However, in this most recent case, it was not a password used to unlock the phone but facial recognition:
> The judge granted the Justice Department's request to place Capitol riot defendant Guy Reffitt in front of his laptop so they could use facial recognition to unlock the device
And apparently this is not protected by the same ruling, which is interesting.
The fifth amendment provides blanket protection from forcing you to divulge any information that can be used to convict you of a crime. This includes passwords. It also means that people can be forced to testify if given immunity to the crimes they will confess to (this is what freed Bill Cosby recently).
There is no such protection covering other evidence (although a warrant may be required). The police can force you to give up DNA, fingerprints and to stand still and be photographed.
Whether the information in either case is used to unlock a computer or a safe, is shown to witness or matched against samples is irrelevant.
> undercuts falseclaims from Trump and prominent Republican lawmakers that the rioters weren't armed
I don't recall anyone claiming that; many of those people were carrying openly. I do recall claims that they didn't use their firearms, which is a different thing altogether.
I guess this really comes down to your definition of "anyone" because I've certainly seen a number of comments alleging this and Ron Johnson has said "It wasn't an armed insurrection" which, again, depends on your definition or on how pedantic you want to be.
Totally agree, I mean the Oath Keepers had guns stashed across the Potomac to use and to your point the fact they were armed in violation of DC is damning enough. The whole things was a tinder box and we are lucky the death count was as low as it was. I saw tweets as early as the day after Jan 6th saying that certain people would attempt to rewrite history but I honestly thought "Surely not, not for something like this" but here we are...
I mean they were chanting "Hang Mike Pence", tried to stop the certification of votes, and fought with and injured officers inside the capitol. That meets my bar for "a violent uprising against an authority or government". Also sword + handing out pamphlets != gun + breaking into the capitol.
EDIT: removed "and directly killed at least 1 officer" due to reply.
> He was sprayed with a chemical, collapsed and later had a stroke and died. Two other officers took their own lives in the days afterward, and dozens more were hurt — including one officer who had a heart attack and others who suffered traumatic brain injuries and permanent disabilities. [0]
That said, my point still stands, this was a violent uprising.
> Whataboutism: a conversational tactic in which a person responds to an argument or attack by changing the subject to focus on someone else’s misconduct, implying that all criticism is invalid because no one is completely blameless [0]
We aren't talking about BLM at all right now, we are talking about Jan 6th. If you want to include BLM then we can first talk about how cops took photos with the people who broke into the capitol while they beat and maced BLM protestors for far lesser infractions. If you actually watched BLM footage and compared it to Jan 6th then the difference is stark, officers going out of their way in most cases to not fight back against the people storming the capitol or just holding the line whereas during BLM protests they took any slight as a reason to unleash tear gas, start attacking, and start making arrests.
Secondly "insurrection" is only really used (in my experience and from what I've seen in history) when talking about actual attempts to overthrow said authority. Even calls for defunding the police don't meet this bar. Even burning a police building in MN doesn't really meet that bar for me, no one thought burning 1 station was going to overthrow the police. On the other hand the people on Jan 6th marched in large part to stop the certification of the election, chanted to hang the VP because he wouldn't refuse to certify, and openly talked about killing/hanging member of congress. There is a very clear difference between protesting a provably systematically racist system and attempting to overturn the votes of the majority of Americans based on a lie.
I'm sorry but I don't for a second believe you asked that question in good faith.
>Secondly "insurrection" is only really used (in my experience and from what I've seen in history) when talking about actual attempts to overthrow said authority.
This explains it to me, but is why I disagree with the insurrection label. If armed people really wanted to "kill/hang" politicians and marched into the capitol with the intent to overthrow the government, I (and imo most people) would assume they'd use their weapons/be way more aggressive. You don't go for an insurrection, weapon in hand, and the worse that can be seen is someone having a selfie in Kamala's (?) office/people getting stomped. IMO if you can argue whether someone died from that protest, then it wasn't an insurrection, or else there would be no doubt about it.
Tldr; as far as I've seen there was not enough violence to show that they were going for an insurrection. At most it's a protest that escalated (as a lot of protests do, see BLM), which doesn't warrant the outrage it's getting.
There was one piece missing, that being a singular, previously decided upon leader. It was armed and violent anarchy with the intent to terrorize congress, and people were murdered by this mob.
If they had a leader it would have been an insurrection. That is it.
I also disagree with "violent anarchy." When calling something "violent," we usually refer to the whole thing. For example, if there is a murder in chicago, we don't say "violent residents of chicago cause another victim." In the same spirit, I don't think the violence was widespread enough to warrant that label.
EDIT: But violent here can be argued, I just think the common use is less in line with the literal "there was violence."
That’s not whataboutism — that’s pointing out that your definition of violent uprising is ridiculously broad; it captures everything from the protests you don’t agree with (Capitol Hill) to protests you presumably agree with (BLM, Stonewall, ‘68 Chicago), under the same flag, all of which are far and away from a “real” uprising — e.g. Arab spring.
What about X is a perfectly valid question when you’re trying to characterize the category of an event; you’re talking about a group of events.
It’s invalid when your point is simply “Y is bad and should be stopped”; because you’re talking about only one element.
> That’s not whataboutism — that’s pointing out that your definition of violent uprising is ridiculously broad;
It’s not /my/ definition, it’s the dictionary’s…
And this isn’t about what protests I believe in, but let’s dig into that just a bit. Are you really trying to equate a protests/riots against systematic racism, for gay rights, or against racism/assassination of MLK JR with a riot based on lie? I’m sorry but I’m not interested in debating those on level ground.
> Are you really trying to equate a protests/riots against systematic racism, for gay rights, or against racism/assassination of MLK JR with a riot based on lie?
I think I’ve been very clear that I’m not equating anything to anything. It may be a useful exercise to review what was written as-is, without assigning arbitrary assumptions to underly it.
Your definition of an uprising equates all of these things together, even if you didn’t intend it, because your definition is ridiculously vague.
Essentially, you’ve gone into the deep-end of no-true-Scotsman — a protest constitutes a violent uprising, if a policeman is injured, and heads of state are verbally threatened, and if and only if that protest is the Capitol Hill protest (so as to exclude all other protests that do not meet the prior criteria).
If you exclude that last clause, it’s hard not to find a protest constituting an uprising. Not because I’m being overly pedantic, but because five dead at a protest is a fairly mundane protest, and fighting with the police is basically a requirement of any protest, as is calling for the deaths of everyone in charge, as far as US protests go.
MLK and Ghandi are famous because they avoided it — because avoiding violence at a protest is abnormal; you expect fights with the police (or whatever relevant authority) at any protest… it’s basically tablestakes (because someone always starts something, with enough of a crowd). That such violence occurs does not immediately elevate it to the level of “uprising”, because then you would have no protests/riots anywhere — just uprisings.
> I wore a sword at the time and no one had an issue with it.
Carrying a sword is, to the best of my internet research, perfectly legal in DC. Switchblades and concealable knives are right out (as well as it retroactively becoming illegal to carry the sword if they can demonstrate an intent to use it to harm someone.) Carrying a firearm is pretty tricky (and forbidden in federal buildings or in the middle of demonstrations).
That is, a sword is treated as a prop and a gun/switchblade/brass knuckles etc. are treated as weapons.
It seems to me that there may be legitimate public interest in absolute transparency whenever agencies conduct activities or investigations of a political nature.
As far as I know, to the degree it doesn't compromise the investigation (e.g. reporting that person X turned on his co-conspirators before they can be arrested), there is transparency in this case. Is there something you are worried is insufficiently covered.
Oh I’m not talking about this particular incident. {{current_administration}} is obviously right, and I don’t need to know anything else. I’m talking about all the things that {{rival_party}} did. They’re terrible.
You truly are enlightened and above the political fray. I am so happy you pointed out how smart you are. Truly, you added something to the conversation.
30 comments
[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 66.9 ms ] threadHowever, in this most recent case, it was not a password used to unlock the phone but facial recognition:
> The judge granted the Justice Department's request to place Capitol riot defendant Guy Reffitt in front of his laptop so they could use facial recognition to unlock the device
And apparently this is not protected by the same ruling, which is interesting.
Should the judge say: Because the face could be used for a task that is often performed using a secret, it is a secret in the sense of the law?
There is no such protection covering other evidence (although a warrant may be required). The police can force you to give up DNA, fingerprints and to stand still and be photographed.
Whether the information in either case is used to unlock a computer or a safe, is shown to witness or matched against samples is irrelevant.
I don't recall anyone claiming that; many of those people were carrying openly. I do recall claims that they didn't use their firearms, which is a different thing altogether.
I guess this really comes down to your definition of "anyone" because I've certainly seen a number of comments alleging this and Ron Johnson has said "It wasn't an armed insurrection" which, again, depends on your definition or on how pedantic you want to be.
Keep in mind that open carry it not permitted in DC and "visitors" are not allowed to carry guns in the capitol.
iirc it was 1997 that I sat out on the Mall in DC for a day or two pushing pamphlets; I wore a sword at the time and no one had an issue with it.
EDIT: removed "and directly killed at least 1 officer" due to reply.
> He was sprayed with a chemical, collapsed and later had a stroke and died. Two other officers took their own lives in the days afterward, and dozens more were hurt — including one officer who had a heart attack and others who suffered traumatic brain injuries and permanent disabilities. [0]
That said, my point still stands, this was a violent uprising.
[0] https://apnews.com/article/politics-donald-trump-capitol-sie...
We aren't talking about BLM at all right now, we are talking about Jan 6th. If you want to include BLM then we can first talk about how cops took photos with the people who broke into the capitol while they beat and maced BLM protestors for far lesser infractions. If you actually watched BLM footage and compared it to Jan 6th then the difference is stark, officers going out of their way in most cases to not fight back against the people storming the capitol or just holding the line whereas during BLM protests they took any slight as a reason to unleash tear gas, start attacking, and start making arrests.
Secondly "insurrection" is only really used (in my experience and from what I've seen in history) when talking about actual attempts to overthrow said authority. Even calls for defunding the police don't meet this bar. Even burning a police building in MN doesn't really meet that bar for me, no one thought burning 1 station was going to overthrow the police. On the other hand the people on Jan 6th marched in large part to stop the certification of the election, chanted to hang the VP because he wouldn't refuse to certify, and openly talked about killing/hanging member of congress. There is a very clear difference between protesting a provably systematically racist system and attempting to overturn the votes of the majority of Americans based on a lie.
I'm sorry but I don't for a second believe you asked that question in good faith.
[0] https://www.dictionary.com/browse/whataboutism
This explains it to me, but is why I disagree with the insurrection label. If armed people really wanted to "kill/hang" politicians and marched into the capitol with the intent to overthrow the government, I (and imo most people) would assume they'd use their weapons/be way more aggressive. You don't go for an insurrection, weapon in hand, and the worse that can be seen is someone having a selfie in Kamala's (?) office/people getting stomped. IMO if you can argue whether someone died from that protest, then it wasn't an insurrection, or else there would be no doubt about it.
Tldr; as far as I've seen there was not enough violence to show that they were going for an insurrection. At most it's a protest that escalated (as a lot of protests do, see BLM), which doesn't warrant the outrage it's getting.
If they had a leader it would have been an insurrection. That is it.
EDIT: But violent here can be argued, I just think the common use is less in line with the literal "there was violence."
What about X is a perfectly valid question when you’re trying to characterize the category of an event; you’re talking about a group of events.
It’s invalid when your point is simply “Y is bad and should be stopped”; because you’re talking about only one element.
It’s not /my/ definition, it’s the dictionary’s…
And this isn’t about what protests I believe in, but let’s dig into that just a bit. Are you really trying to equate a protests/riots against systematic racism, for gay rights, or against racism/assassination of MLK JR with a riot based on lie? I’m sorry but I’m not interested in debating those on level ground.
I think I’ve been very clear that I’m not equating anything to anything. It may be a useful exercise to review what was written as-is, without assigning arbitrary assumptions to underly it.
Your definition of an uprising equates all of these things together, even if you didn’t intend it, because your definition is ridiculously vague.
Essentially, you’ve gone into the deep-end of no-true-Scotsman — a protest constitutes a violent uprising, if a policeman is injured, and heads of state are verbally threatened, and if and only if that protest is the Capitol Hill protest (so as to exclude all other protests that do not meet the prior criteria).
If you exclude that last clause, it’s hard not to find a protest constituting an uprising. Not because I’m being overly pedantic, but because five dead at a protest is a fairly mundane protest, and fighting with the police is basically a requirement of any protest, as is calling for the deaths of everyone in charge, as far as US protests go.
MLK and Ghandi are famous because they avoided it — because avoiding violence at a protest is abnormal; you expect fights with the police (or whatever relevant authority) at any protest… it’s basically tablestakes (because someone always starts something, with enough of a crowd). That such violence occurs does not immediately elevate it to the level of “uprising”, because then you would have no protests/riots anywhere — just uprisings.
Why? Was the sword related to the content of the pamphlets?
Carrying a sword is, to the best of my internet research, perfectly legal in DC. Switchblades and concealable knives are right out (as well as it retroactively becoming illegal to carry the sword if they can demonstrate an intent to use it to harm someone.) Carrying a firearm is pretty tricky (and forbidden in federal buildings or in the middle of demonstrations).
That is, a sword is treated as a prop and a gun/switchblade/brass knuckles etc. are treated as weapons.