Court: 'Repugnant' Online Discussions Aren't Thoughtcrime (arstechnica.com) 155
An anonymous reader writes: The U.S. 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals has issued a ruling in favor of former NYPD officer Gilberto Valle — the so-called "cannibal cop." In 2012, Valle was fired and arrested for going online and talking about his fantasies, which included kidnapping, murder, sexual assault, and cannibalism. He was later convicted in a jury trial. A district court judge overturned the conviction, but the government appealed, hoping to make it stick. The Appeals Court has now affirmed Valle's acquittal. In the ruling (PDF), the court notes, "We are loathe to give the government the power to punish us for our thoughts and not our actions. That includes the power to criminalize an individual's expression of sexual fantasies, no matter how perverse or disturbing. Fantasizing about committing a crime, even a crime of violence against a real person whom you know, is not a crime." The court also addressed the government's questionable efforts to use the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act to increase the severity of Valle's punishment: "While the Government might promise that it would not prosecute an individual for checking Facebook at work, we are not at liberty to take prosecutors at their word in such matters."
While the Government might promise that it would n (Score:2)
Well LA has per crime now so what is next?
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You mean pre crime, loser!
In your face! Victory is mine!
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MOO
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APPS!
Re:While the Government might promise that it woul (Score:5, Funny)
Oh just kiss already
Re:While the Government might promise that it woul (Score:5, Funny)
Still a better love story than Twilight.
Re:While the Government might promise that it woul (Score:4, Funny)
We might be able to come up with a new programming method using recently open-sourced Swift and implement 64-bit hosts file software that pre-emptively blocks any crime from reaching the victims. I know a guy who might help us with this, he knows a lot about building high-performance hosts file tools. In order to summon him I suggest we all install AdBlocking extensions in our browsers and let it be publically known that we use such resource hogging low quality software.
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Furry and not fury? Hmm... I will probably think of APK in a whole new light now.
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Well LA has per crime now so what is next?
Thought police. They will arrest anybody caught thinking.
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Not sure why they'd do that. LA doesn't have a particularly high thinking rate. And it's recidivism rate for thinking is even lower.
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That would explain most Hollywood movies. ..
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What, fucking underage boys is ok now? I thought you have to be a priest for this to be ok.
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NO!
PEOPLE AREN'T REALIZING!!!
We can finally discuss what we REALLY want to do with APK :P
HAHA!
I wonder if he has a perty mouth
Famous last words of granting emergency powers (Score:5, Insightful)
More of the quote:
While the Government might promise that it would not prosecute an individual for checking Facebook at work, we are not at liberty to take prosecutors at their word in such matters. A court should not uphold a highly problematic interpretation of a statute merely because the Government promises to use it responsibly.
Pay attention the next time your senator or congresswoman or Attorney General or CIA head or ex head or President says, "Come on, Shelley. Give it a rest. We aren't going to abuse it."
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More of the quote:
While the Government might promise that it would not prosecute an individual for checking Facebook at work, we are not at liberty to take prosecutors at their word in such matters. A court should not uphold a highly problematic interpretation of a statute merely because the Government promises to use it responsibly.
Pay attention the next time your senator or congresswoman or Attorney General or CIA head or ex head or President says, "Come on, Shelley. Give it a rest. We aren't going to abuse it."
I wish people would remember in the voting booth that the government power to do this kind of crap comes from taxes.
And having "someone else" get their taxes raised because "they need to pay their fair share" is BULLSHIT propaganda purveyed by those who want to give that government even more power to use against us.
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I wish people would remember in the voting booth that the government power to do this kind of crap comes from taxes.
Except it doesn't, not really.
It comes because the people consent to the government having power, for various reasons. It may be because people recognize the need for an organizing force to maintain public infrastructure and essential services (the justice system being one of those), because of societal pressure to follow the status quo, or because the government has enforcers that quell any serious threat to their power.
Taxes are a by-product of government power, not the source of it. Yes, the government
Re:Famous last words of granting emergency powers (Score:5, Insightful)
Pay attention the next time your senator or congresswoman or Attorney General or CIA head or ex head or President says, "Come on, Shelley. Give it a rest. We aren't going to abuse it."
Generally in politician speak you could translate that to: "We are going to abuse you with these laws, now bend over"
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Context (Score:2)
This kind of holding is somewhat more important than usual because it is coming from the 2nd Circuit, which is one of the most respected appeals courts in the country. It will give it a little extra weight if the question is examined by either another circuit court or the Supreme Court in the future.
Someone should tell our AG (Score:4, Informative)
Loretta Lynch Vows to Prosecute Those Who Use 'Anti-Muslim' Speech That 'Edges Toward Violence' [dailywire.com]
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Loretta Lynch Vows to Prosecute Those Who Use 'Anti-Muslim' Speech That 'Edges Toward Violence'
What do you expect from an AG named "Lynch"?
Seems like the "identity politics" crowd these days worries more about backlash against muslims after a terrorist attack than the next attack. You know, there wasn't a backlash after 9/11, because the average American really can distinguish between "muslim terrorist" and "muslim". Really.
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I saw a video once of a woman whose proof that Obama is a Muslim was that his middle name is 'Hussein'. "Wake up, America!", she said.
Re:Someone should tell our AG (Score:5, Interesting)
Loretta Lynch Vows to Prosecute Those Who Use 'Anti-Muslim' Speech That 'Edges Toward Violence' [dailywire.com]
"UPDATE: Loretta Lynch, at a press conference yesterday, termed the San Bernardino shootings a "wonderful opportunity" to change the nature of police work:
We’re at the point where these issues have come together really like never before in law enforcement thought and in our nation’s history and it gives us a wonderful opportunity and a wonderful moment to really make significant change."
She's a FUCKING MONSTER.
repugnant (Score:2)
Seems to almost perfectly require Evelyn Hall's pithy description of Voltaire's attitude.
Nice to see a judge agreeing.
Glad it was upheld (Score:1)
This would have been a very dangerous precedent to set. As a society we have to stop being so terrified that something bad MAY happen that we police all potentially harmful actions. I'm glad no one was hurt but we have to be willing to accept a certain level of risk to have the freedoms we all want. Maybe he was going to kill that woman and that would have been tragic but it's nothing in the grand scheme. Just because something could happen doesn't mean it will and trying to stop everything that might happe
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I'd personally rather have the slim risk of being tortured to death and eaten than guaranteed oppression.
It's not a binary choice, you unutterable clown.
You might as well say that since laws against murder impact on your freedom to kill that it would be better to dissolve them.
Good Queen Bess (Score:2)
Missing info (Score:2)
He was later convicted in a jury trial.
Convincted of conspiracy to commit kidnapping, by the way. Just in case you thought he was convicted of simply expressing grim thoughts.
Our esteemed Attorney General may disagree (Score:5, Informative)
You know, not talk to the principal, or local law enforcement, no. Call the federal government.
No mention other people being bullied, of course.
So watch that rhetoric, people! The Obama administration just said they feel they have the power to "go after you" if you're found being
So what happens to this Georgia statute: (Score:1)
http://law.justia.com/codes/georgia/2010/title-16/chapter-12/article-3/part-2/16-12-100-2
2010 Georgia Code
TITLE 16 - CRIMES AND OFFENSES
CHAPTER 12 - OFFENSES AGAINST PUBLIC HEALTH AND MORALS
ARTICLE 3 - OBSCENITY AND RELATED OFFENSES
PART 2 - OFFENSES RELATED TO MINORS GENERALLY
16-12-100.2 - Computer or electronic pornography and child exploitation prevention
Of most interest to this discussion:
(e) (1) A person commits the offense of obscene Internet contact with a child if he or she has contact with s
What matters was the defendant (Score:3)
Then what is thoughtcrime? (Score:2)
Doesn't matter. (Score:1)
I just saw a famous feminist dox some guy on facebook because he used the word "slut" online. She tattled to his employer (an apartment complex). He was fired the next day. Can't remember her name. Clemintine Ford or some shit like that.
http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/real-life/news-life/sydney-man-fired-after-calling-feminist-writer-clementine-ford-a-sl/news-story/e1179d6bd723ab6e395c1e2735e4a157
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I just saw a famous feminist dox some guy on facebook because he used the word "slut" online. She tattled to his employer (an apartment complex). He was fired the next day. Can't remember her name. Clemintine Ford or some shit like that.
http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/real-life/news-life/sydney-man-fired-after-calling-feminist-writer-clementine-ford-a-sl/news-story/e1179d6bd723ab6e395c1e2735e4a157
Stupid auzzies voted away all of their own rights decades ago.
auzzie being auzzies is not surprising at all.
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Re:Instead should have HANGED the prevert! (Score:5, Funny)
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At least a crime would have occurred...
could you elaborate on that..? Are you saying that his thoughts SHOULD be a crime, or are you saying that if he was hanged right away a crime would NOT have occurred? When we convict people of thoughts and feelings that is a slippery slope to an Orwellian future.
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Yes but doesn't English do that all the time? Try '80 to 180 million', does it mean '80 to 180,000,000' or '80,000,000 to 180,000,000' ?? Causes me problems all the time.
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I think he's saying that hanging him would have been the crime.
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Gilberto "Cannibal Cop" Valle illegally used a police database to research his potential victims. This was illegal, regardless of whether or not he actually planned to use the information he gained to commit any crimes, and has nothing to do with the thought-crime part of this case. By breaking the law, Cannibal Cop committed a crime, so a crime did occur.
The reason this appeals court threw out the
Re: Instead should have HANGED the prevert! (Score:1)
Because the only thing worse than a postvert is a prevert!
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Because the only thing worse than a postvert is a prevert!
Maybe preverts commit pre-crime, which is what this is all about? Or maybe they just think about it... Aw, hell, now I'm getting confused.
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Actually, it's the opposite. They're saying you can't convict someone for their fantasies, no matter how disturbing.
Re:Umm...ok! (Score:5, Insightful)
No it was way more detailed. He was researching how long chloroform is effective and also used his access to police databases to look up potential victims. Separately its not that sketchy but all together its the planning of a crime.
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Wait a minute, you might actually be on to something here...
Although you would have to jail a bunch of really good authors too. Bummer.
Re:Umm...ok! (Score:4, Informative)
Actually planning a crime is a criminal action. It's called "conspiracy to commit" and people get put in jail for it.
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You have to actually do something more than just talking about doing a crime, for being guilty of conspiracy.
E.g. in Valle's case, fabricate chloroform, finding ropes, weapons and such in your car or house, a data collection for a potential victim he stalked.
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You have to actually do something more than just talking about doing a crime, for being guilty of conspiracy. E.g. in Valle's case, fabricate chloroform, finding ropes, weapons and such in your car or house, a data collection for a potential victim he stalked.
You also need more than 1 person. Just to be specific: 18 U.S. Code 1117 - Conspiracy to murder If two or more persons conspire to violate section 1111, 1114, 1116, or 1119 of this title, and one or more of such persons do any overt act to effect the object of the conspiracy, each shall be punished by imprisonment for any term of years or for life.
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It isn't just planning, you must ALSO take a step to carry out said plans. The actual crime is not the planning, but taking a step to carry it out.
I can plan all day with my wife and kids and anyone else about how to beat someone with a baseball bat. But if I don't have a bat, that isn't a crime. The moment I go and buy a bat with the intention of carrying out a crime, then all bets are off. Read the statute very carefully.
do any overt act to effect the object of the conspiracy
Have to advance the conspiracy.
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The moment I go and buy a bat with the intention of carrying out a crime, then all bets are off.
Since you just said he has kids, he was teaching his kid to play baseball.
Reasonable doubt and all that.
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And if he can show that he actually did that with his kids, has pictures showing them playing baseball with the bat, and they go to the park every weekend, then triple your point...
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Right. Planning involves more than daydreaming. But writing it down can be considered a part of planning. I think the prosecutors didn't take the right tack with this case.
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So I guess I should stop writing those murder mysteries.
Why again is Steven King still at large?
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You don't see the difference between writing a novel and writing that you are going to kill all your co-workers and how you're going to do it in explicit detail? Not that you hate them and would like them dead but that you are going to come in next week with an AK-47 and shoot them all.
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Heh....gonna have them Folsom Prison Blues.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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So I guess I should stop writing those murder mysteries.
Why again is Steven King still at large?
Most people can differentiate between fiction and reality. If you can't, I hope you're receiving suitable medical treatment.
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If conspiracy to commit was actionable on writing a story there would be a LOT of people in jail. Better than 3/4s of the population has probably violated the law in a story, writing or drawing at some point in their lives.
Remember those pictures you drew of a kid? Actionable conspiracy under your definition. For all the research this person did he never took a single action to make his plan real. He didn't buy chloroform, he didn't start building a kitchen and he didn't have a partner (regardless of what t
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Conspiracy is an agreement between two or more persons to engage jointly in an unlawful or criminal act, or an act that is innocent in itself but becomes unlawful when done by the combination of actors. There needs to be more than one person involved. It isn't really punishing preparations for a crime, you're punishing the idea of more than one person coming together with intent to commit a crime. The preparations that the parties are making is merely showing the intent to conspire.
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It seems silly that the difference between crime and not-crime is whether you wrote your thoughts on paper.
I get that society should be protected from imminent threats, but it seems clumsy to call it a crime when there are no victims.
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I think if he was just talking in generalities then it's not illegal. If you start talking about actions against specific individuals in specific locations it gets to be over the line. I suspect that what he had written freaked the jury out. I believe that they started thinking the city would be safer if this creep was behind bars. Understandable but if it was only a fantasy then he should never have been tried.
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This is the problem with conspiracy and thought crimes in general. Even if someone has a hammer and a plan to kill a particular person it doesn't mean they'd actually carry it out. We shouldn't be arresting people who haven't committed actual violence and there is evidence of that violence for which the person being violated has not agreed against another person. Otherwise we hand ammunition to prosecutors, juries, and judges to convict people who are nothing more than innocent victims in an even more f'd u
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Planning a crime isn't illegal either. If it were most Hollywood writers/producers/directors would be jailed.
When there is a planned crime, agreement between the conspirators, AND a clearly targeted potential victim? I think that's a crime, guy.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conspiracy_%28criminal%29#United_States
Re:Umm...ok! (Score:5, Insightful)
Or the alternative description is he was researching material so his writing was more accurate. Something authors do all the time.
For all the bluster of the prosecution, if this man was actually planning these actions and his documents weren't just a story why did he change the names of the people?
Maybe it's because he was just writing a story. If they thought this guy was a real risk they should have put him under 24 hour surveillance and waited for him to take action. Even if what he planned was real all they could arrest him for was researching a story. A vile, repugnant story but a story nonetheless.
If this guy can be prosecuted for what he did so could you for what you write on the internet.
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He. Selected. A. Specific. Individual. To be his victim. That's what makes it a crime.
Imagine someone writing up a plan to kill you, Feyshtey, on a particular day, with a particular tool, with express cooperation of a few other people. The police discover it. Should they prosecute? Or should they let it go until the plan is actually carried out and you were transformed into a corpse?
There is a huge chasm between "I hate that Feyshtey guy, I want to kill him" and "Ok, Bob, we will kill Feyshtey a week from t
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No, he selected a specific individual to be the object of his fantasy. That's what makes it NOT a crime. You know that, and pretending otherwise makes you a liar.
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Uh, yes? He was "not a murderer" until he killed someone. Up until that very moment he was "not a murderer" then he killed a person and became "a murderer". I don't know why that concept seems so hard for you to understand.
"I wanna be a murderer, I'm gonna be a murderer" is gangsta rap, not a crime.
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But if all a person has done is fantasize, or research, and there's been no purchase of materials physical actions progressing the act closer to reality, then it's THOUGHT. Thought is not a crime, and as soon as you start to blur that line you start to make it possible for any person in a position of power make a case to prosecute
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He. Selected. A. Specific. Individual. To be his victim. That's what makes it a crime.
Imagine someone writing up a plan to kill you, Feyshtey, on a particular day, with a particular tool, with express cooperation of a few other people. The police discover it. Should they prosecute? Or should they let it go until the plan is actually carried out and you were transformed into a corpse?
None of that is illegal, nor should it be. No thoughts should be illegal. No plans should be illegal. Taking action to further those plans: that's what should be (and is, at least for conspiracy) illegal.
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No plans should be illegal.
Try planning a terrorist attack and then claiming it was just a bit of harmless fun when the police arrest you.
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While the FBI has made a bad habit of convincing homeless people to plan terrorist attacks and then arresting them, to keep the FBI's stats looking good, non-corrupt police don't arrest people until they take some clear act to further the plan. For terrorist attacks, that usually involves acquiring some explosives or other weapon, and at least for the ones that make the news, the people arrested had done many such acts. Of course, corrupt police value "taking action" over personal liberty, and so you occa
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It sounds like a crime, but it is a harassment charge or possibly an assault, and then only if it was known to the prospective victim.
If it was expressed to a co-conspirator it might be conspiracy to commit murder, but another co-conspirator would be essential for that.
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I understand he made some preparation by purchasing a variety of restraint and torture devices that were found in his garage. Where the line is drawn is a bit subjective but that *may* count for some. It doesn't appear to count in this case, for whatever reason - I've not read much about it.
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It is a bit of a pre-crime scenario. The theory is that a planned act by more than one person increases the likelihood and the severity of any crime significantly; enough that any combination of people making serious plans to commit a crime need to be stopped before they are able to execute.
However, actual intent to commit a crime needs to be shared with the conspirators. Buying a gun could be proof of intent, but if the presumed plan the conspirators made was to try and kill their target in a way that wa
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If you even read the summary instead of just the summary title, you'd know that's actually what they said.
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I read (TFA) as a finding of guilt to commit conspiracy was overturned. Nothing about the status of thoughtcrime as an actual crime. Nobody ever suggested that the thoughts by themselves violated law. Just that, absent any other evidence, they are insufficient to create intent.
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If all judges were this sensible, then those who want to imprison people for "climate change denial" will be thwarted.
All zero people.
Well probably not quite zero, there's enough people in the world that there's probably one nutjob who says something like that. I'll bet you can't find a remotely significant number of people with such views.
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All zero people.
Lawrence Torcello blows a hole in that claim: http://gawker.com/arrest-clima... [gawker.com]
Though you're right, there (thankfully) doesn't seem to be a significant number of people who agree with him.
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If all judges were this sensible, then those who want to imprison people for "climate change denial" will be thwarted.
All zero people.
Well probably not quite zero, there's enough people in the world that there's probably one nutjob who says something like that. I'll bet you can't find a remotely significant number of people with such views.
Crawl out from under that rock, because you're WRONG:
Read a US Senator (Democrat, natch) call for bringing RICO charges against climate deniers [washingtonpost.com].
More here: Arrest Climate-Change Deniers [gawker.com]
And here: Is misinformation about the climate criminally negligent? [theconversation.com]
More: Al Gore Blasts GOP Climate Deniers, Thom Hartmann Says Throw Them in Jail [ecowatch.com]
Let’s give up on academic freedom in favor of justice [thecrimson.com]
Death Penalty for Global Warming Deniers? [wordpress.com]
WTF? DEATH PENALTY?!?!?!
Yes indeed - death penalty. And he's not
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The punishments suggested aren't far off from the punishments handed out for the crime of heresy in days past.
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Despite what you say, the senator is not calling for anyone to be imprisoned. He is suggesting the filing of a civil l
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Wrong again! There are no laws against climate change denial. For the simple reason that there are no laws against being self-serving, ignorant, and stupid.
There are laws against fraud, and criminal negligence. And there are restrictions on the allowed actions of monopolists and oligopolists. Penalties absolutely do include jail time.
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The problem there is that the numbers are so huge.. With no further climate change at all climate is already set to kill between about 1 to 3 billion people in the next 100 years, in the worst case scenario that rises to 3 to 5 billion - or more. Maybe the death penalty is a bit strong today, but the majority of the world already have their fingers pointed firmly at the USA and the West on this .. so if real climate change does kill a lot of people then we will all be taking a lot of collective heat.
Some of
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Redditors aren't people.
Then again, neither are we by those standards.
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Richard Stallman x Twilight Sparkle?
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