Omnileech
It shows that I'm right and you're wrong. You claimed that English common law had laws in place to arrest people for briefly yelling. I said that no, they didn't, and that laws in place were meant for protecting the public safety from threats.
No you claimed that there were no laws in place to prevent people from making a disturbance.
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You in turn presented an irrelevant law that didn't lend itself to your idea of what laws were like at all.
I presented a law carried over from British common law to the american judicial system.
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It came out in support of me!
Except it didn't. You bolded a part that said "usually" and took it to mean "always"
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The law was for things like rioting and actual threats to the public safety! Of course the law is irrelevant since it was from
A DIFFERENT GOVERNMENT
Hence the "carried over"
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and the bill of rights
DIDN'T EXIST THEN ANYWAYS
True. DOn't really see how it really means anything but you are correct that the queen's peace did exsist before the Bill of Rights.
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and the bill of rights
DIDN'T APPLY TO STATES UNTIL AFTER THE CIVIL WAR ANYWAYS.
Hmm? what does this have to do with anything?
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Wanna try a relevant example?
What would be more relavant about a tangent that laws against disorderly conduct were around since the begining of our country than the law itself?
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I'm done toying around with batting down irrelevant laws that don't support your argument. It's a waste, it's nonsense. Don't throw anything else at me as support unless it directly supports your claim. Your irrelevant law actually eroded your claim.
According to your gibberish yes.
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Stop lying.
A neighbor took a picture of Gates being arrested. He wasn't even off of his property before he was arrested for insulting a police officer.
Yes but he was out of his house. Which is really all that I said.
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Or the police department realized how ******** stupid it was to arrest someone for a non-crime from a police officer abusing his power to arrest someone for making him mad. There's no way the police could argue that the man was disturbing the peace in front of a judge without looking like complete morons. They saved themselves from a lawsuit.
No the DA dropped the charges in an unusual way. The police have backed up the officer.
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Well someone's not paying attention.
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According to you it only needs to be a few hours of sleep deprivation in order to be harmful to health and yet several hours of additional stress.
I NEVER SAID SUCH A THING.
Of course that wasn't what I was asking about.
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So anything that causes stress would also fall under this general rule of thumb? After all Stress has a well documented effect on our health and any and all of the situations you listed certainly can cause stress.
I NEVER MADE SUCH A CLAIM.
I am clearly asking whether it would fall under the same ruling as your ruling about sleep deprivation not putting words in your mouth.
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You also insinuated that I think that someone can be as loud as they want for as long as they want. You're also ******** intellectually dishonest for equating a brief yelling match to blasting music ALL NIGHT LONG.
And they can be so long as they stop when asked. And the statement was "at all hours of the night" not "all night long."
One is a definative statement. The other is a common phrase. Maybe I should have said Playing their music late or something more clear but the phrase doesn't mean all night long.