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@SNerd

I mean, this is the Biden administration saying that these transactions were troubling.

I'm not watching news here. I'm watching the accusations coming directly out of civil servants of Biden's own administration.

And so Congress is looking to follow up on their reports to figure out if there is anything to them.

@mnutty

I'm not asking you to do anything.

If you'd like to be informed then you have some reading to do, but it's up to you.

If you're happy to go about your day without knowing what's going on in DC I completely respect that.

Whether a person wants to be informed or not is really up to them.

@newstik

18 USC 201?

I don't see anything in there that prevents me from tipping the cashier at the convenience store.

law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18

@AmericanScream

But that's not quite factually correct.

*A* hostname and *an* IP address system are controlled by those organizations, but we're welcome to use different systems, to point our computers at different DNS resolvers for example.

So it sounds like you're arguing that things are centralized so long one only considers specific, central authorities.

Like, all computers are manufactured by one, single, central company, so long as a person only considers IBM.

Meanwhile, as you said we have a variety of distributed alternatives for the network infrastructure ranging from wireless (WiFi) through cellular.

@badbede

I don't see how that cause is inconsistent with the goal of becoming an interplanetary species.

Seems to me that we can be both moral and able to travel to other plants.

@dsfgs

I don't think that's a common definition of the term fascism.

Certainly the images that come to mind involve authoritarians who don't care so much about promoting business.

@lauren

Care to cite sources?

Because everything I hear from mainstream Republican outlets says the opposite, that guns should be taken away from such people.

I wonder where you're getting that.

@markmetz

Well perhaps if you knew more about it you might have a different sense of the effects of it.

One of the fundamental elements of Citizens United is that the rich always have influence in the US government, and the question before the court had nothing to do with them. The matter in CU was whether the rest of us would be able to associate to speak up against them and counter their claims.

So much of what we see now is exactly what the argument in CU was opposed to, but unfortunately the reporting on the case has been so terrible that people don't realize it.

@gfjacobs

@gfjacobs

Your proposing this conspiracy theory that just doesn't match the simple text coming out of the Supreme Court.

Your theory is debunked by the facts of the ruling.

This has nothing to do with my opinion. This is what the Supreme Court ruled, regardless of my opinion, and the conspiracy theory that you are spending just doesn't match up with the facts of the case.

Harlan Crow didn't declare that the federal government cannot suppress speech against public officials. That is a constitutional decision not up to Crow, one that is reflective of liberal values.

Again, if you think there's a conspiracy plot out there to protect our rights to criticize the rich and powerful, well...

@markmetz

@gfjacobs

I really don't know why right wing keeps getting brought up when this was a ruling firmly in the tradition of the left wing.

It's like, there's this conspiracy theory that we really need to support regardless of the facts of the situation which would debunk it.

It's more important to promote this conspiracy theory than actually look at the liberal sway of the ruling? More important to promote the sensational clickbait account in the press than appreciate that the ruling was about speaking truth to power?

I just think this is a very unhealthy way to go.

@markmetz

@dogcanyon meh, I know quite a few Democrats who use that term.

@SNerd you haven't seen the months of evidence that they've been publicly releasing?

From government records about troubling bank transactions through public testimony delivered under oath through even Biden's own words?

You say without any evidence as if whatever news sources you're following have been declining to carry all of the evidence that has been coming out for months if not years.

@dsfgs

But when we elect *and reelect* the government representatives who push for this stuff, that's not fascism, that's democracy.

It's our fault for electing these people.

@heideroosje

You say that, and yet the freedom caucus is making a TON of noise about how McCarthy has not delivered on what they wanted.

@mnutty

If you've been following the releases from House committees over the past few months you'd see the evidence piling up and showing that this is about Biden's own actions, not about political payback.

So they've released everything from bank records to sworn testimony that raise questions about Biden's actions, and this is the next step when investigation is being resisted, as they try to follow the trail of evidence to figure out what went on.

It has nothing at all to do with . The investigation is solely about and about questionable things he got himself into even before he was elected.

@AmericanScream

No, the Internet is not "totally controlled by centralized authorities", shown if nowhere else by your listing of decentralized pathways and pluralization of authorities.

If it was centralized then there would be one central control, not the multiple as indicated by your own phrasing.

@lauren

Bored businessman troll.

Yes, he's making money serving customers, but he has enough now that he's bored and trying to get attention.

And we're playing his game giving it to him.

@afouxenidis

I don't see it.

Facebook has a ton more privacy control to build private and semi-private groups than this has.

@newstik

I am aware of no law that prevents me from giving the Western Union cashier a tip.

@thisven

Well I think a lot depends on what each individual user is looking for from a platform.

For example, I personally don't expect any of these platforms to build community. I know others do, but it's just not a draw for me.

Rather, I think social media CAN represent a crosssection of the population, biased as it may be, which includes a lot of perspectives I don't agree with or enjoy, but that's the point: to engage with the world, warts and all.

It's unfortunate that so many have decided to stop lending their perspectives to Twitter, especially if those are valuable perspectives. That choice leaves with less good out outweigh the bad elements of society. The choice biases the cross section in a negative direction.

But my main point here is that a bunch of people left Twitter and are now complaining that Twitter doesn't have the perspectives that they themselves took out of it!

@briankrebs @jerry

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