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User ID: 2642

anon_


				
				
				

				
0 followers   follows 0 users   joined 2023 August 25 20:53:04 UTC

					

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User ID: 2642

It is not dereliction of duty. That is a military standard that applies to the military. And it would be impossible to prove he knew in advance that he would behave like a coward once he faced real danger.

Right, which is why we need deterrence of punishment after the fact.

A town can only afford to hire so many police officers (and firefighters), they should be assured that the ones they hire will do the job.

at least three other officers had arrived seconds later and also failed to stop the gunman

We should try this for other crimes. Your honor, there were 3 other guys also (robbing the bank|rioting against ICE|storming the capitol)!

Is this exculpatory evidence? I don't think so. If it were, then every criminal who starts running from the police "because they got scared" would then have, at the very least, a get-out-of-evading-arrest-free card to play at all times.

Not in the hindsight sense. The standard is whether a reasonable person observing what the officer did and within the time the officer had to evaluate would have perceived it as a threat. If that reasonable person would see that Good was trying to get away, then it wouldn't be legal to shoot her.

Non-compliance with law enforcement orders has to remain chargeable.

Chargeable, yes. Arrestable, absolutely. Deadly force, not without more.

Absolutely agreed.

But it is also lawful to protest a police action without obstructing it. I’m sure there are examples of protests in Minnesota that are & aren’t.

Seems like a strong case that this is part of a conspiracy and not protected (see 2(b) of the article) -- at least on that fact pattern.

Then again, if some kids in the hood do whistle whenever the cops pulled up and some other guy does buy them fast food, it's gonna be hard to actually make that case.

The other part wrestled with in the general case is when there is dual-use speech, which again, depends on the fact pattern.

OTOH blinking your brights to warn of an oncoming speed trap is.

So much here depends on the analogy chosen.

Obviously we need someone more upright and trustworthy. I thereby humbly accept this burden as my duty.

Europe needs to get a good kicking to jolt it out of being the USA's little bitch

May I ask that you familiarize yourself with the concept of BATNA.

Yup, agreed on that.

The very next sentence is

But the Court didn't explain the scope of this exception-it spent just a few sentences on the subject-and in particular didn't discuss whether the exception reached beyond threats to national security. And the following year, the Court held in NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware that knowingly publishing the names of people who weren't complying with a boycott was constitutionally protected, even though some people who weren't observing the boycott had been violently attacked, and the publication clearly could facilitate such attacks.

I agree, the caselaw is complex and there isn't a definitive ruling one way or the other. In particular, I don't think Brandenburg is deciding here, it's just an unresolved question.

The European payment system works fine because it appropriated the property of US multinational firms.

Americans could have very cheap Louis Vuitton handbags if we mandated that they license it to American manufacturers for a $10/piece licensing fee.

In your example Alice isn't inciting lawless action, the murderer is going to try to escape regardless. At best, she's aiding or facilitating it, which isn't squarely covered by Brandenburg.

If you care to read the section aptly titled The Existing Crime-Facilitating Speech Cases is a fairly comprehensive survey of cases on it.

There's a review on the history of such speech in section 2(a) of this paper.

You could take this even further:

Anti-(good-ICE)-true-positive: Protesters harassing ICE while they are conducting an operation lawfully

Anti-(bad-ICE)-true-positive: Protesters harassing ICE while they are conducting an operation unlawfully

Unless ICE has a 100% conduct-the-operation-lawfully rate, at least some of these will A(BI)TPs.

Oh, sure, you might catch and deport a few foreigners who overstayed their student visa, but generally the government is unlikely to have a complete list of all the people who illegally crossed the border and try their best to stay out of the governments databases.

I think the bulk of it is the backlog of individuals with final orders of removal that are still here.

To my knowledge, there is no rule that you can not deport someone if you had arrested them without sufficient probable cause.

This is actually being litigated right now. I suspect you are right about where the law end up.

You wrote:

The irony of it all is that this is what anti ICE groups are accusing ICE of doing. Going to places and harassing people based off of stereotypes without any legal authority to do so. Demanding evidence to prove that someone belongs here.

I'm sure ICE has done exactly this -- going to a place they suspect removable aliens to be present and demanding evidence.

I'm sure ICE has other operations where they target specific removable aliens on which they have prior information too.

Seems very similar unless you are really resting the justifiability argument cited.

It’s unlikely we would would see worse transaction processing unlike housing where price fixing leads to shitty housing.

We would surely see reduced rewards, reduced perks and reduced consumer protection (e.g. worse chargeback terms), worse settlement terms (today it's ~daily, you'd see net-90).

The price of processing cash is not what the interchange should be. That basically assumes the CC company can take 100% of the surplus which implies a monopoly exists.

The price of a good is determined in part by the price/substitutability of substitute goods. This is a feature, not a bug.

It's not that they should be exactly equal, but the cost of processing cash is a good marker by which to understand the value provided by interchange to the merchant.

Moreover, the counterfactual here isn't giving any surplus to the merchant anyway -- in the absence of credit card companies they would process cash and be approximately equally well off.

That set up a twitter folly of the high rate people are subsidizing low rate people with rewards backed by a fed paper.

I see in your edit that you understand that rewards are funded almost exclusively by interchange. So what does limiting the rate/fees accomplish?

Then the store I go to doesn’t pay a processing fee. So they cut prices. And it probably saves me more money than getting 2% cash back.

Well sure, if you essentially appropriate the credit card networks and force them to operate it nearly for free, then we can all enjoy the enormous benefits it confers without paying the owners. This is not a sustainable equilibrium though.

Also, you should look up or ask your most trusted LLM what the average cost to a retail business is for accepting/processing cash. The interchange for electronic payment (plus the benefits of immediate settlement) is competitive to the labor/logistic overhead of processing cash, especially for smaller businesses.

I agree that certain false positive rates are acceptable when enforcing the law (up to but not past the point of conviction/sentencing at least). I disagree that certain false positive rates are acceptable when forming a mob. This is not hypocrisy.

In that case it doesn't matter if the mob is harassing or assaulting ICE or non-ICE folks.

Which implies that the examples you gave are not relevant.

Does the accusation of character-assassination necessarily require falsehood? Specifically, if the film portrayed the non-famous 13YO as shithead but was reasonably accurate, does that still count in your mind?

We've gone around and around and I still can't understand what are the necessary and sufficient conditions that you have in mind.

The problem with this kind of "overlapping questions" claim is that it resists actually being pinned down.

Moreover, I think most of it fails the TDWP test. Certainly Anna Wintour didn't consent to having a fictional depiction of her in a book/movie. It probably contributed a lot to her reputation, possibly rising to the level of harm.

I'm having a real time figuring out what your mental model is here.

Wouldn't TDWP also cause a realistic-seeming image of a real person in the viewers' mind that is nevertheless fictional?

I expect more tho.

So on this theory if these images had a visible watermark (or other signifier) saying “AI GENERATED” then all the controversy would be extinguished?

Ultimately this is also why I don't see how Onlyfans continues to exist as a business model for flesh-and-blood women after this year.

I found a couple of fully-AI generated insta accounts, some with moderately convincing short videos.

Unfortunately for them, there are still tells. For example, in one (I can find the link) the model's birthmark kept moving around her body. Or lighting ends up a bit off.