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OK, let's get some TRUTH in here:
THIS is the FBI ?sex offender? page:

http://www.fbi.gov/hq/cid/cac/registry.htm

See for yourself what it REALLY is!!! Also, THINK about such lists and the continuation of creating lists such as this. WHICH list could YOU find YOURSELF on??? wink

These links help expose the TRUE agendas at work here.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=1855771&page=1

http://saltlakecity.about.com/b/a/257300.htm

Quotes from: http://portlandme.wpadmin.about.com/?comments_popup=257612
1. According to data compiled by the U.S. Justice Department (http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/crimoff.htm#sex ), the high recidivism rate of sex offenders is a myth. Sex offenders have an overall recidivism rate of less than 6 percent over three years, and 40 percent of those who do re-offend do so in the first year after their release. More detailed analysis confirms that a sex offender?s likelihood of committing a new crime decreases the longer he or she remains free; in other words, if they?re going to commit another crime, it will probably happen in the first few years after their release.
Of course, this sort of data doesn?t make for good sound bytes for politicians seeking to foster a ?get tough? image to bolster their chances for election or re-election; but it?s the truth, as much as they may deny it.
Nonetheless, the supposedly high sex offender recidivism rates that politicians seem to pull out of thin air (when was the last time you heard one cite an actual study to validate the numbers they quote?) have created an environment where the mere presence of an individual who committed a sex crime five, ten, or twenty years ago is enough to cast a community into a state of panic. Given the misinformation and lies of the politicians (and the media?s dutiful reporting of same), it?s no wonder that some, at least, feel that vigilante justice is an appropriate response.
In the end, it all comes down to a simple question: Should our government be in the business of facilitating vigilantism? Certainly the legislators who wrote these laws will argue that that was not their intention, but the effect is the same.
These laws remind me of the ?attractive nuisance? concept in liability law. People who work with potentially dangerous equipment (circular saws, pesticides, chemicals, and so forth) are required to safeguard those items to prevent curious children (and others) from hurting themselves. If a carpenter leaves his circular saw unattended and a child picks it up and cuts himself, the carpenter is liable for costs and damages related to the child?s injuries. The argument that it wasn?t the carpenter?s intent that a child pick up and play with his circular saw is irrelevant. By leaving it unattended, he created an attractive nuisance; and he is therefore liable.
Creating a public hysteria about sex offenders, and then publishing their names and addresses on the Web, where anyone can access that information without so much as providing identification, is akin to leaving a power saw unattended. Anyone ? stable or unstable, honorable or malicious ? can access that information and use it in any way they like. This opens the door not only to vigilantism, but also to innocent people being killed because of mistaken identity.
If this information is to be made public at all (personally, I think it should only be available to law enforcement professionals), then the only safe balance between the public?s ?right to know? and the concept of the rule of law is to release the information only to adults who physically walk into a police station, present identification, and make an inquiry about a particular individual. This creates accountability and helps safeguard against random vigilantism.
In other words, if the neighbor down the street seems to be a bit too friendly towards your children and you want to check him out, that seems to me a legitimate use of sex offender registration information. But to simply publish all of this data on the Web, with no safeguards to prevent it from being used irresponsibly or criminally, is unconscionable in a society whose conduct supposedly is based upon the rule of law.
Comment by Bugsy ? May 4, 2006 @ 10:01 am
2. Anyone who values their liberties and who has studied history should be afraid - very afraid ? of these laws.
Long before Hitler killed the first Jew in Nazi Germany, he paved the way for the wholesale disenfranchisement of human beings by ? you guessed it ? attacking the rights of sex offenders. From 1933 through 1936, a series of amendments were passed to Paragraphs 173 through 188 of the German Penal Law specifically targeting homosexuals and others determined to be ?sexual deviants.?
The sex offender laws created under the Nazi Third Reich may as well have been the model for ?Megan?s Law.? They established the first sex offender registry, required sex offenders to register their whereabouts and to wear pink triangles, and established draconian punishments for sex crimes that included long prison terms, loss of voting rights, confinement in concentration camps, and (sometimes) the death penalty. All of these laws were justified by the Nazi?s in the same way that our present-day politicians justify Megan?s Law: to protect the children from sexual predators.
Of course, Hitler had other things in mind, as history shows us; and targeting sex offenders was just a way to establish the precedent of wholesale deprivation of human rights in preparation for his later attacks against the people he truly hated.
It?s doubtful that the German people would have acquiesced to Hitler?s rounding up Jews, Gypsies, Communists, Socialists, trade unionists, and so forth, and sending them off to death camps in 1933 when he first ascended to power. Hitler had to first establish a precedent that some people were subhuman and unworthy of human rights ? and he started with the most universally despised group he could find.
Anyone who thinks that this couldn?t happen again is delusional. The simple fact is that history shows that you can?t single out one group for deprivation of civil rights without weakening those rights for everyone else.
Comment by Liberty Lover ? May 7, 2006 @ 8:54 am

To learn more on the TRUE nature of what is going on visit this site:
http://www.geocities.com/eadvocate/issues/?20064

and go through it with a fine toothed comb.
Posted by: btljooz   Posted on: 07/26/06 You are currently: a Guest | Members login | Terms of Use

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Congress spanks naughty sex sites!  Reverend MacFellow | 07/25/06
Well, it keeps them from spanking each other!  HypnoToad | 07/25/06
Or themselves (NT)  enduser_z | 07/25/06
Not Barney Frank!  Reverend MacFellow | 07/26/06
What's an example of misleading?  voska | 07/25/06
Re: What's an example of misleading?  none none | 07/25/06
The misleading thing is the bill, not the sites  ac2_z | 07/25/06
Well...  Patrick Jones | 07/26/06
Of all the things they can do, this is it?  HypnoToad | 07/25/06
It's the same old story....  BitTwiddler | 07/26/06
So how do they enforce this?  bitflippper1 | 07/25/06
nannyware?  btljooz | 07/26/06
sex sites...  bgonetoo | 07/25/06
Realy  People | 07/25/06
Yep, Impeachment of the WHOLE lot...  btljooz | 07/26/06
If any of my sites were on US soil, I might be concerned...  B.O.F.H. | 07/25/06
I think it is all three...  Patrick Jones | 07/26/06
Parents = NAIL ON HEAD!  btljooz | 07/26/06
I think it is all three. . .  pencilpro1 | 07/27/06
Congress spanks naughty interns  Boot_Agnostic | 07/26/06
You have no children, they are owned by the government  Protector | 07/26/06
What you said  btljooz | 07/26/06
The idiots have officially taken over...  jasonp@... | 07/26/06
Idiots in DC  jmorgus@... | 07/26/06
That's a good start!  btljooz | 07/26/06
When will Congress learn  FamilyManFirst | 07/26/06
FBI running a sex offender registry?  Roger Ramjet | 07/26/06
They have AFIS...  ken_ballard@... | 07/26/06
Laws don't protect children  ProfKing | 07/26/06
FBI Sex Ofeender Database = Free marketing Tools for Pornographers  cyberscan | 07/26/06
Child porn  nydas | 07/26/06
Why did that take 162 pages? What else is in there?!?  dms350 | 07/26/06
Thank you for your voice of reason  btljooz | 07/26/06
What is more...  agbags | 07/27/06
OK, let's get some TRUTH in here:  btljooz | 07/26/06
I'd spend more energy  People | 07/27/06
What about spam with the porn in it?  g.douglas | 07/27/06
Now SPAM with porn...or just plain SPAM is  btljooz | 07/27/06

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