Patriot Act Author Warns EU Against Dragnet Response To Terror (politico.eu)
schwit1 writes: Jim Sensenbrenner, former chairman of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee, was one of the driving forces behind the Patriot Act. He introduced the legislation a month and a half after the Sept. 11th, 2001 terrorist attacks, and in 2013 he led the charge to scale back its powers, after Edward Snowden's revelations. Now, in the wake of the tragedy in Paris, Sensenbrenner is warning the EU that sweeping surveillance measures are not a proper response. Sensenbrenner said, "The cautionary tale is that democracy depends upon a respect for civil liberties. ... Talking about it in practical terms, the answer is to target the people which you know are up to bad stuff rather than bringing in the 99.8 percent of the inhabitants there, including the vast majority of followers of Islam, who have no intention whatsoever of conducting a terrorist attack."
E: Invalid operation Islamic_terrorism
Oops, sorry: apt-get install Islamic_terrorism.
Although I'd prefer apt-get purge Islamic_terrorism.
If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
(sudo-)Islamic terrorism
Oh god, they've got root?! Cut the hard line!
I'm perfectly OK with a complete ban on guns as long as we start with the military and police...
...the military or local National Guard unit would provide instructors to lead regular drill sessions that are open to local citizens training with their own weapons.
To expand on that idea, how about we automatically enlist all gun owners in the National Guard, with all attendant requirements?
Want to keep your gun? Attend the monthly training and annual 2-week deployments. If you can't be bothered to be part of a "well-regulated militia," why should you be trusted with a gun?
Go on, citizen, stamp the vote card. R or D, your choice.