Already we see states and the Feds trying to figure out how to push protesting behavior into something far worse.
We are already arresting and charging the insurgents. We don’t need new laws to get them.
“But what about investigations?”
It’s worth noting that the PATRIOT Act created a special “sneak and peek” warrant to target terrorism… which has been used almost entirely to go after routine drug cases.
Same thing will happen here.
The catch is clear: defining “domestic terrorist” will be hard.
I doubt there is clear statutory text that unambiguously distinguishes the Jan 6 insurgents from ppl surrounding the police station in Brooklyn Center, MN.
A determined DA will find a way.
In fact, it doesn’t even have to be a *strong* argument, just a viable-plausible one.
Just the threat can be chilling. And some will plead just to make the bigger threat go away.
Take the J20 defendants from Trump’s inauguration protests. Cases fell apart… after 20 pleas.
We already have the tools we need.
Expanded tools are always used in other areas.
For a political issue like this one, it’s going to rope in a lot of conduct ppl don’t want included.
Even weak arguments can have huge effects.
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Fair—it wasn’t right of me to say that the “we’re being silence” intellectual-dark-web McKinsey-is-too-woke types are annoyed solely over their inability to state certain racial views publicly.
They’re also annoyed they can’t dehumanize trans ppl openly too.
But it is fair, and not cynical at all, to point out that a HUGE chunk of what the “forbidden knowledge” types complain about boils down to not being able to openly dehumanize certain marginalized groups.
Thus their need for safe-space echo-chambers in which to do so.
Like I said when it came to opera-watch SCOTUS buddies, I can be friends and politely debate anyone over tax policy or the goals of punishment.
The “I don’t want to hear it” only comes up when they start making it clear that they don’t see certain ppl as full ppl.
I’d add, without sarcasm: I think I see a way to push for SCOTUS retirement.
Congress surely CAN pass a law saying that justices can receive $0.00 in royalties, honoraria, etc while in office. Prob can limit above-market returns on housing sales, etc.
It’s clear that outside payments—whether direct cash payments or cozy “teaching” gigs overseas or sudden land sales—are a non-trivial form of SCOTUS compensation.
A chunk unprotected by Art III.
Cut that off, maybe lifetime employment is less appealing.
“Won’t that reduce the quality of ppl who apply?”
1. The what now? 2. Short terms as a philosopher-king followed by big bucks? Think lots of quality ppl will be fine with that.
“What abt the incentive to look to that future payment?”
I’m not saying that the causal story here isn’t true, but I feel like at this point we should basically just ignore studies that are purely correlational with—AFAICT here—absolutely NO identification strategy beyond “we control for confounders.”
Like, this is an issue where reverse causation is really, really plausible—the vulnerability to schizophrenia CAUSES the self-medicating use of marijuana. Which makes correlational-only so so risky.
And that it may align w other such studies tells us nothing, if all are biased.
Given all the alleged benefits of weed, it shouldn’t be hard to create an ethically sound RCT that simultaneously tracks for these sorts of risks.
They did it for Vioxx with heart risk. Surely can do for weed.
Thread, on the murder--it was a murder--of a homeless man on the F train this week: on how we have consistently failed to provide adequate services, disrupted effective self-support the homeless have devised in their absence, and thru it all dehumanized them.
The coverage of this, from every source, has made the consistent, deadly, dehumanizing error of equating disorder with danger.
The claims of "threatening behavior" are simply asserted, although nothing I've read suggests he *actually threatened* anyone.
Can it be somewhat scary when someone in a mental health crisis acts erratically on the train? Sure.
But the time between stops on the F in Manhattan is ~1 minute. If you're scared, that's more than enough time to just ... change cars at the next station.
Moreover, by going to the opera w Scalia rather than shaming him, those who went w him failed to impose any costs for this racist behavior, despite being among the few anywhere who could. Which only likely encouraged him more.
(This applies to his takes on homosexuality too.)
Also, honestly? If you could go and laugh and have fun with someone who thought like this, it makes me wonder about the seriousness of one’s commitment to the rights of Blacks or gays.
How was this sort of thinking not repulsive on a personal level?