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The Retarded Thread: Malice Metro Edition
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2019-08-04 at 3:05 AM UTCgaytor skin
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2019-08-04 at 3:16 AM UTC
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2019-08-04 at 3:52 AM UTC
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2019-08-04 at 4:14 AM UTCFried alliGAYtor "tastes like chicken". Not bad
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2019-08-04 at 4:14 AM UTCLanny is fucking gay
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2019-08-04 at 4:42 AM UTC
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2019-08-04 at 5:22 AM UTC
Originally posted by DietPiano Lanny is fucking gay
I actually did report everyone who didn't talk about pallets in that thread.
Lanny is either gonna laugh or ban me harder. Or both. I'm just waiting for it at this point. He's such an infrequent mod it's ridiculous he tries to control discussion at all.
Now hes going to read this post and definitely ban me. -
2019-08-04 at 7:15 AM UTCfollowing these latest shootings I'm pretty sure australian ISPs have DNS fi'ltered archive.is and a bunch of other sites
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2019-08-04 at 7:22 AM UTC
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2019-08-04 at 7:28 AM UTCyeah after the christchurch shooting they dnsfi'ltered a bunch, including dailystormer and liveleak 'until interest in his manifesto dies down', but dailystormer is still blocked.
I honestly couldn't be bothered testing to see how many ISPs are doing it but I'm on a telstra connection:
# nslookup archive.is
Server: 192.168.42.129
Address: 192.168.42.129#53
** server can't find archive.is: NXDOMAIN
# nslookup archive.is 8.8.8.8
Server: 8.8.8.8
Address: 8.8.8.8#53
Non-authoritative answer:
Name: archive.is
Address: 130.0.234.124
# nslookup 4chan.org
Server: 192.168.42.129
Address: 192.168.42.129#53
** server can't find 4chan.org: NXDOMAIN
# nslookup 4chan.org 8.8.8.8
Server: 8.8.8.8
Address: 8.8.8.8#53
Non-authoritative answer:
Name: 4chan.org
Address: 104.16.168.99
Name: 4chan.org
Address: 104.17.136.89 -
2019-08-04 at 7:34 AM UTCSheit negro shouldn't this be international news like when Turkey and shit start blocking?
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2019-08-04 at 7:36 AM UTCit's only censorship when brown people do it
it reminded me to pay my VPN for a few more monnths though, lol -
2019-08-04 at 10:36 AM UTC
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2019-08-04 at 12:02 PM UTCI wonder if writing a manifest and not doing a shootie would be great happy
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2019-08-04 at 12:14 PM UTC
Originally posted by Ghost I wonder if writing a manifest and not doing a shootie would be great happy
I actually thought the same, what if someone wrote their terrorist manifesto then just got arrested on purpose in a very clean manner but for a high profile crime, to where they get famous but definitely not convicted. So people read their manifesto and no one dies. That way you'd just need a terror threat and no actual terrorism. -
2019-08-04 at 12:25 PM UTC
Originally posted by Common De-mominator I actually thought the same, what if someone wrote their terrorist manifesto then just got arrested on purpose in a very clean manner but for a high profile crime, to where they get famous but definitely not convicted. So people read their manifesto and no one does. That way you'd just need a terror threat and no actual terrorism.
Defendants convicted of making terrorist threats face a range of possible penalties. Some states categorize the crime as either a misdemeanor or a felony, or both, depending on the nature of the circumstances. The penalties involved for a terrorist threat typically include one or more of the following:
Incarceration. Anyone convicted of a misdemeanor offense for making a terrorist or criminal threat faces up to one year in a county jail. For a felony conviction, a court can impose a prison sentence of a year or more. Depending on the state and the nature of the threat, a conviction for making a terrorist threat can result in a prison sentence of 40, and even 100 or more years in prison.
Fines. Fines for making a terrorist threat vary widely. Some states impose no minimum fine, while others impose minimum fines of as little as $200 or as much as $10,000. Maximum fines for making a terrorist threat can exceed $250,000.
Restitution. Courts may also order a person convicted of making a terrorist threat to pay restitution. Restitution is similar to a fine, but instead of paying it to the state, the convicted person pays restitution to the victims of the terrorist threat in order to compensate them for any damages they suffered as a result of the crime.
Probation. In misdemeanor cases, and even in some felony cases, a court can sentence a person convicted of making a terrorist threat to a probation term. The length of the term differs widely, but typically lasts 6 months or more, depending on the circumstances of the case and state sentencing rules. Courts may also order probation after the defendant has served a jail sentence, and may also require the convicted person to pay a fine or restitution. -
2019-08-04 at 12:35 PM UTC
Originally posted by Common De-mominator I actually thought the same, what if someone wrote their terrorist manifesto then just got arrested on purpose in a very clean manner but for a high profile crime, to where they get famous but definitely not convicted. So people read their manifesto and no one does. That way you'd just need a terror threat and no actual terrorism.
You'd get charged with conspiracy as if you were going to do it. -
2019-08-04 at 12:43 PM UTCWhat if you stated it was a work of fiction at the start
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2019-08-04 at 12:46 PM UTC
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2019-08-04 at 12:47 PM UTC'performance art'
'social experiment'
'it was just a prank bro'