That would make it difficult to discuss theories for which reliable sources don't yet exist. A lot of truth first exists as rumor; how would you suggest that rumors be discussed?
There's also a rumor that elites are kidnapping 900,000 kids a year to rape them and extract adrenochrome from their pituitary glands while still alive. It's hard to find a reliable source for this, but ah, nevertheless.
And the discussion of too many unsubstantiated rumors gets us to the place where a very significant portion of the population are basically full blown conspiracy theorists. Then we find ourselves in a place where facts and science are transformed into beliefs.
I don't think discussing rumors is inherently bad in moderation, but I guess moderation is a tough problem for us in many parts of society today.
Well, I'm not saying we should jump to the other extreme - though, suppression or denial of rumors doesn't really help them go away. Streisand effect, etc. Rather, I'm just reacting to the parent's claim that we shouldn't discuss anything that doesn't already have substantiative evidence behind it - if we applied that principle more generally, physics would come to a standstill.
"A BBC radio interview circa 2004 given by the former head of the KGB, General Yevgeni Primakov, as well as a former congressman confirmed that Homeland Security hired Markus Wolf, the architect of the STASI informant program, as a consultant for DHS."
Just hard to find the original interview. You're welcome to search yourself, or perhaps discuss something else?
Probably it's hard to find because there has never been such a person at the head of KGB? There had been 8 chairmen (K in KGB stands for "committee" hence its head's title is "Chairman") in the whole history of this organization and none of them had this or similar name. The only KGB-related person with such name is Yevgeni Maksimovich Primakov, who had been a head of the KGB's 1st Department for a brief period of time in 1991, but he had been a civilian so not the same person as the "General Yevgeni Primakov".
There are no novel ideas without a source. Every human concept and invention is based on some prior idea or knowledge. More importantly, every "idea" that attempts to aspire to fact has to be proven to be considered valid.
The claim "Allegedly they used Markus Wolf (ex-Stasi chief) as a consultant in the formative days" is not merely a "novel idea" but an allegation, in other words, an idea that aspires to fact. The likely validity of this statement depends on its source.
To assert that the above claim requires no source in order to be valid as fact simply because it is an "idea" is to ban the distinction between truth and fiction.
When speaking of third hand information reported in the media absolute terms like 'proven', 'fact' and 'valid' seem overly broad. Throw in the contentious nature of a political discussion on the Internet and you have a real mess.
All sources are ideas in itself and If all "ideas" under your definition have a source, this means every source also has a source because they are ideas themselves. By induction this leads to the existence of ideas with an infinite chain of sources... Which is impossible.
By logic, the Chain must terminate at an idea without a source. Thus it can be said that:
All ideas are built from an idea without a source.
We call this an "axiom" in mathematics.
The exception to this rule is the existence of a cycle in this chain:
An initial idea that refers to another idea that refers to the initial idea as its source; A closed loop.
However, we as humans tend to shun these cycles as we call them "paradoxes."
What the poster means by "novel idea" as opposed to "idea" is the terminal idea at the end of these source chains.
In short, the inception of all "novel ideas" begin without a source. Again, we call this "novel idea" The axiom or the assumption.
The strange thing about the axiom itself is an entity that "bans the distinction between truth and fiction" and is ironically the foundation of all human logic.
Another word for this is a "paradox" something we both shun and use as the foundation for all human logic.
What part of "Hacker" in "Hacker News" did you not notice? Hackers have always been involved in politics.
This is our world now... the world of the electron and the switch, the
beauty of the baud. We make use of a service already existing without paying
for what could be dirt-cheap if it wasn't run by profiteering gluttons, and
you call us criminals. We explore... and you call us criminals. We seek
after knowledge... and you call us criminals. We exist without skin color,
without nationality, without religious bias... and you call us criminals.
You build atomic bombs, you wage wars, you murder, cheat, and lie to us
and try to make us believe it's for our own good, yet we're the criminals.
Depends on the country the VPN provider is based out of.
While there are many soft power actions like blocking payments etc to outright hacking American LEA can do to extract data from other countries orgs but legally there are no tools like NSL and FISA courts to get it .
Trump's impeachment? No, he was impeached by the House of Representatives. He just wasn't convicted by the Senate and removed from office--perhaps that's what you consider a failure, though.
It’s been true since the day the TSA security theater / jobs program started. “Land of the free, home of the brave” hasn’t been a thing since I was a kid.
It's particularly depressing considering the passengers on United Airlines Flight 93 had figured out how to _not_ let terrorists win before 10:00 AM the morning of 9/11/2001.
It was later that we decided, oh no, let's let the terrorists win by throwing the bill of rights on metaphorical fire.
Why are Americans so obsessed with freedom? It's the catalyst for peoples freedom to not wear masks and go to the beach during a pandemic.
Freedom has pros and cons. The historical foundations of Freedom in America is an idealistic notion that should be tempered with modern knowledge about the price and complexity of freedom.
My friend in China has told me that the crisis has largely been contained in in their country. The irony here being they have less freedoms than we do but they can now go out in public without worrying about transmitting or receiving covid.
Because we believe it is the way to maximize individual happiness and that individuals are inherently valuable. To take an individual’s liberty is to violate something sacred that the person has just by being alive. You have to have a very strong justification, with a high bar.
This does come with tradeoffs, but I don’t think the masks and beach are part of that tradeoff. People can and will voluntarily take on inconvenience for the good of others, but they have to be convinced. Our dysfunctional president has actively fought against creating a consensus that we should move as one against this virus. When the US decides to do something together, especially in the modern era, we do it incredibly well mostly without sacrificing human rights (with some obvious historical injustices we have to remedy). What is happening here is a failure of leadership, not a failure of liberty.
you mean how Americans post about the chinese internment camps and "human rights violations" while you also had Japanese internment camps during WW2, that sort of thing?
Did the US internment camps violate the rights of others?
This was wrong; but the US has largely moved past this, China has not.
The line is blurry here though. These internment camps house people based off of their religious beliefs. China and its citizens view these people the same way a US citizen would view a cult or scientology. By definition there is little difference, it's just the eastern "mysticism" associated with these religions lends more of a positive light to these religions from the western view point.
I would side more with western viewpoint on this issue but I just said the above to help you empathize with China's viewpoint. It is basically scientology from their point of view and they are using their centralized powers to stamp out a cult that believes in things and acts in ways that have nothing to do with science. Think of it as an extreme form of eliminating creationism from the US educational curriculum.
>When the US decides to do something together, especially in the modern era.
No. This is wrong. Freedom divides, Lack of freedom unifies by definition. Unification and freedom sound like words that go together but they are like oil and water because freedom involves the freedom to be divisive.
Case in point, our dysfunctional president was elected based on a highly divisive voting war between people who have the freedom to think he's dysfunctional and people who have the freedom to think he's not dysfunctional.
>Our dysfunctional president has actively fought against creating a consensus that we should move as one against this virus.
This is freedom by definition? He and other people have the freedom to fight against consensus. In China, you are punished if you don't wear a mask which is the very definition of oppression.
>we do it incredibly well mostly without sacrificing human rights
Like the human right to stay alive and not be killed by people deliberately spreading covid? How many human rights were sacrificed when a bunch of people decided their freedoms were more important? Everyone has the right to believe that covid is a hoax just like how freedom of religion gives you the right to believe in scientology and cults.
Meanwhile in other countries that lack freedoms, what's going on? In these places, where cults like falun gong and scientology would be viciously stamped out if they existed, secret police are patrolling the streets walking around and arresting people who don't wear masks and don't follow the rules.
There are two sides to every coin.
I think it's a pretty biased and narrow viewpoint whenever a US citizen reacts so negatively to things like "secret police" or "destroying our freedoms" to a topic that is so much more complex than your typical black and white / cops and robbers scenario.
> . When the US decides to do something together, especially in the modern era, we do it incredibly well mostly without sacrificing human rights
As long as you don’t consider the scary brown-skinned people of the moment “human”, you might be able to say that with a straight face, but, no, even in the modern era, the US has fairly regularly enthusiastically violated people's rights, at home and abroad (often subverting institutions designed to protect rights in other countries for short-term gain as part of the latter) as broadly supported long-term policy.
Hence the mention of some pretty clear historic problems we have to address. I also don’t fully support some of our recent wars, and I don’t pretend to say we’re perfect. We’ve pretty clearly done some bad things even quite recently.
What I love about this country is that we talk about it, we struggle with it, we do so publicly, and eventually we try to do the right thing. Our ideals are pretty good, just really hard to live up to, and the real world is complicated. We support dictators abroad, we have a racially unequal (though improving, albeit too slowly) society, there are no saints among great nations.
The point is in trying to live up to the ideals. If we compare to other great powers, I think we do better than most historically. As long as we keep moving toward universal human rights and freedom, however imperfectly, I’m on board.
China's goal is to build a cohesive economic powerhouse that functions as a unified whole. Unification at the cost of less individual freedoms. Given the current pandemic no doubt China is handling it better than the US as a result of their centralized control.
The US on the other hand values more individual freedoms at the cost of less cohesion and greater division. No doubt this is what's causing the current influx of Karen's refusing to wear masks. The hatred you see towards these people on YouTube is literally enforced in china. You don't wear a mask in china, you're fucked, nobody dares do such a thing.
Rather then fighting some patriotic flamewar I'd prefer HN viewers to have a more logical nonbiased view point and call it apples and oranges, but alas this is not the case. America has to be the best, especially when compared to China.
It implies that your friend lives in Hong Kong or Taiwan, and that China employs people to read Facebook posts from those places. Unless you mean that she sent you a messenger chat (which now has end-to-end encryption). In that case, she lives in Hong Kong or Taiwan and the Facebook encryption should not be relied on to protect yourself from Chinese monitoring.
I think you ask a fair question here. The answer is in your own comment.
>...freedom to not wear masks and go to the beach during a pandemic.
>...they can now go out in public without worrying about transmitting or receiving covid.
People who are going to the beach probably are not worried about COVID. There's also a fair amount of debate among the technocrats about how transmissible it is on a beach.
Ultimately people just want the freedom to decide for themselves. Central planning isn't always the best for everyone. Fallibility plays a key role. If your friend is happy with her situation in China, that's fine. I'm sure beach goers also enjoyed themselves...
You're forgetting that by going out without a mask to the beach you may have received covid and transmitted covid and killed people as a result of being a vector for transmission.
A centrally planned country prevents senseless deaths from occurring at the cost of freedom.
>People who are going to the beach probably are not worried about COVID. There's also a fair amount of debate among the technocrats about how transmissible it is on a beach.
There were huge huge crowds on the beach with know one wearing masks and now we're experiencing Covid spikes. I wonder why?
The doctors and the CDC are telling everyone to stay in and wear masks. Ignore the technocrats, they're not experts.
By definition a technocrat would be ordained as an expert in his field. However, this does not preclude the fallibility of man. If we extrapolate from this, we can say that it would be impossible for an individual or group of individuals to obtain the perfect information necessary to ideally centrally plan a society.
There is a propensity for 'experts' in their field to massage data to suit political or personal goals. Heart attack deaths are down, but COVID deaths are up. Some have suggested that this is due to selective reporting of deaths which would otherwise be cardiac arrests as COVID related deaths.
There's also the problem of the unseen. Even if the epidemiologists could have the perfect information in regards to controlling an outbreak, they wouldn't necessarily appreciate the economic or social implications of their mandates.
If we accept these limitations, we can say that greater information can be obtained via the network effects of decentralized decision making. This is the value of individualism which has allowed the west to flourish, whereas more communal cultures have been regressive. Of course this is all a very general overview.
>and now we're experiencing Covid spikes. I wonder why?
I'll ignore your cherry picking and refrain from picking an equivalent counter-example.
If we accept that the US has failed in managing the covid crisis, then we should just as readily ask if top-down planning has been effective. Instead you focus on the inverse.
You are far removed from reality. Talk to your friends in china. The anecdotal evidence is clear. Last week several of my friends attended an extravagant wedding.
Not to mention the statistical measures and statements from technocrats are all inline and consistent.
Your retort is the equivalent of flat earthers or fake moon landing conspiracy theories. Open your eyes.
Yes, new outbreaks and lockdowns are being reported throughout China. Anecdotal reports are not especially meaningful in the context you suggest.
>Not to mention the statistical measures and statements from technocrats are all inline and consistent.
Wear a mask, don't wear a mask. Cloth face coverings are sufficient. Cloth face coverings are not sufficient.
A paper debunking the use of hydroxychloroquine was retracted, as many studies are. Without a doubt, the issue has become politicized.
Human knowledge is imperfect. Science is a system of rational inquiry practiced by fallible humans, not a system of belief. Scientism would be the misuse of science as a system of belief. Typical of the theme, those who criticize scientism (and the annointed technocrats) are castigated as heretics and unbelievers.
Attempting to conflate my doubts about the effectiveness of technocratic management and central planning with flat eartherism is plain hyperbole. This kind of retort speaks to your inability to address the issue.
>Wear a mask, don't wear a mask. Cloth face coverings are sufficient. Cloth face coverings are not sufficient.
Technocrats from China and the US were obviously divided about this. Sources of information can be wrong. But in this specific case I am providing you with 3 sources. Each consistent.
>Human knowledge is imperfect. Science is a system of rational inquiry practiced by fallible humans, not a system of belief. Scientism would be the misuse of science as a system of belief. Typical of the theme, those who criticize scientism (and the annointed technocrats) are castigated as heretics and unbelievers.
But it is more perfect then anything that can come out of you. If I have provided you evidence from three sources or even one source it is better than anything you can come up with. Right now the information I provided you is the best information we have. Similar to how the theory of gravity is the best theory we have for why things go down and not up.
>Attempting to conflate my doubts about the effectiveness of technocratic management and central planning with flat eartherism is plain hyperbole. This kind of retort speaks to your inability to address the issue.
No I am conflating your ability to ignore evidence and not present counter-evidence. All you do is just doubt doubt doubt. How can you doubt without evidence yourself? How is that scientific? It is not. You can just as well doubt the theory of gravity. There is no difference, and your bias makes you incapable of seeing that.
There are multiple lenses and sources and observers seeing what's going on in China both biased and unbiased. You have utilizes none of those sources, only choosing to doubt.
>What exactly do you believe that this 'evidence' proves in relation to my original statement?
Nothing can be proven. This is a property of science and reality. Even a scientific paper can't prove anything. What can be done is to say my hypothesis has more evidence and is more likely than your hypothesis to a significant degree.
This is how science works. We can say hey look this scientific paper has more rigor and accuracy than the opinions of a religious shaman in Africa because we understand the statistical rigor and science that is used by the scientific paper to gather evidence to support a conclusion. We also understand that the shaman in africa came to a conclusion getting high off some drug in his straw hut so we know one source is better than the other.
>>But it is more perfect then anything that can come out of you
>How so?
You're not a credible source... You're not a scientific paper, you're not a statistic. You're just a person on the internet spouting off his opinions, not too far off from an African Shaman.
If I write a thesis can I cite "random person on the internet" as a source? No, I can't because you don't have the reputation or the scientific rigor to gather any evidence that's worth anything. You are not a "lens" into what's happening in China, because you yourself use other "lenses" to see what's going on. Your opinion and your information is only as good as the "lenses" you are using. Yet look at what information you provided me with. You provided me with no sources and a shitload of opinion thats it's pretty much useless.
Thus in order to give more credence to your statements you have to back them up with credible sources. You tell me which lens your using, why it's accurate and how it supports your conclusion... Which you have not done.
As a random person on the internet myself, my word is as useless as yours until I backed up my word with sources more credible than myself.... Which I have done.
>Everyone has a bias. Everyone's view is subjective by definition.
Underneath every viewpoint is the actual object being viewed. And that objective reality cannot be biased. But all observations of said object is done through a lens and that lens is biased.
But....
Some views are less biased than others. For example a scientific paper that statistically measures the amount of covid cases in China is less biased than a random person on the internet stating his useless opinion without evidence backing it up.
There can be cases where there are two scientific papers that come to opposite conclusions. In this case it's hard to tell which lens is more biased and which lens is more accurate. In this case no conclusion can easily be declared.
>I'm not sure you've understood anything that I've written here.
I understand everything you've written. You don't understand how to make a point and how to back it up and you don't understand science. You just view the world as a muddy: "everyone has a biased viewpoint" without truly understanding why and without truly understanding how to navigate such a world and make some "viewpoints" less biased than other "viewpoints."
Not to mention your viewpoints and lenses that you're using have led you to come to a deeply inaccurate and incorrect view of China. You realize the nobody can actually 100% prove to the flat earthers that the world is round? What they can do is present scientific evidence that makes a flat earth very very unlikely. That's it.
I can assure you, with my background and the sources I have presented to you, I can never prove my point to you, but I have certainly shown that my conclusion is quite accurate by presenting to you several angles of the same objective reality: The scientific angle, the anecdotal angle and the statistical angle.
Think about it, if Fox news can produce dozens of stupid people who don't kn...
You seem to be tilting against an imaginary opponent. Perhaps it would help if we went back and examined where this discussion started.
I thought you wanted to discuss the differences between individualism and a centrally planned society. Is that true, or were you primarily interested in nationalism and identity politics?
Pursuant to what I viewed as a noble discussion about these ideals, I attempted to sidestep your tribalism and focus on what I viewed as the crux of the issue.
Central planning requires perfect information to live up to its stated goals. Thus in any centrally planned society we see mishaps resulting from imperfect information wielded by central planners.
In contrast, decentralized systems based upon individualism and free markets are generally more resiliant to errors committed by individuals. Participants who have the _freedom_ to choose for themselves can observe errors committed by others and look for alternate solutions. Similarly, they can emulate successes they observe.
At the time, I felt that a succinct reply was sufficient to express these general concepts.
In response to these points you provide anecdotal evidence about your friend attending a wedding in China. While I am no mind reader, I could only assume that you were implying that the wedding was not canceled because of the superior central planning of the CCP. This is absurd on many levels.
First of all as I pointed out, China is a large country. There are lockdowns elsewhere. Week to week we see new lockdowns throughout the country. Even Beijing has had entire neighborhoods on lockdown. Head central planner Xi, has fled the capital.
We can also look to Sweden, where lockdowns were not mandated at all by the central authorities. Death rates there are normalizing.
Finally, if central planning equated to competent governance, then why did COVID-19 originate under the reign of central planners?
In your next comment you misuse the temporal sense and suggest that you have already given me three contexts. In this comment you provide a link to a COVID study and a map of COVID cases. Obviously, these data have no relation to the points expressed about technocracy or central planning.
>Nothing can be proven. This is a property of science and reality
The points made are philosophical. They can be challenged or even refuted logically. So far you have failed to do so. You haven't even approached the discussion. Observation can be part of this process, but strictly speaking this is not scientific.
Then you go on to hyperbole and debase yourself with ridiculous insults. Much of your rambling follow up is dedicated to the same. The greater part seeks to defend China from an imagined slight. I will entertain this digression.
China is not the CCP. Throughout this discussion you appear to conflate the two. This is an important distinction. You also make several inaccurate assumptions about myself, but I'll leave that to the side for now. In any strictly logical debate, the identity of the speaker should not play a role.
GDP is a self-gratifying statist metric preferred by technocrats the world over. The calculation of GDP justifies further government intervention in an economy. In the case of the west, this can be in the form of credit expansion. In the case of the CCP's centrally planned economy, this is much more direct.
GDP can be increased by simply paying workers to dig and fill holes. While this will increase GDP, it will not add any value to the economy. Similarly in China we see 'tofu buildings'. These kinds of projects may increase GDP, but they decrease the quality of life for market participants. Residents have been injured by these shoddy constructions. Markets are distorted and capital is misallocated, preventing entrepreneurs from contributing actual value.
Removing your hands from the neck of the patient is not the same as performing the Heimlich maneuver.
From this perspective it would be more fitting to applaud the increase in the standard of living of the Chinese people. T...
>You seem to be tilting against an imaginary opponent. Perhaps it would help if we went back and examined where this discussion started.
Nope. I'm just trying to teach you.
>Pursuant to what I viewed as a noble discussion about these ideals, I attempted to sidestep your tribalism and focus on what I viewed as the crux of the issue.
No. You don't get it. Your entire argument is tribal. You need to present evidence, you have none. Just statements of your own opinions.
>Central planning requires perfect information to live up to its stated goals. Thus in any centrally planned...
Again another opinion. With no offering of evidence. How about you give me a an example of a perfect system that doesn't need perfect information and then we can talk about the merits of central government. I really can't even cite an example of a government that doesn't require perfect information to be perfect. But go ahead, here's an opportunity for you to give me evidence to show me that I'm wrong.
>In contrast, decentralized systems based upon individualism and free markets are generally more resiliant to errors committed by individuals. Participants who have the _freedom_ to choose for themselves can observe errors committed by others and look for alternate solutions. Similarly, they can emulate successes they observe.
And what makes you say people behave this way? Where's your evidence? Again, another useless opinion because I have a different opinion: People are doomed to repeat history, people as a group mob function with as if they were a single person with an IQ of 80. My opinions differ from yours. Again your useless attempt to turn me requires evidence. There is no tribalism going on here. I am teaching you how to debate because you don't know how. All in all my real opinion is a hybrid of your opinion and mine. People are shades of both creating a story that is far more complex than your simple classifications of behavior. But again, who cares because no evidence.
>In response to these points you provide anecdotal evidence about your friend attending a wedding in China. While I am no mind reader, I could only assume that you were implying that the wedding was not canceled because of the superior central planning of the CCP. This is absurd on many levels.
No. I am presenting to you a piece of evidence. The evidence doesn't prove anything by itself, it just gives more credibility to something. The more evidence I present to you the more credibility is given to my hypothesis. So in total the evidence I presented to you were three in total: Technocratic, Anecdotal, and statistical. Each piece of evidence no doubt has different levels of quality and veracity but all three combined together form a consistent picture. No doubt, if I observe a friend going to a wedding in China it shows consistency with statistical evidence and news articles.
>First of all as I pointed out, China is a large country. There are lockdowns elsewhere. Week to week we see new lockdowns throughout the country. Even Beijing has had entire neighborhoods on lockdown. Head central planner Xi, has fled the capital.
Evidence. Please. Cite your sources.
>We can also look to Sweden, where lockdowns were not manda...
Cite your sources. Give me statistics. Numbers. You could be pulling all of this out of your ass.
>Finally, if central planning equated to competent governance, then why did COVID-19 originate under the reign of central planners?
Why do people have such simple minded views on issues that are startlingly more complex? I know why. It's because of pride. It's US vs. China and the US has to be better. Look, I don't equate central planning to better governance or worse governance or perfect governance. I never said this, you just assumed it. I equate it to alternative governance. If the US was an Orange then China would be an Apple. You're comparing Apples and Oranges.
For example how do you explain the massive growth China has experienced o...
The answer is simple. Propaganda. US children have been told about "freedoms" since they were old enough to go to school. When asked to define what "Freedoms" they have vs other nations, they stumble on multiple fronts. This is because so few own passports and have ever left the US and they instead depend on their FOX news for world views.
I've actually been to China many times, and can tell you that the US view of China as often posted here, vs reality is very far apart.
On your latter point, we don't need to go to China to know about it. The fact the great firewall exists is an affront to human liberty. All other freedoms are downstream from speech.
He's not wrong you really need to go to China to see the truth. Your logic is as simplistic as a someone saying America is full of overweight white supremacists or rich people with Hollywood good looks. Both stereotypes gloss over a reality that is far more complex.
As someone who's lived and breathed aspects of both countries the story of china is the same. A complex story with many facets very good and very bad as well. I will say that the media's portrayal of China is heavily biased towards the bad side of china and has resulted in your bigoted and niave one sided outlook. This is not an insult, it is a statement to help you be more self aware. Like telling a white supremacists about the morality of equality among races I don't know if you'd be able to reexamine your view point, or just follow your biased outlook all the way to the bloody end.
Put it on your bucket list. Go to Shanghai or Shenzhen. China's progress is breakneck, there has never been a phenomenon like it in the history of civilization and I am not saying this haphhazardly. I promise you, that if you go, you will be blown away.
You are conflating valuing something with thinking that no one else has it.
Also traveling to china has nothing to do with understanding what the government can and will do citizens that dissent against it. You don't walk around a city and prove a negative by not witnessing any disappearances or live organ harvesting (there are reports that you can -schedule- heart transplants).
That is like picking up snow to prove that global climate change is a myth.
> My friend in China has told me that the crisis has largely been contained in in their country.
You could never know, because freedom of speech and the press doesn't exist there. The CCP jailed the doctors and experts who spoke up about the original Wuhan coronavirus outbreak in 2019, then proceeded to have a public banquet without social distancing or masks in the following weeks, and the CCP celebrated the fact that 40,000 families[1] showed up to it.
You say that the lack of freedom has been a good thing for handling the outbreak, but that lack of freedom stopped doctors and epidemiologists from learning more about the coronavirus outbreak while it could still be contained, and prevented them from informing and warning the world about it.
Yeah like all countries china is fallible and imperfect.
I'm talking about the general handling of the epidemic. When china got serious, they killed it. When America tried to get serious they got people protesting that covid is a hoax.
There's some really stupid shit that china did like you brought up above, but overall in the big picture scheme of things... China did a really good job and the United States is bungling the whole situation.
In the overall big picture of events, the lack of free speech and assembly in China allowed a containable outbreak to become the largest worldwide pandemic in 100 years. That doesn't make authoritarianism something to be celebrated, that makes it something the CCP should be embarrassed of.
Again, because of the lack of free speech and press in China, the only proof of what you allege publicized through CCP approved media.
Doubling down on authoritarianism and suppression of the press after initial authoritarianism allowed an epidemic to become a pandemic just suggests you can't trust the press in China without extensive independent auditing, which the CCP doesn't allow.
>In the overall big picture of events, the lack of free speech and assembly in China allowed a containable outbreak to become the largest worldwide pandemic in 100 years.
Lack of free speech is not the reason why this pandemic spread. The proof is in the United States. The United States "freedoms" including speech has allowed it to be #1 in covid-19 cases.
Additionally, I'm not even sure how your misguided reasoning works... Patient Zero has a disease, he covertly spreads it to 3 people who in turn also covertly spread it 3 people, the cycle continues... Where in this scenario of compounding growth does free speech stop a disease from being covertly spread?
Also China isn't stupid. They aren't North Korea. When there's a real problem in China they won't clamp down on the information and release propaganda that is completely ludicrous. In fact if covid-19 was still killing tons of people in China and the Chinese media was hiding it, the US would know because Chinese citizens have the freedom to talk to the press outside of their borders. Word gets out.
Either way, the US and US public was informed about the impending problem WELL before it arrived at our borders, we failed to take action for various reasons including the fact that we didn't need to do such a thing for SARS or ebola.... Everyone is still learning about covid.
>Again, because of the lack of free speech and press in China, the only proof of what you allege publicized through CCP approved media.
The CCP is not that powerful. Nor does their desire to preserve their own image become so ludicrous that they'll outright lie about the pandemic dying down for no reason. Your image of China is twisted. Yes they are authoritarian, yes they are fallible to human weaknesses, no they are not stupid, no they are not North Korea, and no they are not evil incarnate.
>That doesn't make authoritarianism something to be celebrated, that makes it something the CCP should be embarrassed of.
This statement is where the controversy lies. Do you want to be embarrassed about authoritarianism or are you more embarrassed about all the deaths occurring in the United States despite superior medical knowledge?
In New York City I read a story about a nurse in tears because she had to remove a respirator from an older patient to give a chance to a younger patient to live. They are choosing who lives and who dies in NYC because they don't have enough respirators.
The counterpart story in China was they built an entire hospital in a week to handle the crisis and now the hospital is mostly empty because the crisis is dying down.
It's kind of embarrassing that China wasted resources on building a hospital that is now empty. But you know what's more embarrassing? The fact that my own country can't build enough respirators and as a result a nurse has to choose between killing an older patient or a younger patient because some people have the freedom not to wear masks.
Take a look at this video and tell me which country should be embarrassed:
Like literally every country is looking at the US and shaking their heads. This isn't just my opinion... it's an obvious fact and if you can't see this, then you're lying to yourself.
Freedom has a price, and we are paying that price right now with deaths and "embarrassment."
These people are being detained by people with POLICE written on their vests, charged in front of a magistrate, and released. All the info is on the Portland website of arrests.
There are videos where we can clearly see these unmarked agents (yes they are unmarked if they have no name or number) attacking and detaining medics without reading them their rights.
Those are the violations of civil liberties we are discussing and this argument throws out.
A prime example of civil liberty being infringed would be the large number of people being assaulted with chemicals, projectiles, intimidation and old fashioned thuggery in reaction to acts carried out by a different, smaller group of people.
You've linked a private organization that explicitly disclaims association with any state or local government (right there on the page you've linked to even).
No, I haven't evaluated it beyond what I've said here.
But up thread you claim that the people detained and placed in unmarked vehicles are listed there. I was wondering how you had determined that, or if you were assuming it to be true, or what.
Do a search for “releases in last 7 days”, look through the names and you’ll see that the arresting agency was “DHS” or “US Marshalls” and it will see say “no charges filed, release on X/X/X”.
> we are watching the perfect and perhaps inevitable combination of a domestic-security superagency and a President who rejects all mechanisms of accountability, including the Senate confirmation process.
Accountability appears to be broken with a two party system.
Combined with a President who’s willing to push boundaries and a federal agency built to act more swiftly with broader powers, we could see a lot more civil strife before this term is up.
I think the presidential system is also a factor; it makes it a little too obvious and immutable where the blame lies. In a parliamentary system, there’s much more scope for the ruling party to resolve this sort of thing by, say, quietly sacrificing the minister for justice, without much blame attaching to the PM (even if it’s their fault to begin with). In a presidential system it’s harder to do this without criticising dear leader. I can’t imagine many republican leaders are actually very happy about this whole mess, but very few of them are willing to publicly break ranks and they have limited ability to check the executive even if they do.
The equivalent here is asking for the resignation of the DHS secretary. Unfortunately, that has already happened when ICE separated children from their families. A second resignation would only make the president look bad.
>I can’t imagine many republican leaders are actually very happy about this whole mess, but very few of them are willing to publicly break ranks
I think this is one of the most fundamental factors in the breakdown at higher levels of discourse. Most liberals I personally know used to put a strong emphasis on benefit of the doubt and pragmatism when it came to judging Republican leadership - there was always plenty of strong criticism, but there was also a lot of "well, in such-and-such case, they are just doing what they honestly think is best for the country". But that attitude is now utterly gone, because of the silence of such leaders on the incredibly overt hatred and unreasonableness of Trump and other proponents of spite-motivated authoritarianism. They still have plenty of good faith for Republicans, but what's changed is that they now have absolutely zero for Republican leaders. What's happening is awful.
That has, looking from the outside, been one of the weirdest aspects of the whole Trump thing to me. Traditionally, prime ministers in parliamentary systems are _terrified_ of their own parties; it's their own party who can most conveniently get rid of them, and even very popular leaders will be conscious of this. I understand that it's less so in the US system (as it's much harder for the party to get rid of the president) but even still, the level of support for Trump by republican leadership seems bizarre.
Like, there _have_ to be quite a few of them who have misgivings about this (either on a 'this is wrong' basis, or, more cynically, on a 'we will suffer for this electorally' basis), but practically none have voiced any.
The President of the US is elected by the people, not his party. The only thing the party can do to the president is to sabotage the next election and give it to the opposite party. While Democrats probably think its a rational thing for Republicans to do, some Republicans might disagree.
There is speculation [1] that the federal officers deployed to Portland include not only government employees, but also private security contractors. This seems reminiscent of "Pinkerton's National Detective Agency". If accurate, this undermines the legitimacy of the deployment, and perhaps explains why official identification for many of the officers is not provided.
The police cover their faces, and make face coverings illegal. In the past, this has worked very well; the main change now is that we have a social expectation that law-abiding folks will wear face coverings, and in even more of an inversion, folks without face coverings are suspect.
In neither situation would facial recognition systems make things better for the populace.
> If accurate, this undermines the legitimacy of the deployment
I am perfectly comfortable questioning the legitimacy of the deployment without any speculation about which individuals we the tax payers ended up paying to be there.
There's the BLM daylight protestors... There's the "moms" in the evening... Then there's the anarchists/antifa at 2am.
Before you judge what the DHS is doing, watch the videos from 2am. I think many people are watching the peaceful daytime videos and seeing DHS as overreacting. Which it would be.
I don't think it's overreacting to people setting the court house on fire, hitting police in the head with hammers or destroying businesses. You can find videos of this easily even though the "protestors" tend to beat up and eject "unofficial" camera people.
And they've been doing this for 2 MONTHS, way before DHS arrived with a mission to protect federal property, which we all pay for.
So if I were to grab you off of the street, question you, refuse to answer your questions and drop you off 30 minutes later without physically harming you... you'd be fine with that?
That's actually happened to me (except out of my house, not off the street) when my house was misidentified as the location of a domestic violence call.
It was disturbing and a little frightening, but yes, in hindsight I am fine with it. I hope they found the right house and found the person they were looking for.
If it’s true that rioters are attacking with hammers, certainly the use of less-lethal force is justified. Do the police not have the right to self-defense that every other citizen has?
Calling the police's capacity for violence merely "the right to self-defense" is absurd. Qualified immunity goes so far beyond the rights of normal citizens that there really is no possible comparison. Not even the fever dreams of the most radical libertarian encompass qualified immunity for civilians.
The police in the United States are a paramilitary force, equipped with military gear, and in many cases with military training -- the only thing military thing they don't have is the uniform code of military justice, which forbids things like the use of chemical weaponry and war crimes.
There was the incident of a protester holding a boombox over their head, and getting shot in the face with a "less lethal" munition that cracked their skull.
Another where a person was riding their bike away from a protest and got hauled into an anonymous van and held without cause.
Self defense is ok, these actions are not. One "protester" being violent does not warrant collective punishment of all/any protesters. It warrants defense from, and the arrest of, the violent ones.
Except citizens get prosecuted, fired, judged as to weather or not it was indeed a justified use of force. The pd does not have any such accountability or review.
Do you know what a hammer will do to a skull? The dude was not nailing up boards, he was at the door waiting to ambush.
I don't support what's going on on the police side, and think they seem to be intentionally escalating to draw out events like that to use politically, but there is no excuse for what that hammer guy was doing.
Portland lost their injunction in front of a judge yesterday. I’m assuming they put forward their best evidence and the judge said they “provided no evidence these allegedly illegal seizures are a widespread practice”.
Federal judiciary can be maddening unwilling to hold executive security apparatus to account. I'm reminded of the NSA surveillance lawsuit, that was shrugged away with the same "lack of standing". And the same question lingering -- then, your honor, who exactly _does_ have standing?
It creates a catch-22-enhanced version of Who’s On First[1][2], except it’s Who Has Legal Standing? It results in judges being hesitant to rule as they ought due to intentional muddying of the jurisdictional hierarchy of bureaucracy and who is able to claim standing and harm. It’s a shell game designed to disempower everyone in the courtroom to the boon of those who can never or will never be brought inside one.
What if change through the courts is impossible because it would take longer than any one person’s life to acquire standing to sue, and have the case heard?
That separate ruling does not affect a ruling by a different federal judge, barring federal agents from interfering with journalists and legal observers; this ruling includes potential future enforcement against individuals and their supervisors if the judge’s ruling is not obeyed by individuals acting under federal authority or directed by federal agencies.
Imagine going before a Federal judge, whose Courthouse is under attack by people trying to burn it down, and then argue before the judge that Federal officers aren't warranted.
I would not want to show my face in that court ever again.
This comment breaks the site guidelines, and some of your other comments have been doing that also. Would you mind reading https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and sticking to the rules when posting here? Note that they include:
"Comments should get more thoughtful and substantive, not less, as a topic gets more divisive."
"Don't be snarky."
"Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. Assume good faith."
It's obviously not easy to stay in the mode of curious conversation when discussing the most conflictual topics of the moment, but the intended spirit of this place requires all of us to try.
I've been watching the violent portion of these protests and have been impressed how much restraint the police and feds have shown. It's very interesting how differently these situations are perceived depending on your political perspective and sources of information.
Same here. Video of the arrests the last few nights don’t seem out of line to me.
The feds stay locked up in the courthouse, the “protestors” breakdown the barriers erected, start fires, then the feds rush them and grab who they can.
These are not “innocent” protestors just exercising their 1st amendment rights. At least not in the videos I’ve seen.
As someone who has advocated for strong states rights (a position that’s traditionally not held by the progressive left over the last decade) I find these times to be interesting, and full of ideological dissonance.
People are asking for a federal mandate on masks, but at the same time want no federal enforcement of these laws? How about neither?
I hate seeing a world where “federal police” come in and squash local protests, and it bugs me that previously state rights advocates are calling for it.
This is typical of today's divisive atmosphere. Do you remember the other BLM (Bureau of Land Management) protests in Oregon?
I recall outraged partisans demanding federal intervention, while claiming that the ranchers were enjoying special privileges due to their race. I believe they called them "vanilla ISIS".
Of course individuals within any movement will vary, but generally speaking, partisans want to use the power of the state against their ideological opponents. When it is used against them, they predictably cry foul.
I think maybe the issue here is that the press did not cover the unidentified federal agents arresting the BLM protesters. The result is that it looks like the treatment of the Portland protesters is different.
Do you actually believe that graffiti and a couple small fires rise to the same level of criminality as an armed takeover of federal land? It's fully possible to believe the federal government should put a stop to armed takeovers of federal land and not be involved in graffiti on non-federal property without it being a partisan thing.
The problem is that people believe the protests in Portland are violent riots. They aren't. As long as people are manipulated so easily, I guess real policy discussions aren't going to happen.
I'm not looking for equivalency in that sense. On one hand you have arsonists seeking to destroy federal property. On the other you had armed (not specifically violent) men occupying federal property. One of these men was shot.
The equivalence is the partisan hypocrisy. There are several sources citing violence in Portland. Even left leaning sources acknowledge this.
When you dismiss someone's view you disagree with as "manipulated", you illustrate the larger point I was making.
I think it's safe to say that political discourse and the possibility of any societal-level discussion (and agreement) has failed. It's the same crap that plagues software development when modelling complex business problems. Political or decision makers never ask explicit questions (like yours), make decisions (laws) on them and then follow through without hesitation.
Here we are in 2020 and we've got camps trying to justify how violent protests are a "civil rights" or "free speech" issue instead of just agreeing and everyone saying "yeah - anyone can protest because we agree it's a right, but police can arrest anyone that does violence". We're forever complicating and conflating issues, adding layer upon layer of complexity, instead of simplifying. I think the analogy to software development is quite profound.
There is no void. The movements still result in that service filled just with a different face. Essentially rebuild with less horizontal expectations and power, creating sister organizations that are scoped to their appropriate need.
Maybe that means having a deescalation officer lead to thugs around I'm not sure but it's not have no police force.
Most people aren’t suggesting literally banning the police, but rather either decapitating and reorganising (RUC would be an example) or dissolving and replacing wholesale (Stasi would be an example).
Gaslighting occurs with respect to a current situation, not a hypothetical.
Here are top results on Google for "defund the police."
“Defund the police” means reallocating or redirecting funding away from the police department to other government agencies ...
“Defund the police” means reallocating or redirecting funding away from the police department to other government agencies funded by the local municipality.
"Defund the police" is a slogan that supports divesting funds from police departments and reallocating them to non-policing forms of public safety and community support, such as social services, youth services, housing, education, healthcare and other community resources.
Instead of funding a police department, a sizable chunk of a city's budget is invested in communities, especially marginalized ...
Police abolition means reducing, with the vision of eventually eliminating, our reliance on policing to secure our public safety. It ...
No sources in these results say "create a power vacuum". That is the invention of critics. Please demonstrate otherwise.
You don't need to presume; just read their platform. They want the police to stop filling the vacuum left by lack of social services (i.e. police currently respond to people mental distress because there are no social workers who currently do that). They want to defund the police and have the money directed to social services so that police stop being a jack of all trades (especially since they are not trained in deescalation).
Public education has been defunded for decades, but we still have teachers and public schools, and their charter alternatives - that should be your mental model not abolishment of police.
As far as I know, essentially everyone is either asking for either "in some way reorganise this, maybe lose the leadership, or at most fire the lot and make a new one" or "pull money and responsibilities from this and give to social services/community groups/whatever". However, those make for awful slogans. "Defund the police" is a good slogan.
This is, incidentally, probably the US left learning the Hillary Clinton Lesson. Detailed, costed proposals of what you want to do may be very practical, but people prefer a good slogan, and to leave the details to the detail people.
> The people who are calling to defund the police literally mean defunding the police.
The people who are saying defund the police do want that literally, but they don't mean “reduce funding to zero”, they mean reduce funding and responsibility and transfer the bits that aren't optimally served by an armed paramilitary law enforcement force to be served by other agencies, who also get the associated funding.
There are people who take that a step further, who prefer the slogan “dismantle the police” or “abolish the police”. Mostly, like the “defund” group with which they overlap (these are variations rather than strict alternatives) they want to fund agencies that they see as more appropriate for the functions, but the dismantle/abolish group thinks that the kind of centralized armed groups with paramilitary organization that exist as local police departments aren't the right solution to any problems (except perhaps for large scale civil disorder, but we already have the national guard to respond to that, who don't do nearly as much to provoke that disorder in the first place), so they think all the functions of existing police departments should be transferred to other agencies (some of which might have arrest powers, and even armed agents, but those agents would be working for domain-specific agencies, not a massive centralized general-purpose paramilitary law enforcement agency.)
> Presumably the ones that make this call are hoping an ideological paramilitary arm (such as antifa) can fill the power vacuum left behind.
No, for the most part the defund/dismantle/abolish group thinks that the problem is centralized omnipresent paramilitary forces with a separate ideology and culture from the general society, not that we just need to swap one out for a different one.
> Those that want reform are asking for reform.
“Defund the police” and “dismantle/abolish the police” are approaches to reform of how society serves the functions currently served by the police. They are approaches differing from the counterproductive “reform” efforts that have led us where we are today because they don't involve shoveling more scarce resources and more responsibility into local centralized paramilitary law enforcement agencies.
It’s not weird. Anarchists are coopting the BLM movement to achieve an anarchist goal. Look at the Portland crowd, all white, all antifa.
They’ve tried to do this every year on May Day in Seattle, but it’s too hard when the police can crack down on the whole group. Now they’ve conned thousands of “normal” people to be their human shields.
"The ultimate weakness of violence is that it is a descending spiral begetting the very thing it seeks to destroy, instead of diminishing evil, it multiplies it. Through violence you may murder the liar, but you cannot murder the lie, nor establish the truth. Through violence you may murder the hater, but you do not murder hate. In fact, violence merely increases hate. Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that."
... And? Did you post this in the wrong thread, or do you want to imply something about the French Revolution's relevance to the above quote but can't be bothered to explain your point? The French Revolution began as a bloodbath and ended in Napoleon rampaging across Europe, so it would seem like a case in point. Is that what you meant?
French Revolution is a perfect counter example nullifying MLK point. Yes, a lot of violence and chopped heads can in fact establish better future for all.
...the French revolution led to Napoleon though, and several more wars after. Did they cause the better future? Was the substantial violence and ethnic cleansing _following_ WW2 part of that future? I am far from an expert on the subject but I've yet to hear the argument you are presenting. Curious to hear a more substantive version of it.
French were already war happy without Napoleon. 30 year war, Spain, Netherlands, Austria, then we get to French and Indian War and American Revolution. If anything Napoleonic Wars brought peace and introduced never seen before liberties. Obviously being a Pole makes me strongly biased. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duchy_of_Warsaw
He was an emotional genius. It's upsetting that I've seen people use anti-violence quotes like this not to stand on their own, but as attacks against protesters in general, or against destructive rioters but excluding any police or reactionary militias.
The premise of the article has almost nothing to do with current events.
One can dislike how/why DHS was created and also believe that order needs to be restored the area by the feds.
As for the "unmarked cars" picking people up, what is actually happening to these people? Is it catch and release? It seems pretty tame to me.
Should they just let the protesters/rioters burn down the courthouse?
As to whether they are protesters or rioters, ask whether you think Peter Schiff could do what he did during occupy and stroll into the crowd attempting to debate and defend capitalism with the folk (which I think he failed to do at all, but more just the fact he was able to try it there is significant)? The answer is of course not; he'd probably be beaten or severely injured.
>As for the "unmarked cars" picking people up, what is actually happening to these people? Is it catch and release? It seems pretty tame to me.
Its illegal to detain people for no reason. How will you feel when it happens to you?
> Should they just let the protesters/rioters burn down the courthouse?
That is an interesting perspective. And its one that a lot of people currently hold toward the police. Does one (or even a few) bad apple spoil the bunch?
Do you think that protesters like the Navy Vet, Naked Athena, the Wall of Moms, and even the Mayor of Portland really want to burn down a Federal building?
I agree and I find these events troubling. But I also want to put them in perspective.
> Does one (or even a few) bad apple spoil the bunch?
I don't understand the point you're making here.
> Do you think that protesters like the Navy Vet, Naked Athena, the Wall of Moms, and even the Mayor of Portland really want to burn down a Federal building?
As another commenter said, there are about 3 different groups with different adgendas operating in the area.
Who exactly is calling for the the courthouse to burn? That is my point, while there may be some troublemakers the vast majority are not. While some find calls to defund the police offensive, others find the call to stop people from exercising their rights offensive.
If this happened at all, there have only been 2 possible cases, and given that extent, we are not talking about a widespread phenomenon. The scope of the discussion and ramifications should account for that.
> police with no.. planning, or accountability?
Yes, I think an institution has a lot more of those things than a mob does. And just because that is true doesn't mean police need to be reformed. But i'm responding to your direct coments.
> And assault everyone?
Are they 'assaulting everyone?" I don't know what events you're talking about anymore.
You admit that there are possible cases where human rights were violated and yet you see no problem with that - that goes directly against our constitution and our natural rights as humans. So far there has been no accountability for the Feds.
"Typically, police fire the agent once or twice to clear crowds and encourage people to move away from an area, said Michelle Heisler, the medical director of Physicians for Human Rights. But in Portland, federal agents have been unleashing the chemicals repeatedly for hours. This sustained cascade makes it difficult for peaceful demonstrators to avoid being hit and runs the risk of ensnaring bystanders in the area, she said."
I find it sad that you hold the symbolism of a building over the lives and fair treatment of your countrymen.
You don't know what's happening to the taken people, but it seems pretty tame to you?
>Should they just let the protesters/rioters burn down the courthouse?
You're implying a binary, which is a common fallacy. It's not helpful, and is in fact provocative, to respond to critics of some behavior to the effect of, "So, what, they should do the extreme opposite thing?"
attempts to launch fireworks/mortars into the windows of the courthouse is not a binary or a fallacy.
> You don't know what's happening to the taken people, but it seems pretty tame to you?
I don't think they're being killed/maimed/"dissapeared" (south american style) as another commenter put it, but i agree that detainment without identification is a problem and it should stop.
Oof. If terrorizing protestors that are leaving the protest while having committed no crimes and only exercised their first amendment rights is “tame” to you, there remains some questions about your tolerance for tyranny.
A burnt-down courthouse is less of a threat to civil liberties than actual paramilitaries literally grabbing people off of the streets. We're better off when vandals are the bad guys, rather than state security.
EDIT: I'm not sure why I took your false dichotomy at face value in the first place. A burnt-down courthouse and an informal military occupation aren't the only two options; but even if they were, the former is preferable.
I disagree. A mob burning down a courthouse isn't a minor thing: it's a clear symbolic statement that the justice system is illegitimate, the law has no power, and mob rule should be established. If I were confident that everyone would peacefully disperse and things would return to normal, I'd be all in favor of letting it burn, but I'd expect to just see more arson.
As the person above you has said, it's a false dichotomy. We can both respect people's civil liberties and prevent federal buildings from burning down.
He's saying that if those were the only choices he'd prefer those buildings burning down over the suspension of civil liberties. But they are not the only choices, we can protect both. It's not easy, but it's worth it.
I'm not sure we can. What ideas do you have in mind? The obvious strategy would be for local leaders to show up in person to express sympathy and solidarity with the cause, but that's been tried and doesn't seem to have changed anything.
I've seen some people float "do everything the mob demands so they won't have to follow through on their threats", but I hope we can agree that doing that would itself constitute mob rule.
The presence of federal agents and the police who are defending the court house is not illegal, it's their job. That helps defend the building from arson.
However federal agents violating 1st and 4th amendment rights by teargassing peaceful protests and unlawfully detaining people that's what needs to stop.
I fail to see why people are defending that behavior. You can support the deployment of those federal agents while still being critical of their overreach.
I'm critical of their overreach, but my criticism is muted, because I see the mob they're fighting against as a larger threat to the freedom of Portland residents. The police abuses we've seen are limited in scope and severity; as anyone who remembers 1992 can tell you, mob violence is very capable of engulfing an entire city.
And because of that overreach the criticism of the arsonists and rioters is muted as well, because the protesters see the police abuses as a larger threat to the freedom of Portland residents. It's what their entire protest movement is based on in the first place.
Both sides abandoning the middle ground is the reason we're in such a divisive political time. If you can't come to the defense of arguments you agree with because they're voiced by people you disagree with then you're contributing to the divisiveness.
Let's dispense with the residents per se because neither side cares about them, really. It's about power and institutions. The residents will vote soon enough anyway.
I don't believe I've abandoned any middle ground. I can come to the defense of those arguments. They just don't seem relevant to the urgent question of how to get rid of the mobs trying to burn down the courthouse. I'm sure we can agree that federal agents manning siege defenses every night isn't a workable long-term solution.
It certainly is not a workable solution, but given that the protests are about police abuses, perpetuating those abuses will only exacerbate the problem. The arguments might not seem relevant to you right now, but to the protesters they're fundamental to everything they stand for.
There is no easy fix for the problem, because any solution requires both the protesters and the police to come to the middle ground.
The police and federal agents need to show respect for the peaceful protests during the day and the protesters need to respect a reasonable curfew so police can do their work stopping rioters and arsonists at night.
Showing up in militarized uniforms and teargassing/shooting peaceful protestors doesn't bring us closer to that middle ground. Neither does destruction of property and defending rioters/arsonists.
Entirely true, but what's the hard fix? I'm skeptical of the federal plan to arrest a bunch of people until the problem stops, but it's at least a plan - if no one else can come up with one, I don't see much choice but to accept it.
> The police and federal agents need to show respect for the peaceful protests during the day and the protesters need to respect a reasonable curfew so police can do their work stopping rioters and arsonists at night.
That was the hard fix. I don't believe the feds will be able to solve it this time by doing what they did in LA in 1992.
And if we simply restore the status quo using a show of force then these riots will happen again and again.
Related to these mysterious federal agents in unmarked cars, I've often wondered how private citizens are supposed to protect themselves against someone impersonating law enforcement.
In this case, the 'officers' were not even dressed as law enforcement, and either way, it is not very difficult to produce a reasonably convincing replica of a uniform. How can you make sure that you are dealing with actual law enforcement, when you submit yourself to them, they cuff you, take your stuff, drive you away, etc.?
"Can I see your badge?" doesn't seem very effective, given that a badge can easily be faked, but more importantly you'd probably, for good reason, be too afraid to even ask. Is
America really such a police state now that you are just supposed to submit to anyone in a uniform? And does this not seem ripe for abuse to everyone else?
Unfortunately a lot of 2A enthusiasts seem to be perfectly fine with the militarization of police and harassment of minorities and protestors, because to them it's the "right people" getting the short end of the stick.
I’m looking for a statement by the NRA condemning what’s happening, reminding people that this kind of government oppression is what the 2A is all about and that regardless of your political views we should stand united in our willingness to bear arms against this incursion into our freedoms.
I haven’t found it yet. Lots of stuff about demonic Democrats stripping freedoms though. Strange.
I understood the OP to be talking about individual enthusiasts of the constitutional amendment, not the republican lobbying organization—my apologies if I had that wrong.
The vast majority of 2nd Amendment supporters (vocal enough to be advocates) are also staunch supporters of the NRA and its rhetoric.
This is the reason the Second Amendment and gun rights are almost exclusively associated with The NRA and Republicans in the US, and why gun sales in the US always peak during Democratic administrations.
Also, there is a long and established relationship between militia movements in the US and right-wing/white supremacist ideology, which serves to create sympathy among gun rights advocates with authoritarianism which just happens to target leftists, immigrants and minorities.
I think you’re attributing too much weight to a narrow overlap between constitutionalists and white supremacists. But I appreciate that you have reasoned through that meme and I am sorry I accused you of posting it thoughtlessly.
I can only speak from what I've observed, living in the American south I have yet to encounter a vocal advocate of the Second Amendment who isn't also a vocal advocate of the NRA.
There are 2A supporters opposed to the NRA, but they seem (anecdotally) to be a minority with no real influence on the gun rights/gun control dialogue or politics.
Not in the way most gun-rights advocates portray it; the 2A grew out of a vision that a particular danger to freedom was a standing army, largely because it became a separate subculture and would inevitably be used for internal oppression as well as external defense (modern police forces—standing paramilitary forces devoted exclusively to internal use would be a more extreme example than they had considered) and protecting the RKBA was designed to preserve a model where such forces were unnecessary as the states, individually and collectively, would rely on mobilizing the general militia for security (internal and external), rather than standing professional forces, not as a tool for individuals to resist such forces.
This is false and is a modern political narrative. It came from the British Bill of rights which explicitly states otherwise... In most if not all of history the police force was the same as the military.
Could you elaborate, because I am having trouble finding support for your position.
If, by "British Bill of rights" you mean https://avalon.law.yale.edu/17th_century/england.asp then it seems to be clearly concerned that a standing army in peace time is a concern, and places a limit on it (specifically, that it require consent of Parliament). It doesn't strike me as remotely contradictory to think that those drafting the 2nd Amendment might have thought that did not go quite far enough, and have chosen a slightly different tack in addressing the same concern.
This certainly leaves room for other evidence to decide the question in either direction, but (assuming I correctly interpreted your reference) the thing that you presented as evidence for your position doesn't seem to be.
> Is America really such a police state now that you are just supposed to submit to anyone in a uniform?
Yes. It has been since Sept 11th 2001. (And every single day since, that we stand idly as a nation and refuse to look further into that day)
To make it worse, your only tool for fighting it is the court system, which for every day infractions committed by the system, is usually not financially (yes i am using this word) viable.
> Is America really such a police state now that you are just supposed to submit to anyone in a uniform?
I guess what really surprises me every time I see it is... how can I put it?
The level of militarisation of said police; I mean these federal agents look like they're on their way to storm Faluja, in full battle dress, and that makes me really, really, really uncomfortable.
Its not quite the same here in the UK, although I believe we're getting there, albeit slower. But yeah, seeing those dudes dressed in battle rig with no visible badges of rank/name etc gives me the creeps.
> Its not quite the same here in the UK, although I believe we're getting there, albeit slower. But yeah, seeing those dudes dressed in battle rig with no visible badges of rank/name etc gives me the creeps.
Soldiers carry visible identification (mostly) because they are subject to the Geneva convention, but police isn't and thus doesn't, since there is no legal obligation by the state in many countries.
Even in Germany, a somewhat civil country, police generally wear their rank and name openly, except when they are deployed in Hundertschaften, where they carry no identification apart from the unit number. Obviously this makes it very difficult for people to report officers, since "that guy in dark blue riot gear with a BY 84-V on his back hit me for no reason" applies to literally a hundred people who were in roughly the same area doing roughly the same thing.
People put up with it for the same reason they always put up with this kind of stuff: they're given a bigger enemy to focus on, one that is or much worse and people are never let to forget that. Of course by comparison it looks like you actually have it good. And you slowly forget, or ignore, that you have it "good by comparison" but you also have it worse year after year.
The other thing is that not everyone gets to suffer. Under any form of government the ones that are on the leadership's "good side" will benefit or simply not suffer obviously. The others get to suffer. In democracy this might be the "dictatorship of the majority", and if that majority doesn't care enough to vote for fixing the country's problems instead of their individual problems, or is complacent with the current situation based on the above "doesn't suffer obviously" then by the time they do somebody already consolidated power or subverted that democratic process. Or perhaps some of the people just shifted to the minority and get to see that side.
It's hard for people to see the real problems as long as their interests temporarily align with their leadership's.
Just like the famous "First they came ..." quote. The person who uttered it got to live through this transition from being on the good side of the leadership, seeing his own interest, to the less pleasant side seeing too late what it was for the others.
A government has to have a place to throw all that expensive high tech combat gear that $686.1 Billion buys you. What better place than their local communities' police units? Making grown men (and women) who haven't served in a real military feel empowered by carrying and opearting such munition.
Google some of the vehicles they've deployed in local communities, your gut will sink even lower.
Regarding impersonation, I think a parallel can be drawn to plainclothes police arrests. If a plainclothes police officer arrests you, do you comply or do you shoot? Breonna Taylor was killed by plainclothes officers when her boyfriend shot believing their apartment was being robbed.
At least these federal agents have uniforms and police insignia.
I guess the American way is to comply, then sue them later.
In the US, pulling out a phone during a police interaction has been known to get people shot dead, so it's not a great solution, even ignoring how non-police impersonating police might respond.
There is a third option, because cops in nearly every European country carry guns [1], either in their vehicle or actually on them. Even still, few get shot in this type of situation.
I have no idea why so many countries think it's normal for their community police to carry something so extreme as firearms. Really boggles my mind. They should be reserved for extreme emergency situations, used by very specialist officers. There should be absolutely no need for an officer responding to routine tasks to be carrying military-grade weapons.
My suggestion as to why: police officers carrying guns doesn't need to pose a concern. I currently live in a country with a much lower police shooting and killing rate than the UK despite police routinely carrying firearms here.
Granted, the crime rate is also lower, but in any case an end result is that people here are less likely to be shot and/or killed by a cop despite their weaponry. Why should I bother disadvantaging the police in their ability to use a gun at least as a threat, or as a potential weapon, when some years have gone by in which no one here has been killed by a police officer's gun?
Furthermore, the distinction you draw between "community police" and "specialist officers" exists through a systematic process in the UK (creating separate training programs, etc.) but why should a country even bother with this process and the potential disadvantages it poses (e.g. delayed armed responses when needed) if it can handle arming ordinary officers without a fatal police shooting problem?
I think it's a principle thing - community police shouldn't have that kind of weaponry, no matter how responsibly they use it or not use it at all. It makes any interaction with them always half-a-second from being lethal. No thanks.
> I currently live in a country with a much lower police shooting and killing rate than the UK
Even countries you think are as-safe or safer have insane rates of killings. For example French police kill almost 8x as much as British police do. What on earth are they doing over there? Maybe take away their guns to stop them slaughtering so many people?
> It may get lower but can't really get much lower can it!
> Even countries you think are as-safe or safer have insane rates of killings. For example French police kill almost 8x as much as British police do. What on earth are they doing over there? Maybe take away their guns to stop them killing so many people?
Yep, credit where credit is due: given that the violent crime rate and other similar heuristics in the UK are higher than several of the countries with more fatal police shootings, I think it's very impressive that British police are as non-fatal as they are. I definitely think disarming much of the police force can benefit some of these other countries. That would include France, which you mentioned, as it seems to have a similar violent crime rate.
> I think it's a principle thing - community police shouldn't have that kind of weaponry, no matter how responsibly they use it or not use it at all. It makes any interaction with them always half-a-second from being lethal. No thanks.
I suppose I can't directly disagree with this, and I see where you're coming from. I recognize that where I am is probably more of an anomaly than the pattern, and this approach likely wouldn't be as successful in many other places.
The idea was that impersonating a federal agent or law enforcement official was a felony, which among other things, even if you did your jail time, would result in you being in the system, on speed dial for actual law enforcement, and bereft of certain fundamental civil rights.
Of course, there is still the issue that all that serves to do is keep honest people honest, and doesn't do much to deter a determined criminal who is certain they'll get away with it, criminals who don't care and just want to do as much damage as they can before being stopped, etc...
In truth, you can't do much about it short of public access to operational details of Law enforcement agencies, which arguably comes with it's own set of problems.
Hence, now the country being in the midst of a crisis of faith, all thanks to the absolutely jaw dropping incompetence and unprofessionalism perpetrated by the Administration, the Legislature's complete ineffectiveness and incapability to follow any other strategy than "pitch impossibility and deadlock", and the Media not even being able to be relied upon to show some decency in terms of holding the bar of ethical journalism high enough that enough people can trust them without having to cross-reference to next Sunday to get a reasonably accurate rendition of what actually happened.
While others may advise the 2nd Amendment, which I wholeheartedly support, it doesn't solve the immediate need of satisfying due process without escalating to violence in the event of a lawful arrest.
Of course, if you're a protestor,even a lawful arrest may not carry that much weight for you, and at the end of the day there is something extremely uncomfortable about a state of affairs where you end up either arresting unarmed Protestors, and shooting/ignoring the armed ones.
Can't deny that fundamentally speaking though, individual to individual: only you can ultimately be responsible for keeping yourself alive, breathing, and free. Act accordingly. If you accept that puts you on the wrong side of the law, then that's that, and maybe one day that can stop being the case, and the struggle continues. If it puts you on the side of enforcing the will of the People you deem to be legitimate, that's that; the struggle continues.
If you just want others to leave you be, to live and let live, you need to be prepared to fend off getting wrangled in by either of the aforementioned groups, and just as above the struggle continues.
My understanding is that this is already happening in Arizona with cartel members impersonating police for kidnappings. Don't expect this to get better.
> "Can I see your badge?" doesn't seem very effective, given that a badge can easily be faked, but more importantly you'd probably, for good reason, be too afraid to even ask
There are thousands of videos on the internet of Americans being harassed, beaten or arrested, sometimes illegally, by cops who refuse to identify themselves when asked.
Even if they carried a badge, what reason would a jackbooted thug have to reveal their identity to their victims? The government already gave them carte blanche to shoot, maim and abduct citizens for exercising constitutional rights to assembly and speech.
> The government already gave them carte blanche to shoot, maim and abduct citizens for exercising constitutional rights to assembly and speech.
Don’t be hyperbolic.
They may have the ability to abuse their position as police officers to do all that, but the government and the law has certainly not given them permission.
Any officer caught breaking the law like this, does run the risk of himself getting arrested and losing his job (even though the risk may be smaller than we’d like it to be).
I don't see the need to bicker over formalisms. For example, Breonna Taylor's murderers have yet to be charged. It makes sense to say that the law has been corrupted to protect them. And it also makes sense to say that the existing laws are adequate and the prosecutor is corrupt. It does not make sense to argue over which one of these is more correct - addressing either area of corruption could yield progress.
In the Netherlands a police raid lead to the discovery of a soundproofed shipping container in a warehouse equipped as a torture chamber, complete with a creepy old barber's chair replete with leather straps, handcuffs suspended from the ceiling, and an assortment of pliers and other tools. They prevented the crime syndicate behind it from executing a carefully orchestrated plan were a team posing as a police tactical unit would 'arrest' a competing drug lord and take him to their newly prepared torture chamber.
They had the van and the appropriate uniforms all ready for use.
The idea that the police squad busting down your door might not be the actual police is downright scary. Of course this is an extreme case, and involving something most of us are not involved in, but it does make you wonder what recourse the drug lord would have had (except for the obvious 'don't be a drug lord, dummy' solution of course).
I doubt 'can I just check your badge for a moment?' would work even if the actual police showed up.
You say "even" as if two powerful leaders that helped catalyze enormous changes in society resulting in a fundamental shift in who has power and autonomy would somehow be less likely to have ruthless enemies. Those are the folks who if anything are more at risk of being killed by powerful enemies than a druglord since MLK, Gandhi, Lincoln etc had enemies motivated by pure ideology (white supremacy, hindu supremacy, white supremacy) while drug lords'enemies are motivated by money. I'd be a lot more worried about the former.
Right, what I meant is that it's easy for someone to dismiss a drug lord being assassinated as "just deserves" or "live by the sword die by the sword" or "tut tut, that's why you shouldn't be a drug lord".
I just mean to show that even upstanding citizens and role models and inspirational figures could have enemies ruthless enough to drag them into an unmarked van. "That's why you shouldn't become an upstanding moral figure" is what they'll say.
I watched Warren Beatty's "Dick Tracy" movie (from 1990?) last week and as part of the plot, one mobster (played by Al Pacino) mattert-of-factly sent thungs-dressed-as-cops to "arrest" and later kill a competing mobster.
I'm sure if you go take a stroll down the history of crime, both fictionalized and real, this has happened tens of times.
If you live in baltimore or philadelphia you call 911 (if necessary) so that these “law enforcers” can spend some time in jail until after November when this ridiculous problem goes away.
These aren't even uniforms, they are fatigues. Camouflage is meant to hide you. Police don't wear clothes to hide themselves, that is something soldiers do.
People in America don't understand that they gave up their civil rights when the "patriot act" and similar laws were approved after 9/11. The federal government has the right given by congress to spy, detain, and imprison outside the standard rule of law, under the pretense of "attempted domestic terrorism". This is essentially minority report-style laws applied to the US, since they can do what they want on the excuse of crimes that would possibly happen in the future.
> The federal government has the right given by congress to spy, detain, and imprison outside the standard rule of law, under the pretense of "attempted domestic terrorism".
No unconstitutional act of congress can take away rights enshrined in the constitution.
Perhaps you can contextualize the situation you are in. Were you detained rioting next to a federal courthouse? Maybe then you can assume it's a federal agent. Were you walking down the street in a suburb? Maybe not.
This is precisely why the uniform, badge, marked cars, being deliberate, and following procedures are so important to policing. And why impersonating law enforcement is strictly punished.
The lack of these things is why the answer here is to defend yourself by any means possible, including lethal force. Realistically though most people would just get kidnapped - we don't all walk around prepared to fight, because we rely on society being calm enough that this is not necessary. These goon squads are not upholding law and order, but rather creating confusion and disorder. The cities that are directing their local police to arrest these dangerous criminals have the right idea, although we'll see how it plays out.
This might be interesting: how about a hundred years ago, a German Carpenter dressed up as a Prussian officer and got the local guards to hand over the town treasury. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23950138
> Is America really such a police state now that you are just supposed to submit to anyone in a uniform? And does this not seem ripe for abuse to everyone else?
The snarky answer is: if people with guns come up to you and tell you to come with them, you should probably comply, especially if they aren't cops. But really you raise a good point, one that the ACLU's lawsuit explicitly brings up.
I recall a case (I think in Myrtle Beach) where some police officers broke conducted a no-knock warrant to arrest someone, but they did so in plain clothes and did not announce that they were officers and that the person was under arrest. The person, fearing for his safety, came out of his bedroom with a gun and the officers shot him multiple times. He later sued. I remember the opinion from the judges was absolutely scathing. They held that the officers would be personally liable for damages (i.e. the would have to pay this guy out of their own pockets, not just the city). I recall listening to oral arguments and at one point the defense rhetorically said something to the effect of "he had a gun, were the officers supposed to just stand there and get shot?" And the judges essentially responded "yes".
Now part of that conclusion rested on the fact that he has a right to defend his home, and there's some specific case law there ( I believe Heller calls out defending your home specifically). But I wouldn't be surprised if it was perfectly legal to refuse to go with someone who does not identify themselves, and even to respond with force if they assault you. But it's probably not the wisest thing to do. Best thing to do would probably be to record them and take legal action. I think the craziest thing about this is that the people getting arrested by these weird federal agents are all being released within hours without charges, because these arrests violate all normal procedures. Actually I kind of wish they would try to prosecute these protesters. Because you have the right to face your accuser, and during discovery all of the information about who these people are and who ordered them to do what would come to light.
If I were a malicious government I might start off by grabbing people off the street then releasing them, to get people used to the idea that "it's not so bad" and "don't struggle, they'll let you go without charge". After that narrative has had time to sink in (days? weeks?), I'd redirect the people I'd grabbed somewhere they weren't going to be released from instead. Not all at once, mind, because if most, or at least some, or maybe one or two are still getting released like before, there'll be confusion about what's actually going on and violent resistance won't crystalise. Especially if it's random, and there's no way to tell if someone's lost and hasn't turned up after release, or if they've been vanished.
IMO the catch and release is because they're fishing for the ones they can make the strongest legal case for federal jurisdiction. Out of staters, social media posts, cell location history, some other connection with the courthouse, etc. Once they get some favorable precedents, they'll ramp it up.
The purpose isn't to prosecute protesters, it's variably to intimidate and rile them up. It isn't to hold protesters accountable for their actions, it's a setup for a win-win scenario: (a) stop protesting and start complying means the secret police win; (b) fighting back with force means the secret police win.
The only way they lose is with scrutiny, so avoiding scrutiny is their top priority. Hence the secrecy. Any U.S. attorney charged with the task of defending police in any of these cases will be ordered to obfuscate, delay, and confuse the issues.
There was a similar case about a decade ago in Germany, where a member of a biker gang heard someone manipulate his house door at four in the morning, and shot through the door. Previously rival bikers tried to break in at a similar time. He hit and killed a police officer, who was part of a SWAT team preparing to raid his home. He was acquitted. The court found he believed he was under threat and acted in self-defense, which is legally equivalent to acting in self-defense in response to a real threat (in Germany), if you couldn't have reasonably known better.
Yes and yes. This is what happens with corruption. The degradation of trust and civility is the point. The more it happens, the more civil disobedience happens, that too is inevitable. And this is known in advance, and will be what results in a demand for the police to use even more force to restore order.
Order is code for two things: compliance and nostalgia. Not trust or civility.
So, in short, the DHS has the FPS (Federal Protective Service), and their job is
> "... safeguarding Federal owned and leased facilities and has been since 1790.
The FPS is part of the DHS.
...
The Customs and Border Protection unit is legally supporting the Federal Protective Service because the particular unit -- the Border Patrol Tactical Unit -- BORTAC -- is highly trained in riot control operations."
There are lots more details by JLM there including quotes of the relevant laws, e.g., 40 USC 1315.
So, the FPS was in Portland to protect Federal property as in 40 USC 1315.
In simplest terms, the Federal work there in Portland was protecting Federal property. Policing Portland in general was not part of the work.
The article mentioned "secret police": To set that aside, just read the JLM quotes and explanations of the laws.
There's an explanation for that, good, bad, or otherwise.
The claim is that they didn't want to dive into an angry, violent, dense mob to arrest people because that would be dangerous.
For an arrest away from the action, all I saw was one video clip. For how general that was, I saw no information.
I was concerned about that one video clip, but without more information I'm ready to set it aside as poor judgment, a mistake, a one time thing, or some such. I need more information.
But, still, broadly, the "FPS" was not there, in either theory or practice, for the scary reason, Federal forces, not wanted in Portland, inserted to police the city, etc. Even given the one video clip, the FPS was clearly not policing the city. And for protecting the Federal courthouse, they were not over doing it since the courthouse was significantly damaged.
Can read the reference I gave and conclude that the FPS, CBP, and DHS were just doing what the laws said they were supposed to do.
For the laws, does anyone have any better ideas how the Feds can protect Fed property? Uh, supposedly that is actually not the job of the local police, that usually there is an agreement that the line is the center line on the street in front of the Fed building with the FPS on their side and local police on the other.
IMHO the Portland case does not look like some start on Federal secret police.
For the Chicago case, as best as I can see from the media, the Feds are there just to help local police with murder, etc. investigations and not on the street police work and were invited in by the mayor of Chicago.
Come on guys the Comedian shoots a guy with a tear gas canister and then says “what happened to the American Dream? It came true!” That’s pretty on the nose.
There's this quiz on the web where you're given a dozen names and have to guess if they are the names of My Little Ponies or porn stars. In that vein, here's another quiz:
Story 1: In the late evening hours, the sound of sporadic gunfire was heard all over the city. There were many white vans driving around the streets searching for people. During one incident, plainclothes police jumped out of a sliding door, grabbed a civilian and then sped off.
Story 2: They had barely made it half a block when an unmarked minivan pulled up in front of them. "I see guys in camo. Four or five of them pop out, open the door and it was just like, 'Oh s*. I don't know who you are or what you want with us.'" Law enforcement officers have been using unmarked vehicles to drive around and detain protesters since at least Tuesday. Personal accounts and multiple videos posted online show the officers driving up to people, detaining individuals with no explanation about why they are being arrested, and driving off.
Now here's the quiz part: which of these describes Tiananmen Square and which describes Portland, OR?
Authoritarianism doesn’t happen all at once. Trump continues to test his limits. The DHS is currently being run by someone who was never approved by Congress and in violation of the law for how long an acting director is allowed to be in place. The DHS officers are now pushing our several blocks away from the Federal buildings.
Compare Trump’s response to how the government responded to the Occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge where a federal building was occupied for 40 days and cost the Federal government millions of dollars. But the Feds didn’t escalate the situation like Trump and the DHS are attempting to do.
This is a three block area of Portland. The city is not overrun. The protests are largely peaceful. I don’t condone the graffiti or anyone trying to damage the building but the Federal response is over the top and unjustified.
Trump would like nothing more than a huge escalation in events.
That there’s any similarity between the events in Tiananmen and in Portland by the authorities is not okay.
I don't think protecting the Courthouse is authoritarianism AT ALL. It's protecting a Federal building.
> The protests are largely peaceful
The anarchists are not protesters. They aren't at all the same people. The vast numbers of peaceful protesters don't change the need for police to contain the ~200 anarchists trying to destroy the Federal Courthouse.
> Occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge
This is an insane comparison. A major west coast Federal Courthouse, home to the US 9th Circuit Federal Court of Appeals as well as a number of Federal offices, is absolutely NOTHING like occupying a small park Welcome center: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cb/MalheurN... . Was that even a serious comment?
> I don’t condone the graffiti or anyone trying to damage the building but the Federal response is over the top and unjustified.
The Federal response doesn't go far enough. The people attacking the building need to be arrested and sentenced to prison for attempted arson of a Federal Courthouse - ideally by the judges who's courthouse they are trying to burn down.
> Trump would like nothing more than a huge escalation in events.
I agree. So they should stop trying to burn down the Federal Courthouse.
> That there’s any similarity between the events in Tiananmen and in Portland by the authorities is not okay.
There isn't of any significance. You can always claim "similarities" when your bar for such is so low. Hitler and Trump both breathed oxygen - did you know that? Obviously he's a Nazi leader reincarnate.
"Homeland Security" is a umbrella grouping of organizations that were independent pre-9/11 and who were combined after 9/11. Seemed like a good idea, at the time!8-))
When you're arrested you're arrested by someone from a particular agency: a Secret Service agent, a member of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Federal Protective Service, the USDA, INS, etc. Creation of DHS "merely" brought 22 agencies under one umbrella for coordination. Of course, judgments and plans made in haste often age poorly.
I'm not saying DHS is a good thing but there's a better explanation than the alarmist "HS was destined to become a secret police force." See
I have an idea for a forum where ML buffers the conversation by becoming some sort of virtual referee, or that folks can score the comments in many dimensions, not just up down. Many posts just need a slight tweak to stay on track.
A kind of semi-automated lint for discussions.
Clippy could come out and say, """
I see you are insulting someone's mother in a discussion about Ayn Rand taking social security payments, are you sure this furthers the conversation?
I've seen this attempted in comments, turned out to be just a bad-word filter. A system that can track a semantic argument would be non-trivial, and if you could do it it would probably be wasted on this use case.
OTOH he is not necessarily "insulting people": he is likely correct that debate class (or logic class) is the best venue for learning about Hanlon's Razor and other ideas. But the application of such tools to real-life (as opposed to simple logical problems), where logic may not completely describe problems, is far more variable yet IMO still useful.
I, for one, do not feel insulted and even feel that his post is a useful elaborative warning along the path to "truth", which in the real world may have many traps, wrong ways and pitfalls.
I always thought of Hanlon's Razor not as a way to dismiss evidence but as a hurdle to prevent a rush to judgment. That is, it usually indicates that one should consider seriously and root out any evidence or possibility of malice but not assume by default that malice is afoot. And finally that sometimes a cigar is merely a cigar.
IOW I think your corollary is precisely on point. Perhaps we should name it: "Romeo's Corollary to Hanlon's Razor" has a nice ring to it!
The people not protesting peacefully are confined to ~3 blocks, and there are not large numbers.
The Portland police declare a riot each night (regardless of the state of the crowd) and start crowd control procedures, where they force people out of areas with noxious gas and other violent methods.
You do not need large numbers you need organization and will. They have both. The ONLY reason feds are there is because this Antifa “squad” been attacking the federal courthouse. Why they are doing that? Well to get feds to come so they can have their: “fight the gestapo” moment. Of course it is nothing like gestapo or nkvd(but Americans are ignorant of nkvd and antifas ideology is so close to Stalinism I guess calling feds nkvd would not work). But whatever you can turn against Trump right? And bring dictatorship of proletariat while you are at it
I'm confused. Did people attack federal buildings or not? If they did, is it expected that local police should intervene? If local police should but didn't, is it lawful that federal agents moved in? There are streams of videos that showed there were two groups: those who held peaceful protest before 1:00am or so, and those who rioted after 1:00am. Are those video telling the truth? Or are they edited out to mislead us? When did the federal agents move in? Did DHS director tell the truth in DHS' public debriefing? Did the video about riots played by Kayleigh McEnany tell the truth?
Or all I saw are a bunch of alt-right propaganda? Or violence is the voice of unheard so by asking these questions I'm a disgusting evil person? And no, those are not rhetorical questions. I honestly don't have answers. For one, the so-called "arson" in front of the courthouse looked so small. It looks just a bunch of people burning cardboard for fun or for protesting. Probably still illegal, but I wouldn't call it violent or arson.
It certainly doesn't help that the right wing of the twitter-verse keeps posting videos and images of riots in other decades and countries and attributing them to Portland. It's such a bizarre mindfuck seeing repurposed videos from Ukraine or South America presented as the north west.
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292 comments
[ 5.1 ms ] story [ 250 ms ] threadI don't think discussing rumors is inherently bad in moderation, but I guess moderation is a tough problem for us in many parts of society today.
oh wait, there is!
Just hard to find the original interview. You're welcome to search yourself, or perhaps discuss something else?
The claim "Allegedly they used Markus Wolf (ex-Stasi chief) as a consultant in the formative days" is not merely a "novel idea" but an allegation, in other words, an idea that aspires to fact. The likely validity of this statement depends on its source.
To assert that the above claim requires no source in order to be valid as fact simply because it is an "idea" is to ban the distinction between truth and fiction.
All sources are ideas in itself and If all "ideas" under your definition have a source, this means every source also has a source because they are ideas themselves. By induction this leads to the existence of ideas with an infinite chain of sources... Which is impossible.
By logic, the Chain must terminate at an idea without a source. Thus it can be said that:
We call this an "axiom" in mathematics.The exception to this rule is the existence of a cycle in this chain:
However, we as humans tend to shun these cycles as we call them "paradoxes."What the poster means by "novel idea" as opposed to "idea" is the terminal idea at the end of these source chains.
In short, the inception of all "novel ideas" begin without a source. Again, we call this "novel idea" The axiom or the assumption.
The strange thing about the axiom itself is an entity that "bans the distinction between truth and fiction" and is ironically the foundation of all human logic.
Another word for this is a "paradox" something we both shun and use as the foundation for all human logic.
This is our world now... the world of the electron and the switch, the beauty of the baud. We make use of a service already existing without paying for what could be dirt-cheap if it wasn't run by profiteering gluttons, and you call us criminals. We explore... and you call us criminals. We seek after knowledge... and you call us criminals. We exist without skin color, without nationality, without religious bias... and you call us criminals. You build atomic bombs, you wage wars, you murder, cheat, and lie to us and try to make us believe it's for our own good, yet we're the criminals.
(From the Hacker's Manifesto, 1986)
To VPN, or not VPN: that is the question.
While there are many soft power actions like blocking payments etc to outright hacking American LEA can do to extract data from other countries orgs but legally there are no tools like NSL and FISA courts to get it .
Why not have always-on VPN? Not a nice experience for Google users, but screw Google, iCloud never complains on 'new device'.
So you're saying Apple is worse at protecting you from suspicious logins?
Land of the oppressed, home of the scared.
It was later that we decided, oh no, let's let the terrorists win by throwing the bill of rights on metaphorical fire.
Freedom has pros and cons. The historical foundations of Freedom in America is an idealistic notion that should be tempered with modern knowledge about the price and complexity of freedom.
My friend in China has told me that the crisis has largely been contained in in their country. The irony here being they have less freedoms than we do but they can now go out in public without worrying about transmitting or receiving covid.
This does come with tradeoffs, but I don’t think the masks and beach are part of that tradeoff. People can and will voluntarily take on inconvenience for the good of others, but they have to be convinced. Our dysfunctional president has actively fought against creating a consensus that we should move as one against this virus. When the US decides to do something together, especially in the modern era, we do it incredibly well mostly without sacrificing human rights (with some obvious historical injustices we have to remedy). What is happening here is a failure of leadership, not a failure of liberty.
Did the US internment camps violate the rights of others?
Definitely. Was that your only point?
"But America..."
The line is blurry here though. These internment camps house people based off of their religious beliefs. China and its citizens view these people the same way a US citizen would view a cult or scientology. By definition there is little difference, it's just the eastern "mysticism" associated with these religions lends more of a positive light to these religions from the western view point.
I would side more with western viewpoint on this issue but I just said the above to help you empathize with China's viewpoint. It is basically scientology from their point of view and they are using their centralized powers to stamp out a cult that believes in things and acts in ways that have nothing to do with science. Think of it as an extreme form of eliminating creationism from the US educational curriculum.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
No. This is wrong. Freedom divides, Lack of freedom unifies by definition. Unification and freedom sound like words that go together but they are like oil and water because freedom involves the freedom to be divisive.
Case in point, our dysfunctional president was elected based on a highly divisive voting war between people who have the freedom to think he's dysfunctional and people who have the freedom to think he's not dysfunctional.
>Our dysfunctional president has actively fought against creating a consensus that we should move as one against this virus.
This is freedom by definition? He and other people have the freedom to fight against consensus. In China, you are punished if you don't wear a mask which is the very definition of oppression.
>we do it incredibly well mostly without sacrificing human rights
Like the human right to stay alive and not be killed by people deliberately spreading covid? How many human rights were sacrificed when a bunch of people decided their freedoms were more important? Everyone has the right to believe that covid is a hoax just like how freedom of religion gives you the right to believe in scientology and cults.
Meanwhile in other countries that lack freedoms, what's going on? In these places, where cults like falun gong and scientology would be viciously stamped out if they existed, secret police are patrolling the streets walking around and arresting people who don't wear masks and don't follow the rules.
There are two sides to every coin.
I think it's a pretty biased and narrow viewpoint whenever a US citizen reacts so negatively to things like "secret police" or "destroying our freedoms" to a topic that is so much more complex than your typical black and white / cops and robbers scenario.
As long as you don’t consider the scary brown-skinned people of the moment “human”, you might be able to say that with a straight face, but, no, even in the modern era, the US has fairly regularly enthusiastically violated people's rights, at home and abroad (often subverting institutions designed to protect rights in other countries for short-term gain as part of the latter) as broadly supported long-term policy.
What I love about this country is that we talk about it, we struggle with it, we do so publicly, and eventually we try to do the right thing. Our ideals are pretty good, just really hard to live up to, and the real world is complicated. We support dictators abroad, we have a racially unequal (though improving, albeit too slowly) society, there are no saints among great nations.
The point is in trying to live up to the ideals. If we compare to other great powers, I think we do better than most historically. As long as we keep moving toward universal human rights and freedom, however imperfectly, I’m on board.
The US on the other hand values more individual freedoms at the cost of less cohesion and greater division. No doubt this is what's causing the current influx of Karen's refusing to wear masks. The hatred you see towards these people on YouTube is literally enforced in china. You don't wear a mask in china, you're fucked, nobody dares do such a thing.
Rather then fighting some patriotic flamewar I'd prefer HN viewers to have a more logical nonbiased view point and call it apples and oranges, but alas this is not the case. America has to be the best, especially when compared to China.
No.
>...freedom to not wear masks and go to the beach during a pandemic.
>...they can now go out in public without worrying about transmitting or receiving covid.
People who are going to the beach probably are not worried about COVID. There's also a fair amount of debate among the technocrats about how transmissible it is on a beach.
Ultimately people just want the freedom to decide for themselves. Central planning isn't always the best for everyone. Fallibility plays a key role. If your friend is happy with her situation in China, that's fine. I'm sure beach goers also enjoyed themselves...
A centrally planned country prevents senseless deaths from occurring at the cost of freedom.
There were huge huge crowds on the beach with know one wearing masks and now we're experiencing Covid spikes. I wonder why?
The doctors and the CDC are telling everyone to stay in and wear masks. Ignore the technocrats, they're not experts.
By definition a technocrat would be ordained as an expert in his field. However, this does not preclude the fallibility of man. If we extrapolate from this, we can say that it would be impossible for an individual or group of individuals to obtain the perfect information necessary to ideally centrally plan a society.
There is a propensity for 'experts' in their field to massage data to suit political or personal goals. Heart attack deaths are down, but COVID deaths are up. Some have suggested that this is due to selective reporting of deaths which would otherwise be cardiac arrests as COVID related deaths.
There's also the problem of the unseen. Even if the epidemiologists could have the perfect information in regards to controlling an outbreak, they wouldn't necessarily appreciate the economic or social implications of their mandates.
If we accept these limitations, we can say that greater information can be obtained via the network effects of decentralized decision making. This is the value of individualism which has allowed the west to flourish, whereas more communal cultures have been regressive. Of course this is all a very general overview.
>and now we're experiencing Covid spikes. I wonder why?
I'll ignore your cherry picking and refrain from picking an equivalent counter-example.
If we accept that the US has failed in managing the covid crisis, then we should just as readily ask if top-down planning has been effective. Instead you focus on the inverse.
Not to mention the statistical measures and statements from technocrats are all inline and consistent.
Your retort is the equivalent of flat earthers or fake moon landing conspiracy theories. Open your eyes.
>Not to mention the statistical measures and statements from technocrats are all inline and consistent.
Wear a mask, don't wear a mask. Cloth face coverings are sufficient. Cloth face coverings are not sufficient.
A paper debunking the use of hydroxychloroquine was retracted, as many studies are. Without a doubt, the issue has become politicized.
Human knowledge is imperfect. Science is a system of rational inquiry practiced by fallible humans, not a system of belief. Scientism would be the misuse of science as a system of belief. Typical of the theme, those who criticize scientism (and the annointed technocrats) are castigated as heretics and unbelievers.
Attempting to conflate my doubts about the effectiveness of technocratic management and central planning with flat eartherism is plain hyperbole. This kind of retort speaks to your inability to address the issue.
What would fact-checkers have said to Copernicus?
I gave you 3 contexts. Anecdotal, statistical and sayings from technocrats.
Statistical: https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus
Technocrats: https://science.sciencemag.org/content/368/6498/1481
Anecdotal evidence was already provided to you.
>Wear a mask, don't wear a mask. Cloth face coverings are sufficient. Cloth face coverings are not sufficient.
Technocrats from China and the US were obviously divided about this. Sources of information can be wrong. But in this specific case I am providing you with 3 sources. Each consistent.
>Human knowledge is imperfect. Science is a system of rational inquiry practiced by fallible humans, not a system of belief. Scientism would be the misuse of science as a system of belief. Typical of the theme, those who criticize scientism (and the annointed technocrats) are castigated as heretics and unbelievers.
But it is more perfect then anything that can come out of you. If I have provided you evidence from three sources or even one source it is better than anything you can come up with. Right now the information I provided you is the best information we have. Similar to how the theory of gravity is the best theory we have for why things go down and not up.
>Attempting to conflate my doubts about the effectiveness of technocratic management and central planning with flat eartherism is plain hyperbole. This kind of retort speaks to your inability to address the issue.
No I am conflating your ability to ignore evidence and not present counter-evidence. All you do is just doubt doubt doubt. How can you doubt without evidence yourself? How is that scientific? It is not. You can just as well doubt the theory of gravity. There is no difference, and your bias makes you incapable of seeing that.
There are multiple lenses and sources and observers seeing what's going on in China both biased and unbiased. You have utilizes none of those sources, only choosing to doubt.
I have presented evidence. Where's yours?
>But it is more perfect then anything that can come out of you
How so?
>There are multiple lenses and sources and observers seeing what's going on in China both biased and unbiased
Everyone has a bias. Everyone's view is subjective by definition.
I'm not sure you've understood anything that I've written here.
Nothing can be proven. This is a property of science and reality. Even a scientific paper can't prove anything. What can be done is to say my hypothesis has more evidence and is more likely than your hypothesis to a significant degree.
This is how science works. We can say hey look this scientific paper has more rigor and accuracy than the opinions of a religious shaman in Africa because we understand the statistical rigor and science that is used by the scientific paper to gather evidence to support a conclusion. We also understand that the shaman in africa came to a conclusion getting high off some drug in his straw hut so we know one source is better than the other.
>>But it is more perfect then anything that can come out of you >How so?
You're not a credible source... You're not a scientific paper, you're not a statistic. You're just a person on the internet spouting off his opinions, not too far off from an African Shaman.
If I write a thesis can I cite "random person on the internet" as a source? No, I can't because you don't have the reputation or the scientific rigor to gather any evidence that's worth anything. You are not a "lens" into what's happening in China, because you yourself use other "lenses" to see what's going on. Your opinion and your information is only as good as the "lenses" you are using. Yet look at what information you provided me with. You provided me with no sources and a shitload of opinion thats it's pretty much useless.
Thus in order to give more credence to your statements you have to back them up with credible sources. You tell me which lens your using, why it's accurate and how it supports your conclusion... Which you have not done.
As a random person on the internet myself, my word is as useless as yours until I backed up my word with sources more credible than myself.... Which I have done.
>Everyone has a bias. Everyone's view is subjective by definition.
Underneath every viewpoint is the actual object being viewed. And that objective reality cannot be biased. But all observations of said object is done through a lens and that lens is biased.
But....
Some views are less biased than others. For example a scientific paper that statistically measures the amount of covid cases in China is less biased than a random person on the internet stating his useless opinion without evidence backing it up.
There can be cases where there are two scientific papers that come to opposite conclusions. In this case it's hard to tell which lens is more biased and which lens is more accurate. In this case no conclusion can easily be declared.
>I'm not sure you've understood anything that I've written here.
I understand everything you've written. You don't understand how to make a point and how to back it up and you don't understand science. You just view the world as a muddy: "everyone has a biased viewpoint" without truly understanding why and without truly understanding how to navigate such a world and make some "viewpoints" less biased than other "viewpoints."
Not to mention your viewpoints and lenses that you're using have led you to come to a deeply inaccurate and incorrect view of China. You realize the nobody can actually 100% prove to the flat earthers that the world is round? What they can do is present scientific evidence that makes a flat earth very very unlikely. That's it.
I can assure you, with my background and the sources I have presented to you, I can never prove my point to you, but I have certainly shown that my conclusion is quite accurate by presenting to you several angles of the same objective reality: The scientific angle, the anecdotal angle and the statistical angle.
Think about it, if Fox news can produce dozens of stupid people who don't kn...
I thought you wanted to discuss the differences between individualism and a centrally planned society. Is that true, or were you primarily interested in nationalism and identity politics?
Pursuant to what I viewed as a noble discussion about these ideals, I attempted to sidestep your tribalism and focus on what I viewed as the crux of the issue.
Central planning requires perfect information to live up to its stated goals. Thus in any centrally planned society we see mishaps resulting from imperfect information wielded by central planners.
In contrast, decentralized systems based upon individualism and free markets are generally more resiliant to errors committed by individuals. Participants who have the _freedom_ to choose for themselves can observe errors committed by others and look for alternate solutions. Similarly, they can emulate successes they observe.
At the time, I felt that a succinct reply was sufficient to express these general concepts.
In response to these points you provide anecdotal evidence about your friend attending a wedding in China. While I am no mind reader, I could only assume that you were implying that the wedding was not canceled because of the superior central planning of the CCP. This is absurd on many levels.
First of all as I pointed out, China is a large country. There are lockdowns elsewhere. Week to week we see new lockdowns throughout the country. Even Beijing has had entire neighborhoods on lockdown. Head central planner Xi, has fled the capital.
We can also look to Sweden, where lockdowns were not mandated at all by the central authorities. Death rates there are normalizing.
Finally, if central planning equated to competent governance, then why did COVID-19 originate under the reign of central planners?
In your next comment you misuse the temporal sense and suggest that you have already given me three contexts. In this comment you provide a link to a COVID study and a map of COVID cases. Obviously, these data have no relation to the points expressed about technocracy or central planning.
>Nothing can be proven. This is a property of science and reality
The points made are philosophical. They can be challenged or even refuted logically. So far you have failed to do so. You haven't even approached the discussion. Observation can be part of this process, but strictly speaking this is not scientific.
Then you go on to hyperbole and debase yourself with ridiculous insults. Much of your rambling follow up is dedicated to the same. The greater part seeks to defend China from an imagined slight. I will entertain this digression.
China is not the CCP. Throughout this discussion you appear to conflate the two. This is an important distinction. You also make several inaccurate assumptions about myself, but I'll leave that to the side for now. In any strictly logical debate, the identity of the speaker should not play a role.
GDP is a self-gratifying statist metric preferred by technocrats the world over. The calculation of GDP justifies further government intervention in an economy. In the case of the west, this can be in the form of credit expansion. In the case of the CCP's centrally planned economy, this is much more direct.
GDP can be increased by simply paying workers to dig and fill holes. While this will increase GDP, it will not add any value to the economy. Similarly in China we see 'tofu buildings'. These kinds of projects may increase GDP, but they decrease the quality of life for market participants. Residents have been injured by these shoddy constructions. Markets are distorted and capital is misallocated, preventing entrepreneurs from contributing actual value.
Removing your hands from the neck of the patient is not the same as performing the Heimlich maneuver.
From this perspective it would be more fitting to applaud the increase in the standard of living of the Chinese people. T...
Nope. I'm just trying to teach you.
>Pursuant to what I viewed as a noble discussion about these ideals, I attempted to sidestep your tribalism and focus on what I viewed as the crux of the issue.
No. You don't get it. Your entire argument is tribal. You need to present evidence, you have none. Just statements of your own opinions.
>Central planning requires perfect information to live up to its stated goals. Thus in any centrally planned...
Again another opinion. With no offering of evidence. How about you give me a an example of a perfect system that doesn't need perfect information and then we can talk about the merits of central government. I really can't even cite an example of a government that doesn't require perfect information to be perfect. But go ahead, here's an opportunity for you to give me evidence to show me that I'm wrong.
>In contrast, decentralized systems based upon individualism and free markets are generally more resiliant to errors committed by individuals. Participants who have the _freedom_ to choose for themselves can observe errors committed by others and look for alternate solutions. Similarly, they can emulate successes they observe.
And what makes you say people behave this way? Where's your evidence? Again, another useless opinion because I have a different opinion: People are doomed to repeat history, people as a group mob function with as if they were a single person with an IQ of 80. My opinions differ from yours. Again your useless attempt to turn me requires evidence. There is no tribalism going on here. I am teaching you how to debate because you don't know how. All in all my real opinion is a hybrid of your opinion and mine. People are shades of both creating a story that is far more complex than your simple classifications of behavior. But again, who cares because no evidence.
>In response to these points you provide anecdotal evidence about your friend attending a wedding in China. While I am no mind reader, I could only assume that you were implying that the wedding was not canceled because of the superior central planning of the CCP. This is absurd on many levels.
No. I am presenting to you a piece of evidence. The evidence doesn't prove anything by itself, it just gives more credibility to something. The more evidence I present to you the more credibility is given to my hypothesis. So in total the evidence I presented to you were three in total: Technocratic, Anecdotal, and statistical. Each piece of evidence no doubt has different levels of quality and veracity but all three combined together form a consistent picture. No doubt, if I observe a friend going to a wedding in China it shows consistency with statistical evidence and news articles.
>First of all as I pointed out, China is a large country. There are lockdowns elsewhere. Week to week we see new lockdowns throughout the country. Even Beijing has had entire neighborhoods on lockdown. Head central planner Xi, has fled the capital.
Evidence. Please. Cite your sources.
>We can also look to Sweden, where lockdowns were not manda...
Cite your sources. Give me statistics. Numbers. You could be pulling all of this out of your ass.
>Finally, if central planning equated to competent governance, then why did COVID-19 originate under the reign of central planners?
Why do people have such simple minded views on issues that are startlingly more complex? I know why. It's because of pride. It's US vs. China and the US has to be better. Look, I don't equate central planning to better governance or worse governance or perfect governance. I never said this, you just assumed it. I equate it to alternative governance. If the US was an Orange then China would be an Apple. You're comparing Apples and Oranges.
For example how do you explain the massive growth China has experienced o...
I've actually been to China many times, and can tell you that the US view of China as often posted here, vs reality is very far apart.
As someone who's lived and breathed aspects of both countries the story of china is the same. A complex story with many facets very good and very bad as well. I will say that the media's portrayal of China is heavily biased towards the bad side of china and has resulted in your bigoted and niave one sided outlook. This is not an insult, it is a statement to help you be more self aware. Like telling a white supremacists about the morality of equality among races I don't know if you'd be able to reexamine your view point, or just follow your biased outlook all the way to the bloody end.
Put it on your bucket list. Go to Shanghai or Shenzhen. China's progress is breakneck, there has never been a phenomenon like it in the history of civilization and I am not saying this haphhazardly. I promise you, that if you go, you will be blown away.
Also traveling to china has nothing to do with understanding what the government can and will do citizens that dissent against it. You don't walk around a city and prove a negative by not witnessing any disappearances or live organ harvesting (there are reports that you can -schedule- heart transplants).
That is like picking up snow to prove that global climate change is a myth.
You could never know, because freedom of speech and the press doesn't exist there. The CCP jailed the doctors and experts who spoke up about the original Wuhan coronavirus outbreak in 2019, then proceeded to have a public banquet without social distancing or masks in the following weeks, and the CCP celebrated the fact that 40,000 families[1] showed up to it.
You say that the lack of freedom has been a good thing for handling the outbreak, but that lack of freedom stopped doctors and epidemiologists from learning more about the coronavirus outbreak while it could still be contained, and prevented them from informing and warning the world about it.
[1] https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/east-asia/coronavirus-wuha...
I'm talking about the general handling of the epidemic. When china got serious, they killed it. When America tried to get serious they got people protesting that covid is a hoax.
There's some really stupid shit that china did like you brought up above, but overall in the big picture scheme of things... China did a really good job and the United States is bungling the whole situation.
Again, because of the lack of free speech and press in China, the only proof of what you allege publicized through CCP approved media.
Doubling down on authoritarianism and suppression of the press after initial authoritarianism allowed an epidemic to become a pandemic just suggests you can't trust the press in China without extensive independent auditing, which the CCP doesn't allow.
Lack of free speech is not the reason why this pandemic spread. The proof is in the United States. The United States "freedoms" including speech has allowed it to be #1 in covid-19 cases.
Additionally, I'm not even sure how your misguided reasoning works... Patient Zero has a disease, he covertly spreads it to 3 people who in turn also covertly spread it 3 people, the cycle continues... Where in this scenario of compounding growth does free speech stop a disease from being covertly spread?
Also China isn't stupid. They aren't North Korea. When there's a real problem in China they won't clamp down on the information and release propaganda that is completely ludicrous. In fact if covid-19 was still killing tons of people in China and the Chinese media was hiding it, the US would know because Chinese citizens have the freedom to talk to the press outside of their borders. Word gets out.
Either way, the US and US public was informed about the impending problem WELL before it arrived at our borders, we failed to take action for various reasons including the fact that we didn't need to do such a thing for SARS or ebola.... Everyone is still learning about covid.
>Again, because of the lack of free speech and press in China, the only proof of what you allege publicized through CCP approved media.
The CCP is not that powerful. Nor does their desire to preserve their own image become so ludicrous that they'll outright lie about the pandemic dying down for no reason. Your image of China is twisted. Yes they are authoritarian, yes they are fallible to human weaknesses, no they are not stupid, no they are not North Korea, and no they are not evil incarnate.
>That doesn't make authoritarianism something to be celebrated, that makes it something the CCP should be embarrassed of.
This statement is where the controversy lies. Do you want to be embarrassed about authoritarianism or are you more embarrassed about all the deaths occurring in the United States despite superior medical knowledge?
In New York City I read a story about a nurse in tears because she had to remove a respirator from an older patient to give a chance to a younger patient to live. They are choosing who lives and who dies in NYC because they don't have enough respirators.
The counterpart story in China was they built an entire hospital in a week to handle the crisis and now the hospital is mostly empty because the crisis is dying down.
It's kind of embarrassing that China wasted resources on building a hospital that is now empty. But you know what's more embarrassing? The fact that my own country can't build enough respirators and as a result a nurse has to choose between killing an older patient or a younger patient because some people have the freedom not to wear masks.
Take a look at this video and tell me which country should be embarrassed:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4f6-MDhygWc
Like literally every country is looking at the US and shaking their heads. This isn't just my opinion... it's an obvious fact and if you can't see this, then you're lying to yourself.
Freedom has a price, and we are paying that price right now with deaths and "embarrassment."
Go live in China or Taliban controlled regions for a year and even try letting those words come out of your mouth again.
That reasoning sounds eerily close to the Reichstag Fire Decree.
These people are being detained by people with POLICE written on their vests, charged in front of a magistrate, and released. All the info is on the Portland website of arrests.
https://oregon.staterecords.org/multnomah
What civil liberty has been suspended?
Those are the violations of civil liberties we are discussing and this argument throws out.
http://www.mcso.us/PAID/
You can even see who the arrest agency is and it includes federal agencies. Note that most of them have been released.
But up thread you claim that the people detained and placed in unmarked vehicles are listed there. I was wondering how you had determined that, or if you were assuming it to be true, or what.
It just demonstrates that some people detained in Portland have been detained by officers working under those entities.
> we are watching the perfect and perhaps inevitable combination of a domestic-security superagency and a President who rejects all mechanisms of accountability, including the Senate confirmation process.
Accountability appears to be broken with a two party system.
Combined with a President who’s willing to push boundaries and a federal agency built to act more swiftly with broader powers, we could see a lot more civil strife before this term is up.
I think this is one of the most fundamental factors in the breakdown at higher levels of discourse. Most liberals I personally know used to put a strong emphasis on benefit of the doubt and pragmatism when it came to judging Republican leadership - there was always plenty of strong criticism, but there was also a lot of "well, in such-and-such case, they are just doing what they honestly think is best for the country". But that attitude is now utterly gone, because of the silence of such leaders on the incredibly overt hatred and unreasonableness of Trump and other proponents of spite-motivated authoritarianism. They still have plenty of good faith for Republicans, but what's changed is that they now have absolutely zero for Republican leaders. What's happening is awful.
Like, there _have_ to be quite a few of them who have misgivings about this (either on a 'this is wrong' basis, or, more cynically, on a 'we will suffer for this electorally' basis), but practically none have voiced any.
[1] https://medium.com/@wkc6428/the-lead-federal-agency-respondi...
These federal police should show up in databases confirming their identities, whether that's a federal db or a relatives FB page.
Maybe we should be using ClearView AI to keep the police honest.
In neither situation would facial recognition systems make things better for the populace.
Evidence enough?
I am perfectly comfortable questioning the legitimacy of the deployment without any speculation about which individuals we the tax payers ended up paying to be there.
There's the BLM daylight protestors... There's the "moms" in the evening... Then there's the anarchists/antifa at 2am.
Before you judge what the DHS is doing, watch the videos from 2am. I think many people are watching the peaceful daytime videos and seeing DHS as overreacting. Which it would be.
I don't think it's overreacting to people setting the court house on fire, hitting police in the head with hammers or destroying businesses. You can find videos of this easily even though the "protestors" tend to beat up and eject "unofficial" camera people.
And they've been doing this for 2 MONTHS, way before DHS arrived with a mission to protect federal property, which we all pay for.
It was disturbing and a little frightening, but yes, in hindsight I am fine with it. I hope they found the right house and found the person they were looking for.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
The police in the United States are a paramilitary force, equipped with military gear, and in many cases with military training -- the only thing military thing they don't have is the uniform code of military justice, which forbids things like the use of chemical weaponry and war crimes.
Another where a person was riding their bike away from a protest and got hauled into an anonymous van and held without cause.
Self defense is ok, these actions are not. One "protester" being violent does not warrant collective punishment of all/any protesters. It warrants defense from, and the arrest of, the violent ones.
I don't support what's going on on the police side, and think they seem to be intentionally escalating to draw out events like that to use politically, but there is no excuse for what that hammer guy was doing.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/645981db-2a88-3304-ae89-094ca25...
What if change through the courts is impossible because it would take longer than any one person’s life to acquire standing to sue, and have the case heard?
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Who%27s_on_First%3F
[2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTcRRaXV-fg
https://www.oregonlive.com/portland/2020/07/judge-inclined-t...
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=23934702
I would not want to show my face in that court ever again.
"Comments should get more thoughtful and substantive, not less, as a topic gets more divisive."
"Don't be snarky."
"Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. Assume good faith."
It's obviously not easy to stay in the mode of curious conversation when discussing the most conflictual topics of the moment, but the intended spirit of this place requires all of us to try.
The feds stay locked up in the courthouse, the “protestors” breakdown the barriers erected, start fires, then the feds rush them and grab who they can.
These are not “innocent” protestors just exercising their 1st amendment rights. At least not in the videos I’ve seen.
People are asking for a federal mandate on masks, but at the same time want no federal enforcement of these laws? How about neither?
I hate seeing a world where “federal police” come in and squash local protests, and it bugs me that previously state rights advocates are calling for it.
I recall outraged partisans demanding federal intervention, while claiming that the ranchers were enjoying special privileges due to their race. I believe they called them "vanilla ISIS".
Of course individuals within any movement will vary, but generally speaking, partisans want to use the power of the state against their ideological opponents. When it is used against them, they predictably cry foul.
The problem is that people believe the protests in Portland are violent riots. They aren't. As long as people are manipulated so easily, I guess real policy discussions aren't going to happen.
The equivalence is the partisan hypocrisy. There are several sources citing violence in Portland. Even left leaning sources acknowledge this.
When you dismiss someone's view you disagree with as "manipulated", you illustrate the larger point I was making.
Here we are in 2020 and we've got camps trying to justify how violent protests are a "civil rights" or "free speech" issue instead of just agreeing and everyone saying "yeah - anyone can protest because we agree it's a right, but police can arrest anyone that does violence". We're forever complicating and conflating issues, adding layer upon layer of complexity, instead of simplifying. I think the analogy to software development is quite profound.
No police means maximum freedom quickly followed by complete Anarchy. Then back to some sort of restrictive government.
Maybe that means having a deescalation officer lead to thugs around I'm not sure but it's not have no police force.
Presumably the ones that make this call are hoping an ideological paramilitary arm (such as antifa) can fill the power vacuum left behind.
Those that want reform are asking for reform.
Don’t be gaslit.
Here are top results on Google for "defund the police."
“Defund the police” means reallocating or redirecting funding away from the police department to other government agencies ...
“Defund the police” means reallocating or redirecting funding away from the police department to other government agencies funded by the local municipality.
"Defund the police" is a slogan that supports divesting funds from police departments and reallocating them to non-policing forms of public safety and community support, such as social services, youth services, housing, education, healthcare and other community resources.
Instead of funding a police department, a sizable chunk of a city's budget is invested in communities, especially marginalized ...
Police abolition means reducing, with the vision of eventually eliminating, our reliance on policing to secure our public safety. It ...
No sources in these results say "create a power vacuum". That is the invention of critics. Please demonstrate otherwise.
Public education has been defunded for decades, but we still have teachers and public schools, and their charter alternatives - that should be your mental model not abolishment of police.
This is, incidentally, probably the US left learning the Hillary Clinton Lesson. Detailed, costed proposals of what you want to do may be very practical, but people prefer a good slogan, and to leave the details to the detail people.
The people who are saying defund the police do want that literally, but they don't mean “reduce funding to zero”, they mean reduce funding and responsibility and transfer the bits that aren't optimally served by an armed paramilitary law enforcement force to be served by other agencies, who also get the associated funding.
There are people who take that a step further, who prefer the slogan “dismantle the police” or “abolish the police”. Mostly, like the “defund” group with which they overlap (these are variations rather than strict alternatives) they want to fund agencies that they see as more appropriate for the functions, but the dismantle/abolish group thinks that the kind of centralized armed groups with paramilitary organization that exist as local police departments aren't the right solution to any problems (except perhaps for large scale civil disorder, but we already have the national guard to respond to that, who don't do nearly as much to provoke that disorder in the first place), so they think all the functions of existing police departments should be transferred to other agencies (some of which might have arrest powers, and even armed agents, but those agents would be working for domain-specific agencies, not a massive centralized general-purpose paramilitary law enforcement agency.)
> Presumably the ones that make this call are hoping an ideological paramilitary arm (such as antifa) can fill the power vacuum left behind.
No, for the most part the defund/dismantle/abolish group thinks that the problem is centralized omnipresent paramilitary forces with a separate ideology and culture from the general society, not that we just need to swap one out for a different one.
> Those that want reform are asking for reform.
“Defund the police” and “dismantle/abolish the police” are approaches to reform of how society serves the functions currently served by the police. They are approaches differing from the counterproductive “reform” efforts that have led us where we are today because they don't involve shoveling more scarce resources and more responsibility into local centralized paramilitary law enforcement agencies.
They’ve tried to do this every year on May Day in Seattle, but it’s too hard when the police can crack down on the whole group. Now they’ve conned thousands of “normal” people to be their human shields.
-Martin Luther King Jr.
Let us know how that works out.
I can't tell if this is a serious comment or not.
One can dislike how/why DHS was created and also believe that order needs to be restored the area by the feds.
As for the "unmarked cars" picking people up, what is actually happening to these people? Is it catch and release? It seems pretty tame to me.
Should they just let the protesters/rioters burn down the courthouse?
As to whether they are protesters or rioters, ask whether you think Peter Schiff could do what he did during occupy and stroll into the crowd attempting to debate and defend capitalism with the folk (which I think he failed to do at all, but more just the fact he was able to try it there is significant)? The answer is of course not; he'd probably be beaten or severely injured.
Its illegal to detain people for no reason. How will you feel when it happens to you?
> Should they just let the protesters/rioters burn down the courthouse?
That is an interesting perspective. And its one that a lot of people currently hold toward the police. Does one (or even a few) bad apple spoil the bunch?
Do you think that protesters like the Navy Vet, Naked Athena, the Wall of Moms, and even the Mayor of Portland really want to burn down a Federal building?
I agree and I find these events troubling. But I also want to put them in perspective.
> Does one (or even a few) bad apple spoil the bunch?
I don't understand the point you're making here.
> Do you think that protesters like the Navy Vet, Naked Athena, the Wall of Moms, and even the Mayor of Portland really want to burn down a Federal building?
As another commenter said, there are about 3 different groups with different adgendas operating in the area.
The point of a mob is that having diffuse boundaries there is no central leader, planning, or accountability
So the response should be police with no identification, planning, or accountability? And assault everyone?
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/feds-unmarked-vans-portlan...
If this happened at all, there have only been 2 possible cases, and given that extent, we are not talking about a widespread phenomenon. The scope of the discussion and ramifications should account for that.
> police with no.. planning, or accountability?
Yes, I think an institution has a lot more of those things than a mob does. And just because that is true doesn't mean police need to be reformed. But i'm responding to your direct coments.
> And assault everyone?
Are they 'assaulting everyone?" I don't know what events you're talking about anymore.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2020/07/26/leaf-blower...
"Typically, police fire the agent once or twice to clear crowds and encourage people to move away from an area, said Michelle Heisler, the medical director of Physicians for Human Rights. But in Portland, federal agents have been unleashing the chemicals repeatedly for hours. This sustained cascade makes it difficult for peaceful demonstrators to avoid being hit and runs the risk of ensnaring bystanders in the area, she said."
I find it sad that you hold the symbolism of a building over the lives and fair treatment of your countrymen.
https://www.aclu.org/other/constitution-100-mile-border-zone
>Should they just let the protesters/rioters burn down the courthouse?
You're implying a binary, which is a common fallacy. It's not helpful, and is in fact provocative, to respond to critics of some behavior to the effect of, "So, what, they should do the extreme opposite thing?"
> You don't know what's happening to the taken people, but it seems pretty tame to you?
I don't think they're being killed/maimed/"dissapeared" (south american style) as another commenter put it, but i agree that detainment without identification is a problem and it should stop.
- terrorizing
- while having committed no crimes
- only exercised their first amendment rights
I haven't seen the evidence for or against those - I'm not sure how you know in each of those cases what actually happened either.
I do think the unmarked arrests should stop though
EDIT: I'm not sure why I took your false dichotomy at face value in the first place. A burnt-down courthouse and an informal military occupation aren't the only two options; but even if they were, the former is preferable.
He's saying that if those were the only choices he'd prefer those buildings burning down over the suspension of civil liberties. But they are not the only choices, we can protect both. It's not easy, but it's worth it.
I've seen some people float "do everything the mob demands so they won't have to follow through on their threats", but I hope we can agree that doing that would itself constitute mob rule.
However federal agents violating 1st and 4th amendment rights by teargassing peaceful protests and unlawfully detaining people that's what needs to stop.
I fail to see why people are defending that behavior. You can support the deployment of those federal agents while still being critical of their overreach.
Both sides abandoning the middle ground is the reason we're in such a divisive political time. If you can't come to the defense of arguments you agree with because they're voiced by people you disagree with then you're contributing to the divisiveness.
There is no easy fix for the problem, because any solution requires both the protesters and the police to come to the middle ground.
The police and federal agents need to show respect for the peaceful protests during the day and the protesters need to respect a reasonable curfew so police can do their work stopping rioters and arsonists at night.
Showing up in militarized uniforms and teargassing/shooting peaceful protestors doesn't bring us closer to that middle ground. Neither does destruction of property and defending rioters/arsonists.
That was the hard fix. I don't believe the feds will be able to solve it this time by doing what they did in LA in 1992.
And if we simply restore the status quo using a show of force then these riots will happen again and again.
...not sure who's side the anarchists are on.
In this case, the 'officers' were not even dressed as law enforcement, and either way, it is not very difficult to produce a reasonably convincing replica of a uniform. How can you make sure that you are dealing with actual law enforcement, when you submit yourself to them, they cuff you, take your stuff, drive you away, etc.?
"Can I see your badge?" doesn't seem very effective, given that a badge can easily be faked, but more importantly you'd probably, for good reason, be too afraid to even ask. Is America really such a police state now that you are just supposed to submit to anyone in a uniform? And does this not seem ripe for abuse to everyone else?
I haven’t found it yet. Lots of stuff about demonic Democrats stripping freedoms though. Strange.
This is the reason the Second Amendment and gun rights are almost exclusively associated with The NRA and Republicans in the US, and why gun sales in the US always peak during Democratic administrations.
Also, there is a long and established relationship between militia movements in the US and right-wing/white supremacist ideology, which serves to create sympathy among gun rights advocates with authoritarianism which just happens to target leftists, immigrants and minorities.
There are 2A supporters opposed to the NRA, but they seem (anecdotally) to be a minority with no real influence on the gun rights/gun control dialogue or politics.
If, by "British Bill of rights" you mean https://avalon.law.yale.edu/17th_century/england.asp then it seems to be clearly concerned that a standing army in peace time is a concern, and places a limit on it (specifically, that it require consent of Parliament). It doesn't strike me as remotely contradictory to think that those drafting the 2nd Amendment might have thought that did not go quite far enough, and have chosen a slightly different tack in addressing the same concern.
This certainly leaves room for other evidence to decide the question in either direction, but (assuming I correctly interpreted your reference) the thing that you presented as evidence for your position doesn't seem to be.
Yes. It has been since Sept 11th 2001. (And every single day since, that we stand idly as a nation and refuse to look further into that day)
To make it worse, your only tool for fighting it is the court system, which for every day infractions committed by the system, is usually not financially (yes i am using this word) viable.
I guess what really surprises me every time I see it is... how can I put it?
The level of militarisation of said police; I mean these federal agents look like they're on their way to storm Faluja, in full battle dress, and that makes me really, really, really uncomfortable.
Its not quite the same here in the UK, although I believe we're getting there, albeit slower. But yeah, seeing those dudes dressed in battle rig with no visible badges of rank/name etc gives me the creeps.
Soldiers carry visible identification (mostly) because they are subject to the Geneva convention, but police isn't and thus doesn't, since there is no legal obligation by the state in many countries.
Even in Germany, a somewhat civil country, police generally wear their rank and name openly, except when they are deployed in Hundertschaften, where they carry no identification apart from the unit number. Obviously this makes it very difficult for people to report officers, since "that guy in dark blue riot gear with a BY 84-V on his back hit me for no reason" applies to literally a hundred people who were in roughly the same area doing roughly the same thing.
The other thing is that not everyone gets to suffer. Under any form of government the ones that are on the leadership's "good side" will benefit or simply not suffer obviously. The others get to suffer. In democracy this might be the "dictatorship of the majority", and if that majority doesn't care enough to vote for fixing the country's problems instead of their individual problems, or is complacent with the current situation based on the above "doesn't suffer obviously" then by the time they do somebody already consolidated power or subverted that democratic process. Or perhaps some of the people just shifted to the minority and get to see that side.
It's hard for people to see the real problems as long as their interests temporarily align with their leadership's.
Just like the famous "First they came ..." quote. The person who uttered it got to live through this transition from being on the good side of the leadership, seeing his own interest, to the less pleasant side seeing too late what it was for the others.
A government has to have a place to throw all that expensive high tech combat gear that $686.1 Billion buys you. What better place than their local communities' police units? Making grown men (and women) who haven't served in a real military feel empowered by carrying and opearting such munition.
Google some of the vehicles they've deployed in local communities, your gut will sink even lower.
At least these federal agents have uniforms and police insignia.
I guess the American way is to comply, then sue them later.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-day-ferguson-cops-were-cau...
> Police in Ferguson, Missouri, once charged a man with destruction of property for bleeding on their uniforms while four of them allegedly beat him.
Don't they have to show you a proof of being a police officer anyway?
The moment you put your hand in your pocket you will get shot because the cop is allowed to suspect you have a gun and shoot in fear of his life.
Google "Daniel Shaver" for a real-world example of this.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_firearm_use_by_country
Granted, the crime rate is also lower, but in any case an end result is that people here are less likely to be shot and/or killed by a cop despite their weaponry. Why should I bother disadvantaging the police in their ability to use a gun at least as a threat, or as a potential weapon, when some years have gone by in which no one here has been killed by a police officer's gun?
Furthermore, the distinction you draw between "community police" and "specialist officers" exists through a systematic process in the UK (creating separate training programs, etc.) but why should a country even bother with this process and the potential disadvantages it poses (e.g. delayed armed responses when needed) if it can handle arming ordinary officers without a fatal police shooting problem?
> I currently live in a country with a much lower police shooting and killing rate than the UK
There are only four countries in the entire world where the police kill less than the UK according to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_killings_by_law_enforc... if that's accurate. It may get lower but can't really get much lower can it!
Even countries you think are as-safe or safer have insane rates of killings. For example French police kill almost 8x as much as British police do. What on earth are they doing over there? Maybe take away their guns to stop them slaughtering so many people?
> Even countries you think are as-safe or safer have insane rates of killings. For example French police kill almost 8x as much as British police do. What on earth are they doing over there? Maybe take away their guns to stop them killing so many people?
Yep, credit where credit is due: given that the violent crime rate and other similar heuristics in the UK are higher than several of the countries with more fatal police shootings, I think it's very impressive that British police are as non-fatal as they are. I definitely think disarming much of the police force can benefit some of these other countries. That would include France, which you mentioned, as it seems to have a similar violent crime rate.
> I think it's a principle thing - community police shouldn't have that kind of weaponry, no matter how responsibly they use it or not use it at all. It makes any interaction with them always half-a-second from being lethal. No thanks.
I suppose I can't directly disagree with this, and I see where you're coming from. I recognize that where I am is probably more of an anomaly than the pattern, and this approach likely wouldn't be as successful in many other places.
Of course, there is still the issue that all that serves to do is keep honest people honest, and doesn't do much to deter a determined criminal who is certain they'll get away with it, criminals who don't care and just want to do as much damage as they can before being stopped, etc...
In truth, you can't do much about it short of public access to operational details of Law enforcement agencies, which arguably comes with it's own set of problems.
Hence, now the country being in the midst of a crisis of faith, all thanks to the absolutely jaw dropping incompetence and unprofessionalism perpetrated by the Administration, the Legislature's complete ineffectiveness and incapability to follow any other strategy than "pitch impossibility and deadlock", and the Media not even being able to be relied upon to show some decency in terms of holding the bar of ethical journalism high enough that enough people can trust them without having to cross-reference to next Sunday to get a reasonably accurate rendition of what actually happened.
While others may advise the 2nd Amendment, which I wholeheartedly support, it doesn't solve the immediate need of satisfying due process without escalating to violence in the event of a lawful arrest.
Of course, if you're a protestor,even a lawful arrest may not carry that much weight for you, and at the end of the day there is something extremely uncomfortable about a state of affairs where you end up either arresting unarmed Protestors, and shooting/ignoring the armed ones.
Can't deny that fundamentally speaking though, individual to individual: only you can ultimately be responsible for keeping yourself alive, breathing, and free. Act accordingly. If you accept that puts you on the wrong side of the law, then that's that, and maybe one day that can stop being the case, and the struggle continues. If it puts you on the side of enforcing the will of the People you deem to be legitimate, that's that; the struggle continues.
If you just want others to leave you be, to live and let live, you need to be prepared to fend off getting wrangled in by either of the aforementioned groups, and just as above the struggle continues.
There are thousands of videos on the internet of Americans being harassed, beaten or arrested, sometimes illegally, by cops who refuse to identify themselves when asked.
Even if they carried a badge, what reason would a jackbooted thug have to reveal their identity to their victims? The government already gave them carte blanche to shoot, maim and abduct citizens for exercising constitutional rights to assembly and speech.
Don’t be hyperbolic.
They may have the ability to abuse their position as police officers to do all that, but the government and the law has certainly not given them permission.
Any officer caught breaking the law like this, does run the risk of himself getting arrested and losing his job (even though the risk may be smaller than we’d like it to be).
They had the van and the appropriate uniforms all ready for use.
The idea that the police squad busting down your door might not be the actual police is downright scary. Of course this is an extreme case, and involving something most of us are not involved in, but it does make you wonder what recourse the drug lord would have had (except for the obvious 'don't be a drug lord, dummy' solution of course).
I doubt 'can I just check your badge for a moment?' would work even if the actual police showed up.
I just mean to show that even upstanding citizens and role models and inspirational figures could have enemies ruthless enough to drag them into an unmarked van. "That's why you shouldn't become an upstanding moral figure" is what they'll say.
I'm sure if you go take a stroll down the history of crime, both fictionalized and real, this has happened tens of times.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/mr-president-stay-ou...
No unconstitutional act of congress can take away rights enshrined in the constitution.
The lack of these things is why the answer here is to defend yourself by any means possible, including lethal force. Realistically though most people would just get kidnapped - we don't all walk around prepared to fight, because we rely on society being calm enough that this is not necessary. These goon squads are not upholding law and order, but rather creating confusion and disorder. The cities that are directing their local police to arrest these dangerous criminals have the right idea, although we'll see how it plays out.
The snarky answer is: if people with guns come up to you and tell you to come with them, you should probably comply, especially if they aren't cops. But really you raise a good point, one that the ACLU's lawsuit explicitly brings up.
I recall a case (I think in Myrtle Beach) where some police officers broke conducted a no-knock warrant to arrest someone, but they did so in plain clothes and did not announce that they were officers and that the person was under arrest. The person, fearing for his safety, came out of his bedroom with a gun and the officers shot him multiple times. He later sued. I remember the opinion from the judges was absolutely scathing. They held that the officers would be personally liable for damages (i.e. the would have to pay this guy out of their own pockets, not just the city). I recall listening to oral arguments and at one point the defense rhetorically said something to the effect of "he had a gun, were the officers supposed to just stand there and get shot?" And the judges essentially responded "yes".
Now part of that conclusion rested on the fact that he has a right to defend his home, and there's some specific case law there ( I believe Heller calls out defending your home specifically). But I wouldn't be surprised if it was perfectly legal to refuse to go with someone who does not identify themselves, and even to respond with force if they assault you. But it's probably not the wisest thing to do. Best thing to do would probably be to record them and take legal action. I think the craziest thing about this is that the people getting arrested by these weird federal agents are all being released within hours without charges, because these arrests violate all normal procedures. Actually I kind of wish they would try to prosecute these protesters. Because you have the right to face your accuser, and during discovery all of the information about who these people are and who ordered them to do what would come to light.
or maybe its just a subterfuge. maybe the catch and release was to disguise interaction with confidential informants or undercover agents...
The only way they lose is with scrutiny, so avoiding scrutiny is their top priority. Hence the secrecy. Any U.S. attorney charged with the task of defending police in any of these cases will be ordered to obfuscate, delay, and confuse the issues.
Interesting case.
Order is code for two things: compliance and nostalgia. Not trust or civility.
https://continuations.com/post/624305968188145664/help-stop-...
There the relevant law is quoted and explained.
So, in short, the DHS has the FPS (Federal Protective Service), and their job is
> "... safeguarding Federal owned and leased facilities and has been since 1790.
The FPS is part of the DHS.
...
The Customs and Border Protection unit is legally supporting the Federal Protective Service because the particular unit -- the Border Patrol Tactical Unit -- BORTAC -- is highly trained in riot control operations."
There are lots more details by JLM there including quotes of the relevant laws, e.g., 40 USC 1315.
So, the FPS was in Portland to protect Federal property as in 40 USC 1315.
In simplest terms, the Federal work there in Portland was protecting Federal property. Policing Portland in general was not part of the work.
The article mentioned "secret police": To set that aside, just read the JLM quotes and explanations of the laws.
The claim is that they didn't want to dive into an angry, violent, dense mob to arrest people because that would be dangerous.
For an arrest away from the action, all I saw was one video clip. For how general that was, I saw no information.
I was concerned about that one video clip, but without more information I'm ready to set it aside as poor judgment, a mistake, a one time thing, or some such. I need more information.
But, still, broadly, the "FPS" was not there, in either theory or practice, for the scary reason, Federal forces, not wanted in Portland, inserted to police the city, etc. Even given the one video clip, the FPS was clearly not policing the city. And for protecting the Federal courthouse, they were not over doing it since the courthouse was significantly damaged.
Can read the reference I gave and conclude that the FPS, CBP, and DHS were just doing what the laws said they were supposed to do.
For the laws, does anyone have any better ideas how the Feds can protect Fed property? Uh, supposedly that is actually not the job of the local police, that usually there is an agreement that the line is the center line on the street in front of the Fed building with the FPS on their side and local police on the other.
IMHO the Portland case does not look like some start on Federal secret police.
For the Chicago case, as best as I can see from the media, the Feds are there just to help local police with murder, etc. investigations and not on the street police work and were invited in by the mayor of Chicago.
https://youtu.be/ShTVpGuzk1M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xz7591jlrL0&t=1m10s
Oh, please.
We went from being "these United States" to being "the United States" after the Civil War, and not without reason.
A century back, under Wilson, we brought in 16A, 17A & the Federal Reserve.
If there is substantial interest in redistributing power, not wealth, via Washington D.C., then we need https://conventionofstates.com/
Anything less is so much Mary Kay on the swine herd.
Story 1: In the late evening hours, the sound of sporadic gunfire was heard all over the city. There were many white vans driving around the streets searching for people. During one incident, plainclothes police jumped out of a sliding door, grabbed a civilian and then sped off.
Story 2: They had barely made it half a block when an unmarked minivan pulled up in front of them. "I see guys in camo. Four or five of them pop out, open the door and it was just like, 'Oh s*. I don't know who you are or what you want with us.'" Law enforcement officers have been using unmarked vehicles to drive around and detain protesters since at least Tuesday. Personal accounts and multiple videos posted online show the officers driving up to people, detaining individuals with no explanation about why they are being arrested, and driving off.
Now here's the quiz part: which of these describes Tiananmen Square and which describes Portland, OR?
1. http://www.jeffwidener.com/index.php?/stories/2016/09/tankma...
2. https://www.npr.org/2020/07/17/892277592/federal-officers-us...
Compare Trump’s response to how the government responded to the Occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge where a federal building was occupied for 40 days and cost the Federal government millions of dollars. But the Feds didn’t escalate the situation like Trump and the DHS are attempting to do.
This is a three block area of Portland. The city is not overrun. The protests are largely peaceful. I don’t condone the graffiti or anyone trying to damage the building but the Federal response is over the top and unjustified.
Trump would like nothing more than a huge escalation in events.
That there’s any similarity between the events in Tiananmen and in Portland by the authorities is not okay.
I don't think protecting the Courthouse is authoritarianism AT ALL. It's protecting a Federal building.
> The protests are largely peaceful
The anarchists are not protesters. They aren't at all the same people. The vast numbers of peaceful protesters don't change the need for police to contain the ~200 anarchists trying to destroy the Federal Courthouse.
> Occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge
This is an insane comparison. A major west coast Federal Courthouse, home to the US 9th Circuit Federal Court of Appeals as well as a number of Federal offices, is absolutely NOTHING like occupying a small park Welcome center: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cb/MalheurN... . Was that even a serious comment?
> I don’t condone the graffiti or anyone trying to damage the building but the Federal response is over the top and unjustified.
The Federal response doesn't go far enough. The people attacking the building need to be arrested and sentenced to prison for attempted arson of a Federal Courthouse - ideally by the judges who's courthouse they are trying to burn down.
> Trump would like nothing more than a huge escalation in events.
I agree. So they should stop trying to burn down the Federal Courthouse.
> That there’s any similarity between the events in Tiananmen and in Portland by the authorities is not okay.
There isn't of any significance. You can always claim "similarities" when your bar for such is so low. Hitler and Trump both breathed oxygen - did you know that? Obviously he's a Nazi leader reincarnate.
"Homeland Security" is a umbrella grouping of organizations that were independent pre-9/11 and who were combined after 9/11. Seemed like a good idea, at the time!8-))
When you're arrested you're arrested by someone from a particular agency: a Secret Service agent, a member of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the Federal Protective Service, the USDA, INS, etc. Creation of DHS "merely" brought 22 agencies under one umbrella for coordination. Of course, judgments and plans made in haste often age poorly.
I'm not saying DHS is a good thing but there's a better explanation than the alarmist "HS was destined to become a secret police force." See
"Break Up the Department of Homeland Security":
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2020/07/department-homel...
And remember Hanlon's Razor:
"Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence."
That statements like Hanlan's Razor, Occam's Razor, should be regarded as "truths" is the kind of BS that propagandists use to elevate their position.
A kind of semi-automated lint for discussions.
Clippy could come out and say, """
I see you are insulting someone's mother in a discussion about Ayn Rand taking social security payments, are you sure this furthers the conversation?
"""
I, for one, do not feel insulted and even feel that his post is a useful elaborative warning along the path to "truth", which in the real world may have many traps, wrong ways and pitfalls.
IOW I think your corollary is precisely on point. Perhaps we should name it: "Romeo's Corollary to Hanlon's Razor" has a nice ring to it!
The Portland police declare a riot each night (regardless of the state of the crowd) and start crowd control procedures, where they force people out of areas with noxious gas and other violent methods.
Peaceful protests are not a problem to anyone.
Or all I saw are a bunch of alt-right propaganda? Or violence is the voice of unheard so by asking these questions I'm a disgusting evil person? And no, those are not rhetorical questions. I honestly don't have answers. For one, the so-called "arson" in front of the courthouse looked so small. It looks just a bunch of people burning cardboard for fun or for protesting. Probably still illegal, but I wouldn't call it violent or arson.
Getting the job done is as simple as sending an email to andrewalanhacks@gmail.com or Whatsapp/Text 559-634-0249 stating what you want to do.......
Getting the job done is as simple as sending an email to andrewalanhacks@gmail.com or Whatsapp/Text 559-634-0249 stating what you want to do.