FBI held back ransomware decryption key to run operation targeting hackers(washingtonpost.com) |
FBI held back ransomware decryption key to run operation targeting hackers(washingtonpost.com) |
TL;DW: In the US, the police owes you no protection. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Town_of_Castle_Rock_v._Gonzale...
> were a mandate for enforcement to exist, it would not create an individual right to enforcement that could be considered a protected entitlement under the precedent of Board of Regents of State Colleges v. Roth; and even if there were a protected individual entitlement to enforcement of a restraining order, such entitlement would have no monetary value and hence would not count as property for the Due Process Clause.
Case in point, the officer assigned to stoneman Douglas was arrested for inaction:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2019/06/09/scot-peters...
Case law stating that police have ZERO DUTY or LEGAL OBLIGATION to protect goes back to the 1850s. This case is merely the latest is in literally DOZENS of examples of case law saying this.
The Constitution and US case law very literally and repeated has said: "Your own protection is 100% ONLY on you"
And honestly this is why the 2nd amendment still is relevant and universal to all individuals.
Kind of like it is a doctor's role to try to cure you but you can't sue the doctor if they don't succeed.
The point of the video was police as a fraternity don't have any obligation to protect you, personally, absent special circumstances. Which, when you get down to it is sort of like doctors-- if I have a heart attack across the street from a hospital, you know, I'd appreciate them trying to save me but unless there is some special circumstance I'm not confident they're required to.
The FBI shouldn't continue to victimize for a (failed) chance at stopping the perpetrators.
Which has been done before.
At the end of the day though, they couldn't have known that would happen, and they made the right choice. The Kaseya hack was terrible - they were trying to stop that happening again.
*shocked pikachu meme*
Everyone in the US, including the FBI and the NSA have in their best interest a functioning economy without companies being ransomwared to death.
Seeming to be doing something useful is more important to that end than actually doing something useful, hence their colorful history of creating easy problems to fix and then solving them to great fanfare, particularly well-documented in the aftermath of 9/11.
It's much safer to find mentally unstable people, surround them by undercover agents and get them to incriminate themselves than it is to go after actual criminals.
An FBI agent wants to stop criminals and have a big bust more-so than they want to generally preserve the economy.
The police equivalent is that you don't expect them to be able to intercept every bullet fired everywhere. Particular if it is a the risk of their own lives.
In some countries, especially in central Europe, failing to give aid where reasonable can even be a crime. In the US it depends on jurisdiction.
Can you clarify this? Are you saying if a Dr fails to cure you, they are opening themselves up to liability, or they only open themselves up to liability if they go outside of standard protocols and fail to cure you, they are now liable?
I was under the impression that neither of these scenarios open you up to liability- that medical malpractice is an entirely different things. However, I don't know.
Additionally- this seems to create really bad incentives, where the liability-free protocols take precedence over a doctor's judgement.
The police are there to protect the government against threats to stability and the monopoly on the use of power. Police are always quick to defend 'their own' (other police) and government agencies/agents.
Most people don't hold much private property apart from maybe their house. Pretty much everything else from vehicles to toothbrushes fall under the category of personal property.
Private property generates capital for the owner without the owner performing labour, personal property does not. Police will protect the former, not the ladder.
That said, the police usually aren't especially interested in protecting business assets and property from being damaged or stolen either. Ask any business manager or owner who has had property damaged or stolen, and they will tell you that the police (in most areas) don't particularly care.
This has definitive harm for a potential gain against future potential harm, versus stopping an active harm at no direct real cost. It's a bird in hand versus two in the bush.
You can't use people in wagers like that.
You can't say that definitively. It seems unethical and incorrect to me.