[Vision2020] Teenagers and responsibility

Donovan Arnold donovanjarnold2008 at yahoo.com
Sat Feb 20 22:40:45 PST 2010


Schou,
 
1) I wasn't giving legal advice, just pointing out you don't have the rights you think you do.
 
2) The US Government does have access to Google's database indirectly.
 
3) Once your personal information on your computer crosses the US borders, which it does, the US government can do whatever it wants to get it. 
 
4) The US government does track currency. How you want to believe it does it, is up to you. Or you can think the US government doesn't track large currency movements because it doesn't think it is relevant. 
 
5) Any techno geek can listen in on your cell phone conversation.
 
6) If you don't believe that you consent to a search of yourself and property when you enter a federal building, trying running away from the medal detector after you set it off and see what happens. 
 
7) Since you want to be a lawyer, you shouldn't be giving out legal advice.
 
Your Friend,
 
Donovan Arnold

--- On Sat, 2/20/10, Andreas Schou <ophite at gmail.com> wrote:


From: Andreas Schou <ophite at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Vision2020] Teenagers and responsibility
To: "Donovan Arnold" <donovanjarnold2008 at yahoo.com>
Cc: vision2020 at moscow.com, "Kai Eiselein" <fotopro63 at hotmail.com>
Date: Saturday, February 20, 2010, 11:23 PM










 
Did you know the United States Federal Government has access to Google Database which holds and retains for years every thing you looked up on its search engine?
 
Did you know the US Government doesn't need a warrant to access and record your conversations on a wireless phone?
 
Did you know the US Government can scan and read your mail without opening it and use Optical Recognition Software to read and store every word?







Did you know there is passive transmitter in your dollar bill which the government can read within special equipment and tell exactly how much cash you have on you (hold it up to the light, you will see it)?
 
Did you know when you enter an airport or any federal building you automatically forfeit you right to refuse a search of you and your property?


(1) There is no such thing as a "passive transmitter," considering that transmission is inherently active. Additionally, dollar bills do not contain RFID tags. Neither do $20 notes.


(2) The US government does indeed need a warrant to access wireless phone conversations. Unless it's unencrypted, which I don't believe happens anymore.


(3) This doesn't happen either. It may be possible with a warrant, but certainly not without one.


(4) Google has a federal law enforcement pen register, but it's not accessible at will by federal law enforcement.


(5) For someone who hates attorneys so much, you certainly do love giving legal advice.






      
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