Not by going elsewhere. By changing the direction and/or leadership of
the country.
I'd like to go back toward the direction of land of the free and home of
the brave instead of a place where it's illegal to buy a Big Gulp and
it's considered unfair that I work my butt off and earn a lot of money
because people who don't want to work aren't satisfied with the level of
food stamps they receive or the brand of free cell phone they get from a
free government program. ALSO, a place where my last sentence wouldn't
be considered racist. It's ridiculous that my 13 year old son feels
compelled to apologize every time he uses the word black, even when he's
describing the color of a kitchen appliance.
Sorry, not tech related, but I had to chime in.
Aloha!
On 1/15/2015 9:25 AM, Al Billings wrote:
On Jan 15, 2015, at 11:20 AM, J.M. Porup <j...@porup.com> wrote:
On 01/15/15 13:45, Al Billings wrote:
Insisting that we both can and cannot (at the same time) trust people like
Moxie simply because they live in the USA and the NSA exists is stupid. I don’t
see a suggestion of what jurisdiction the author thinks people can live within
where there won’t be the same issues. From there, the list of demands gets
rather high and the list of solutions non-existent.
I’m well aware of the Snowden revelations. I’m also well aware that people like
Moxie are doing good work to try to counter some of the NSA grabs of Internet
data. The post read like crazy person FUD.
Which country should people be in where the government isn’t going to try to
potentially legally compel them to do things or spy on their communications?
Where is your utopia of freedom?
There is no utopia of freedom. But we can avoid the dystopia of tyranny
the United States is rapidly becoming.
By going where? Please do say.
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