By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close
Mr Khan said:
SamuelRSmith said:
KylieDog said:

Take this nonsense elsewhere.  The time of civil war in first world countries like the US is long gone.


This is a domestic agency, not for foreign combat.

Drones. Drones EVERYWHERE.

Papers, please.

I said: papers, please.

Who needs a trial?

At least I can read what I want.

I'd argue that there's more a case for gun rights than ever before.

I'd argue that people who both claim this and own a gun should be vigorously investigated.

You mean you want the government to bypass the fourth amendment. Don't worry they're already doing that via facebook and other internet resources, as well as encouraging people to report "suspicious behavior" much like I don't know the secret police of authoritarian states in Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia.  But in this new America it's alright to arrest people for what they think and/or own and you seemingly encourage it. 

Just look what happened to this kid, minding his own business in school, after Sandy Hook. 

http://cbldf.org/2012/12/doodles-lead-to-new-jersey-students-arrest/

 

When a 16-year-old New Jersey boy doodled in his notebook on Tuesday, December 18, he probably didn’t expect to be arrested by the end of the day. However, when school officials saw the sketches, which they state appeared to be of weapons, and the boy “demonstrated behavior that caused them to be concerned,” the police were called.

A subsequent search of the boy’s home led to his arrest because they found several electronic parts and chemicals. He was charged with the possession of an explosive device and put in juvenile detention.

The details on what was precisely in the drawings are sketchy, as are the details on the behavior that caused concern. The school claims the drawings were of weapons, but the boy’s mother told various press outlets that, “He drew a glove with flames coming out of it.” If true, then the drawing wouldn’t be out of place in the notebook of any teenager who loves comic books.

At no point in time did the boy threaten the school, school officials, or his classmates. He cooperated fully with authorities, and a search of the school itself found nothing dangerous. The boy’s mother describes him as a good boy and frequent volunteer with a passion for disassembling old things and reassembling them. School district superintendent Steve Ciccariello stated that he would not expect violent behavior from the student. Further, Galloway Township Police Chief Pat Moran recognized that “There was no indication he was making a bomb, or using a bomb or detonating a bomb.” Despite all this, the boy was arrested — all because he doodled in his notebook.