But Surely This Doesn’t Mean We Can’t Still Find A Civil Liberty To Piss On Somewhere?
April 1st, 2008
Internet predation? Horseshit.
Anyone not see that coming?
A lot of parental worries about Internet sex predators are unjustified, according to new research by a leading center that studies crimes against children.
“There’s been some overreaction to the new technology, especially when it comes to the danger that strangers represent,” said Janis Wolak, a sociologist at the Crimes against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire in Durham.
“Actually, Internet-related sex crimes are a pretty small proportion of sex crimes that adolescents suffer,” Wolak added, based on three nationwide surveys conducted by the center.
Two of the surveys contacted 3,000 Internet users aged 10-17 in 2000 and again in 2005. The third sums up findings from 612 interviews with investigators at a nationally representative sample of agencies that deal with Internet sex crimes involving children.
In an article titled “Online ‘Predators’ and Their Victims,” which appears Tuesday in American Psychologist, the journal of the American Psychological Association, Wolak and co-researchers examined several fears that they concluded are myths.
Bad Idea, Indeed
March 26th, 2008
There’s a kind of sublime serendipity herein, right?
What the cops are looking for as a pretext to perform warrantless searches are exactly what is needed to ensure the cops don’t, well, perform warrantless searches.
(Thanks, NBC.)
Police are asking residents to submit to voluntary searches in exchange for amnesty under the District’s gun ban. They passed out fliers requesting cooperation on Monday.
The program will begin in a couple of weeks in the Washington Highlands neighborhood of southeast Washington and will later expand to other neighborhoods. Officers will go door to door asking residents for permission to search their homes.
Police Chief Cathy L. Lanier said the “safe homes initiative” is aimed at residents who want to cooperate with police. She gave the example of parents or grandparents who know or suspect their children have guns in the home.
Community leaders went door to door in Ward 8 Monday to advise residents not to invite police into their homes to search for weapons.
“Bad idea,” said D.C. School Board member William Lockridge. “I think the people should not open your doors under any circumstances, don’t even crack your door, unless someone has a warrant for your arrest.
So What The Fuck’s Wrong With That?
March 24th, 2008
Inculcating a slave mentality from preschool on.










