mariorulezman
Baptized in Flames
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qeEcoi8kEuU
what?!mariorulezman said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qeEcoi8kEuU
I really really doubt that. This is terrible for constitutional rights, but you're overestimating Obama's involvement in both bills (it was pretty much limited to signing the fiscal budget into law as I understand it) and the power these bills actually give the executive. Obama's a smart guy, he knows suspending elections would be ineffective and disastrous. I don't think he wants to and I don't think he can.Dart said:I'm betting that Obama will try to use these two laws to suspend next year's elections. I hope I am wrong.
mariorulezman said:He can't suspend the elections...yet. Who knows what is going to happen for the next year till elections.
This is exactly why Obama would never suspend elections. The military would never ever ever ever ever back him. It wouldn't get him anywhere even if he wanted to become some kind of dictator.Dart said:Exactly. Yet. The fiscal bill gives way too much power over the American People by the military. But there is a glimmer of hope; the U.S Supreme Court has consistently been upholding laws that undermine the Obama Administration's efforts to undermine the Constitution.
As for a Revolution, although the U.S Military is the most advanced out there, it is comprised of people who are citizens first, soldiers second. That and the amount of armed private citizens outnumber the military 100 to 1. The 2nd Amendment will in the end trump anything politicians try to do. Because We The People hold the keys to the real power.
stealth toilet said:Correct me if I'm wrong (I don't live in the States, so I don't always understand how it works there), but doesn't this give more power to the RIAA, MPAA, and IP owners than the government?
stealth toilet said:Ok, then I think what I said originally is valid, haha.
I understand that there could be some political censorship or whatever, but isn't the major concern here that corporate entities have abused the political system to further their own profit-making ends at the expense of civil liberties, like property ownership?
Now some record label or publishing house can "sell" me a product without having to transfer the rights of ownership to me, making it illegal for me to do what I want with my own property?
As far as the political angle goes, I would suspect this passed mostly out of political ignorance than out of some sort of power grab. I.e. powerful lobbying groups (owned by record labels, publishers, etc.) told politicians to pass it, and they did because they didn't understand what it meant, and now the corporate entities represented by those lobbying groups have the law on their side when they want to prosecute Johnny-music-buyer if he wants to share a song with a friend, put it in a youtube video, etc.