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Old 31-05-2006, 22:10
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High Court Trims Whistleblower Rights

With each new year, the government takes away more individual right as people are made to become slaves of the institution.

I say, if you're going to fuck me, don't do it little-by-little.
Just fuck me real hard, all at once, and get this shit over with.


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High court Trims Whistleblower Rights

The Supreme Court rules public employees don't have free speech rights for what they say as part of their jobs.

By: Compiled from staff, wire reports
Published May 31, 2006

http://www.sptimes.com/2006/05/31/Wo...ims_whis.shtml

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court scaled back protections for government workers who blow the whistle on official misconduct Tuesday, a 5-4 decision in which new Justice Samuel Alito cast the deciding vote.

In a victory for the Bush administration, justices said the 20-million public employees do not have free-speech protections for what they say as part of their jobs.

The ruling affects only constitutional free-speech claims related to work, the court said, not the rights of public employees off the job. Nor does it affect state and federal labor laws or whistleblower protection statutes, the court said.

Critics predicted the impact would be sweeping, from silencing police officers who fear retribution for reporting department corruption, to subduing federal employees who want to reveal problems with government hurricane preparedness or terrorist-related security.

Supporters said that it will protect governments from lawsuits filed by disgruntled workers pretending to be legitimate whistleblowers.

For the roughly 500,000 state and local public employees in Florida, the impact will likely be muted because state law includes strong free-speech protections. But any federal employee in the state - be it an FBI agent, a Veteran's Administration nurse or a soldier - will be affected by Tuesday's ruling, said Tampa lawyer John Lauro, a former federal prosecutor who specializes in whistleblower cases.

Also possibly affected are any state or local public employees whose salary derives from federal pass-through funds, such as a university researcher receiving a federal grant.

"This is disastrous for exposing federal wrongdoing,'' Lauro said. "This says those people should be discouraged from voicing concerns. It effectively puts a muzzle on them.''

Gene Schaerr, a lawyer for the International Municipal Lawyers Association, an organization of local government attorneys that supported the L.A. County District Attorney's Office, said the ruling "allows local and state governments the appropriate degree of oversight of their employees, without really impinging upon their First Amendment right to speak out as private citizens."

The ruling was perhaps the clearest sign yet of the Supreme Court's shift with the departure of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and the arrival of Alito.

A year ago, O'Connor wrote a 5-4 decision that encouraged whistleblowers to report sex discrimination in schools. The current case was argued in October but not resolved before her retirement in late January.

A new argument session was held in March with Alito on the bench. He joined the court's other conservatives in Tuesday's decision, which split along traditional conservative-liberal lines.

Exposing government misconduct is important, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy wrote for the majority. Kennedy wrote that many "powerful" rules still "provide checks" on supervisors.

"We reject, however, the notion that the First Amendment shields from discipline the expressions employees make pursuant to their professional duties," Kennedy wrote.

The ruling overturned an appeals court decision that said Los Angeles County prosecutor Richard Ceballos was constitutionally protected when he wrote a memo questioning whether a county sheriff's deputy had lied in a search warrant affidavit. Ceballos had filed a lawsuit claiming he was demoted and denied a promotion for trying to expose the lie.

Kennedy said if the superiors thought the memo was inflammatory, they had the authority to punish him.

"Official communications have official consequences, creating a need for substantive consistency and clarity. Supervisors must ensure that their employees' official communications are accurate, demonstrate sound judgment, and promote the employer's mission," Kennedy wrote.

In his dissent, Justice David Souter wrote: "Private and public interests in addressing official wrongdoing and threats to health and safety can outweigh the government's stake in the efficient implementation of policy."

Souter was joined by Justices John Paul Stevens and Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Justice Stephen Breyer also supported Ceballos, but on different grounds.

The ruling upheld the position of the Bush administration, which had joined the district attorney's office in opposing absolute free-speech rights for whistleblowers. President Bush's two nominees, Alito and Chief Justice John Roberts, signed onto Kennedy's opinion but did not write separately.

Employment attorney Dan Westman said the ruling frees government managers to make necessary personnel actions, like negative performance reviews or demotions, without fear of frivolous lawsuits.

"I don't think he's unleashed a wave of terminations," Westman said.

Schaerr, a former government attorney, said the ruling keeps courts from meddling in the business of local governments. "It's not the role of the First Amendment to be an all-purpose whistleblower law," he said.

The court's decision immediately prompted calls for Congress to strengthen protections for workers.

Kennedy said government workers "retain the prospect of constitutional protection for their contributions to the civic discourse." They do not, Kennedy said, have "a right to perform their jobs however they see fit."

Supreme court rejects appeal in Boy Scout case

The Supreme Court rejected an appeal Tuesday from an atheist father over Boy Scout recruiting at his son's public school.

John Scalise had asked the court to bar public schools from opening their doors to Boy Scout recruiters and promoting membership, arguing that the group discriminates against nonreligious boys and parents by denying them membership if they don't swear to religious oaths.

Scalise's dispute with the Scouts dates back to 1998, when his son was a third-grader in Mount Pleasant, Mich.

He says he and his son were barred from a Scout program at the elementary school because they would not pledge "to do my duty to God and my country." They are nonreligious Humanists.

Michigan courts ruled that the school-Scout partnership did not advance religion in violation of constitutional dictates.

High court agrees to hear Philip Morris appeal

WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court said Tuesday it will decide if tobacco giant Philip Morris must pay nearly $80-million in damages to the family of a longtime smoker, a case that could shield companies from large jury awards if the company wins.

Lawyers on both sides of the issue said the case could determine whether the high court will place limits on punitive damage awards in a variety of cases beyond tobacco.

At $79.5-million, the award in the Oregon case is more than 150 times the $521,000 actual damages awarded by the jury.

Tallahassee deputy bureau chief Joni James contributed to this report, which includes information from the Associated Press and Washington Post.
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There WAS a day when I believed that this country was worth fighting and dying for, but I don't believe that anymore.

Since the free nation that I would have fought to defend no longer exist, why should I (or anyone) even bother trying?
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Old 31-05-2006, 23:28
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There are many TYPES of propaganda,
whichever TYPE we choose to believe is our own fault...

Freedom is for those who wish to embrace it, some use it and some abuse it,
some live it and many have died for it. Tolerance and persecution are two words which never coexist, yet under freedoms unwavering guidance both can be expressed in a manner unlike anywhere else. A closed mind harbors ignorance and pestilence, while an open mind promotes knowledge and progression.
Freedom is a gift I will never take for granted.
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Old 31-05-2006, 23:53
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Freedom is an illusion in america. We are all brought up being taught that its a free country that accepts everyone and doesnt discriminate. This is so far from the truth its rediculous. The sooner people realize this the sooner somethign will be done about it. America needs a revolution, and needs to be disbanded back into tribes where people of like beliefs can live in harmony with each other without fear of persecution of restriction of "freedoms"
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Old 01-06-2006, 01:23
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ant-Man
Tolerance and persecution are two words which never coexist, yet under freedoms unwavering guidance both can be expressed in a manner unlike anywhere else.
What if you tolerate persecution?

Sorry, just being pedantic and facetious.

but yeah, i think a lot of societies toloerate intolerance. I grew up assuming (naively) that bigotry was eventually to be a thing of the past.

But now i assume bigotry is one of those things every moral person should stand against but is inevitable due to being ingrained in the nature pf man.

A bit like war i suppose.
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Old 06-06-2006, 16:34
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Loving the title, Woodie. The sentiment is spot on, it's drip-drip fascism.
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Old 06-06-2006, 17:22
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Meanwhile on this day - 6/6/6 - our president in Washington is showing his freedom-loving nature by trying to make discrimination against a certain segment of the population the Constitutional law of the land. If he suceeds, then soon we can be free to go beat the bloody hell out of certain people. Oh boy! Then we can get jobs running the gas-chambers in the deserts. Yay!
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Old 07-06-2006, 02:53
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That amendment is going to be a hard sell to the American people, I hope. If two people want to get married, so be it. No matter what sex they are.
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Old 07-06-2006, 09:25
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What a fantastic way to make corruption and scandal that much easier to obtain. If something is going on at your work place that you do not believe is right, why would it be wrong to tell somebody about it, if it is an unjust acusation it will be aquited. This is such a huge step back for the American people it is nearly impossible to comprehend why it can be allowed. Im not talking about legally allowed, how can somebody go out and make a law saying you should keep your mouth shut when something happens and not be fired if not beaten for its incredible display of setting this country back 100 years. These kinds of decisions should be left to the people, because that is exactly who it effects. Let the country take a vote on it for christ sake, and if it doesnt turn out in the best interest of the people with power, go fucking cry to a nation who gives a fuck.
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Old 20-09-2007, 21:41
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Re: Just Fuck Me, Already!

Another fine fucking example:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DF6D45l8vm8
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Old 20-09-2007, 22:15
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Re: Just Fuck Me, Already!

I guess this means no more coffee mugs that say "world's #1 pepsi licker" and the like.
carrion what an ironic name.....

Last edited by allyourbase; 21-09-2007 at 01:57.
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