One addition this year... I brought my dog to work! She's going to be dressing up for the office costume competition, although unless they give her a paycheque she's probably not qualified to win.
@Seth A group of students at my Uni once jumped into a supermarket trolley with water pistols, and then got pushed passed an embassy as they shot at it .... they weren't present for lectures the next day
having to remove what must have been 2 whole cans of silly string from the cat and take her to the vet because they additionally drenched her in shampoo causing very averse reactions with her eyes and matting the fur entirely, grr.
I hate the argument that if you have nothing to hide you have nothing to worry about. That is not really the point. I do not want something/someone looking at my personal stuff without my consent because it is none of your business.
global connectivity and networking has also brought global spying, and the advent of super computers and meta data and machine learning have enabled us to drill down to a largely individual level for people who aren't really of any national interest
it's not so much the taking of the photo but the fact that in an instant you can take a photo and have it broadcast to the world and also have the face detected and the gps coordinates determined and a scarily accurate behavioral analysis applied based on some insignificant detail
but the most recent official statement from the FAA about shooting drones clarifies that, yes, it classifies drones as aircraft, which means to shoot one down anywhere is a felony
even if it's hovering 30 feet over your property
you have legal recourse if an aircraft is on your property illegally but shooting it down is not included
@JanDvorak no because it is typically considered an immediate threat to your life
aka if someone is trying to kill you
so I suppose yes if the president of the united states is trying to beat you with a baseball bat, you'd legally be within your rights to defend yourself w/ lethal or at least equal force
"Whoever incites, sets on foot, assists, or engages in any rebellion or insurrection against the authority of the United States or the laws thereof, or gives aid or comfort thereto, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both; and shall be incapable of holding any office under the United States."
If you can't defend against rebellion then you can't have rule of law and any hope of a civilized republic gets thrown out the window. Every nation has something like that
You've gotta have legal recourse to insurrection on the books
otherwise you're gonna have everybody testing the waters every couple of decades
@Machavity I'm torn often on Imminent Domain. Part of me thinks you need to be able to put your foot down as the government and say 'this is for the greater good' but then you're relying on the government to do the right thing, which, obviously, is a pretty big gamble
@TylerH Eminent Domain is actually a necessary part of law. For certain types of civic projects it's critical. But Kelo said you can use it for purely tax reasons. So a dozen or so people lost their homes to a casino developer. Who then went bankrupt. Now their land sits empty
Ironically, hatred of that ruling is bipartisan. I'd actually say it's one of the few issues you could get broad consensus on for amending the Constitution
5 people from different ethnic/social backgrounds who had magic power rings that, when combined, formed a 'superhero' called captain planet who would protect the earth from environmental dangers (or dangers to the environment by humans)
@Machavity huh?
@JanDvorak this is true in effect
life can be great under a benevolent dictator
I guess it does depend a bit on your point of view though
@Olaf Well, that ruling seems to be ignored often enough :| Sadly. We have a pretty neat constitution, but still, some things are just inevitably prone to abuse.
@TylerH My sentiments exactly. Pollution happens because of apathy and expedience. But the villans of the show loved pollution for the sake of pollution
@Seth As long we have docu-soaps, Aldi/Lidl for food, everything is fine for most ppl. Also some pretty old principle: "Panem et circensem" (Bread and games). The old Romans knew their job. The rest is like cooking a frog (slowly increase the heat).