Lisa loves Pooh
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2004
- Messages
- 40,449
The text of the DOI reads UNalienable, however, both words mean the same thing
I stand corrected.
The text of the DOI reads UNalienable, however, both words mean the same thing
I believe her point is that our government did absolutely nothing about it when they were formed.
While they couldn't change the past, they had every opportunity to change the future but opted not to out of fear of disagreement.
Again, the knowledge of your celphone's location does not violate the 4th Amendment. Nothings is being searched or seized.
But that is not entirely true,
The topic of slavery and the debate was strong during the drafting of the Constitution. Compromises were made to get the thing ratified.
The largest, found in section 9 of Article I of the Constitution, stipulated that Congress would not be able to prohibit the importation of slaves before 1808, although they may tax them. This helped to counter Southern fears that Congress' power to regulate commerce would be used to abolish slavery. This provision could not be changed by amendment, thus, giving the slave trade a 20 year reprieve.
They could not ban it outright and get it passed, so they put a 20 year moratorium, until they could.
Jefferson wrote a bill in about 1805 banning slave trade all together...!
"We should profile passengers on airlines based on Muslim names."
Shrubber 1/8/10
My effects and property are being searched
but he did it while owning slaves so how serious could he have been.
http://www.monticello.org/jefferson/biography.html
Jefferson inherited slaves from both his father and father-in-law. In a typical year, he owned about 200, almost half of them under the age of sixteen.
I apologize, I realise that I started this and it's way off topic.
I find it odd that someone who is willing to profile someone based on something as unimportant as their name is so up in arms about their privacy.
Either the police (and by extension the TSA) can do whatever is necessary to catch a bad guy, like profile them by their name or track them by their cell phone, or they can not. It can't go both ways. You can't claim your rights are unalienable (or inalienable) but someone else's are not.
I find it odd that someone who is willing to profile someone based on something as unimportant as their name is so up in arms about their privacy.
Either the police (and by extension the TSA) can do whatever is necessary to catch a bad guy, like profile them by their name or track them by their cell phone, or they can not. It can't go both ways. You can't claim your rights are unalienable (or inalienable) but someone else's are not.
Your effects and property aren't being searched or seized. The cell phone company has access to your location information. It is stored on their servers. The police are searching their servers (ie property) for the location information, not you. If the phone company allows them to have access to the information no warrant is necessary. If they hold the information waiting for a subpoena or warrant it is the phone company that the warrant is against, not you since the information they are seizing is not yours but the possession of the company on who's server it sits.
This is a very important distinction.
You don't want to be tracked? Simple. Don't have a cell phone. Problem solved. Really, do you think the government has ANY intrest in tracking you? And, if they do have intrest in you, they'll get whatever they need in order to do so. If you're so worried about them tracking you, maybe the government SHOULD be tracking you, kind of like the people who submit the paperwork to get whatever information the gov't has.. well, we didn't have anything on you before, but now we know you're worried. So, now in addition to being billed for the manhours required to show you we don't have anything on you, you might find you're being watched.
Don't like it? Tough.
Seems a simple solution. If you don't like the idea of tracking by cell phone, don't own one.
You don't need a cell phone for the authorities to track your movements....
http://http://archives.chicagotribune.com/2009/may/07/news/chi-ap-wi-gps-police
Again, all without a warrant
Scary stuff
eliza61 said:Oops sorry about the error in numbers I'm sure the 50,000 that were enslaved and the 12 million Africans who were enslaved over the next 100 or so yearsshrubber said:There were never 12 million slaves here in the US.
Wrong on SO many counts. To begin, the first slaves were brought from Africa (and traded for food!) in 1619.shrubber said:It was not 'a hundred years or so either '
The horror of slavery lasted in this country from the ratification of the Constitution to the Emancipation Proclamation,,about 75 years
HOWEVER - your cell phone provider is not your person, house, papers, or effects. The police want - not unreasonably - access to their records in specific instances, and only to determine where and when a cell phone WAS used. Not where it is being used, but where/when at some time in the past.shrubber said:The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized
I fully realize that, the comment was made about our country and specifically the failings of our Constitiution, which could hardly be held accountable some 287 years before Jefferson wrote the thing.
It was not 'a hundred years or so either '
The horror of slavery lasted in this country from the ratification of the Constitution to the Emancipation Proclamation,,about 75 years
What country was this in 1619 again?
You were incorrect in your first statement.
This country has indeed not held the institution of slavery for more than 200 years.
No. Your cell phone company's records are being examined.shrubber said:My effects and property are being searched
America. You are therefore wrong in stating that another poster's statement is wrong.