Re: 86 Civil Liberties Groups and Internet Companies Demand an End to NSA Spying [via Federated Social Web Community Group]

Tend to agree, on a range of issues. Lawyers are very, oh, it takes time
with the system, even for things like stop and frisk. Blatantly illegal.

Heres what google said.

http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2013/06/asking-us-government-to-allow-google-to.html




On Tue, Jun 11, 2013 at 5:18 PM, Mark Janssen <dreamingforward@gmail.com>wrote:

> > You mean like this?
> >
> >
> http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/02/26/clapper-v-amnesty-international-warrantless-wiretapping-supreme-court_n_2765931.html
>
> If that really happened (and since we're talking/researching about the
> NSA and on an electronic medium at that, I can't take it as the
> complete reality just yet -- there is clearly a lot of strange and
> mis-information going around), then it was not approached correctly.
> Sue people directly (Snowden named names, right?) if possible and let
> the system determine how to handle this issue of "how to handle this"
> issue of its very fabric.  There should be pro bono, Constitutional
> lawyers bringing a case to the court, defending their country.  What
> the hell?
>
> Clearly there's no leadership happening whatsoever (if the President
> hasn't made a stand on and against it), so the People must exercise
> their right.  If the government isn't working for the People, then
> bring it down.  Refuse to pay taxes.  This is ridiculous.
>
> --
> MarkJ
> Tacoma, Washington
>
>
>

Received on Tuesday, 11 June 2013 23:01:05 UTC