Yeah, the solution is to get Go Daddy to enforce its rules.Tech journalist thinks she's figured out how to shut down the Texas abortion snitch website for goodhttps://t.co/AkvkRKJq8O
— Raw Story (@RawStory) September 3, 2021
Probably not the best of ideas..@GoDaddy rules are that sites cannot "collect or harvest" info about people without their consent, or do anything that "violates the privacy or publicity rights of another User or any other person or entity..." #TexasTaliban pic.twitter.com/hMRITqrXTA
— Lo Sivad #ArrestTrumpNow #CovidIsNotOver (@losivad) September 3, 2021
Still, this website is reprehensible. Whatever can be done, needs to be done. You know; like this:If you're depending on GoDaddy to do the right thing you are clinging to a very weak reed
— AZSteve AntiWar since 1972 ☮πΊπΈπ΅π✌️ (@AZSteve54) September 3, 2021
Thinking outside the box: Since there is no penalty, at all, for making false or frivolous claims under the Texas Bounty Hunting Act, and since people outside of Texas can sue anybody *in* Texas...
— Elie Mystal (@ElieNYC) September 3, 2021
We could sue every single Republican in Texas for aiding or abetting abortions...
Of course, it’s not that simple:Again, UNDER THE TEXAS LAW... there is absolutely NO penalty for making a frivolous or wrong claim. You just have to file it, then the party you accuse has to answer and the court has to issue a ruling.
— Elie Mystal (@ElieNYC) September 3, 2021
Again, just thinking of GURIELLA LAW tactics to actually stop these people.
There is also this argument:/4 (As I read it the anti-SLAPP law's mechanism for dismissing a case - the procedural vehicle -- would still apply either way, including the crucial provision for an immediate appeal. But it only applies to specified speech, not all conduct covered by the anti-abortion statute.)
— OneHitPopehat (@Popehat) September 2, 2021
Filing so many lawsuits, do you break the statute? Or do you break the courts?When you are dealing with people who want to destroy judicial review, checks and balances, and the court system, saying "well then WE'LL file a bunch of frivolous complaints too" is just a different way of helping them win. Yes, I recognize it's a dilemma.
— OneHitPopehat (@Popehat) September 2, 2021
I feel like this is a little of what it must have felt like the week after the Fugitive Slave Act went into effect. It took a civil war to change that. What the Supreme Court did something that forces desperate measures and no one who knows what's going to work. There is nothing that is certainly safe from them. I think the Court broke itself.
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