- Joined
- Feb 4, 2012
- Messages
- 25,566
- Reaction score
- 36,346
- Location
- American Refugee in Europe
- Gender
- Male
- Political Leaning
- Independent
My vote is that he should win a couple of decades of residence in his own private room, with all of his meals and living expenses paid for by the federal government.
How dare he inform you that your government was spying on you! The balls! Lock him in the dungeon! :roll:
Judge: NSA domestic phone data-mining unconstitutional - CNN.com
I guess to some people like yourself, the constitution is just a piece of paper that politicians can wipe their ass with.
What he made public might deserve to be public, but he as a person, someone who signed his name to a document in which he promised that he would keep what he saw secret and then betrayed his employer and the oath he took/signed.
So you think a confidentiality agreement overrules the constitution? When I was a soldier I swore to uphold and defend the constitution, and to protect the American people. His oath was essentially the same. Nowhere does it say **** about defending the honor of the politicians who made unconstitutional decisions.
If they were murdering kids in dark rooms, would you still think he belongs in jail for reporting what happened, or is there a situation where you feel he would be justified?
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