What a crock of pure shit. Reeks of desperation. One could speak of your retreat into this shell of blithering irrelevancy, crying "It's content," (dependent on your a priori and blind faith in the government always lies and the government is always bad) blah, blah, blah. Like I said, what a crock of pure shit.Vrede wrote:Yes, I get it, you are desperate to avoid the real issue, the one I was always discussing, the one this thread has always been about, the one you decided was not important about my post, and in your desperation to defend the indefensible - a massive assault on our freedoms and core principles - when even your own largely inconsequential distinction, content or not, falls apart among your own sources, you retreat into this shell of blithering irrelevancy. Crying, "It's not content," (dependent on your ahistorical blind faith in our government) is as meaningful as saying that it's only 115 million phones, not 121 million.
I wasn't desperate to avoid anything. I discussed one issue the entire time. If you wanted to discuss something else, that's your problem. If you wanted me to discuss something else, that's your problem.
Here's my first post:
[/color]Stinger wrote:Vrede wrote:I was making an educated guess above about the NSA and our failed drug war, just found this:
Did You Know that NSA Spymasters Are Involved in the War on Drugs?: A lot of people don't realize that the NSA has a mandate to "stem the flow of narcotics into the country."
That means that PRISM may have noted any of our posts here about drugs and the drug war. Knock, knock . . .
Next to impossible. PRISM collects records from internet companies, not content. The most they should be able to tell is who posted when, not who posted what.
There is still the NSA program for snooping emails entering and leaving the U.S., so if anyone posts from overseas, the Alphabet Boys might know about it.
Pretty damn clear what I was talking about from the get-go.
Did I address any other issues you were talking about? No. Don't try to blame me because you can't follow a simple frickin' train of thought.
Here's your reply:
[/color]Vrede wrote:I believe you're thinking of the Verizion, etc. phone snooping, PRISM is all about content and who posted what.Stinger wrote:...PRISM collects records from internet companies, not content. The most they should be able to tell is who posted when, not who posted what...
Wow. You said PRISM/content. I said PRISM/data. Then you said PRISM/content again. It seems like we started with a discussion about PRISM, content vs. data. It seems like you were following the train of thought. Where did you go wrong?
The only bizarre behavior is you ignoring the blatantly obvious and continuing with your delusions. You seem to think that you control all thought processes on the forum and everyone has to discuss your topic your way.
That's just more bullshit. I can take a sentence out of any post and discuss that sentence anytime I want to on any thread I want to. That's how forums work. You're not God. You don't get to determine exactly what every argument is about and exactly how every argument is supposed to go.
It wasn't deceptive editing. You can keep blathering your false, irrational, illogical accusations as long as you want, but it won't make them any more accurate. You're just plain wrong.
The only way I could have deceptively edited anything is if the part I left out makes a difference. Let me state that again. The only way I could have deceptively edited anything is if the part I left out makes a difference.
Logically, for it to have made a difference, it would have to have changed the meaning of the first part of the sentence. It didn't.
Of course, you can always explain how the end of that sentence changes anything. Here's the sentence: "The surreptitious collection of metadata fundamentally alters the relationship between individuals and their government."
Try explaining how retaining "fundamentally alters the relationship between individuals and their government" somehow magically changes "The surreptitious collection of "metadata" to actually mean "the surreptitious monitoring of content."
If you can't, your argument is just noisy nonsense.
My declarations of relevancy are valid because I know what I was talking about the whole time. The same thing you started talking about -- PRISM as content vs. validity. I reiterated it many times.
But you still have to show how leaving that off changes the meaning of the first part of the sentence.
Try explaining how "fundamentally alters the relationship between individuals and their government" somehow magically changes "The surreptitious collection of "metadata" to actually mean "the surreptitious monitoring of content."
Lying 20 times? Two or three maybe. And I'm exaggerating? My behavior's bizarre? I'm desperate? ROTFLMAO!!!!
If you're now going to lie about separating my sentence so that you could distort the meaning of what I said with your comment, that's just frickin' pitiful. As many people as you've asked to man up and you won't admit what's right there in front of you.
So where did you not separate my sentence so that you could alter the meaning and get your little false insinuation in?Stinger wrote:...So far, your best shot was a couple of articles in ThinkProgress
Your source until it didn't say what you wanted it to say.
where content was mentioned in the article . . . but not in the original source. I've provided an expert, Bill Clinton,
I clearly explained that a journalist who says his source says one thing when, in fact, the article he cites says the opposite is either sloppy or dishonest.
Maybe you can explain, since you're always right, regardless of the facts, how a journalist who says his source says one thing when, in fact, the article he cites says the opposite is a reliable source. Yeah, explain that one to me.
So here are some things you can explain to add a little credibility to your fantasies.
1.) Explain how you can say PRISM monitors content, I can say PRISM only mines data, you say that PRISM mines content, and we're not having a discussion about whether PRISM monitors content or mines data. Explain that one.
2.) Explain how how "fundamentally alters the relationship between individuals and their government" somehow magically changes "The surreptitious collection of "metadata" to actually mean "the surreptitious monitoring of content." You claim I changed the meaning by leaving it off. Explain how I did that.
3.) Explain why you get to determine what every argument is about and how it's supposed to go, regardless of what's actually being discussed
4.) Explain how I lied 20 times. ( i really liked that one.)
5.) Explain how my sentence got separated. You claim you never moved it. Explain how it got separated by your comment. (Maybe it was the same sort of magic where leaving off the last part of the sentence magically change the first part of the sentence.)
6.) Explain how a journalist who says his source says one thing when, in fact, the article he cites says the opposite is a reliable source.
You've made or implied all these. If you could explain them all logically and rationally, that would be peachy keen.