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On Mar 10, 2025 at 9:17:06 AM PDT, "moviePig" <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:Surely you mean "manipulative and inflammatory" irony...
On 3/9/2025 6:32 PM, BTR1701 wrote:Behold the irony.On Mar 9, 2025 at 2:37:27 PM PDT, "moviePig" <nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:>
On 3/9/2025 4:28 PM, BTR1701 wrote:That's calling her actions illegal. They were not. You were beingOn Mar 9, 2025 at 1:07:48 PM PDT, "moviePig" <nobody@nowhere.com>>
wrote:
On 3/9/2025 2:29 PM, BTR1701 wrote:Exactly. Her actions being the post to social media. You called herOn Mar 9, 2025 at 10:04:01 AM PDT, "moviePig"No, I was *always* referring to the crime. Presumably, this is
<nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
On 3/8/2025 6:35 PM, BTR1701 wrote:You weren't referring to the crime. You said her post wasOn Mar 8, 2025 at 2:50:39 PM PST, "moviePig"Then you maintain that she's innocent of the crime she was
<nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
On 3/8/2025 3:57 PM, BTR1701 wrote:And since it's been explained to you (repeatedly) that herOn Mar 8, 2025 at 12:42:22 PM PST, "moviePig"I literally cited Google, which said that 'cyberstalking'
<nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
On 3/8/2025 2:20 PM, BTR1701 wrote:Being arrested for them by bad cops does not make herOn Mar 8, 2025 at 9:52:14 AM PST, "moviePig"Whether or not she was innocent of the allegations,
<nobody@nowhere.com> wrote:
On 3/8/2025 1:27 AM, Ed Stasiak wrote:Well, I hate to dash your summary hopes, but herLet me clear this up, summarily I hope:moviePigOur free speech rights are not limited to theBTR1701Arresting her for "objecting" would violate
Furthermore, State v. Bishop (2016) and
State v. Shackelford (2019) have reinforced
the principle that vague and overly-broad
interpretations of cyber-stalking statutes
violate constitutional protections of free
speech and press freedom.
her free-speech rights. Which, according to
your link, didn't happen. Had "objecting" been
her offense, she'd have been guilty at the
store.
time and place of the event we happen to be
commenting on.
The subject-line, as well as the article, claims
that a woman was arrested for merely *objecting*
to someone else's (political) attire. But, since
they weren't, free speech is -- in this limited
instance, anyway -- happily alive and well. She
*wasn't* arrested for 'objecting' (which occurred
at the store). Rather, she was arrested for
subsequent -- and illegal -- actions in pursuing
her objection.
subsequent action-- posting about it on social
media-- was in no way, shape, or form illegal. As
evidenced by the text and elements of the statute
itself, the 1st Amendment and the 200+ years of
jurisprudence illuminating it, and the fact that the
district attorney dropped the case instantly like a
hot potato.
they're what she was arrested for
actions illegal.
See? I can play the word-nitpick game, too.
...and not for "objecting".Yet you literally called it illegal right there up
*I* don't call the woman's post *anything*(And, yes, I do think the mislabeling here wasA rather ironic statement to make-- and I'm being
intentional and inflammatory ...especially as the
simple facts would've sufficed to provoke issue.)
generous here in calling it ironic rather than
hypocritical-- from someone who continues to call
the woman's post an illegal act despite having had
it explained to him in this thread multiple times
that it was the exact opposite of illegal-- it was
1st Amendment-protected speech.
Yet you're all het up over the word 'objecting'
being purposely inflammatory.
above.
is a crime.
post did not meet any of elements of the crime and that even
if it had, it still wouldn't be criminal because it's
protected speech under the 1st Amendment, your continued
characterization of it as illegal is manipulative and
inflammatory.
arrested for, i.e., 'cyberstalking'. No doubt she'd welcome
your amicus curiae.
Google doesn't know "this woman" from your cat, and is thusWas Google wrong?If it said this woman's post was criminal unprotected
speech, then yes, Google was wrong.
unlikely to have anything whatsoever to say about her. What
Google did say is that 'cyberstalking' is a crime. Was Google
wrong?
Are crimes no longer illegal now?You added the word illegal.What word(s) did I change to invent drama?Meanwhile, yes, I often feel compelled to scoldBut you're apparently not compelled to refrain from
manipulative verbiage.
using it yourself.
illegal. It factually and objectively was not.
the passage you find erroneous:
ME: Rather, she was arrested for subsequent -- and illegal --
actions in pursuing her objection.
post illegal, when it factually and objectively was not, something
you'd been informed of repeatedly at that point in the thread.
No, I said that she was *arrested for* illegal subsequent actions, not
that she committed any.
manipulative
and inflammatory.
Note that being "arrested for" something doesn't equal guilt. E.g.,:But if you characterize a person's actions as illegal when they're not,
you're
being manipulative and inflammatory.>It was because it happened in reality.But making a purported statement of fact that her post was illegal>
was manipulative and inflammatory.
No, it *would* have been, had it happened outside your imagination.
Do stick to those guns. You have another foot...
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