What are the pros and cons here?<br />Is the first amendment really being eroded here?<br /> http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/5034100.stm
Amen!!!!!Originally posted by Laddies:<br /> One of the biggest problems with this great nation is the citizens think the the goverment can or should protect them against every thing. This is simply impossiable the citizens need to take responcablity for themselves and thier families, not only as far as safety, but morally, religiously and finacially. Life is not a free ride, you cannot be dependent on this goverment or any other and still have your freedom
I would change the "if" to When and I agree with you.<br />Also I wonder if the general public could handle knowing what all our goverment has already done in stopping crimes like that.<br /><br />I'm not a sheeple but I do live in a ChittyMy choice is to not infringe one millimeter on my freedoms and privacy, but I am a warrior and wouldn't blame the Feds if they missed another one like they missed 9/11/01
Beautiful statement and I agree.<br />I resent those Americans that are willing to give up a fraction of freedoms or privacy because by doing so they make vulnerable the same that I choose to value.<br />My choice is to not infringe one millimeter on my freedoms and privacy, but I am a warrior and wouldn't blame the Feds if they missed another one like they missed 9/11/01.
I see blatant examples of the citizenry not being represented.<br />While I see big money, big business, big government, big medicine, big Ag, big oil, and big mouths being breast fed representation.Are the three branches of the Federal Govt' trampling on the citizenry ?
Maybe no less suspicious but the high court found in part concluded that "Government Employees" rather than "citizen" may have some freedoms limited. In this case it was tried on the basis that whisle blowing to complaining on the job was not protected by free speech.<br />Why chastize the honest citizen for exposing such behaviour?"
That, the above, changes in personal banking practices, traditional due process and search and siezure law, emminent domain and private property rights should worry you, or at least be seriously considered.<br /><br />Saving the second amendment to another thread, all the examples here are issues regarding the first through six with a little Declaration of Indepedence thrown in.<br /><br />Really this drives home the point how several small bites of freedom can be taken away and still be seen as only"government collecting data regarding phone calls" by many.Everyone is freaking out about the government collecting data regarding phone calls.