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Yes, my complaint applies here.
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And so do the laws of your country.
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no they dont
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Yes they do.
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Within the bounds of the internet, you are accessing international cyberspace. There are no constitutional bindings within the internet.
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Just like your complaint.
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Edited by bastage: 3/1/2015 8:14:02 PMYet you have failed to explain how. My complaint has nothing to do with the U.S. and it's constitution. I don't understand where you're going.
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Lol! Epic Failure! You do know of course. I won that debacle.
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Not really. You're avoiding your inevitable humiliation with this horrid point of yours.
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Yes! I'm glad you finally asked and deviated from your one sided ridiculous stand point. The complaint you made was a requisition to adjust a certain point in a video game (which is online based). Which is totally moronic and ironic that you are trying to make a rule while telling me that they're no rules to the Internet. Arbitrarily you tell me that your complaint is legitimate (which is you trying to create a boundary) While at the same time you're telling me that the law doesn't apply to the Internet and my point is illegitimate. The point is, if the law doesn't apply to the "internationally bound" Internet than neither does your feeble attempt to make a rule since rules don't exist where things are "internationally bound". If your rule is legitimate than my freedom of speech/religion is also. Hence your complaint is completely and totally idiotic being that your wholesome complaint is that "I see a [url=http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin%27s_law]-godwinslaw!-[/url] symbol and this should be removed" meaning you either are taking away your own freedom to do whatever the hell you want.Or by limiting your self with your rule you were simply wrong. Checkmate bitch. And here's this. After I joyously broke down the false logic in this discussion here's the cold facts. the laws of the state/nation in which the user resides, the laws of the state/nation that apply where the server hosting the transaction is located, and the laws of the state/nation which apply to the person or business with whom the transaction takes place. So a user in one of the United States conducting a transaction with another user in Britain through a server in Canada could theoretically be subject to the laws of all three countries as they relate to the transaction at hand.[5] This is a direct piece from an article reiterating cyberspace law. Stop pretending like you know anything before you open your prodigiously stupid mouth.
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Edited by bastage: 3/2/2015 2:07:51 AM[quote]The complaint you made was a requisition to adjust a certain point in a video game (which is online based). Which is totally moronic and ironic that you are trying to make a rule while telling me that they're no rules to the internet.[/quote] I never even said the [url=http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin%27s_law]-godwinslaw!-[/url] logo was illegal, hence why this constitution crap you brought is retarded. Neither did I even come close to saying there are no rules on the internet. There are rules that prohibit illegal activity in some areas, yet that's it. You're bound by whatever rules are on a website. Here you are implying that a video game [i]is[/i] a website. Video games [i]also[/i] have regulations on what they can't have, and there are games that have had to be altered due to [url=http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin%27s_law]-godwinslaw!-[/url] symbols. This game, however, has a symbol that can be argued to not be taken out (even though it most certainly should). There. I'm not even going to finish reading the rest of your wall of text because (after scanning through it) this is the base of it all and the base is gone. When the base is gone, the rest falls down with it. P.S. I didn't ask a question lol you sound retarded. P.P.S. Reported for attacking me (yes I can report you because that's against the rules mr. constitution). P.P.P.S. You don't look smart P.P.P.P.S. Oh, and muted.