And now we can all get drunk there! Yay!
And now we can all get drunk there! Yay!
I use the Sharedband service. The interesting thing is, your (local) internet service provider has no record of ANY site you visit if you use a service like Sharedband. All your internet traffic is un-traceable at the local level; it all goes through the regional Sharedband node (which may be like hundreds of miles…
They did not discover a speed limit for "quantum particles" (which could be electrons, muons, whatever)... it was a speed limit for quantum interactions within a particular lattice.
I would just like to add that more than four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation. And when, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the…
Serious déjà vu...
How much more black could some of these pages be? None. None more black, it seems.
"Just because the US can do something doesn't mean it ever would."
Sorry you misunderstood me, Daniel. If you look back at what I said, I compared nothing; in fact, I prefaced my statements with which you disagreed with an "alternatively..." a word which means different, not the same as, etc. I simply stated some additional facts. You said, "...a nation cannot 'simply pluck you from…
And also, if you're a U.S. citizen and commit a crime NOT on U.S. soil, you can be extradited back to the U.S. For example, some U.S. citizens have flown to Asian countries to rape minors. Even though the crime occurs in another country, the U.S. citizen can be extradited back to the U.S. to stand trial. Or, as…
It is just true that the U.S. can pluck someone from their home country and hold them indefinitely without trial.
"We asked the government’s lawyer at argument what an appropriate sanction for the prosecutor’s misconduct might be. We are not permitted to reverse a judgment on the basis of a lawyer’s misconduct that would not have caused a reasonable jury to acquit, United States v. Hasting,461 U.S. 499, 505-06 (1983); United…
Yes! Gizmodo passes on those rumors to us! They pass on... the rumors. It's pretty simple really.
Nope. If you're indicted in the U.S., and the country you live in has an extradition treaty with the U.S., you will be arrested by your home country and sent to the U.S. to stand trial. If found not guilty, you can go home. If found guilty, you will be prosecuted or executed in the U.S., depending on your crime.
There's an interesting phenomenon which deserves its own word. I don't know what to call it yet. But the phenomenon goes like this: