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#11 | |||
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Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: North Myrtle South Carolina
Posts: 244
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When they put the info into a log and MSP asks if they have a certain name on the list then they give them an adress. Thats kind of how i remember it but it was a while ago. And im at work and trying to type in between phone calls and customers. Call Joe over their, he has no problem explaining.
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#12 | |||
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Head'n for the hills
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: SoMD / West PA
Posts: 40,797
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Quote:
Md. Police Put Activists' Names On Terror Lists If the tactic was used once, the question that needs to be asked is: "How many times was it used?"
__________________
Life is tough, life is tougher when you are stupid. |
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#13 | |||
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MSI Executive Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Calvert County
Posts: 7,678
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Quote:
What I need is a list of characteristic features that I can use to visually distinguish between upstanding citizens like yourself and the dreaded drug dealer. And to your knowledge does Fred's have such a list of "thug-like" characteristics and do they use it to deny service to people? |
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#14 | |||
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MSI Executive Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Calvert County
Posts: 7,678
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Quote:
Is the purchase of ammunition for a gun a crime if you are not "registered" for that type of gun in the MSP logbook (which is not a registry according to them)? There are some who believe tracking the sales of ammo will help the police catch felons who should not have been buying in the first place. They are correct. It does help the police. But only by also ensnaring the non-offending public in a web of monitoring that tracks your legal purchases. Ammo is not a controlled item. Would you support a system where all sales of bread and milk were logged to better support the police in finding people they later consider them a public threat? How about keeping track of all who purchase alcoholic beverages, so to better stop repeat drunken offenders from driving under the influence? It would almost surely catch the drunk in action - we could link the retail register purchase with a state-wide database that flags transactions from known offenders in real time. If Happy Harry buys another case of beer, the state database can dispatch officers immediately to the area to look for his weaving car. That system would probably work. But to work...they need to track you, too. Even larger: Would you support a system where all transactions must be logged to aid the government if and when your time comes due? Perhaps we are all mistaken. I open the door (and my judgment) to any logical rationale that shows me how logging the legal sale of 2A related supplies can lead to the betterment of society at large, even in the face of the occasional bad guy getting caught. Slippery slopes look great from the top of the hill. |
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#15 | |||
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Past the Vanishing Point
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 101
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Eh... don't kid yourself. Overall most of us here are in numerous databases already, including the one this site/provider maintains.
Invariably your personal data & opinions are logged each time you interact in today's society. Rest assured if it's not by your own doing, the surrogates pickup the slack. Inevitably then, the consolidation of data into one superzone for the ultimate of accountability/vulnerability comes forth. Logging of data is here to stay & growing. The real question is how it's handled. That being said, maintaining the illusion of freedom takes a tremendous effort based on constantly redefining the fringe of perceived inalienable rights. Where that line lies may fluctuate but behind it understand: Compliance is mandatory. Resistance is futile. Digressions are intolerable. My 2¢ says what are we, you, I doing to define that line & the viable personal data metered against it? |
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#16 | |||
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MSI Executive Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Calvert County
Posts: 7,678
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I have a super-nifty alias online that
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#17 | ||
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Banned
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: St Mary's County
Posts: 1,585
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Doesn't always work.
Now, if you spoof your IP etc AND you're careful you may be able to hide. Better yet. Steal internet access from the idiots in your neighborhood that don't secure their connections when doing your dirty deeds. Try not to use the same user name across web boards. Use a name that is common etc. You can hide some of your tracks, but not all of them. |
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#18 | |||
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MSI Executive Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Calvert County
Posts: 7,678
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The joke is that my real name is...(wait for it)...Patrick.
I figure everything I write online eventually gets tagged to me anyway. It keeps me from getting too stupid. The Google knows all. But I still say helping the MSP track legal purchases of 2A items is slimy. At least "The Google" reads my email and forwards me advice on my next purchase. Now if the MSP did something similar - like settling the whole "9mm versus .45ACP" debate forever -- that might have value. If the MSP dropped me a line after shopping at Fred's to tell me there is a sale on .270 Win at Bass Pro coming up...I might actually willingly share my info. Hell, I'd even give them my guns once a month for test firing if they'd clean them for me in the process. I have nothing to hide. It's all about perceived value. |
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