Date: Wed, 7 Jan 2004 20:04:24 +0200 (EET) From: Narvi <narvi@haldjas.folklore.ee> To: Allan Bowhill <abowhill@blarg.net> Cc: freebsd-chat@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Personal patches Message-ID: <20040107194051.P32387-100000@haldjas.folklore.ee> In-Reply-To: <20040107001001.GA65133@kosmos.my.net>
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On Tue, 6 Jan 2004, Allan Bowhill wrote: > On 0, Narvi <narvi@haldjas.folklore.ee> wrote: > : > :On Tue, 6 Jan 2004, Allan Bowhill wrote: > : > :> On 0, Brad Knowles <brad.knowles@skynet.be> wrote: > :> :At 5:56 PM +0100 2004/01/06, Dag-Erling Sm?rgrav wrote: > :> : > :> :>> [...] just remember that a meeting of peoples > :> :>> who disagree, who are different, who ... is pretty much undeniably > :> :>> one of the things that does make America great. > :> :> > :> :> America is great? > :> : > :> : No. It has been turned into a police state. > :> : > :> : Prepare to be fingerprinted. > :> > :> Few U.S. citizens haven't been. > : > :you find it reasonable? Besides, it in no way counters the police state > :part, and rather enodorses it. > > How so? There is nothing illegitmate, arbitrary, illegal, secret or > repressive about requiring fingerprints and photos of visitors who come > across our international borders. It is necessary record-keeping. > nothing repressive? whats the colour of sky on the planet you are on? > {Personally I hope genetic fingerprinting ultimately replaces this > system. This method of identification has proven indispensable in > catching criminals who would otherwise have gone unnoticed. It works. > Take Gary Ridegeway for example, who may have killed over 60 women in > Washington State. He would never have confessed (and may never have been > arrested) if the police could not confront him with a solid death > penalty case, supported by genetic evidence. Because the police were > able to confront him with this, he plea-bargained out of death in exchange > for leading the police to his victim's gravesites.) > hah. and you bring some stupid and arbitrary plea bargain as a good reason for geneticly fingerprinting everybody? > :> Why should extranationals have more privilige? > : > :Mainly because they are extranationals? > > Again, why should we trust? > because you want to have international visitors and trade. Oh, and because inbound tourism in US number 2 export at ~ $80 billion. Which is already 20% down from 2000. > No organization (or nation) with plenty to lose will base it's practices > on institutionalized trust. It's always institutionalized mistrust that > makes it possible to conduct business. Like with banks. > US has plenty to lose by having less people visit it. > :Also, they are way less likely to > :commit any crime than those already living inside the US. > > It's anybody's guess without statistics. But it's peripheral to the > reasons for this type of security. Lets take say year 2000. There were 15500+ murders in the US, for a rate of 5.5 per 100000. If the ratio of murders commited by tourists was the same as natives, they should have accounted for over 2400+ murders in year 2002. You can now easily convince by a couple of queries that that was not teh case. The absurd thing is that 9/11 merely meant that peopel in US killed by US citizens had the same per person rate as peopel killed in US by people who came into US. > > The point is to identify and catch people posing as travelers who > are known to be terrorists, or associated with terrorism. If the > system helps law enforcement catch other people on the lam, then > more power to it. except that there not only is no likelyhood that such is achieved but there isn't even any credible description how such would work. > > -- > Allan Bowhill > abowhill@blarg.net > > Etymology, n.: > Some early etymological scholars came up with derivations that > were hard for the public to believe. The term "etymology" was formed > from the Latin "etus" ("eaten"), the root "mal" ("bad"), and "logy" > ("study of"). It meant "the study of things that are hard to swallow." > -- Mike Kellen >
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