• catloafEnglish
    362 months ago
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    Oh like with the protests at Kent State?

    • azimir
      262 months ago
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      That was my first reaction. The Republicans want to blame President Biden for killing college students and suppressing free speech. They also want a generation of young adults to be driven away from the Democratic party.

      Whatever the Republicans suggest or want, it’s all too often to hurt the nation. Eye everything they propose with great suspicion.

      • Ultragigagigantic
        12 months ago
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        Whatever the Republicans suggest or want, it’s all too often to hurt the nation. Eye everything they propose with great suspicion.

        Republicans are moving to protect First Past The Post voting in the states they control. Do you want to use the same voting system republicans prefer blue states?

    • TropicalDingdong
      132 months ago
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      Tin soldiers and Nixon coming

      We’re finally on our own

      This summer I hear the drumming

      Four dead in Ohio

    • afraid_of_zombies
      92 months ago
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      I was thinking the same thing but then I wondered if there were times the guard came into a campus situation and nothing notable happened. Then it occurred to me that the piece of crap suggesting this idea probably wants another Kent state incident

  • afraid_of_zombies
    202 months ago
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    right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances

    • callouscomicEnglish
      22 months ago
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      Columbia is a private institution, so a lot of first amendment stuff may not apply specifically there.

      • crusa187
        92 months ago
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        Technically correct and will provide legal cover.

        However, it should be noted that historically protests have been encouraged on college campuses such as Columbia, and it’s only just recently that new rules safeguarding said private property have been enforced and selectively applied to those who don’t want to murder Palestinian children.

        Also, if we’re being so concerned about rules: after Kent State, Columbia instituted a rule that said police may only be called on protesters if both the administration and the faculty agree to do so. The faculty did not agree to this, which is why so many of them joined the protests yesterday.

      • Corkyskog
        22 months ago
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        Then they should reject all federal backed grants and loans.

      • afraid_of_zombies
        12 months ago
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        Yeah funny how it works. Pretty much freedom of speech only applies in your own home and yet my ability to record people is infinite.

      • stoly
        12 months ago
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        Yep. They’re shown that they are beholden to their donors.

    • proleEnglish
      22 months ago
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      Yeah, except this time we’d be lucky if it’s only four.

  • talEnglish
    122 months ago
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    The National Guard’s primary role isn’t really policing. If you have something expand beyond the ability of the police to deal with, okay, but basically it’s putting a bunch of people with limited experience in a policing role. It’s not the first option to pick unless the police can’t deal with it.

    “If [New York City Mayor] Eric Adams won’t send the NYPD and [New York Governor] Kathy Hochul won’t send the National Guard, Joe Biden has a duty to take charge and break up these mobs, Cotton wrote Monday on X, formerly Twitter,

    Biden – as with the federal executive in general – cannot use the state National Guard for policing like that without state involvement.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Posse_Comitatus_Act

    The Posse Comitatus Act is a United States federal law (18 U.S.C. § 1385, original at 20 Stat. 152) signed on June 18, 1878, by President Rutherford B. Hayes which limits the powers of the federal government in the use of federal military personnel to enforce domestic policies within the United States. Congress passed the Act as an amendment to an army appropriation bill following the end of Reconstruction and updated it in 1956, 1981 and 2021.

    • Dark ArcEnglish
      12 months ago
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      I remembered this where the 101st was sent in to Arkansas:

      https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Rock_Nine

      Turns out that made use of the instruction act to bypass Posse Comitatus. So, it’s theoretically possible, but I wouldn’t recommend him doing so. Especially because it’ll further normalize use of the insurrection act, which I don’t think is a good idea.

  • callouscomicEnglish
    92 months ago
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    On an unrelated note, Joe Biden is so damn old and been in politics for so long, he was less than a year from taking a county position when Kent State happened in 1970, and only 3 years later would be in the Senate.

  • thechadwick
    72 months ago
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    First off, we’re free speech absolutists and censoring Hunter Biden’s dickpics was the crime of the century.

    Secondly, anyone who disagrees with our unfathomably narrow worldview should be met with the full might of the state!

    Free speech! (but not like that)