*********!? Dear god, when you put it that way...
well it is ******* whether it should be or not, well that doesn't really matter.
*********!? Dear god, when you put it that way...
So just bending over and accepting something is alright with you?
So just bending over and accepting something that is really invasive is alright with you?
Judge Kozinski is a leading conservative, appointed by President Ronald Reagan, but in his dissent he came across as a raging liberal.
To have more security you lose a bit of privacy. This is a different world from 10 years ago and it will be even more different 10 years from now. So get used to it.
I just have a certain level of trust in my government, and these arguments are based on the concept that governments are inherently evil and not trustworthy. Difference of opinion, I suppose.
Not to say that I fully agree with the concept of putting GPS units on unsuspecting individuals' cars, but in the only case I've seen of this (i.e. this thread), the government had a reasonable (later founded) suspicion that this person was breaking the law. I find it hard to believe that the average citizen need live in fear of the government putting a GPS tracking system on their car, is all.
Would you think it's acceptable if he wasn't guilty? Do you actually believe it's necessary for any government to do this kind of big brothering?
...and by your cellphone, internet activity, credit/debit card, passport, credit inquiries........
Well the main issue is tracking Jihadists and their money trail no doubt. To have more security you lose a bit of privacy. This is a different world from 10 years ago and it will be even more different 10 years from now. So get used to it.
Awesome point, all this electronic jazz has made things much easier for the government to track anything and everything that you do.
Good. So it's okay to commit felonies. If he hadn't been doing it, they wouldn't have tracked him in the first place.
All of your posts make me :1orglaugh.
Well the main issue is tracking Jihadists and their money trail no doubt. To have more security you lose a bit of privacy. This is a different world from 10 years ago and it will be even more different 10 years from now. So get used to it.
I would hope the process for tracking someone like this would be equivalent to the steps necessary to obtain a search warrant.
If that's the case then why should they not just go out and get a search warrant?
The simple answer would be they're still building their case and surveillance is part of the process of building a sufficient case for probable cause to secure a search/arrest warrant.
With that way of thinking they might as well think they have the right to just stick a camera in your house to gain evidence when your not looking. Without a warrant I don't think they should have had the right to mess with the car in the first place. The thing they did with the car reminds me of the old ******* "sneak and peek" technique *************** does.