, they probably also welcome their new status as Europe's premier surrender monkeys.

      The recent earthquake in Kent was probably caused by Winston Churchill's body spinning so quickly in his grave that it caused subterranean sonic booms. It's a good thing that most of the WWII generation are already dead, because they've been spared the shame of seeing their country's metamorphosis from a bastion of freedom that so many fought and died to protect into an island of snivelling cowardly shits who've handed their liberty to Fuhrer Blair in return for being "protected" from a few Muslim extremists (who only become active some time _after_ British forces were sent to Iraq on an American-led wild goose chase, and then stayed there as occupying conquerors), illegal immigration (worse now than before Blair despite endless empty promises), and the evil EC, which is obviously the real reason for all Britain's ills, and not the fact that that they're a nation of passive dweebs who've repeatedly elected a government that they know will anally rape them at every opportunity.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    5. Re:EU Expedited Extradition by mormop · · Score: 1

      "[rant]F***ing Blair. We elected a leader, and he became a Bush follower and sold us out. I'll piss on his grave when he dies for the damage he's done to the UK sovereignty. [/rant]"

      Then I suggest getting there early 'cos I suspect they'll be a hell of a queue. By the end of day one the Blair grave will probably have developed a swampy texture.

      --
      Hmmmmmm..... Deep fried and look like Squirrel.
    6. Re:EU Expedited Extradition by mpe · · Score: 1

      This is why a McKinnon (who broke US PCs into had a look around and left) is being accused of doing $5000 damage to each PC, in order for it to be a Federal crime and hence extraditable.

      A pity this dosn't get applied to spammers, who probably cost far more real money than anything McKinnon might have done...

      [rant]F***ing Blair. We elected a leader, and he became a Bush follower and sold us out. I'll piss on his grave when he dies for the damage he's done to the UK sovereignty. [/rant]

      No doubt nu-Labour will pass a law against that.

    7. Re:EU Expedited Extradition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give the UK some credit: the English involved in this group are being tried in England, under the laws applicable there. Much like GitMo, where the English "enemy combatants" returned to England. David Hicks on the other hand got screwed by Howard et al.

  17. Lets just put it this way... by mwvdlee · · Score: 3, Funny

    US: All your Australians are belong to us.

    --
    Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    1. Re:Lets just put it this way... by Opportunist · · Score: 0

      You sure that shouldn't read "All your laws are belong to us"?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:Lets just put it this way... by cralewyth · · Score: 1

      In Soviet Australia, America owns YOU!

      --
      "Women are just like ninjas; They lie even when it is more convenient to tell the truth." ~ Unknown
  18. Women must be 2nd class here by Jack+Schitt · · Score: 1, Insightful

    According to TFA, the average imprisonment term is less than that of copyright infringement. Women being considered 2nd class to men would be the only way to explain how something that hurts an entity (corporate or personal) financially has a greater punishment than something that hurts primarily women physically, mentally, and for a long time.

    (And me before you get all technical on me, I did say primarily women, but men can be raped as well...)

    --
    This message brought to you by Jack Schitt's Previously Shat Shit
    1. Re:Women must be 2nd class here by mrchaotica · · Score: 2, Informative

      According to TFA, the average imprisonment term is less than that of copyright infringement.

      No, the average rape sentence is less than the maximum copyright infringement sentence. To compare properly, you have to compare maximum to maximum or average to average. The maximum rape sentence is probably life in prison (or maybe death in some states); the average copyright infringement is probably considerably less than 10 (or even 6) years.

      Still sound as unreasonable as it did before?

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    2. Re:Women must be 2nd class here by Jack+Schitt · · Score: 1

      Still sound as unreasonable as it did before?
      YES!!!

      But that's only because I don't believe in reason.

      I guess I mis-rtfa. My bad.
      --
      This message brought to you by Jack Schitt's Previously Shat Shit
    3. Re:Women must be 2nd class here by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1

      ah, yes, but the US seems to like handing out maximum or near-maximum sentences. What's the betting that he'll get credit for 3 years of time served fighting his extradition? (given that someone else who was wrongfully extradited to the US didn't when their time served was pretty much equal to their sentence). Perhaps Australian jail time is equivalent to American jail time.

      --
      FGD 135
    4. Re:Women must be 2nd class here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most rapes are in fact against men, including prison rapes. (Reported as by either Amnesty International or New Internationalist, can't remember which one)

    5. Re:Women must be 2nd class here by asninn · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, it still sounds unreasonable to me - outright ridiculous, in fact. Do you seriously want to tell me that ANY copyright infringement could ever be as bad as an "average" rape?

      Get real. And see a shrink.

      --
      butter the donkey
    6. Re:Women must be 2nd class here by MrManny · · Score: 1

      This is a little bit offtopic, but I'm curious: How long is a "life time in prison" in the U.S.? (Iirc it's about 25 years over here, in good old Austria, Central Europe.)

      Thanks in advance, ~ M.

    7. Re:Women must be 2nd class here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The length of a life sentence in the US is however long it takes for you to die, modulo parole.

    8. Re:Women must be 2nd class here by Suzumushi · · Score: 1
      Agreed. Prison time for copyright infringement? Insane. Considering this guy did not violate copyright for profit(according to article all cracked soft was distributed for free), I can't understand why the criminal courts are even involved...it should only be a civil issue. If this guy was selling the cracked software that's another story.


      It's another case of how big corporate cartels (read MPAA/RIAA/BSA) bypass the supposed democracy we have in the US by buying off our "representatives" in government. If the people of the US were truly being represented by their elected officials, the DMCA would never have passed, and it would be repealed with prejudice today if it had...

    9. Re:Women must be 2nd class here by Mr.+Shotgun · · Score: 1

      It all depends on what you mean by life, apparently. It used to be that a judges would set a range when handing down sentences, such as 25 to life or 50 to life. Meaning that a prisoner could serve 25 years and be let out on parole for good behavior, or if they did not behave themselves or make any progress as determined by the parole board, they could be in prison till they die.

      However with the new push for truth in sentencing and get tough on crime politicizing, some states have adopted the life means life approach, where the only way out is in a pine box, while other have imposed sentences that are longer than a natural human life, sometime in excess of 200 years. Also in a fit of paradoxical euphoria, some prisoners have been sentenced to consecutive life sentences, leaving me to wonder how will they repay their debt to society?

      More info can be found here and the federal sentencing guidelines that most judges use can be seen here.

      --
      Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the (supposed) good of its victims may be the most oppressive
    10. Re:Women must be 2nd class here by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Do you seriously want to tell me that ANY copyright infringement could ever be as bad as an "average" rape?

      I was treating the issue of the relative "badness" of copyright infringement separately from the issue of the unfair comparison. If you were familiar with my posting history, you'd see that not only do I not need to see a shrink, but I completely agree with you about the outright ridiculousness of it all.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  19. Can we do this to them? by Hyperhaplo · · Score: 1

    Let's try it.
    It can't be too hard to isolate an American who has broken Australia's laws. Anyone want to bet that it won't work the other way?

    Serious question: If it doesn't work the other way (that Australia cannot sentence American citizens), then could this decision be reversed?

    Captcha: Pleaded. How appropriate.

    --
    You have a sick, twisted mind. Please subscribe me to your newsletter.
    1. Re:Can we do this to them? by Archon-X · · Score: 1

      You're right.
      Two words: David Hicks.

  20. Not really by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Australia is not USA's 51st state. Australian's don't get any of the rights of US citizens, just the down sides.

    Thankfully we still have some sanity here in NZ. Although there was perhaps some keenness to hitch up withAustralia in the 1980s and 1990s, less kiwis think thta way now.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
    1. Re:Not really by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      No, Australia doesn't get the benefits. Only the liabilities.

      Makes sense, doesn't it? I mean, would you... if you were in the US's boots?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    2. Re:Not really by cralewyth · · Score: 1

      Australia is not USA's 51st state

      That's correct. Australia is 5 states in itself; That's gotta bring the total states of America up to atleast 55.

      --
      "Women are just like ninjas; They lie even when it is more convenient to tell the truth." ~ Unknown
    3. Re:Not really by cralewyth · · Score: 1

      *6 and *56

      Yeah yeah yeah, I'm no aussy.

      --
      "Women are just like ninjas; They lie even when it is more convenient to tell the truth." ~ Unknown
    4. Re:Not really by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 1

      Thankfully we still have some sanity here in NZ.

      I'd like to think that the public does, judging from the polls I've seen on various issues. However, I'm not convinced our politicians are much better than the Aussies. Certainly, the incumbent government has previously introduce policy directly against public opinion, and a lot of policy change is done rather quietly here. I've no doubt our Ministers would sacrifice a random hacker for even a hint of extra consideration at the next "free trade" talks.

      --
      Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
    5. Re:Not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've no doubt our Ministers would sacrifice a random hacker for even a hint of extra consideration at the next "free trade" talks. Perhaps, but the "free trade" carrot has not gotten us to give up our anti-nuclear stance and it didn't stop the current Prime Minister from criticising the US' actions in Iraq. I think our politicians realise that no "free trade" deal with the US is ever going to stop them applying subsidies. Just look how many time the US has been chastised by the WTO (to no avail, I might add). We're far more independent of the US than Australia are, that's for sure.
    6. Re:Not really by 19061969 · · Score: 1

      Actually, we in the UK are the 51st state. Australians can be the 52nd if they want...

      Quoth the OP: "Thankfully we still have some sanity here in NZ. Although there was perhaps some keenness to hitch up withAustralia in the 1980s and 1990s, less kiwis think thta way now."

      I think that was because a few kiwis left NZ for Australia a few years ago. What was it the NZ PM said? Something like, "it should raise the IQ of both countries."

      --
      bang goes my karma... again...
  21. all things Global by rozz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Globalization is the word of the day .. Globalization is the theory of the day.
    the GlobalJail may be the first real implementation.

    --
    "There is nothing more frightful than ignorance in action." Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    1. Re:all things Global by tshillig · · Score: 1

      Back in the day, Australia WAS the GlobalJail... maybe this "extradition" could just be considered a prison transfer.. haha

      On a side note, I love Australians... good senses of humor, completely and utterly blunt, amazing people... cheers mates!

  22. This is entirely unacceptable. by NickHydroxide · · Score: 5, Informative
    This is horrendous. I don't condone what he has done, but I contend that this should fall squarely and solely within the sovereign boundaries of Australia. We have a perfectly acceptable method of pursuing him for the same offence - either s 132AC(1) or s 132AC(2) of the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth), which provide respectively:

    (1) A person commits an offence if:

                                              (a) the person engages in conduct; and

                                              (b) the conduct results in one or more infringements of the copyright in a work or other subjectmatter; and

                                              (c) the infringement or infringements have a substantial prejudicial impact on the owner of the copyright; and

                                              (d) the infringement or infringements occur on a commercial scale.

    (2) An offence against subsection (1) is punishable on conviction by a fine of not more than 550 penalty units or imprisonment for not more than 5 years, or both.

                              (3) A person commits an offence if:

                                              (a) the person engages in conduct; and

                                              (b) the conduct results in one or more infringements of the copyright in a work or other subjectmatter; and

                                              (c) the infringement or infringements have a substantial prejudicial impact on the owner of the copyright and the person is negligent as to that fact; and

                                              (d) the infringement or infringements occur on a commercial scale and the person is negligent as to that fact.

    Penalty: 120 penalty units or imprisonment for 2 years, or both. There is absolutely no reason to extradite him except for political convenience or expediency, which should NEVER be a basis for depriving someone so severely of their status as a citizen. As Justice Young noted, we should beware allowing (and effecting) foreign prosecutions where the conduct is almost entirely referential to Australia.

    If equivalent offences were not in existence in Australia, then perhaps I might be more willing to accept it (although even then I would have drastic reservations). As it stands, I cannot accept this.
    1. Re:This is entirely unacceptable. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When did australia open a policy of colonising the united states with our prisoners? Or is John Howard just living even further in the past than anyone had reckoned?

      Has anyone told him the place is already inhabited?

      Then again, existing populations have never stopped western colonialism before...

  23. No News? by connect4 · · Score: 1

    errr . . . except that he is being extradited to the USA

    As you were.

  24. Well that sucks balls by BestNicksRTaken · · Score: 1

    I always thought extradition was for when you commit a crime whilst living in a foreign country, they send you back to your mother country for punishment - so at least family can visit you in jail etc.

    Phoning Australia from the US sure is going to eat his phone credits!

    Sounds like the Aussie government is another of Bush's World Police bitches.

    --
    #include <sig.h>
  25. Immense problem by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

    This is really wrong. The crime didn't take place on American soil. If someone is going to be tried under a foreign country's court, they should have the right to vote for the laws that he or she is being tried under.

    1. Re:Immense problem by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      '' The crime didn't take place on American soil. ''

      That is the question. The person was apparently never in the USA, but making software available illegally in the USA could be considered to be taking place in the USA. Just because the submitter says it didn't happen in the USA doesn't make it true. With that kind of situation it might matter exactly what he has done.

      Second, the fine article says that he was extradited for breaking US law. That is certainly the reason why the USA wants him, but I would think that he wouldn't be extradited if this wasn't a crime according to Australian law as well.

    2. Re:Immense problem by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1

      " but making software available illegally in the USA could be considered to be taking place in the USA"

      Only by someone blinded by a desperate desire to come up with any old crap to justify trying someone clearly outside their jurisdiction. Sadly, most judges used to be the same grandstanding lawyers interested in their own careers more than justice and so are willing to scratch the backs of the current generation (in the same way as the judges of their time no doubt did).
      This clearly shows the need for an overseeing body made up of impartial observers who aren't judges or lawyers to be able to bash them both around the head and toss cases clearly outside their jurisdiction.

      --
      FGD 135
  26. Re:Looks like he violated... by pelrun · · Score: 4, Informative

    No. The guy is australian, broke australian law whilst in australia - why the F**K is he being tried in America again?

    If you break a law in a country you get tried IN THAT COUNTRY. Extradition works to preserve that - if you break the law then leave the country, you can be extradited BACK to that country to stand trial.

  27. Death Penalty by Nymz · · Score: 1

    Many countries will refuse extradition requests if the penalty could include death.

    1) Pass new sentancing guildlines (all pirates must 'walk the plank')
    2) Then countries will refuse to extradite all pirates
    3) Profit!!!

    1. Re:Death Penalty by lime_red · · Score: 1

      On the face of it, Australia says they won't extradite if the penalty could include death. However, in one particular case, the federal police co-operated with another country(Indonesia) that did have death penalty, and waited until they were under the jurisdiction of that country before busting them.

  28. Thanks mom and dad. by jbssm · · Score: 0, Redundant

    I wanna thank my parents for having me getting born in Europe ... the real Europe, not UK.

  29. It's an extradition treaty... by TapeCutter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...dummy /sarcasm

    --
    And did you exchange a walk on part in the war for a lead role in a cage? - Pink Floyd.
  30. Bush's minions at work again... by blowtorch · · Score: 1

    This is so crazy, that it would be funny if he weren't facing a 10 year jail sentence. Doesn't jurisdiction come into the picture here? Authorities use it to pass over stuff that they don't want to investigate all the time don't they?

  31. No real Citizen rights by Azeroth48 · · Score: 1

    Australian has no real rights like the right to free speech in America, Our government will bend over backwards for any foreign country that has the slightest shred of power. Sure we have a lot of privileges that we take for granted but our government can take them at any time if it wished. And most of the population is ignorant about this... We get fed the illusion through our tv which nearly all the law/legal shows are american. And that keeps most of the people happy.

    --
    This is where we are, our rock we stand, among the world, looking forward, eternally.
    1. Re:No real Citizen rights by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We (Australia) do actually.
      Through High Court interpretation of the Australian Constitution we have implied rights.
      Commonwealth Parliament cannot overrule such rulings.
      I'm not going to bother listing them, Google it.
      At least we have a constitution unlike one other western country.

  32. No surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This extradition isn't much on the scale of how much Australia sucks up to the USA. Would any other country close down all major city roads just to give visiting US vice president Dick Cheney a "clear ride"?

  33. I have zero sympathy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This guy went out of his way to break other peoples copyright and drive them out of business. I hope the son of a bitch fries. I'm sick of people pirating stuff and thinking its a victimless crime. I hope they make a serious example of this bastard.

  34. The question no one (yet) has asked... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He faces up to 10 years in a US jail

    Some sample states:

    Florida: In Fiscal Year 2004-05, it cost $18,108 a year or $49.61 a day to feed, clothe, house, educate and provide medical services for an inmate at a major prison, which is only $486 more per year than it cost the previous fiscal year. For more inmate cost per day information, go to http://www.dc.state.fl.us/pub/annual/0405/budget.h tml.

    New Hampshire: "$28,000 annual per inmate."
    http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=200704 26171735AAB9pAf

    Utah: It costs about $23,000 a year to incarcerate the average inmate.
    http://www.cr.ex.state.ut.us/faq.html

    Couldn't find Virginia, but let's be ridiculously conservative and say it's $10,000/year. Let's say he gets off on good behavior in 5.

    Who's paying this $50,000? And who gets the half-million in fines, which I'm sure is pocket change for this guy?

  35. Human rights by youthoftoday · · Score: 1

    Surely he could fight this under one of the Geneva Conventions on the basis that America tortures prisoners?

    --
    -1 not first post
    1. Re:Human rights by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      I believe that only works if there's a reasonable chance that he would be tortured, not that they torture other prisoners. He's not of middle eastern or african descent so little chance of that happening.

    2. Re:Human rights by Mr.+Shotgun · · Score: 1

      Ahh, but we only torture prisoners we have no intention of charging. As he is being pursued by the MAFIAA and not the DHS, you can bet he will be charged so that the MAFIAA can get their pound of flesh (in the form of large bank notes).

      --
      Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the (supposed) good of its victims may be the most oppressive
    3. Re:Human rights by youthoftoday · · Score: 1

      And exactly what proportion of cases does the RIAA persue all the way through court right the way through to a judgement? I'd say at least 107% Call it 108.

      --
      -1 not first post
  36. the US V's the rest of the world again by L0w_KEy · · Score: 1

    there where charges in the past against the US government for spying on british business and passing the information to US business. therefor going after a foreign citizen is not a big issue, not whene money is involved.

    --
    "nil mortifii sine lucbe"
  37. I've known for a while... by petrus4 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...that Australia no longer has genuine national sovereignty distinct from America. We haven't been our own people culturally or economically since the 80s, and the free trade agreement coupled with Howard's ongoing earnestness to subjugate himself to the American government as much as possible are just more nails in the coffin.

    The fools who were so adamant for Australia's split with the English monarchy now failed to realise one crucial detail; Australia's genuine independence is never going to happen. If we split with England entirely, America will rush in to fill the void before anyone can blink.

    Welcome to the 51st state. :(

  38. Shame on Australia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is what happens when you're in bed with the Americans all the time.
    They get to dictate you.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_contributi on_to_the_2003_invasion_of_Iraq
    Karma

  39. Open Source Software by cdn-programmer · · Score: 2, Funny

    Somebody should have told this guy about OSS.

    1. Re:Open Source Software by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah right. Because OSS would have made him a lot more money than selling copied software.

      Get over yourself.

    2. Re:Open Source Software by beanyk · · Score: 3, Funny

      Somebody should have told this guy about OSS.

      Man, are you behind the times; it's been the CIA for years.

  40. Re:Is Australia really an independent state anymor by mgiuca · · Score: 1

    Pretty much, except we don't get to vote in US elections...

  41. Terrorism by N8F8 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Before you hit the flamebait button, please listen: The issue here is more widespread than you think. In this case they were stealing software, breaking the anti-piracy measures and redistributing it. What about hacking a computer in another country, stealing credit cards and selling the cards or charging them? What about training radicals to hop onto planes and commit crimes in other countries? What about private groups of citizens launching rockets across the border into neighboring countries? In what jurisdiction does the crime occur? What if the other government refuses to prosecute? Should it escalate to a national or international conflict?

    The fundamental questions is, what do you do when someone from another country harms your citizens or destroys their property? Criminals used run for the state or country border to avoid prosecution. No they just play in the fuzzy areas of national sovereignty. Many of the conflicts in the world follow this pattern. In this case Australia decided to hand the criminal over the the US for prosecution. Maybe they are trying to send a message to criminals hiding behind these gray areas of sovereignty.

    --
    "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    1. Re:Terrorism by jackjeff · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think Iran would gladly love to get the criminal G. W. Bush... and put him into jail or maybe execute him.

      Now think about it. How many stupid laws from stupid countries have you broken in your peaceful life in the US. Want an example: ever had sex without being married? That's a serious crime in Iran, Saudi, UAE and many other countries... You can get serious fines and jail time for it.

      Either the law is the same in the two countries, which is the case here, and thus it is unfair to extradate the person because he would be more able to defend itself in is home country, he would be able to have support from his family... visits during his jail time. etc... So there should be no extradition.
      Either the law is different but the crime for the "foreign" country was committed in the home country. In that case what he did is not a crime so there's no extradition.
      Extradition should be only reserved for cases where the crime occured in a foreign country.

      In this case, the extradition is unfair. The crime happened only in Australia. There was no hacking into US computers or anything alike.

    2. Re:Terrorism by N8F8 · · Score: 1

      What you are saying is the status quo. Like I said, this system is failing.

      --
      "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    3. Re:Terrorism by metacell · · Score: 1

      In this case they were stealing software, breaking the anti-piracy measures and redistributing it. What about hacking a computer in another country, stealing credit cards and selling the cards or charging them? What about training radicals to hop onto planes and commit crimes in other countries?

      I think it should fall under the jurisdiction of the country where the person was located while committing the alleged crime.

      Assuming that an alleged crime was committed where the effects of it can be seen, seems like slippery ground to me. If a person is located in country X and is accused of committing a crime there, it is fair to prosecute him/her according to the laws of country X. It is not fair to risk being prosecuted according to the laws of any country that claims the crime was partly committed there - some of which may have laws that are worded differently, interpreted differently, much harsher/lenient punishments, or different standards for what is considered evidence.

      A person has a reasonable chance to read and foresee the effects of the laws of one country, not any country the crime can be considered to have occurred in.

      What about private groups of citizens launching rockets across the border into neighboring countries? In what jurisdiction does the crime occur? What if the other government refuses to prosecute? Should it escalate to a national or international conflict?

      Mostly, an act has to be criminal in both countries for extradition to occur. If credit card fraud or launching rockets across the border isn't illegal in a country, that country isn't likely to extradite someone for it anyway.

    4. Re:Terrorism by N8F8 · · Score: 1

      Who owned the software? Where were the physical computers hosting the hacked software?

      --
      "God fights on the side with the best artillery." - Napoleon, Marshal of France - speaking truth to power
    5. Re:Terrorism by ChromaticDragon · · Score: 1

      Well... First of all, it would appear for the purpose of this discussion we have to shift into a mode of presumed guilt. Notice nowhere in your argument do you consider the concept of accusation nor the presumption of innocence. If you're shifting into a discussion of terrorism, you need to recognize #1 the serious problems of fear and fear mongering abridging the presumption of innocence and due process and #2 the ability (dare I say proclivity) of those in power to declare political enemies terrorists or treasonous.

      Furthermore, you have also completely sidestepped the issue of who considers what a crime. An earlier reply attempted to highlight the reciprocal repercussions of your apparent assumption that we can start with a universal concept of what is "wrong". They weren't arguing for status quo. They simply weren't addressing your issues because they didn't agree with your assumptions.

      Another problem with extradition is the assurance of a fair trial. Even if the laws are the same in both places, it may be an incredibly touchy issue where the accused will get an appropriately fair trial. I don't imagine at this moment that much of the world would consider the US an appropriate venue for a truly fair trial (or a trial at all).

      But if we 1) assume guilt of said "criminals"; 2) assume we have a universal concept of "wrong" (i.e. crime), then here are my thoughts...

      It immediately becomes a state vs. state issue at this point. It's not fuzzy at all unless you don't appreciate that any other state has sovereignty. And a whole lot of what happens next depends on the balance of the option(s) we choose to pursue vs. the costs related to such (extradition, covert ops, diplomacy, invasion/bombing, war). But these aren't new issues. These are the same issues we read of in antiquity ("toss his head over or we'll destroy your city"). In all these cases, it is a serious thing to weigh whether the issue truly merits such action or any action at all. For the more powerful states, like it or not, more options are available.

      We don't truly have a world court and we really cannot unless/until the US amends the constitution to recognize a higher court that the SCOTUS and some sort of teeth is given to a world body to enforce any decisions of such.

      What's bugging people here is that instead of the US submitting to a World Court, the US appears to pursuing the goal of BEING the World Court. People don't like bowing to laws they didn't create... sort of like "taxation without representation".

    6. Re:Terrorism by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Either the law is the same in the two countries, which is the case here, and thus it is unfair to extradate the person

      Actually, that's the only time extradition occurs: When the crime is a crime in both countries, and when the damage occured in the other country.

    7. Re:Terrorism by Starburnt · · Score: 0

      Want an example: ever had sex without being married?
       
      You do realise who you are asking, don't you?

  42. Arrest Them All by Bastardchyld · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You are absolutely right! Foreign citizens have absolutely no rights for a trial when they are extradited to the US. But realistically the purpose of extradition was to provide a means of "reacquiring" US citizens who have committed crimes in the US and then fled to the safety of another country.

    I do not know much about Drink or Die but based on the article I would assume that they primarily reverse engineered copy protections and what not. If this is the case then I am not even sure how they would come up with an accurate number for damages. I personally believe that while it MAY be wrong to download music or whatever, under no circumstances is it wrong to provide someone with the information in order to do it themselves. Or we should arrest everyone who has ever shared any information that someone else could use for nefarious purposes, here are some examples that I think we should act upon immediately:

    1. Scientists - these guys are constantly releasing information about different chemical compounds, not to mention explosives, and nuclear materials. All of which can be used for most evil of plots.
    2. Anatomy Book Publishers - these guys release books teaching "students" about vital portions of the body. Now how many serial killers do you know that were never a student?
    3. Lawyers - I am not even going to justify this one ;) Sorry NewYorkCountryLawyer I really do like you.
    4. Mothers/Fathers - When I was a kid my parents gave me the birds and the bees talk (you know the one about sex). Man now that information can be used in some pretty evil ways. It is a good thing that I am on slashdot and therefore am sexual incompetent so I have not been able to utilize this evil knowledge fully.

    --
    $diff terrorists hippies
    $
    $rm -rf *terrorists *hippies
  43. USA - Australia Free Trade Agreement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Australians would do well to read the IP section of thier free trade agreement with the USA

    http://www.dfat.gov.au/trade/negotiations/us_fta/o utcomes/08_intellectual_property.html

  44. Re:Looks like he violated... by mattjb0010 · · Score: 1

    The guy is australian, broke australian law whilst in australia - why the F**K is he being tried in America again?

    The guy is British, broke American law while in Australia (it wasn't like he was merely copying, where he would have been prosecuted in Australia, he was also helping to run a server in America), and why the F**K do you capitalize America but not "australia" (sic)?

  45. Nice Precedent? by Gonoff · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Someone needs to ask for the extradition of your president and our prime minister for crimes against humanity - starting illegal wars, killing 10,000s of civilian non-combatants, detention without trial and lots more bad things.

    Obviously they are not illegal in the USA or the UK because they say so, but there are lots of places where this sort of behaviour is against the rules. If such extraditions are not a good thing, perhaps someone should say why mass murder is less important than intellectual "property".

    --
    I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
    1. Re:Nice Precedent? by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      Well you could probably extradite most of the western governments to the middle east on the basis that they drink alcohol which is illegal in many arab countries..

      *bad* precedent. At least with Skylarov they waited until he decided to travel to the US before arresting him for not breaking any laws..

    2. Re:Nice Precedent? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If such extraditions are not a good thing, perhaps someone should say why mass murder is less important than intellectual "property".

      Oh, that one is easy, those murdered are POOR people, they don't really count as human beings, but "IP" infringement hurts a rich and powerful corporation and must be severely punished.

      Any questions?

    3. Re:Nice Precedent? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just replied in the same argumentation below - you are right on - the arrogance the USA government, in particular the current administration (doesn't deserve that title anyway) commit war crimes, and I expect and predict in 10 years that G.W. Bush will face a war crime tibunal, but he likely won't be extradited but it will show how far the USA has fallen, becomes like a high -tech country with a 3rd world political system, maybe a bit like China will be soon.

    4. Re:Nice Precedent? by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

      Why stop there? Why not seek the extradition of the heads of Syria, Sudan, Iran, Russia, China, Cuba, Israel, Egypt, many South African nations, many South American nations? After all they've all committed acts that are surely illegal or against the rules somewhere. Hell why not extradite the head of the UN (at any given time)?

      I'm only half joking.

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
    5. Re:Nice Precedent? by sjames · · Score: 1

      Someone needs to ask for the extradition of your president and our prime minister for crimes against humanity

      As an American, I say they can have Bush. Be warned that all deals are final. We won't take him back.

  46. crazy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So now a US citizen insults Mohammed and will be extradited to Irak to be excecuted.
    Great thing extradition!

  47. Wait, I've seen this one... by Gerocrack · · Score: 1

    Doesn't he get a public booting now? It's our proudest tradition!

  48. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    To extend the situation...a lot of things that Americans do daily are illegal in other countries (especially muslim countries), and carry severe penalties (like stoning to death for having sex with someone you're not married to, for instance)...would you be happy for US citizens to be deported to those countries to face those punishments for 'crimes' committed in the US?

  49. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by zcat_NZ · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Did you pay the Harry Fox agency the appropriate license fee to reproduce those lyrics?

    No?

    --
    455fe10422ca29c4933f95052b792ab2
  50. Re:Looks like he violated... by gunny01 · · Score: 1

    All Aussie should, right now, right an email to their MP, asking them why this has happened, and why we are pandering to the US. It's a blatant double standard, since. Brad Murdock wasn't extradited to the UK for murdering Peter Falconio...why?

    --
    kill all the fucking niggers
  51. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by appelsiini · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I've been marked as flamebait often for lot less. One point to make - /. moderators are from US mainly, and therefore moderation most likely will favor US citizens and opinions (aka it is BIASED).

  52. Re:Looks like he violated... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I think Australian Justice Minister Ellison had little choice in this. In 2004 Australia successfully obtained the extradition of an alleged people smuggler from Thailand to face trial in Australia.

    The same article notes that several other people have been extradited from Thailand to Australia on similar charges. Globalised crime, globalised justice. Still, I feel sorry for Griffiths. Sounds like an entirely harmless character by comparison.

  53. Dangerous Precedent by Cordath · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If Raymond had broken U.S. law while in the U.S. then I would have no problem with this extradition. When you travel to another country you must abide by its laws. This was not the case however. This extradition sets the precedent of a citizen of a sovereign nation committing a crime on the soil of his own nation and being extradited and tried according to the laws of a foreign nation.

    What is wrong with this? What's wrong is wrong, right? Well, the problem is that, in a democracy, citizens need to have a say in how they are governed. The law is not an absolute and universal code. It is there to serve the people, and the people are therefore responsible for writing the laws they are governed by. With these extraditions, suddenly citizens can be governed by laws they had no say or representation in writing.

    If these extraditions are allowed to continue, citizens may face penalties for things that are legal in their own country, or penalties far harsher than their country would normally permit. As a ridiculous example, say that the U.S. signed such an extradition treaty with an asian nation where drug running was punishable by death. (Yes, this example is ridiculous because, as others have pointed out, the U.S. tends to be "more equal" than other nations in this sort of treaty.) Say that a U.S. citizen who never left U.S. soil masterminded a drug ring which was responsible for sending large ammounts of drugs to this asian country, so that asian country requested his extradition, got it, tried him, and executed him. (Again, I admit this example is ridiculous. I merely use it to convey the principle of my argument.)

    This extradition sets a dangerous precedent, and I sincerely hope that the Australian government comes to its senses before it's too late. Protecting IP just isn't worth this kind of legal fascism.

    1. Re:Dangerous Precedent by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      So if I distribute child pornography to American residents you're cool with me not being extradited? Great!

    2. Re:Dangerous Precedent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The obvious answer would be yes, you don't need to be extradited. But your country should have laws to prevent that sort of thing and US law enforcement should work with your country to provide evidence that can be used by your country to prosecute you to the fullest extent allowed by the laws in your country.

      Extradition should really be reserved for instances where international law has been broken or the crime was committed in one location and the criminal fled to another country before being captured.

  54. MOD parent up by argent · · Score: 1

    I was going to ask whether this couldn't have been tried in Australia. Thanks for the details.

  55. Drink or Die may be linked to terrorist substance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Drink or Die" might be involved in the proliferation of Dihydrogen Monoxide. We've already seen proof that many terrorist cells avail themselves of this dangerous substance. Because we've had so little luck stopping the manufacturing of it, we've had to resort to targetting the proliferators like "Drink or Die" who encourage its use.

    Despite our best detection technologies, terrorists have no problem smuggling this substance on or even inside their bodies. They've been known to hide it by swallowing it or placing it in body cavities, as well as just hiding a layer against the skin. This substance is capable of mass destruction on the scale of Hurricane Katrina.

    You can learn more about Dihydrogen Monoxide at http://www.dhmo.org/

    Shame on "Drink or Die" for promoting the proliferation of Dihydrogen Monoxide exposure, and for issuing death threats to anyone who seeks to halt the use of this substance.

  56. What Australian laws are Americans breaking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Great stuff! Knowing that in diplomacy there's a reciprocity principle, it would be interesting to know what Australian laws are Americans breaking right now?

    1. Re:What Australian laws are Americans breaking? by turing_m · · Score: 1

      The worst would have to be the laws of the English language. They could start by pronouncing herbs the right way. Perhaps there could be extraditions treaties with the UK and Canada until the Americans start getting it right.

      --
      If I have seen further it is by stealing the Intellectual Property of giants.
    2. Re:What Australian laws are Americans breaking? by $1uck · · Score: 1

      The only thing that could possibly make sense to me... is that somehow someway the crime involved servers or computers existing located in the US. If that is the case this makes sense. Just like the UK extraditing the hacker that broke into NASA machines. If not then I don't know which government is being more despicable the US or the Australian on second thought I'd say the Australian government because they are failing horribly to protect their own citizens.

    3. Re:What Australian laws are Americans breaking? by mschiller · · Score: 1

      American's do not speak English they speak American. Problem Solved. The fact that you can understand some of what I, a dumb American, say is a miracle.

    4. Re:What Australian laws are Americans breaking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      American's do not speak English they speak American. Problem Solved. The fact that you can understand some of what I, a dumb American, say is a miracle.

      It's no miracle. The vast quantity of US shows broadcast on Australian television ensures we're all fluent in American.

  57. What exemplary kind of suck-ups ! by unity100 · · Score: 1

    Get a load of that. Now, australian citizens not only have to abide by their OWN law, but also RIAA.US laws too.

    what kind of suck-ups are running australia ?

    1. Re:What exemplary kind of suck-ups ! by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      What he did was also illegal in Australia.

    2. Re:What exemplary kind of suck-ups ! by unity100 · · Score: 1

      why was it illegal ? because australia imports every single law from united states.

  58. fake by Ep0xi · · Score: 0

    fake amount of money.. they extradited the guy for shareware piracy

    --
    ?
  59. Breaking News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This just inn. The Democratic Republic of Roseview Lane no. 14 have broken off from its former Subjugated state to the United Kingdom. The President of The Democratic Republic of Roseview Lane no. 14, Roger Bobbit, have requested the US government to Extradite President Bush, for charges of having gone over his mandate, and being responsible for the deaths of several non-combatants, and destabilizing the balance of power. When asked what the consequences, if the US wouldn't comply, President Roger Bobbit, said [Quote] "I got a Nuclear Weapon... IN MY PANTS!".

    1. Re:Breaking News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not meant to be subjugated state, sorry

  60. Let's extradite by rolfwind · · Score: 1

    people that the Chinese government deems criminals.

  61. G.W. Bush, Kisinger to Intl. War Crime Tribunal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In 10 years I predict G.W. Bush being officially charged with war crimes in Iraq, will he be extradited? We will see. Kisinger may pass away before he has to face jail for his war crimes.

  62. ten years gone by Ep0xi · · Score: 0

    The aussie should stay 10 years of prison in guantanamo without any support from the jailers and obtaining his own food by feeding eating 'roots' of course he will be assraped and tortured by a bunch of blood thirsty tenths of sexy muslims. justice has done it again.

    --
    ?
  63. I agree by LinuxGeek · · Score: 1

    TFA says he is a Briton living in Australia since the age of 7, but doesn't mention his actual citizenship. I wonder if that played a part in the willingness of the Aussie gov to extradite. I think this is a very slippery slope they have ventured out onto and sets a dangerous precedent, which is what future legal actions are usually based on.

    What happens if a muslim-centric country wanted to extradite me for breaking sharia laws? I've dated a woman that was separated but not divorced, consumed alcohol, don't adhere to the dress code, etc... Does this now mean that the US gov would willingly extradite me to Iran to be tried? It would seem that they already set the precedent that it would be acceptable.

    --

    Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see. - Mark Twain
    1. Re:I agree by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      The important point here is that the acts were crimes in both Australia and the US. As such it would have been perfectly ok for Australia to prosecute. They declined and decided to extradite instead, possibly because of an understanding that the prosecution should take place where the law in question was most egregiously violated.

      In the case of sharia laws, or any laws where there is no agreement as to what is a crime extradition is very unlikely to occur.

  64. Counter example by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

    I send a stack of ripped pixar moves to your gmail account. That account is normally served somewhere like India but a server failure causes it to be hosted for a while in the USA. By managing your email you are now helping to admin a server in the states. Should you be extradited to the USA?

    1. Re:Counter example by mattjb0010 · · Score: 1

      By managing your email you are now helping to admin a server in the states.

      Managing email is not the same as administrating a server, if you think so then you shouldn't be on /. Secondly you would have to prove that I knew I was doing something in the US, and that I did something illegal, neither of which is the (pretend) case here, but both of those two points were freely admitted by Hews.

  65. American Empire by Phrogman · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    This is just another brick in the foundation of the American Empire. The US has more weapons, and the ability to project force anywhere in the world, so it has abrogated to itself the *right* to do so whenever its Corporate^H^H^H National Interests seem threatened. It doesn't matter if it violates international law, commonly accepted moral conduct of civilized nations, or even its own internal laws. The US has a long history of invading countries for economic reasons (see the invasion of the Dominican Republic to save US Sugar interests etc). Despite the high purpose of its founding fathers, and the inspired contents of the US Constitution, the US is currently no more than the biggest baddest asshole on the block who feels he can do whatever the fuck he wants because no one will fuck with him for fear of being killed. US Military Personnel can be accused of warcrimes, yet the US will not let them be tried in an International Court, while simultaenously insisting that members of other countries be so tried. In complete violation of the US Constituation, people are being held without trial, without legal representation, and undoubtedly in a few cases, without reason in the concentration camp at Guantanamo Bay. If US personnel don't want to engage in torture that is so extreme it violates the shredded US laws, they simply send the prisoner to some CIA camp in a country that does permit it.

    Under Bush and his cronies, the US has lost all credibility internationally I think. Its hard to claim to be the bastion of the free world and democracy, when you violate your own laws, routinely violate human rights, have a mercenary army numbering in the tens of thousands (or PMCs, ie Private Military Contractors in official parlance) in the country you violently attacked and occupied for no valid reason other than one that was concocted for the purpose of justifying that invasion etc. How can the US expect to be validated as the banner holder for Freedom and Democracy when they no longera adhere to the very virtues they claim to promote?

    No, I like the US, I like those US citizens that I have met, and I think it wass once a noble and daring effort in democratic representation, now its just a nation in the process of decaying into another totalitarian state - albeit one that preserves at least the facade of supporting its ideals internally, while externally projecting the worst aspects of a Fascist Dictatorship. Its sad to see a nation like Australia kowtow to the Pitbull on the block.

    I sincerely hope you can toss Bush out on his ass, preferably after impeaching him for gross misconduct and violation of his countries laws, and then begin work on repairing the reputation of the US internationally. In about 20 years you might undo some of the damage. If you care to try that is :(

    --
    "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
    1. Re:American Empire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the torture and S&M stuff to Iraqi prisoners counts as a criminal deed even in U.S.A. ?
      And where these people sent to home or Iraqi prison... -yep, that's what I thought.

      This looks like a case where this nations chooses to defend its own best interests over the world.
      It may be the cheap oil (provided by one happy liberated nation) or the intellectual rights of their artists.

      Since the American legislative system is built to be quite expensive to start with, sending a person to fight in court against a fortune 500 company looks like a lost battle even before it begun.

      In my opinion it is good that someone tries to bring peace and justice upon world but a lot of bad things are made in the name of good and even God. Crusaders wreaked havoc like never seen before, and why? -well, to bring the light of true religion among the people who did not understand better.

      Even now the prison in Quantanamo bay violates the international laws and I don't know about American laws? Is it ok to do crimes outside the border? How come the laws reach out over the border when it is convenient to do so?

      I don't live in Australia nor America but I pity the Australian people for their government being so spineless. I believe this man should be punished but according to Australian laws. If you have the power to select the location where to judge we may soon be facing the situation where quantanamo bay starts to get crowded when M$ starts to drag in the Chinese people for violating their intellectual rights. Fiction or a bad dream? you decide that but keep an eye to your rights since you never know when you break some law, somewhere.

    2. Re:American Empire by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Bush will be gone in two years, regardless of if you love the guy or hate him to his core. The U.S. Constitution has spoken, and it is unlikely that he will ever run for public office again in his lifetime. Some former presidents have become senators or in one case a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, but most end up like Bill Clinton or G.H.W. Bush.... elder statesmen who occasionally get sent as "official representatives" to state funerals (aka Yeltsin most recently) or speak out about "humanitarian" causes (both elder Bush and Clinton were involved with the Indian Ocean tsunami relief as well as Katrina relief efforts).

      It amazes me that some current presidential candidates are writing up their campaign platforms to be "anti-Bush" as the guy isn't even running. Even those of the same political party as Bush come from positions very much outside of the current political clique that is running the U.S. government at the moment, so it should be obvious in a couple of years that a very new political philosophy is going to be taking charge regardless of who actually wins the presidential election.

      As far as complaints about the destruction of the American political system, you may wish for this to happen, but the current government (speaking broadly here) is very much in charge. I would dare you to find any major government in the world that has so successfully killed any internal domestic groups advocating rebellion and revolution as throughally as the U.S. government has. And to do so with a willing population supporting such moves. Groups like the SLA (Symbonese Liberation Army), Al-Queida, Hell's Angles, "The Mafia", or even weird attempts to spark a coup in America like the "American Liberty League" have all been effectively eliminated from within the borders of the USA. Even groups like the "militia organizations" which advocate extreme interpretations of the 2nd Amendment ("right to bear arms") have been neutralized in such a way they pose no real threat.

      This isn't to say that unlike international perception, that the USA is living in a police state. We aren't. Political opposition does happen, and it is possible to say that you think the current president is a stupid pompous ass and needs to be thrown out with the trash, and to do so right in front of his official residence. If you tried to do that in China, you would likely end up in prison, or would quietly "disappear". Legitimate opposition political movements are tolerated (you just can't advocate armed rebellion) and even encouraged. If you think this is what a fascist dictatorship really means, I would strongly suggest you crack open history books and read a little more on Hitler and Mussolini to see what such dictatorships really were like. This does not exist in America.

  66. how many US ppl extradited to Iraq? by Cybertoy · · Score: 1

    hmm... and how many US torturers have been extradited to Iraq to face punishment for crimes they actually committed on Iraq soil? Somewhere something has gone terribly wrong....

  67. no no no by nephridium · · Score: 1

    The US argument is presumably that the copyright owners are in the US, but so what? If I injure a German person while he visits France, should I be extradited to Germany from France? This whole issue just seems bizarre.

    I think this needs some clarification. It goes like this: if you commit the crime of pissing off a corporation based in the US you should be "extradited" into the sun. Failing that (due to the still quite inefficient technology nowadays) we'll do the next best thing: 10 years in a US pound-me-in-the-ass prison and additionally a fine of half a million US dollars. That'll teach ya ;)

    --


    And when you gaze long enough into the code, the code will also gaze into you.
  68. Scares the sh** out of me... by heretic108 · · Score: 1

    I am an Australian expat, resident for some years in New Zealand, and have broken no laws of this land.

    But New Zealand has an extradition treaty with China.

    I've done some work - totally within New Zealand - on anonymous publishing and encryption software, and shared it freely with the world. What I've done is totally legal here, but it's likely I've infringed on numerous sections of the Chinese criminal code.

    So theoretically, the Chinese Govt could file a request to the New Zealand government for my extradition. The only thing that stops them is that my part in developing this software has been pretty small, and likely hasn't presented a huge obstacle to domestic Chinese law enforcement. I'm pretty small fry. But if any of my code, for instance, gave Falun Gong or pro-democracy protestors a huge advantage in concealing their activities from the Chinese authorities, I could be looking at a long holiday at the Beijing Hilton :(

    --
    -- In the beginning was the WORD, and the WORD was UNSIGNED, and the main(){} was without form and void...
    1. Re:Scares the sh** out of me... by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      Um, you can only get extradited for violating a law within their territory. If you hosted your software in China, or helped distribute within China, that's another story.

      It's just like how the USA had more severe crypto export laws than Canada. Us Cannucks can give out crypto relatively easily [then and now] without regard to the yanks.

      This guy was being pursued because he distributed the breaks within the states [most likely]. I disagree with the extradition but the likely reason for it is because of the distribution within America [well that and corporate malfeasants].

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    2. Re:Scares the sh** out of me... by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      '' I've done some work - totally within New Zealand - on anonymous publishing and encryption software, and shared it freely with the world. What I've done is totally legal here, but it's likely I've infringed on numerous sections of the Chinese criminal code. ''

      The key point is "what I've done is totally legal here". You would be extradited if what you did was against New Zealand law (and then the minor question where exactly that crime occurred).

      Someone posted "what if I made a cartoon picture of Mohammed and sent it to Iran, where it is against the law, should I be extradited"? Clearly if you sent the picture from say Afghanistan, and it was illegal there, they would extradite you. If you sent the same picture from Italy, you would not be extradited.

  69. Software? by datadriven · · Score: 1

    So does anyone know what software he "pirated?"

    1. Re:Software? by Ep0xi · · Score: 0

      i dont think there are a real software vendor after him because the demand never left a police state.

      --
      ?
  70. What's the confusion? by TheSciBoy · · Score: 1
    I don't know what the confusion is on what is right or not. Just ask yourself, if the reverse was true. If an american citizen had broken the copyright and distributed material of large quantities of any other country, would there be any circumstance where the US would extradite him/her to stand trial abroad?

    Cirtainly not. It's even the case that the US believes so much in the principle of trying its own citizens themselves that they have vowed to break any of their military personnel out of any jail anywhere in the world if they are incarcerated, even if the charge is crimes against humanity and the jailor is the international community (UN).

    The hipocricy is so pungent that it's becoming hard to breathe. Or maybe that's just the carbondioxide from millions and millions of beefcows eating their way through the rainforests of southamerica.

    --
    Badgers, we don't need no stinking badgers! - UHF
  71. Australia is a Shameless Sicophantic Nation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Firstly, this isn't flamebait. It sucks that the Australian Government does everything the American Government tells it to do. It's became the most disgraceful nation on Earth. It has absolutely no pride and no dignity.

    Australia kisses American ass, even in a way that Americans would't kiss American ass.

    All John Howard and his crop of kiss-ass Australian politicans need to do is hear an American accent and they're down on their knees looking for the nearest fly to unzip. American salesman have long known this. Every year, they sell the Australian Government crap (helicopters that don't fly, ships that are rusted hulks) and every year John Howard and his cabinet are quivering like giddy school girls at the prospect of getting invited to another BBQ in Crawford. Australia was one of the nations that invaded Iraq in the hop of kissing more American ass, and can you believe the US even billed the Aussies for the bombs they gave them to drop. Being lickspittle sicophantic cowards, the Aussies paid.

    Pathetic. But Australians's know about this and keep voting for the same lickspittle Prime Minister. They have the government they deserve. My fellow Australians: Drink the beer and wave your flag all you like, but you have nothing to be proud of.

    regards
    A Disgraced Aussie

  72. Sacrifices by Jasin+Natael · · Score: 1

    You remember the movie "King Kong", where the villagers tied up the woman outside the village as a sacrifice, to keep the 8,000-lb gorilla from destroying them? Me neither...

    --
    True science means that when you re-evaluate the evidence, you re-evaluate your faith.
    1. Re:Sacrifices by Legion303 · · Score: 2, Funny

      "You remember the movie 'King Kong'"

      Of course. I downloaded the DoD release.

    2. Re:Sacrifices by Ep0xi · · Score: 0

      no sacrifice as sir elton said

      --
      ?
    3. Re:Sacrifices by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 0, Redundant

      I do HOPE to mean that DoD release isnt the "Department of Defense"....

      --
  73. he committed the crime on the internet by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    extradite him to the internet. have the trial in second life, and behead him in world of warcraft, or something

    all joking aside, crimes committed on the web are rather diffuse in terms of national sovereignty. extradition to the usa is obviously retarded, but maybe being tried only in australia is a bit daft too. of course, it will never fly, seeing as countries can't agree on anything substantive enough in theme, but perhaps crimes with a mostly online component to them can be referred to a special international jurisdiction sometime in the future. who knows, maybe some future case will scream for the necessity of sich a thing, such as every country wanting to try the guy, if his crime were vile enough, such as causing economic damage in dozens of country due to some malicious worm, for example. his punishment of course won't be virtual, but it could be agreed upon internationally and then served at any number of countries according to some sort of protocol

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  74. Does the same apply to shoplifters? by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    If I stole something from Asda (UK supermarkets owned by Wallmart), then clearly this would affect the US business at least a little. So would I be extradited for that? I'm sure even if it was major fraud, I'd still be tried under English Law. Why is copyright law so different? Their "losses2 occured all over the world.

    1. Re:Does the same apply to shoplifters? by tomstdenis · · Score: 1

      While I disagree with the extradition, your example is not quite the same. He broke copy protection schemes and promoted [allegedly] the copyright violation of software on a global scale. That he did it from Australia is what bothers me. Can't the aussie courts deal with this?

      That you can get prison time for it bothers me as well. I can see a fine and probation [maybe be denied a computer for a short period], but being locked up is hardly productive, especially for a very non-violent crime.

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
  75. Re:Looks like he violated... by NickHydroxide · · Score: 1

    I don't know the full facts of the case, so I'm just going to throw this out there - perhaps this was because the smugglers mentioned in that article were two Pakistanis and an Iraqi? That is, not nationals of Thailand. Furthermore, perhaps people all round lacked confidence in the incorruptability of the Thai judiciary. As a means to avoid bribes (or even death threats) from the smugglers' connection, they deemed it more appropriate that the three be tried in Australia. I would also argue that the smuggling of people into Australia involves a greater and more direct effect on Australia as a country than the effect on the United States that "passively" making copyrighted material available on the internet would have.

  76. 51st state? More like the kiss ass principlality by BillGatesLoveChild · · Score: 1

    51st state? If only. Americans look after their own. The Australian Government does not. The Australian Government giving up an Aussie because the American Government asks for it? Happens all the time. The American Government giving up an American citizen? Hah! It'd never happen. The Aussie Government routinely passes American laws because it's a kiss ass nation. The American Government passing Aussie laws? Bloody unlikely, 'mate' The Aussie and US Government signed a free trade agreement. It banned agriculture which is Australias prime export. Since the deal, the trade balance has favoured the US. America looks after America's interests. Australia kisses asses. Australia isn't worthy of being the 51st state (because it doesn't act like one) Australia is an ass kisser.

  77. Re:Looks like he violated... by pelrun · · Score: 1

    why the F**K do you capitalize America but not "australia" (sic)?

    laziness!

  78. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by MollyB · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One point to make - /. moderators are from US mainly, and therefore moderation most likely will favor US citizens and opinions (aka it is BIASED). Here we go again... Just because slashdot is an American (yeah, we stole that from the two hemispheres, too) -based site and most users are from here, you would complain that views of commenters and moderators expose that statistical reality and call it bias, but I would point out that the citizens of the United States hold as varied a spectrum of beliefs as a semi-homogeneous sampling from elsewhere. If you simply note our last two Presidential elections, you'll see that we are as polarized as it gets...

    Personally, I moderate on the merits of the post. I have stopped correcting spelling/grammar errors by followup comment as I've discovered that English is not the first language of many posters, although their point of view is as valid as mine. Please don't be misled by the fraction of slashdotters who are loud-mouthed assholes and swagger around like ultra-patriots. Since this is supposedly a free nation, all of us must suffer the inelegant employment of that freedom by some in order to justify our own. I repeat, we are not a monolithic nation, but I concede it could look that way from afar...
  79. One World Government by boyfaceddog · · Score: 0

    So, this is it then. This is the so-called "one world government" the nut-jobs have warned us about. The only problem is that it has no real power except money, has no army except lawyers, and creates only profit for the very rich and powerful.

    I always knew I hated Sony and BMG. Hard to think of them as our overlords after all their cute commercials.

    --
    Here will be an old abusing of God's patience and the king's English.
  80. Look at it this way...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some despot in an autocratic country makes a law that it's illegal to defame or say anything nasty about him and his country. You publish a website that does just that, since you're protected by freedom of speech. Heck, you may even be entirely factual but you're still saying lots of nasty things. The Internet being the international thing that it is, people in that country read your website and the despot wants to extradite you for violating his country's laws. Sound fair?

  81. This sword cuts both ways..US FalunGong Rya lisnen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This sword cuts both ways. Those smug rabid pacifists who laugh up thier sleeves when an Aussie goes to an American slam at American taxpayer expense for interfering with the profits of so called American interests that are really owned by foreigners like Bertellmann or others will have their turn come up as well. Perhaps sooner than they think! Fast forward a few years. The world turns and now China has ability to project the world's largest land army with a newly powerful navy. Now all of a sudden China demands similar 'priviledges' vis-a-vis American citizens. All of a sudden old history lists of anti Chinese internet postings are cheerfully and happily provided by the likes of Google to the newly empowered Chinese secret police and warrants are issued to American citizens in THEIR own homes. Soon American citizens will take part in a present day Chinese industry...being executed for 'anti-state' or 'anti-Chinese' activities so that their collagen can be extracted to be sold in skin creams. When you are being skinned alive in a chinese dungeon, it will be too late to wake up. We have opened a Pandora's box, and no telling what might walk, crawl, or slither out.

  82. So what are you going to do about it? by MichailS · · Score: 1

    What can anybody do about it? Gripe on Slashdot?

    "From the abyss of my parent's basement, I strike at thee with my nerd forum debating skills!"

    1. Re:So what are you going to do about it? by evil_aar0n · · Score: 1

      I can't mod you funny, unfortunately, so I'll just say: Bravo. :-)

      --
      Truth, Justice. Or the American Way.
  83. I'll post the obvious by crivens · · Score: 1

    I'll post the obvious - 10 years for copyright infringement, and much less for murder in the US? Pffft!

  84. First? by camperdave · · Score: 4, Informative

    The USA is the world's most progressive nation, in the sense that it is the first and best democracy...

    Honestly, is that what they teach you in America? The word democracy is an ancient Greek word. Why would the ancient Greeks have a word for something that didn't exist until 1776? Because democracy existed long before the United States did. India was a democracy 8000 years ago, Afghanistan and Pakistan 6000 years ago. The Iroquois Confederacy, the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Althing in Iceland, early medieval Ireland, the Veche in Slavic countries... all democracies, all before the US came into being.

    --
    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    1. Re:First? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kick your sarcasm detector. It's on the fritz again.

    2. Re:First? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Iroquois Confederacy

      The Iroquois?! They were war-crazed cannibals! Their 'Confederacy' had nearly crumbled before the Europeans came to town and finished the job.

    3. Re:First? by realisticradical · · Score: 1

      Honestly, is that what they teach you in America?


      Pretty much, yup.
    4. Re:First? by kimvette · · Score: 1

      The USA is the world's most progressive nation, in the sense that it is the first and best democracy...

      Honestly, is that what they teach you in America?


      No, the schools teach the truth: that The united States of America is a constitutional republic with some elements of democracy at the lower levels. It is the mass media and the politicians who keep mis-using the word "democracy" leading many of us to believe that not only are we a democracy, but that we're the first to do it, and we're the best at it. Hogwash, from beginning to end.
      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    5. Re:First? by CODiNE · · Score: 2, Informative

      Born in the US, went to public school K-12 and I can say that yes, that is what they teach us. We are required to spend a year in high school studying "US History" and are also required to spend a year studying "World History". Other than that, when you're in elementary school you learn things like Thanksgivings day really happened and it isn't a myth like scholarly research might tell you. Honestly I've only heard of the Greek democracies, but we certainly didn't spend any time actually studying them or how they were organized, there was a brief mention of it, but no great thanks and respect taught. But we did spend a year with our required "Government" class in high school... learning words like bicameral and how the constitution was written.

      Really, learning wasn't enjoyable to me at all until after I got out of school. Then I started making up for all the stuff they never taught me. I had it better than the kids now do, a month or two ago kids I know from two different school districts in two different states both told me they spent everyday studying for the upcoming standardized school exams. They teachers now literally throw aside the normal studies and focus for an entire month on gaming the school rankings tests. These kids know the test is coming up and that's all they do until it's over with. Really sad that they don't focus on educating people and teaching them how to think, instead they focus on rote memorization and repeating what you heard. Mighty convenient that.

      --
      Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
    6. Re:First? by Lesrahpem · · Score: 1

      I think he was saying that those are the ill-informed opinions that many Americans hold. If that's what he meant, than I have to agree. I see it everyday.

    7. Re:First? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to contradict you too much, but how exactly did Pakistan have democracy 6000 years ago? It was created only in 1947.... http://www.wisegeek.com/why-was-pakistan-created.h tm

    8. Re:First? by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

      Because the US was not an instantiated as a democracy. It was set up as a republic, a democratic republic in which there was a meta-nation. What they teach in the US today is not that different from what they teach you in what ever country you are in in that they are both wrong.

      There was no government of the structure that the United States was set up as in 1776, never in recorded history has there been. The US was set up as a confederation of soverign states under a single "outfacing organization" to provide for mutual defense and commonality of basic code: the constitution. It was set up as the first government in recorded history to be one defined by limiting it as opposed to maximizing it.

      The governments you describe had "mob rule" - it was however formalized. Democracy is not an ancient greek word. It is a later combination of two ancient greek words:

      demos: people
      kratos: strength/power/govern

      Looking at the root word it is actually a bit of a stretch to say that the roots imply what we call democracy - though they fit what democracy reallyis that being mob rule.
      It is far too common to take what we thnk a word means today and assume it to mean the same thing thousands of years ago. For example, in ancient Greece the word tyrant was used merely to describe someone who took over government by overthrowing the previous regime. Now we use the word far differently.

      As far as Ancient Greece's "democracy" goes, everyone was *required* to vote - well those who were deemed worthy. They also served as the jury/judges for the society as well. Hardly what we have today. That said oraties of the day also talked of the folly of democracy in the sense of it developing a ruling class that essentialy enslaves the lower classes - and does so by elevating the needy through public works into said ruling class. Furthermore the US system of one-person=one-vote was also a new integration.

      Whilst there are similarities with "prior art" in the structure of the US government to say it is not the first of it's kind is folly and factual inaccurate. To say that the various forms of democratic rule or representative government throughout history preclude the proper assertion that the American government was a new form is likewise innacurate and folly.

      Many of the other references you give were actually republics. Which brings us back to the founding of the United States as a democracic republic. It was hoped by the founders (per their writing) that the republic aspect could temper the nasty effects of democracy. We see today that this is sadly not true for extended periods of time.

      You should also thank your educationj system for not educating you on the history of the time as well. The "newness" of what was being done in Americas was proclaimed throughout Europe at the time and by scholars in full posesion of the knowledge of historic governments. Of particular note was/is the separation of powers. As mentioned above the prior democracies consolidated power in the "elected" or the casting of lots. This is critical because these writings are the basis for the long running "America was a new government" assertion.

      As far as the difference between democracy and republic - republics are fundamentally based on civic virtue and liberty. Democracies are founded on the principle of majority rule and force of law. While they are subtle and generally unexplored it is not difficult to still see the vestiges of this underlying difference between republicanism and democracy in the modern Republican and Democrat parties in the US. Other key differences is that democracy is essentially "the law is what the current legislators belive it to be" whereas a republic is founded on a specific set of laws and they are the whole.

      Just because students of today, which clearly include students in your country as well as the US, do not get a solid understanding of the various forms of government conflate the terms does not mean that the US was not the first government of it's kind. Perhaps you should spend less time bashing the US and more time looking at your own system with a critical idea. And they that goes to everyone.

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
  85. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by FritzTheCat1030 · · Score: 1

    If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to be prosecuted by the AUSsies. There's a simple cure to the problem -- don't fucking STEAL SHIT !!! If you can't do the time, don't do the crime - don't do it !!
    So, if you broke Chinese law, by criticizing the Chinese government, you'd expect to be extradited and prosecuted by the Chinese??? There's a simple cure to the problem -- don't fucking CRITICIZE CHINA!!! If you can't do the time, don't do the crime - don't do it!!
  86. When is extradition appropriate? by metacell · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think some people may be missing the point.

    Griffiths has admitted to copyright infringement, which is criminal in both USA and Australia (and almost all other countries). It doesn't matter that the victim of the crime lives in another country; imagine if you could send threatening letters or bombs to someone, and get away with it just because the victim lives outside your country's jurisdiction. As long as you commit the act while being within the borders of your country, and the act is criminal, you could and should be put on trial.

    The weird part is putting Griffiths on trial in USA instead of Australia. The act has been perpetrated on Australian soil by an Australian citizen, so Australian law and Australian courts should apply. Only the victim lives in USA.

    I suspect this is yet another symptom of the hübris of US-American government: they think their rules should apply to everyone else. If a US citizen commits a crime against someone in a foreign country, he is put on trial in USA. If a foreign citizen commits a crime against someone in the USA, the US government wants to put him on trial in USA too. US government believes it should have the jurisdiction over any crime that is committed in USA, *or* by a US citizen, *or* against a US citizen, even though it conflicts with every other country's right to do the same.

    And, of course, it's also a symptom of the lack of backbone of the rest of the world.

    1. Re:When is extradition appropriate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hubris.

    2. Re:When is extradition appropriate? by KillerBob · · Score: 1

      The thing people don't realize about extradition is that you can only be extradited for something that's a crime in your current location. In this case, cracking software is illegal in both Australia and the US. The charges were placed in the US, and a motion to extradite was filed. If it were something that isn't illegal in Australia, then he couldn't be extradited for it.

      At that point, the Australians had basically two choices... they could either file charges in their own court system and deny the extradition on the grounds that he was already being dealt with in the Australian court system, or they could turn him over to face the charges in the US. That's the nature of the treaty... the only other grounds to deny an extradition request are human rights, and I think it'd be pretty hard to prove that he'd face any worse treatment in the US court system than he'd get in Australia.

      This isn't an example of American hubris. This is an example of the Australians not wanting to prosecute for something that doesn't affect Australian interests (as in, because the injured parties aren't Australian companies, they've got nothing to gain by using Australian resources and tax money by trying him).

      --
      If you believe everything you read, you'd better not read. - Japanese proverb
    3. Re:When is extradition appropriate? by metacell · · Score: 1

      That's the nature of the treaty... the only other grounds to deny an extradition request are human rights, and I think it'd be pretty hard to prove that he'd face any worse treatment in the US court system than he'd get in Australia.

      I admit that I don't know anything about Australian prisons, but I find it hard to believe they can be as bad as the US ones. USA is renowned for having the worst and most violent prisons of all modern countries. You'd have to go to a poor third-world country or a non-democracy to find a worse treatment of criminals. At least, that's what we believe in Europe.

      This isn't an example of American hubris. This is an example of the Australians not wanting to prosecute for something that doesn't affect Australian interests (as in, because the injured parties aren't Australian companies, they've got nothing to gain by using Australian resources and tax money by trying him).

      The problem is, USA doesn't return the favour. They sign the extradition treaties, demand that others follow them, but rarely follow them themselves. US authorities seem to think that an american committing a crime on foreign soil is their business (because he's american), a foreigner commiting a crime on Ameican soil is also their business (because it's on american soil), and a foreigner commiting a crime on foreign soil against an american is also their business (because it's against an american).

      Yes, there are cases where USA has extradited, but in most cases, they choose to interpret the treaties differently as soon as they apply to themselves.

      That's where the hubris comes in.

  87. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by CowboyBob500 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you simply note our last two Presidential elections, you'll see that we are as polarized as it gets...


    Not really. From outside the US I see a bunch of right-wingers arguing with another bunch of right-wingers about how far to the right the most acceptable form of government is. Now if you actually had a party that was on the left, then you might be able to call the voting public polarized, but until then...

    Bob
  88. Only when its convinient to US (and corporations) by razpones · · Score: 1

    The US will ask for extraditions such as this one, for obvious non violent crimes (in the US), but when it comes to their own agendas (like sponsoring terrorism via the CIA), they will not let other nations get their justice. As is the case of Luis Posada Carriles a known airplane bomber and former CIA operative, Posada has been accused of involvement in various terrorist attacks and plots in the Western hemisphere. But the US government won't extradite him to Venezuela. Or even keep him in jail.

  89. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by twistedsymphony · · Score: 1

    Seeing as most /.ers seem to also be Libertarian voters, and it's a rare occasion that any Libertarian politician is elected for anything in the US, I would say that even if most of /. is from the USA, very few of them actually hold the same political mindset as your average American voter.

  90. Talk about reciprocity! by multimediavt · · Score: 1

    Holy crap! That's the longest reaching example of legal reciprocity I have *EVER* seen. They talk about living in a police state, but a police planet is a bit much!

  91. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

    Its ridiculous to call Democrats anything but on the left when they're trying to advance gay rights and keep abortion legal.

    Would you like to try again?

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  92. The idiot placed himself under US jurisdiction by HighOrbit · · Score: 1

    <aphorism>Ignorance of the Law is no Excuse</aphorism>


    If you do business in a State (using the work 'state' expansively to mean both a nation and a U.S. state), you place yourself under that State's jurisdiction. Now the word 'business', like the phrase 'interstate commerce' is itself legally expansive. Using the telephone is interstate commerce or business. Selling something or even sending something over the wire to a person in any State means your a now voluntarily placing yourself under the jurisdiction of laws of the that State. Sorry, but as soon as the guy sent cracked IP to the US, he put himself voluntarily under US jurisdiction and legally became fair play for prosecution and extradition. If he had confined his activities solely to Australia, then he would have been outside of the US jurisdiction and only subject to Aussie law.
    1. Re:The idiot placed himself under US jurisdiction by JustNiz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You mean by sending an email to someone you become subject to the jurisdiction of the state they are in?
      That sounds like bullcrap to me.

      >> but as soon as the guy sent cracked IP to the US,

      so what he should claim is that he never actually sent it, just that he made it available and others who happened to be in the US downloaded it.

    2. Re:The idiot placed himself under US jurisdiction by HighOrbit · · Score: 1

      IANAL. But for criminal matters, I'm going to guess "yes" regardless of the number of times, if the email is itself part of a crime (such as a threat or fraud).

      In civil matters, there is the theory of "sufficient connection" to establish jurisdiction. A single e-mail might not be enough, but if you are repeatedly offering goods and services to people in that state, then you are effectively doing business in that state and you have "sufficient connection" to be under the jurisdiction of its laws.

  93. Tell it to a judge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Nice way to peak emotion without putting facts into context. Just a few quick "context" points to add.."

    If the claims the US makes are true, then why be afraid to let it go to trial? The trial will be under oath, the judge will review the evidence and if it's true then they have nothing to fear. The story you quote was about the release of an audio recording by the US. No judge has reviewed the authenticity or completeness of the tape.

    It's not unreasonable of GP to demand the people stand trial for what would be murder/manslaughter/accidental death.

  94. Re:No surprise here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, you are thinking of Austria.

  95. Re:Here's a thought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As has been mentioned before.. Even if you didn't break a law within the U.S.? Learn to read some of the comments before posting, moron.

  96. Correction by Amitz+Sekali · · Score: 1

    Check your fact: You would definitely NOT land in jail if you spit on the sidewalk of Indonesia.

    --
    If you delay pleasure infinitely, the pleasure will be infinite. (YM)
  97. Is the guy in the photograph ... by vorwerk · · Score: 1

    ... wearing any pants? I mean, could they have picked a less flattering picture?

  98. So... by Coucho · · Score: 0

    Australia has become USA's bitch?

    --
    *pSig = NULL;
  99. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by thestreetmeat · · Score: 1

    It just so happens that those two issues have virtually no effect on the economy and labour. When it comes to the non-trivial, both parties are really just factions of the business party.

    It's important for the parties to engage in vigorous debate over issues that are divisive, difficult to resolve, and don't threaten the establishment either way. It's the illusion of democracy. Where are the democrats on public health care, the environment, and not starting illegal wars?

  100. yes, but by Dr.+Hok · · Score: 1
    That comment is not quite correct. Read the follow-ups: extradition is allowed to other EU countries and international courts only, and only under a couple of further conditions, e.g. only if he won't face an unfair trial.

    And I'm unsure if this condition can be fulfilled in the US at all; I remember someone describing the US legal system as: "Trial: A dozen laymen decides who has the better lawyer."

    --
    Say out loud: I'm an Aspie and I'm somewhat proud, I guess. Uh. Can I write an email in all caps instead? Hm...
  101. In a democracy by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    The people get the government they deserve.

    Commonly attributed to a line in Alexis de Tocqueville's "Democracy In America", though I couldn't find it.

    --
    Deleted
  102. Borderless Utopia by BinBoy · · Score: 1

    Isn't it wonderful that the world is becoming a borderless utopia? The laws you must obey have been multiplied by about 200.

  103. Quick Questions for Aussies by Culture · · Score: 1

    I assume that you do not have a problem with me counterfeiting Australian dollars while I am here in the US and selling them at 0.10 per dollar over the internet? I see a raise in my future.

    --
    ----- There are two kinds of people in this world, my friend; those with loaded guns, and those who dig.
    1. Re:Quick Questions for Aussies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The North Korean government is doing the very same thing right now with US Dollars and Chinese Yuan. After months of the US arguing that the counterfeiting had to stop as part of the 7 Way Talks, they eventually stopped pressing the point.

      Furthermore a bank owned by Stanley Ho (a personal friend of the Kim family by the way) in Macau that was helping to launder the cash seems to be off the hook too. The US wasn't after Ho personally either, just his bank.

      Answer your question?

  104. How can we help this guy? by Xesdeeni · · Score: 1

    Is there anything we can do!? I'm an American (and a conservative one who disagrees with most of the political opinions posted here), but I'm appalled by this. There is no way he should have been extradited to the U.S. at all, let alone facing a trip to American jail! I wouldn't stand for an American being ripped from here to another country for something done here, so I'm not quietly going to stand for the reverse.

    Who can we contact?

    Xesdeeni

  105. You'd win if it were like Iraq... by FatSean · · Score: 1

    I mean, the big bad US military is scraping the bottom of the recruitment barrel and radical religionists are slapping our Iraq forces around exactly as predicted in 2002. They're using 1950s technology...think of what the English could bring to bear against an American invasion!

    We're scared in the USA too...our government has run amok and the salt-of-the-earth joe-jobbers have authoritarianism firmly lodged in their throat. Their years of cheerleading Bush's imperialism has rendered the gag reflex inert.

    It's a sad time for the USA :(

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:You'd win if it were like Iraq... by servognome · · Score: 1

      I mean, the big bad US military is scraping the bottom of the recruitment barrel and radical religionists are slapping our Iraq forces around exactly as predicted in 2002
      The US forces in Iraq are not getting slapped around, politically the US is getting slapped around. A roadside bomb killing 2 Americans does not constitute a decisive military action, it does however, feed into a political strategy of maintaining the "war" until the US leaves so that victory can be claimed.
      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
  106. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That was the funniest comment I've seen on Slashdot all month. To bad I'm out of mod points or you'd have a +1 funny from me for sure.

  107. Re:Benign Superpower.... by Warg!+The+Orcs!! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's a difference between the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire. Under the Roman Republic, subject peoples were often ruthlessly exploited by Roman businessmen but the establishment of the Principate under Augustus brought the worst excesses to an end. The Roman Empire was a very benign superpower. The Romans (until the rise of Christianity) was a pluralist society that embraced all the cultures within its borders. Minorities (except Christians) were allowed to practice their beliefs without persecution as long as no-one was injured in the process. In most cases conquered nations were allowed to keep their own form of government, customs and legal systems with the understanding that Roman Law superceded local laws. As the oft quoted lines from Life of Brian go "Apart from the sanitation, the medicine, education, wine, public order, irrigation, roads, a fresh water system, and public health, what have the Romans ever done for us?" - Brought peace. Wherever the US goes, they rarely bring peace with them. They do bring, however, exploitative and ruthless businessmen.

    --
    Travelling forward in time at a rate of 1 second per second.
  108. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by CowboyBob500 · · Score: 1

    Its ridiculous to call Democrats anything but on the left when they're trying to advance gay rights and keep abortion legal.


    Those are two small points which don't actually affect left or right. Here in the UK, the Conservatives are also pro-abortion and gay rights, but they are most definitely right wing.

    To be left wing, the Democrats would have to be advocating free health care for all, promoting unions, calling for national industries like power companies and telephone companies to be nationalised and removed from private ownership, abolishing private schooling for a state only system, etc etc.

    The Democrats do no such thing, and are NOT a left-wing party, and the only main policy differences between the two major parties in the US are the small ideological things. The two main parties put in these ideological choices such as abortion and gay rights to give the illusion of choice, when in fact there is none.

    Bob
  109. Simple ignorance, that's all by TheAxeMaster · · Score: 1

    People here are ignorant, they believe that casting a vote for someone who might not win is a wasted vote, so when they consider who to vote for, they also consider the likelyhood that that candidate will win. I honestly couldn't tell you WHY this is, because I'm not ignorant and I vote for who I think serves my interests best, but that's the best explanation I've been able to come up with so far.

    1. Re:Simple ignorance, that's all by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      You seem to understand how people act in the real world, and yet you claim that those of us who take human nature into account are "ignorant". The world is not black and white. Seriously, why chuck your vote to a hopeless 3rd party in a close election? HE CAN'T WIN, and your piddling vote won't matter.

      Not to mention that in the last presidential election, I didn't really like any of the candidates available to me in my state - not even the 3rd parties.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    2. Re:Simple ignorance, that's all by kelnos · · Score: 1

      Considering that attitude, then "your piddling vote" doesn't matter regardless of who you vote for, so you might as well "waste" it voting along with your principles rather than "waste" it voting for one of the candidates who will surely win anyway. If your vote really doesn't matter, then it will do little to sway the balance between the two "majority" candidates.

      I choose to take a longer view: to use the 2004 election as an example, voting for Bush or Kerry seemed like a waste to me. Obviously one or the other would have won, and I didn't see much of a difference between the two. Kerry might have been the popular "lesser of two evils" choice, but really, things wouldn't be much different with a Kerry presidency. I might as well cast my vote for a third-party candidate. Sure, they get a minuscule portion of the vote, but what does it matter? If more people voted with their convictions instead of wasting their vote on a major-party candidate, maybe things could eventually change. Certainly not for this election or the next, but maybe 15-20 years down the line.

      --
      Xfce: Lighter than some, heavier than others. Just right.
    3. Re:Simple ignorance, that's all by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Considering that attitude, then "your piddling vote" doesn't matter regardless of who you vote for, so you might as well "waste" it voting along with your principles rather than "waste" it voting for one of the candidates who will surely win anyway. If your vote really doesn't matter, then it will do little to sway the balance between the two "majority" candidates. But the fact is that the 2000 election was decided by perhaps as few as 400 votes in Florida. Sometimes a single vote IS significant in swaying the balance between two candidates.

      I choose to take a longer view: to use the 2004 election as an example, voting for Bush or Kerry seemed like a waste to me. Obviously one or the other would have won, and I didn't see much of a difference between the two. Kerry might have been the popular "lesser of two evils" choice, but really, things wouldn't be much different with a Kerry presidency. In hindsight, I think I agree with you. Kerry is a tool, maybe even more of a tool than Bush. At the time, I wasn't really aware of this - and I was pretty much just mad at Bush - and so Kerry got my vote. For what it's worth, I often vote 3rd-party for the exact reasons that you mention. I'm pretty pragmatic, though, and I thought that the 2004 election would be very close - especially in my state (Pennsylvania at the time). In the end, it ended up being a 33,000 vote margin for Kerry - so I don't really feel to bad about my vote... that is pretty close.
      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    4. Re:Simple ignorance, that's all by kelnos · · Score: 1

      You have a good point about the very small margin in Florida, and (expanding that to country-wide) there are certainly instances where a candidate has won by a very small number of electoral votes. But... still, given that I considered both Bush and Kerry to be piss-poor choices for president, I don't think I'd vote for either of them, even if I knew ahead of time that such a close vote would be possible in my state. But I do acknowledge that there could be situations where the choice to ignore the two major parties might be harder to make.

      I was in a similar situation as you, though: California, which Kerry clearly was going to win, so it was an easy choice to vote third-party.

      Regardless, everyone (who actually votes, anyway :-/) needs to feel like they did the right thing by voting the way they did -- whether for strategic reasons or just plain hating one of the major candidates. If someone feels that a 'lesser evil' candidate has a chance and would be significantly more acceptable to them than the other majority-party candidate, more power to them. IMO, however, voting major-party solely because 'no one else will ever win' is irresponsible and just perpetuates our regrettable two-party system.

      --
      Xfce: Lighter than some, heavier than others. Just right.
    5. Re:Simple ignorance, that's all by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      IMO, however, voting major-party solely because 'no one else will ever win' is irresponsible and just perpetuates our regrettable two-party system. That, and the lack of a really credible third party :) For a while I thought that Ross Perot's Reform Party would have some legs, but it turned out to be a one-trick pony... really just a vehicle for Ross. Grassroots efforts like the Greens and the Libertarians are nice efforts and will have more staying power, but have little broad appeal.

      In last year's election in New York, the 3nd parties were uniformly crank-magnets. Every last one of them was running on a platform of investigating the World Trade Center attacks. I threw a couple of them my vote anyway in the hopelessly one-sided contests (Governer Spitzer and Senator Clinton). In New York City, it's really a one-party system, so even a vote for a Republican is sort of a protest vote except for the odd billionare... that's why the primaries are so important.
      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
  110. Oblig. Simpsons Quote by schnipschnap · · Score: 1

    Bart: Hey, G.I.Joe: your sign's broken. We're already in Australia.
    Marine: Actually, Sir, the embassy is considered American soil, Sir!
    Homer: Really? Look, boy, now I'm in Australia...[hops over the line] Now I'm in America...Australia! America!
    Bart: I get it, Dad.
    Homer: Australia! America!
    Marge: Homer, that's enough!
    Homer: Australia! America! [gets punched] Ow!
    Marine: Here in America we don't tolerate that kind of crap, Sir!

    (Source)

  111. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by init100 · · Score: 1

    Its ridiculous to call Democrats anything but on the left when they're trying to advance gay rights and keep abortion legal.

    In the american political spectrum, the Democrats are considered a left-wing party. When compared with many other countries, such as many western and central European ones, both the Democrats and the Conservatives are considered right-wing parties. This is because our (I'm Swedish) left parties are much farther to the left than the most left-wing party you have. Your "left-wing" party, the Democrats, are pretty comparable with our right-wing parties, the Moderates and the Christian Democrats. Going left, we find the Peoples Party (the Liberals), the Center Party, the Environmental Party, the Social Democrats and the Left Party (previously, the Left Party - The Communists). I guess you have no communist parties in the United States. :)

  112. Yes, you can. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the offense is sufficiently serious and doesn't have the Death Penalty as a potential punishment.

  113. Ashamed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm ashamed to be an American.

    And, before folks mod this as troll - I'm actually working toward leaving the US. I don't intend to let the door hit me on the ass on the way out, either.

    I can't believe folks actually are fighting overseas for this horseshit.

  114. Australia no longer its own country ? by billcopc · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Since when did Australia get annexed to the USA ? As a Canadian I'm a bit jealous (psych!)

    I'm divided on this issue. For one, the accused is a lead member of what was one of the largest software pirate groups in the world, which is pretty crazy compared to the buddy-trading we used to do in the 80's and 90's :P He's probably responsible for some heavy-duty stuff in the world of copyright law. On the other hand, what the hell kind of pansy-ass government ships off their own criminal to the states ? If Australia wants to prosecute their citizen, go nuts! If they don't, then leave him be. That's probably why he lives there in the first place. The internet makes it easy to participate in global activities, but so does the telephone and snail mail.

    I can't lie, I want to see this guy walk free, on principle. World leaders want to go on having their separate countries, distinct law systems and economic boundaries... well they have to go all the way! I don't think it's reasonable to open the borders whenever some high-ranking official deems it "necessary", but keep them closed for everything else. If Australia wants to be USA's sock puppet, they might as well become the 51st state and enjoy ALL the benefits of being part of the USA, including their foreign policy.

    "G'day mate! I'm Canajun!"

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
  115. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by WhiplashII · · Score: 1

    What you have to realize is that you are projecting European problems/values on Americans. In Europe, for the most part, you are culturally the same. You share the same morals, so you don't argue about morals. You have varying ideas about socialism, so that is what you argue (from the American perspective, you are arguing about how close to disaster you can dance).

    In the US, everyone is from a different culture. Everyone has different morals. Those things are hard for us to agree on, and we debate them endlessly...

    But everyone in the US (except for the Native Americans) left your type of country and came here in search of freedom, fro the most part economic freedom. So we really do agree for the most part that socialism is bad. We are starting to disagree about that, because the pioneering heritage is slowly leaving us, but it still is not the thing that divides us the most.

    By the way, this really bothers those of us that really do want economic freedom - the country we fought for (we are the ones in the military for the most part) is being subverted into a socialist place we would not want to live.

    --
    while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
  116. Re:Here's a thought by metacell · · Score: 1

    If your country has an extradition treaty with the U.S. DON'T break their laws.

    Isn't it enough that I follow the laws of my own country?

    Should a US citizen be required to follow the laws of my country? There are many acts which are considered illegal and immoral in Sweden, but are legal in the U.S.

    (Besides, extradition should only occur if the alleged act is criminal in both the country requesting and the country making the extradition.)

  117. Re:This sword cuts both ways..US FalunGong Rya lis by Rotten168 · · Score: 1

    Good point, although I don't think we would have an extradition treaty with China under those circumstances. We shouldn't at least... just like we shouldn't do business with them until they clean up their human rights records. And no, the US's isn't perfect either.

  118. Allow me to be the first to say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Welcome to America!

  119. Welcome to the New World Order! by Catbeller · · Score: 1

    Welcome to the American Emprire! There's nowhere you can hide from our corporate power. On my mark, get on your knees and open wide:

    1. 2. 3. MARK!

  120. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "If you simply note our last two Presidential elections, you'll see that we are as polarized as it gets..."

    Sure, until you notice the fact that in the US 'left' politicians hold similar positions on contemporary political topics to those held by centrist politicians in most other nations. As for 'right' and 'far right' candidates....well, in most other countries they would most likely be locked up for being a public menace.

    Sure, Americans are pretty polarized. But political opinion in the US appears to occupy only one half of the political spectrum.

  121. Other similar crimes by phorm · · Score: 1

    What if somebody managed to mail a bomb from AU to USA, without it getting caught at customs. Now let's say the bomb worked properly, and blew up a citizen in the US.

    In which country would the bomber most likely be tried?

    As has been mentioned earlier in various comments, the action at hand is illegal in both countries... I'm not sure why it warrants extradition to the USA when a trial in Australia would be perfectly valid. Is there a precedent for this under other crimes committed from one country to another?

    1. Re:Other similar crimes by MichaelSmith · · Score: 1

      Is there a precedent for this under other crimes committed from one country to another?

      No but this case might be somewhat relevant.

  122. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by jbeaupre · · Score: 1

    Actually we do have a communist party. I know someone who joined because they get free trips out of it. They got to go to Venezuela recently (it's a small party and someone has to go to rallies). So I guess even members of our communist party are happy to live a bourgeois lifestyle.

    --
    The world is made by those who show up for the job.
  123. Re:Is Australia really an independent state anymor by evil_aar0n · · Score: 1

    I'm an American, though no supporter of our current regime, er, dictatorship, er, democracy, er, form of government... I think Australians should rally against this - it's total BS. (Oh, wait, is that incitement? Oops - I didn't say that, then.)

    But I'm curious: after the US decides he's served his time, is he simply sent back home to Australia? Does the US pay for his flight? Is he kicked out onto the street and told to find his own way home? What happens when he's done with his jail time?

    --
    Truth, Justice. Or the American Way.
  124. Slippery Slope of New "International Law" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After the David Hicks fiasco, the government should be very wary of another situation of the public feeling that an Australian has been unjustly detained by the US.

    If the media picks up on the story (The Age is a very good start) the public will rally around Australian law and fairness. "Fairness" is seen as an important part of Australia's classless society.

    Although the Prime Minister (John Howard, Liberal) hasn't called an election yet, recent history has shown that events with a nationalist angle can tip the scales. A previous election was favorable to Howard when he got tough on stranded boat people. On the other hand, the aforementioned David Hicks detention lost him a lot of credibility, and forced the government to back flip. His poll numbers are still looking shaky.

    The Opposition (Kevin Rudd, Labor) will be watching this, and will probably try to put the government on the spot. They've got nothing to lose really, as they're betting that a Democrat government next year won't even remember the whole thing.

    It's generally thought that The Pirate Bay (temporary) closure was driven in part from US pressure. Griffiths' extradition is a further escalation of this program. The US will continue to try things on for size until the limit is reached with what foreign countries will tolerate.

    The perverse part about all this is that countries with well organized and managed governments (eg. Australia and Sweden) are more susceptible to this type of US imperialism than countries seen as major offenders (eg. China and Vietnam). They keep a good dialog with the US and are consensus focused towards foreign policy. Furthermore they have capability and institutions in place that can act.

    These countries are doing a good job of serving their people and economies and shouldn't be manipulated this way.

  125. Bad argument. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you haven't broken any local law, then there's no reason to worry.

    This guy broke Australian and US law and there's a treaty in place to extradite. Sucks for him.

    Everyone's turning this into an irrelevant "oh shit! I just broke a Lithuanian law"-fest. If you break local laws in order to break foreign laws, you'd better know what policy is in effect.

  126. Noooooooo!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DoD was part of an era. They should be extradited to britain and knighted not hauled off to the US to answer for their crimes against humanity.

    Years later I discovered this group actually bothered to crack a program I wrote. I felt honored that they would even care enough to :)

  127. Australia, you've got a choice. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Vote that fucker out and get someone in decent in there. It'll be a rough go because of Telstra and because of all the anti-gun laws you fuckers have passed. The issue is of your own making.

    If you pulled 2,000,000 abos from the center and another 4,000,000 from the coasts, and every son of a bitch just fucking decended upon Canberra over a weekend, you might get some results without having to shoot bastards.

  128. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, that's your problem not ours ...

    As far as we are concerned , the Democrats are pretty damn left to the political spectrum in US , regardless of what some leftists ( or rightwing) nut in Sweden consideres to be a "reality".

  129. Re:Benign Superpower.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It looks like Russia is now turning into 21st century Roman Empire (not republic). Russian Federation is autocratic, undemocratic and quite benign, with an astounding amount of freedoms for an autocratic regime.

  130. Re:voting for the other guy by beyondkaoru · · Score: 1

    the unfortunate thing about representative democracy is that it often prefers a sub-optimal solution, and it would (at least in the US) be better for everyone to vote for one candidate that is not the worst (for example, i might align better with some less represented party, but would vote for the lesser evil of the two big ones if there's no reasonable chance that the others might win). so advocating people to vote for a variety of parties that are not his might not get him out of office if he can maintain his party's voter base. or at least not as efficiently as if many people voted for a coalition party. sorry, just me complaining about how it seems votes for what i actually believe in can matter so little...

    --
    the privacy of one's mind is important.
    you do have something to hide.
  131. This is perfectly acceptable in legal terms. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is very simple. I'm not starting with ianal because I AM a lawyer.
    This is how it goes: Piracy is illegal in the United States. Piracy is illegal in Australia. He cost several corporations IN the US untold millions. Granted, he has never physically been to the US; however, from a legal standpoint, it is the same concept as traveling to the US, robbing a few million from a record exec, and flying home. Because it was over the Internet, it seems unfair and illogical to extradite him to the US, when the 'crime' was committed in his living room in AU. But the [exceedingly well funded and lobbied] MAFIAA lawyers in the US will argue the Internet's effect of telepresence constitutes theft and infringement within the USA. If he had stolen and pirated media from exclusively Australian media corporations, then extradition would be illogical. However, since an overwhelming majority of artistic pirated media and other IP comes from US firms, the plaintiffs have quite a strong case against him. He volunteered to plead guilty in AU undoubtedly because he knew AU courts aren't in bed with the media corps quite as much. It has nothing to do with political supremacy, and more with the fact that these media giants are physically located in the USA.
    But hey, what would slashdot be without mindless inflamatory political discourse with no regard for factual circumstances?

    The unfortunate effect is the establishment of the international legal precident that the justice must be done in the host nation irregardless of the suspect's citizenship or travel history, and it opens the doors for a host of other offensive extradition attempts, legit or otherwise.
    Hope this helps.

  132. Illegal by kilodelta · · Score: 1

    The breadth and reach of U.S. Copyright law is astounding. There really needs to be a line drawn because the RIAA and MPAA are getting a bit too big for their britches.

  133. Re:voting for the other guy by GospelHead821 · · Score: 1

    It seems that way only because nobody is willing to do it. I vote with my heart (although if I agree with one of the big two parties 70% and a smaller party 85%, I'll probably still vote for the large party.) I don't do so because I expect my party to win but because I have no other way of expressing my opinion. I'm proud to vote for smaller parties when I agree with them. I want others to see that and to realize that the only way to really throw away your vote is not to cast it. I vote for the party of which I approve not because I expect a better present but because I think it is the key to a better future.

    --
    Virtue finds and chooses the mean.
    Aristotle, Ethica Nichomachea
  134. passport by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What it means is that he better get a passport ASAP, or he won't be allowed into the 'Land of the Free' to stand trial.

  135. Is the Senator aware of US prison conditions? by Muttley · · Score: 1

    I think this is a disgrace. A fellow Australian, who has never even been to the US, is extradited to the US for a crime that was never committed on US territory because of the damage to certain US corporations.

    My main question is this: is Senator Ellison aware of what he is doing by not granting Griffith's appeal to the extradition. He faces up to 10 years for this crime, in a Virginia court; the sentence for rape in Victoria Australia is 6 years 9 months.

    20% of inmates in the US have been coerced into sex and 10% of inmates have been raped [source: SPR. Prison rape is largely an American phenomenon due to an institutional apathy that surrounds it. There is no prison rape in the Netherlands, much less in the UK and in Australia, and it is also non-existent, altho for other reasons, parts of latin america (Bolivia, Venezuela). A 10 year sentence, even if served at a minimum security prison includes a very high likelihood of being raped, especially as a young male on a non-violent offence.

    So how does Senator Ellison justify allowing this extradition and subsequent sentence in a US prison, far from his family and friends, at risk to his health, including a possible death sentence from HIV, for a crime that yielded him no money, but allegedly cost American corporations $50million (and most of us here would note the difference between $50million worth of software and $50 million worth of sold units).

    MB--

    --
    M.
    1. Re:Is the Senator aware of US prison conditions? by gujo-odori · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As an American, I agree with you, but for reasons having nothing to do with prison rape (which, incidentally, happens far more in state prisons than in federal prisons, and rarely if ever in the "club fed" type of minimum security prison to which a copyright offender would typically be sent).

      My objection to this is over the simple fact that whatever crime(s) he may have committed were committed in Australia, so whether or not he should go to prison, and where and for how long, or even whether he should be arrested and tried, is purely a matter for the Australian government to decide. Extraditing him is ludicrous.

      This is very different than, say, picking some terrorist up on the battlefield, finding he's an Australian citizen, and remanding him to the Australian government to serve his sentence in Australia after being convicted and sentenced. If that guy, who is a far worse criminal than a copyright offender, can serve his sentence in Australia, the accused in the present case should most certainly not be extradited at all.

      Has the Australian government lost all concept of national sovereignty?

  136. Re:Here's a thought by shark72 · · Score: 1

    "Should a US citizen be required to follow the laws of my country? There are many acts which are considered illegal and immoral in Sweden, but are legal in the U.S. Besides, extradition should only occur if the alleged act is criminal in both the country requesting and the country making the extradition."

    Exactly -- you've asked and answered your own question. If it's only against the law in Sweden but not the US, then Sweden can't extradite. If it's against the law in both countries and the Swedish government has sufficient interest in the case (say, I sat in my home in California and ran a Ponzi scheme targeting Swedes) then your government may ask to extradite.

    --
    Sitting in my day care, the art is decopainted.
  137. that's how treaties work, boys and girls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If your country has an extradition treaty with the U.S. DON'T break their laws.

    Isn't it enough that I follow the laws of my own country?

    What you have missed here is that your country signed a treaty. Any treaty signed by your country becomes part of the law of your country.

    Australia signed a treaty on copyright law that essentially made US copyright law become part of Australian law. Presumably, Australian copyright law is also part of US copyright law.

    If a treaty is signed between the US and China regarding subversion, etc., then yes, a US citizen could be extradited to China for saying something bad about the Chinese government. If a treaty is signed between the US and Saudi Arabia regarding hate speech, then yes, a US citizen could be extradited to Saudi Arabia for insulting Islam.

    That is the nature of treaties. That is why the US government refuses to sign so many UN treaties. These high-sounding treaties have all sorts of subtle consequences. Who could oppose a treaty called The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child? Well, read it carefully, and think about how some country can interpret some of its provisions -- and then realize that that interpretion is binding on every signatory to the treaty!
    1. Re:that's how treaties work, boys and girls by metacell · · Score: 1

      Isn't it enough that I follow the laws of my own country?
      What you have missed here is that your country signed a treaty. Any treaty signed by your country becomes part of the law of your country.

      That's not quite how it works here. Sweden has extradition treaties with many countries, but our law also demands that an act must be criminal in both our own country and the country someone is extradited to for the extradition to take place. Breaking a law in the other country is not enough.

      Australia signed a treaty on copyright law that essentially made US copyright law become part of Australian law. Presumably, Australian copyright law is also part of US copyright law.

      I can say for sure that is not how Sweden's treaties work. To give up part of our legislative power to another nation would be against our constitution (with the stated exception of the laws passed by the European Union).

      That is the nature of treaties. That is why the US government refuses to sign so many UN treaties. These high-sounding treaties have all sorts of subtle consequences. Who could oppose a treaty called The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child? Well, read it carefully, and think about how some country can interpret some of its provisions -- and then realize that that interpretion is binding on every signatory to the treaty!

      Well, not just any country can make an interpretation that becomes binding to the other signatories. There would have to be some kind of international court.

      Apart from that, I actually agree with you. These treaties are not all good - for instance, I think some of them contain unacceptable limitations on free speech.

  138. Two Words by elzurawka · · Score: 2, Interesting
    --
    -EL
  139. Re:voting for the other guy by shaitand · · Score: 1

    I think they pick alternative candidates in the land down under. That said, you aren't throwing away your vote if you vote for a third party. There is no lesser of two evils, the major parties are equally evil. The best you can do is cast your vote and let your voice be heard.

    Your candidate might not win but at least you will be able to walk with your head held high and know you don't bear responsibility for the evils beings committed while they are in office.

  140. 10 not so easy steps by Shadowlore · · Score: 2, Insightful

    To demonstrate how har it is to reverse, the US started down this path with "The New Deal" and are still on it. Read up on how FDR coerced (a particular membr of) the Supreme Court by threatenting to expand it until he got enough people on it to agree with him. Then note how the court's decisions on what was unconstitutional abruptly reversed and started expanding government.

    Democracy is incompatible with freedom and liberty.

    --
    My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
  141. Re:voting for the other guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What you say is true in the US, but not in a Representative Democracy.
    Say there are four larger parties -- A, B, C and D, getting 40%, 30%, 20% and 10%, respectively. No party would have the majority, so they would be forced to form a coalition. It is common to form a 'contract' for a coalition, a set of goals and general outlines for the future government the partners have agreed on, which party gets what posts in the government, and so on. In this example, B, C and D might all feel they can represent the will of their respective voters best by working together, and form the government -- even though party A had the most votes.

  142. Not First, but First that still exists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All those democracies died out. The US is the oldest continually operating democracy.

  143. Completely OT grammar insight!!! by BitterAndDrunk · · Score: 1
    (but fewer riches for the shareholders of lockheed-martin and halliburton et al)

    Typically, et al is referring specifically to people and is misused quite often. In this case, is it misused because the corporations named are not people, or does the "personhood" granted by their corporation make this gramatically correct?

    Would it be a usage error only in countries where corporate "personhood" is considered batshit crazy?

    Questions like these are why I never get favorable performance reviews. To veer back on topic, I'd like to say "me too" to your thoughts on enforcement through aggression. It simply doesn't work anymore, if it ever did. Guerrilla warfare is far too effective to rule with an iron fist. Even if you cover it with a velvet glove and then tell women to "smell the glove". Although I bet it would make an awesome rock album. The art would be fantastic.

    --
    You better watch out, there may be dogs about . . .
    1. Re:Completely OT grammar insight!!! by gobbo · · Score: 1

      Typically, et al is referring specifically to people and is misused quite often. In this case, is it misused because the corporations named are not people, or does the "personhood" granted by their corporation make this gramatically correct?

      Please re-read: et al strives to refer to shareholders. And fails, I guess.

      "me too" to your thoughts on enforcement through aggression. It simply doesn't work anymore, if it ever did. Guerrilla warfare is far too effective to rule with an iron fist.

      I rather think that it isn't so much a failed strategy due to changing political circumstances as a failure to read essential human nature (i.e. put the shoe on the other foot). If you came and ruined my life and my family's, and left me with few options, a demented revenge fever is predictable. Where there are strong ideologies (like extreme religion), the revenge justification gets caught up in noble goals.

      My main point is that that is the intention. The iron fist needs something to grasp.

  144. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by DeepHurtn! · · Score: 1

    The mere fact that you identify leftist politics solely with identity-politics and abortion rights shows how utterly skewered to the right American political discourse is. I mean, seriously. Holy shit, buddy. Is your conception of political debate so limited that the poles are defined by pro-abortion and anti-abortion?

  145. WTO by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Makes us all criminals, as somewhere what we are doing is illegal. It does not have to be 'here', as long as it is 'there'.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  146. Germans no better off. by twitter · · Score: 1

    Well actually they do, but call it "extraordinary rendition" instead.

    and Germany co-operated with it. I'm not sure if they got any actual German citizens, but I do know the US exported people from Germany. Some were sent to places like Syria for torture.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  147. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by kelnos · · Score: 1

    So-called "conservativism" and "liberalism" has two parts, at least how we deal with it in the US: fiscal and social. US Republicans tend to be both fiscally and socially right-leaning, while US Democrats are also fiscally conservative, but are generally socially liberal. There's a bit of a contradiction involved in this view, as being liberal socially usually involves support for things like universal state-sponsored health care (and the other programs you mention). So, US Democrats 'balance' that by supporting socially liberal programs that don't cost too much money to clash with their conservative fiscal side (or the financial interests that sadly contribute too much to their campaigns).

    At least, that's how I look at it. Opinions may differ.

    --
    Xfce: Lighter than some, heavier than others. Just right.
  148. They certainly are getting slapped arround. by FatSean · · Score: 1

    The military was supposed to provide security while the destroyed infrastructure was fixed and the Iraqis magically banded together in a western-style democracy. 5 years out and the infrastructure is just as messed up as when the invasion finished. Military can't seem to protect that infrastructure...sounds like a slap to me. Not to mention that they had to build a freakin' WALL to divide the different Iraqi sects. A smart man would have realized that, hey, infantry != police...and that a better plan was required post invasion. Whoops! The man we got had no post-invasion plan and the poor bastards in the military are being forced to do shit they never signed up for.

    The military was sent to do a diplomat's job I will admit...but to claim that they aren't pathetically failing at that job would be a lie.

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:They certainly are getting slapped arround. by servognome · · Score: 1

      The military was supposed to provide security while the destroyed infrastructure was fixed and the Iraqis magically banded together in a western-style democracy. 5 years out and the infrastructure is just as messed up as when the invasion finished. Military can't seem to protect that infrastructure...sounds like a slap to me..
      If that is what you are looking for, then it is impossible. No military in the world can stop every person who straps on a bomb and decides to blow something up. My expectations of the military are to basically prevent an organized uprising capable of overthrowing the installed government until that government can provide the necessary resources to protect and develop the infrastructure.

      A smart man would have realized that, hey, infantry != police...and that a better plan was required post invasion.
      I agree. Further, a smart man would have realized the insurgency in Iraq would be on the long end of the spectrum 10-12 years especially given external influences.

      The military was sent to do a diplomat's job I will admit...but to claim that they aren't pathetically failing at that job would be a lie.
      Depends on your definition of failure. As I mentioned before if you are looking for total security, or that they convince all the various political interests to stop fighting, then yes they are failing at impossible expectations. If you are looking for a certain degree of security defined strategically, then they are doing a good job. In either case, they are not being slapped around by the opposition.
      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
  149. Re:voting for the other guy by beyondkaoru · · Score: 1

    the problem here is that the new coalition, BCD, is now a party and if it wishes to remain in power, it shall stay that way; it would then be a two party system then. democracy like this seems to lend itself to systems of fewer parties, and if there are many issues we care about the chance of having one of a few (even four) parties matching closely with our beliefs is small.

    --
    the privacy of one's mind is important.
    you do have something to hide.
  150. Is this so bad? by i_b_don · · Score: 1

    what if this guy had been a spammer? a phisher? or basically someone who had committed computer crimes from abroad?

    frankly, I don't care if this guy was in the US or in AU, I don't want him to be going to jail for his "crimes", but the "US is a bully" topic seems a bit overplayed. What if there was a hacker in california sending spam and internet scams into mexico by the terabytes, would you not agree that mexico could/should come to the US and say "we want this guy"?

    don

    --
    all language nazi's will burne in heil!
  151. Re:voting for the other guy by hostyle · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you vote for a party or candidate that does not enter office, how has your vote counted at all? How is it any different from people that throw away their vote by not voting?

    I dont vote. Why? Because the two big parties here (they constantly hover at ~45% and ~35% in polls) do exactly the same thing when they get elected - over and over again for the last 85 years or so. The remaining ~20% or so have zero power, and when they go into coalition always tow the majority line. How is that democracy? How is that worth voting for when you disagree totally with the 80% do and also quite a bit with what the remaining 20% do? 99% of politicians here are in it for the money. The remaining 1% are in it to get something done - and they soon realise they are wasting their time. Who would you vote for?

    Feel free to play "guess the country" if you dont wish to discuss politics. That usually far more fun in fact.

    --
    Caesar si viveret, ad remum dareris.
  152. Let's discuss. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the distinction is whether you're committing offensive acts in ignorance or are knowledgeably doing so to be punitive. E.g. say you're lost in Africa and an African tribe finds you and by their custom ties you down and feeds you cockroaches because it's their greeting custom. Sure, you hate it, but they're just ignorant about what you like/dislike. Now, say a Chinese intelligence agency has studied exactly what you like and dislike, and they feed you cockroaches because they wish to punish you. I hope you see the difference.

    Gitmo is meant to incarcerate not to punish (I'm talking about what it's meant to be, not what it is). Incarceration is to separate the outside world and you because you and the outside world together are dangerous to the state; punishment on top of incarceration is sadism, which is a form of evil.

    You might say "well prisons are meant to punish, and people are jailed everyday." Wrong, while prisons are punishment centers, they are not meant to be, they are meant to be correctional facilities that rehabilitate criminals for return to regular society. If you consider gitmo inmates so hardened that you can't rehabilitate them, then incarceration is all that should be done.

    "What about intelligence gathering? We need info!" Well, now you're mixing issues. The issue of incarceration/punishment applies to people who have "done bad". The issue of intelligence gathering applies to people who "know stuff". The two groups are not necessarily overlapping.

    "What about people who have done bad -and- know stuff!" I'm not convinced if what they know is so valuable that you'd distinguish whether they had done anything bad or not. After all, if you endorse torture as a means of extracting information, you suspect that they know some pretty damn good information, in which case, why does it matter if they even have done anything bad? If they know such important info, isn't it necessary to extract it at all costs, whether or not they've done anything bad? You see, when you endorse forceful means of gathering information, you're dealing with an issue completely orthogonal to how bad someone is, and leads to things like the Inquisition.

    "You're a dumb liberal, I know who's bad and not and there wouldn't be an Inquisition because we only send bad guys to gitmo for questioning." The King of England thought so too, the problem is, to someone as affluent as the King, all poor people seem like thieves, criminals, and other miscreants. Affluence breeds a certain contempt toward the lower classes; the fact that you're far more affluent than the people you claim to be able to judge whether they're good or bad leads me to believe you're no better than the King in finding all poor people guilty.

    "Muslims are not poor, they're all terrorists!" Okay, so now you're proving my point and justifying why they're bad with "because they are!" Great. So, basically, you have no argument, no justification, you just -do- stuff because it pleases you and fits into your tainted world-view. Shame you're not the King, huh?

    Just remember, indulging in pleasurable activities is addictive, and once all the members of gitmo die of old-age (which given their conditions won't be long), you'll be finding some other group to fuel those inherent needs of yours (I'm not convinced this desire of yours to hate is extrinsic and belongs to the group you dislike, it's starting to sound a lot like it's intrinsic in you and certain world-events just make you more vocal about it because you think you have better public support now). I'm not saying you _cant_ hate; it's your right to, but please don't kid anybody that you're doing this for our well-being and admit that you take pleasure in seeing a certain group whom you hate suffer. You're entitled to your hate-mongering opinion, but don't pretend to have a rational argument on why any of this is necessary.

    1. Re:Let's discuss. by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      [quote]they are not meant to be, they are meant to be correctional facilities that rehabilitate criminals for return to regular society.[/quote]

      Right, life in prison is designed to be "correctional" for the inmate. This isn't an XOR problem, as you seem to suggest. Prison isn't supposed to be "nice", specifically because it is supposed to be punishment! The word used is PENAL, meaning having to do with punishment.

      Case in point, Paris Hilton is spending time in the slammer, not to be "rehabilitated" but rather as punishment for repeated transgressions.

      "If you consider gitmo inmates so hardened that you can't rehabilitate them, then incarceration is all that should be done."

      I thought prison was for Correctional, isn't that the premise of the first quote I had??? You are simply confused and mixed up. I'm sure that complex isssues like this are hard for you to follow, but at least try to follow the bouncing ball.

      "After all, if you endorse torture as a means of extracting information, you suspect that they know some pretty damn good information, in which case, why does it matter if they even have done anything bad?"

      Before we can go further, please define Torture. Without a common reference, it is nothing more than nebulous term ... like porn. What is Porn to me may not be porn to you, and what is porn to the Muslim may not be porn to either of us. Same with Torture.

      "Affluence breeds a certain contempt toward the lower classes; the fact that you're far more affluent than the people you claim to be able to judge whether they're good or bad leads me to believe you're no better than the King in finding all poor people guilty."

      What Elitist snobbery! I have no contempt for anyone, only contemptable behavior and attitudes. Want my respect?? Respect me for who I am. It doesn't even matter if I agree with you or not, I'll at least respect who you are, as a person.

      "Just remember, indulging in pleasurable activities is addictive, and once all the members of gitmo die of old-age (which given their conditions won't be long), you'll be finding some other group to fuel those inherent needs of yours (I'm not convinced this desire of yours to hate is extrinsic and belongs to the group you dislike"

      Right, because we don't have regular inspections by Red Cross or oversight by anyone. You are drinking too much Koolade. I've seen the reports of the "abuse" at "Gitmo" and quite frankly there isn't any "there" there. The complaint people like Amnesty International have against Gitmo isn't really about "abuse" but rather that they've been locked up without a trial by a civilian court.

      "Muslims are not poor, they're all terrorists!"

      I never said that. In fact, the Silent Majority of Muslims may not be. However they are just as guilty of terrorism if they don't speak out against it, whenever and wherever some illiterate Imam decides to spew the hate screed from the pulpit while they sit silently listening. The reason they don't speak out is because the radicals will kill them right then and there if they do.

      Cowering in fear doesn't prevent terrorism, it feeds it. That is why its called "Terrorism". If we weren't terrified, it wouldn't have the grip it does. This is the error of the Bush (and Clinton) administration. We shouldn't be running "terror drills", we should be running "Bravery drills", where we teach people to be positively reactive, rather than negatively reactive.

      "I'm not saying you _cant_ hate; it's your right to, but please don't kid anybody that you're doing this for our well-being and admit that you take pleasure in seeing a certain group whom you hate suffer."

      Well, let see. I'm very much LIBERTARIAN and don't "Hate" anyone. Leave me the hell alone, and I'll do the same. We'll meet up when we have things in common, otherwise we'll leave each other be. One of my my colleagues here at work and I don't agree on much, but he and I can discuss things we do have in common.

      The moment you start to tell

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    2. Re:Let's discuss. by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      What Elitist snobbery! I have no contempt for anyone, only contemptable behavior and attitudes. Want my respect?? Respect me for who I am. It doesn't even matter if I agree with you or not, I'll at least respect who you are, as a person.

      So.. in order to get your respect, someone has to respect you first.

      Did it ever occur to you that if everyone followed that line of thought, there would never be any respect for anyone?

      I'd suggest to have some basic respect for anyone unless they show to not be worth it.

    3. Re:Let's discuss. by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      -10 ..... 0 ..... +10

      Everyone starts out at 0, what they do to me and others moves them up or down the scale. I meet someone, and what they do starts the dial moving up or down the scale. It is a Log scale so 10 is harder to reach than 9, etc and -10 is harder to reach than -9.

      Everyone is "equal" and created that way. what they do with it, raises or lowers their score. I'm not trusting my life to just anyone, neither will I trust someone who has earned a minus score with much of anything. People earn and lose respect, based on what they do, and their attitudes. I suppose you put everyone at +10 at the start, huh?

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    4. Re:Let's discuss. by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

      First you argue:
      Want my respect?? Respect me for who I am.

      then you argue:
      -10 ..... 0 ..... +10

      Everyone starts out at 0, what they do to me and others moves them up or down the scale. I meet someone, and what they do starts the dial moving up or down the scale. It is a Log scale so 10 is harder to reach than 9, etc and -10 is harder to reach than -9.


      So, you start with everyone at 0, others start with you at 0.

      You say you start with 0 respect for them, now if they follow the same line, they start with 0 respect for you. If they wait for you to respect them first and you wait for them to respect them first, then nothing happens.

      I find it really hard to believe that you cannot follow that simple bit of logic.

      Everyone is "equal" and created that way. what they do with it, raises or lowers their score. I'm not trusting my life to just anyone, neither will I trust someone who has earned a minus score with much of anything. People earn and lose respect, based on what they do, and their attitudes.

      That sounds about correct.

      I suppose you put everyone at +10 at the start, huh?

      'Some respect' is not 'utra extremely utterly highly respected'. Can't you read or what?

  153. Re:voting for the other guy by node+3 · · Score: 1

    Your candidate might not win but at least you will be able to walk with your head held high and know you don't bear responsibility for the evils beings committed while they are in office. Bullshit. If you vote for a party that has no expectation of actually winning in an election where your bloc may be able to sway the vote between someone like Bush and Kerry, you are just as responsible as you would be if you didn't vote at all.

    On the other hand, when the outcome of the election isn't really at stake, becoming a voice for the smaller party that you truly prefer can be a better use of your vote.

    Take two worlds: One in which Gore won in '00, and our present world. In our present world, third parties, while having no chance for the presidency, have gotten media attention. In the alternate world, some things would be the same, but others (Iraq, "War on Terror", No Child Left Behind, Clear Skies Initiative, etc and so on) would be *very* different.

    *That's* what your choice actually was. And you can't claim ignorance as an excuse. You *knew* the polls had a close election, yet you still made the choice that promoting your favorite third-party candidate was more important than keeping the neo-cons out of power (2000), or kicking them out (2004).

    What do yo plan do in 2008? Leave the country on its current course in order to make noise for your third-party? Or attempt to keep the worst candidate from taking power?

    It might be unpleasant to think that way. It definitely insults those patriotic, democracy-loving ideals we learned in school, but at least it accepts reality as it is, and has some *actual* potential to affect the world for the better.
  154. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by Maltheus · · Score: 1

    From inside the US, I see a bunch of left-wingers arguing with another bunch of left-wingers. People on the right are for less government. People on the left believe government is best at solving our problems. Bush has brought us more government than any liberal. My hatred for him has made me more conservative than ever. The only right-wing person running for president now is Ron Paul, but he's already getting shut out of the debates. We may not be tree-hugging left over here, but we are definitely big government left, and that is what ultimately led to this article.

  155. Re:voting for the other guy by SillyNickName4me · · Score: 1

    the problem here is that the new coalition, BCD, is now a party and if it wishes to remain in power, it shall stay that way; it would then be a two party system then. democracy like this seems to lend itself to systems of fewer parties, and if there are many issues we care about the chance of having one of a few (even four) parties matching closely with our beliefs is small.

    Looking at most multi-party (as in more then 2) systems, that is not true.

    For example, the Netherlands has had its current system (with some minor changes over time) for the last 150 years and the number of parties now is a lot bigger then it was 150 years ago. Lookign around in the rest of Europe, I notice we are not unique in this at all.

    The system as it is in the USA tends to lead to 2 major parties, but that in no way means every system does.

  156. Re:voting for the other guy by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    The best of the representative democracies are the ones where there are co-equal branches of government that balance each other out. This way, nothing gets done easily, which is the way the US founding fathers wanted it. When something gets done it's only because people from various political viewpoints have come to some consensus, which means somebody had to sit down and stop being horses' asses long enough to compromise.

    Just look at the last 6 years of pure Republican rule in the US. It was one of the worst half-decades in the last century because when politicians feel they don't have to answer to anyone, they do what comes naturally to them: the wrong thing.

    The only reason I feel a little less apprehensive about the Democrats holding two of the three branches of government is because they are such an unruly bunch, it's almost as if they are two or three different parties. You've got the populist, Blue-dogs, the liberals, the labor folks, who represent very different constituencies. When they come to some agreement, there's a good chance something good will come from it. On the Republican sides, you've got the Religious Right, then the Right-Wing Christians, and then the really Right-wing Christians, then the rich, "pull-up-the-ladder behind you" crowd, and finally, the bigots and racists. When they all agree on something, head for the hills. That's what happened in 2003 when they were all falling over each other trying to start a war...any war.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  157. Re:voting for the other guy by tdelaney · · Score: 4, Informative

    It counts because *Australia has preferential voting*. If after the primary vote is counted, the party you voted for as your first preference has the lowest number of votes, that party is eliminated from the race and its votes are redistributed to other other parties according to your *second* preference. This continues until there are only two parties left.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preferential_voting

    Whilst this system of counting is not the best, statistically speaking (the best are Condorcet methods, though they also have their weaknesses) it is simple to understand (and count), and in the vast majority of cases results in the candidate who is most preferred by the most number of people being elected.

    The US method of "plurality" voting is statistically the *worst* method available.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voting_system

  158. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh Dear God... It's Zombie Ayn Rand- How are we going to stop it? Ayn Rand never had a brain to begin with, so there's nothing to destroy!

  159. All your internets belongs to US by happy*nix · · Score: 1

    It is obvious that many people around the world do not understand the Internet.

    Let me sum it up for you. The USofA OWNS the internet.
    Al Gore invented it.
    The US controls the registars.
    The US has graciously agreed to allow all you cyber colonies to have your own little TLDs. (please refrain from trying to polute .com, .org, .gov, or .net. .us is of cource implicetly implied to any domain the US didn't assign you.)

    When you are on the internet your are on US cyber soil.

    If you don't like that, then try to do something about it. .........please...

    NOTE: satire

    --
    Gone to my happy place.
  160. Re:voting for the other guy by shaitand · · Score: 1

    'One in which Gore won in '00, and our present world. In our present world, third parties, while having no chance for the presidency, have gotten media attention. In the alternate world, some things would be the same, but others (Iraq, "War on Terror", No Child Left Behind, Clear Skies Initiative, etc and so on) would be *very* different.'

    This is where we disagree. I think that more or less the same actual results would have occurred but the bills might have a slightly different spin on them. Actually, the result could have been even worse. The left is just as dirty and corrupt as the right.

    'What do yo plan do in 2008? Leave the country on its current course in order to make noise for your third-party? Or attempt to keep the worst candidate from taking power?'

    Third parties aren't a pet hobby with only two real candidates. There is no 'worst' candidate. Either major party candidate winning is a disaster for this nation. Even a third party that doesn't recognize the need for a MAJOR overhaul of our government and an immediate and drastic redistribution of power wouldn't do any good (although it might slow the corruption slightly).

  161. Re:voting for the other guy by complete+loony · · Score: 1

    Personally I'd disagree.
    In the lower house you get the individual most people within one seat prefer. This still leads to a 2 party system since in most cases only the 2 most popular people have a chance to get in.
    In the upper house though, the seats are decided at a state level. This leads to a distribution of seats that should more closely reflect the preferences of the people.
    The lower house is ruled by the majority, but the upper house should be a negotiation amongst the minorities. That is, if people didn't tend to vote for the same party in both houses....

    --
    09F91102 no, 455FE104 nope, F190A1E8 uh-uh, 7A5F8A09 that's not it, C87294CE no. Ah! 452F6E403CDF10714E41DFAA257D313F.
  162. Re:If I was stealing AUS shit, yes, I'd expect to by kramulous · · Score: 1

    I believe, dear sir, that that was nothing short of a cheap shot.
     
    Perhaps a lot of ./'ers are 'US citizens' but I believe that most (probably the same proportion as any other country) have something unbiased to contribute. For examples, please read some of the above comments with more care.

    --
    .
  163. Globalization by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, do you want globalization, or not?

    you bastards want europe's laws to apply here, well screw off.

  164. Re:voting for the other guy by Capsaicin · · Score: 1

    I think they pick alternative candidates in the land down under. That said, you aren't throwing away your vote if you vote for a third party ... Your candidate might not win but at least you will be able to walk with your head held high.

    We have exhaustive preferential voting, which means that quite literatlly you aren't "throwing away your vote" by giving a minor party your first preference. At the end of the voting process, your vote rests either with the winning candidate or with the canditate who came second.

    As a poster pointed out above, the important considerations is who to put LAST.

    --
    Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
  165. Another example: pr0n by Wooky_linuxer · · Score: 1

    is llicit in China, Pakistan and other countries. Should all /.s be sent to rot in a Chinese prison?

    --
    Where is that guy who'd die defending what I had to say when I need him?
  166. Re:voting for the other guy by dynamo · · Score: 1

    Bullshit. If you vote for a party that has no expectation of actually winning in an election where your bloc may be able to sway the vote between someone like Bush and Kerry, you are just as responsible as you would be if you didn't vote at all. Bullshit. If you refuse to ever vote for someone you don't think will do a good job, and instead vote for someone who is more pandering to the poll averages, you'll help to elect someone in the primary for your "lesser evil" party who doesn't know what the hell s/he stands for, won't take a stand on anything important, and will lose anyway. And along the way they cost the integrity of all those who vote for the more "electable" one despite it not necessarily being the person they would choose if it were up to them.

    You have more hope of making a career of playing slot machines than you do of intelligently influencing election results by "strategically" voting for the lesser man. You've been gamed, man. Wake up. That is not how democracy works.
  167. US isnt a democacy anyway by SonicSpike · · Score: 1

    That's right, the US isn't a democracy. We are a Constitutional republic in which our representatives are democratically elected.

    --
    Libertas in infinitum
  168. Democracy versus democracy by NewsWatcher · · Score: 1

    "The only democracy to invade another democracy". I had never heard this before, and it threw me a bit, as I tried to recall a democracy invading another democracy.

    Germany versus France in World War II would probably be one example (although how true the democracy that brought Hitler to power is could be questionable). Britain versus Argentina in the Falklands war could be another, although Argentina was never really truly democratic either.

    The US invaded Haiti twice, in 1915 and 1994. I think Haiti was nominally democratic on both occasions, but I don't really know enough about Haiti to be sure.

    A quick Google search was no real help. Can anyone tell me if dcam is right. It just seems so unlikely, but it could be true.

    --
    If the pattern goes 9am, 10am, 11am, why isn't noon 12am?
    1. Re:Democracy versus democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Google was no real help?

      The first response to the search 'war between democracies' gives this lengthy page

      http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/demowar.htm

    2. Re:Democracy versus democracy by dcam · · Score: 1

      I can tell you that Germany was not a democracy when it invaded France in WWII (and it invaded Poland first but anyway). Hitler was ruling under the emergency provisions. The last thing approaching an election was in 1934 where there was a vote of confidence in Hitler. There was considerable intimidation and the final vote was 84.6% in favour. (From memory I thought the vote was in 1936, with a 90% approval rating).

      IIRC Argentina was a military dictatorship. Wikipedia seems to agree.

      In 1994 I think Haiti had a US installed dictator, I don't know about 1915.

      There is a certain irony that the US claims to be a champion of democracy. It is all the more ironic when it has toppled more democracies than any other country. Just look at the history of Central America.

      --
      meh
  169. Google Execs Extradited to Thailand by DonZorro · · Score: 1

    It's a different values system.

    US courts and system of government place a high value on copyright...the right of the publisher to copy an artist's work.

    Thai courts and system of government place a high value on respect for the King.

    YouTube can quite successfully remove material that might bring loss of revenue...when requested by the copyright holder.
    YouTube should be able to remove material that might bring loss of respect...when requested by the people who hold the King in high regard.

    Thailand has an extradition treaty with the US with regard to criminal offenses...perhaps Google's execs will be extradited for a criminal trial in Thailand

  170. Have your country grow some balls by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And why is the US at fault because your country won't stand-up for itself?
    You have the right to say "No". France does all the time. Roman Polanski (sp?) rapes a 13 year old girl, and he gets to hang out in France. (Of course, Quintin Tarentino (sp?) says "she was up for it" ... whatever Quintin). France is one big safe harbour for US murders. They never extradite anyone back to the US.

    So why complain about the US asking for extradition? You can say "No". Both France and the US obviously do.
    Hell, if I was Australia, I would have said "No". You should be angry aty them for not saying "No".

    And BTW, what is more free, the country that readily gives up its citizens to a foreign power, or the country that protects its citizens from a foreign power? I'd rather be a citizen of the country that looks out for my interests, first.

    Just because your country doesn't stand up for you, doesn't make my country bad people. It makes your country schmucks.

  171. Re:voting for the other guy by node+3 · · Score: 1

    If you refuse to ever vote for someone you don't think will do a good job, and instead vote for someone who is more pandering to the poll averages Where did you get the idea that those where my criteria? In the overwhelming majority of US Presidential elections (and all of the elections I cited to in my post), there are only two tickets which have any hope of actually winning. Only a fool would vote for a third party in such cases if the outcome of the actual election (the one between the *two* tickets) is in doubt. If, however, it's pretty well set in stone (ie, you live in a solidly "blue" or "red" state), then going for a third party can send a message.

    You've been gamed, man. Wake up. That is not how democracy works. In America, that's *exactly* how democracy works. The way our presidential election system is designed, it *strongly* favors two parties. It takes extremely unusual circumstances for a third party to have a shot at the White House, and when those circumstances are in place, it's very obvious (see: Abraham Lincoln).
  172. Posada Carriles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    USA and Bush government especially go so far as to protect even internationally wanted terrorists against extradition to other countries:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posada_Carriles

    I wish EU would cut the extradition treaties with the americans. We don't really want to be dealing with these kinds of people who only pretend to honor human rights but actually work to abolish them for others and don't honor the treaties they've signed.

  173. Two more words by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1

    Howard Marks.

    A non-US citizen, extradited to the US by Spain for allegedly committing crimes, none of which occurred in Spain.

  174. Re:voting for the other guy by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The left is just as dirty and corrupt as the right.

    If you could actually measure it, I'm betting that you are wrong. Every time we have a Republican administration in the US, we get 4-8 years of shocking corruption. Every Republican administration since Nixon, for example, has had an average of 8 times as many high-level officials convicted as each Dem administration. Carter may have been ineffectual, but he was clean. I'm born in '56 and there was only one relatively clean GOP administration in my lifetime, the one in power the day I was born.

    Oh, there's scandals during the Dem admins, but they're usually BS, ala Whitewater.
    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  175. Applicable Copyright Law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    As another commenter above has noted, there are presently criminal sanctions for copyright infringements pursuant to s 123AC of the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth). However, these were introduced in 2006, and came into operation on 1 January 2007, so they would not cover Griffiths' conduct given that it took place in the 1990s. In fact, the new provision were introduced to comply with Australia's obligations pursuant to the Free Trade Agreement (AUSFTA).

    The previous version of the Copyright Act also had criminal sanctions for copyright violation, but these were tied far more to whether an infringer did so for the purpose of personal advantage or profit.

    I would suggest that s 132(2)(b) of the previous version of Copyright Act would cover Griffiths' conduct:

    (2) A person shall not, at a time when copyright subsists in a work, distribute:

    (a) for the purpose of trade or with the intention of obtaining a commercial advantage or profit; or

    (b) for any other purpose to an extent that affects prejudicially the owner of the copyright;

    an article that the person knows, or ought reasonably to know, to be an infringing copy of the work. [my emphasis added]


    In fact, in his appeal to the NSW Court of Appeal, it was noted that the relevant provisions of Australian law which Griffiths would have been said to have breached were s 132(2)(b) of the Copyright Act and 11.2 of the Criminal Code.

    The extradition of Griffiths is not legally required by AUSFTA as far as I can see. The fellow has already served three years in gaol here. He could arguably be prosecuted under Australian law, even though s 132 has some shortcomings from a US point of view. But it's our law and he is a resident of our country. I think the government should not encourage the operation of extraterritorial US laws on the basis that it is a derogation of our sovereignty.

    For more info, I have written a post of my own.
  176. Torture "Lite" by Valdrax · · Score: 1

    I think he's referring to things like waterboarding as opposed to putting someone on the rack.

    You know, making someone crack by making them think they're drowning to death but not actually leaving permanent physical damage vs. ripping up their body and leaving them crippled or dead -- the infamous "organ failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death" standard for defining torture that left out methods that left permanent psychological damage.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  177. Torture is perfectly defined. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    It is written in several conventions and treaties.

    Failing taht we have a bonafide arbiter in those matters: the Red Cross.

    Oh wait, the US has not allowed access to Guantanamo prisioners to the Red Cross. How fucking conveninet, isn't it.

    I think the neo-cons (and idiots like you) well know what torture is, you know it does not work (specially in a case where you want so badly to hear somethin, you have judged those individuals already in spite tht most of them had been left free because they are guilty of nothing but being in the worng place at the wrong time).

    The US government is an absolute embarrasment to any people with a modicum of decency. Torturing people indiscriminately in the false hope of obtaining "information" (how do you know that a tortured person is not lying in order to stop the torture?) only creates fertile ground for more terrorists.

    If your government has any evidence these people broke any laws then prosecute them and apply due process, that is what democracies where the rule of law is supposed to be paramount. Kangaroo courts to judge concentration camp prisioners is not the way a democratic system works.

    You are the voice of fascism, but we are watching you and will make sure the likes of you never get their way.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  178. Re:voting for the other guy by shaitand · · Score: 1

    Its called misdirection. The scandals in the mainstream press exist only to distract you from the real corruption. The real corruption doesn't make the news. Bills are spun one way and actually do something different or they include dozens of completely unrelated special interest provisions in the fine print. The real corruption isn't in the white house, its in congress. Not that congressmen are less dirty there are just more of them. The president is a big central figure whose primary purpose is to keep you from looking too closely at any congressmen.

  179. Uh huh. what? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moazzam_Begg

    Neither the Kangaroo US court not the British Judicial system cold find anything against this or other individuals.

    This same theme has been repeated over and over again.

    The US screwed badly, they did not have any intelligence, picked up random guys in Afghanistan and Pakistan, tortured them, had to free most of them, but here you are, defending the indefensible.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  180. Re:voting for the other guy by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    The real corruption doesn't make the news.

    That's absolutely true. The "news" industry is there to protect the powerful. There was a time in the last century when there was an independent press in the US. Those must have been some interesting times.

    There are some people working on the Internet to get real news out, but as the Net Neutrality efforts fail, they will also disappear. You can't have everybody knowing just how corrupt their leaders are, or there'd be problems.

    By broadcasting only frightening news that we can't do anything about, rather than the "real news" that we could do something about (perhaps by locking up some politicians), the public is kept scared and quiet. By saying that the "Main Stream Media" is really lying, you have the best of all possible worlds for those in power: They can tell the public that they can't believe the truth. As long as we keep going to work every day and shopping every evening, the wheels keep turning. Nothing can get in the way of that.
    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  181. The principles of extradition by metacell · · Score: 1

    Typically, countries will assert jurisdiction over acts committed within their geographic territory or acts committed by their own citizens wherever they may be.

    And the problem is that any country can make that claim. If a German citizen robs a US citizen in Australia, each of these three countries can try to assert jurisdiction.
    Typically, USA will ignore other countries claims, and do what they see fit. If the alleged criminal happens to be on US ground, they will typically keep him there, ignoring other countries demands. If the alleged criminal is on foreign ground, they will typically demand him/her extradited, and apply pressure to get what they want.
    USA is the most powerful nation in the world, financially and military, so it doesn't have to care about what other nations think.

    This case does not appear to be based on any of those theories of jurisdiction. According to the article, the US charged Mr. Griffiths with conspiracy. Under conspiracy, any one conspirator is liable for the acts of any other person in the conspiracy.

    Thank god that is not the case in Sweden. We don't have collective guilt; in the case of a conspiracy, each person's guilt has to be proven separately, and each person is convicted for only the part of the crime they participated or aided in.
    You can, however, be convicted for accessory just by being present when the crime was committed and the circumstances show that you approved of it (for instance, if you follow someone into a house, knowing that he's intending to murder someone there).

    Not that our system is perfect - it's considered very hard to get someone convicted in a court of law, even when the person is likely guilty.

    This is very troublesome when applied to such a mundane crime as copying works and giving them to people who never would have bought them in the first place. The actual effect of the conspiracy is arguably insignificant. It doesn't seem as troublesome when applied to something who planned the 9/11 attacks, where the effect is very significant. But the theory of jurisdiction is the same: conspiracy with people who committed criminal acts inside the prosecuting country.

    And that is why laws can, and should, be changed.

  182. So you don't mind being judged for copyright... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    ... infringement in China then? Or Saudi Arabia, you know, where they cut the hands of thiefs (I very much doubt the Saud Kingdom will care aobut niceties regarding what is copyright and what is theft).

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  183. Nonsense by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    US people vote for the government, has the power to get rid of them, and chose not to do so.

    Also they freely join the army that goes and does the bid of the government and parrot the interventionist values of the political uberclass.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  184. Giullianni and Arny do too. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    They are Republicans.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  185. Addiction is ubiquitous by loqi · · Score: 1

    So is running a casino equally heinous? Peddling pornography? How about putting sugar in food products?

    Maybe the war on it is pretty ridiculous (I wouldn't know, I don't see what they're doing to combat the problem)

    Well I do know. I've known a few very nice people whose only supposedly negative contribution to society was circumventing unjustifiable and largely unenforceable laws who have gone to jail for dealing pot and psychedelics. Not crack, heroine, not even ecstacy... just marijuana and mushrooms. Maybe if a friend of yours rips off Windows and has the feds break down his door, shoot his dog, and haul him off to prison where he gets to serve mandatory time (after all, we don't want judges actually using their judgment or anything), you'll have enough personal experience to give a shit about the lives that are being ruined by way of external coercion, instead of a personal choice to experiment with your own body.

    I fail to see how these people were destroying society. I fail to see why we should spend tax money terrorizing our own citizens over a ridiculous culture war being largely funded/supported by the worst addicts of them all (fundamentalist zealots). I fail to see how any decent human being could support such impotent and violently enforced prohibition while there are still underfunded treatment clinics turning people away who sincerely need and want help with their addictions.

    --
    If other reasons we do lack, we swear no one will die when we attack
  186. Re:voting for the other guy by moldor · · Score: 1

    It counts because *Australia has preferential voting*. If after the primary vote is counted, the party you voted for as your first preference has the lowest number of votes, that party is eliminated from the race and its votes are redistributed to other other parties according to your *second* preference. This continues until there are only two parties left.

    And THIS is the seat of most of the dissatisfaction in Australia's political system - move to a "first past the post" system, no preferences, and it will make the bastards work harder.