Ass Hat
Home
News
Events
Bands
Labels
Venues
Pics
MP3s
Radio Show
Reviews
Releases
Buy$tuff
Forum
  Classifieds
  News
  Localband
  Shows
  Show Pics
  Polls
  
  OT Threads
  Other News
  Movies
  VideoGames
  Videos
  TV
  Sports
  Gear
  /r/
  Food
  
  New Thread
  New Poll
Miscellaneous
Links
E-mail
Search
End Ass Hat
login

New site? Maybe some day.
Username:
SPAM Filter: re-type this (values are 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,A,B,C,D,E, or F)
Message:


UBB enabled. HTML disabled Spam Filtering enabledIcons: (click image to insert) Show All - pop

b i u  add: url  image  video(?)
: post by josh_hates_you at 2012-03-23 15:03:33
I listened to a segment on npr about this yesterday. The NSA claims they dont have the right to intercept transmissions. According to a defense attorney the NSA uses it's own legal definition of terms that you wont find in a dictionary. For example their description of intercepting something is having it viewed and reported on by an agent. Using this definition they have the right to store any information for future use. As long as they dont read the contents they dont need a warrant to store the info but once a warrant is served they can then use and read the info. So much for having the right to remain silent. Anything you have already said can now be used against you in a court of law.
[default homepage] [print][8:51:40pm May 08,2024
load time 0.01077 secs/10 queries]
[search][refresh page]