On Wed, Aug 29, 2012 at 1:15 PM, George Patterson < george.patterson@gmail.com> wrote:
On 29 August 2012 12:14, Ben Finney <ben+freesoftware@benfinney.id.au> wrote:
Adrian Colomitchi <acolomitchi@gmail.com> writes:
On Mon, 2012-08-27 at 20:30 +1000, Astrid Nova wrote:
Please have a look at and send on the article linked to below on an issue that could affect us all catastrophically. The article supplies a really good argument against what the government is mooting.
"Could affect"? Why the past tense?
That's not the past tense; the word “could” doesn't tell you whether it's past, present or future.
Rather, “could” in this usage is the subjunctive of “can”. Astrid is saying that it's possible, at some point in time, for the issue to affect us all catastrophically.
Agreed. The word may could also have been used. Regardless I didn't read Astrid's sentence as being past tense.
Back on Topic...
From the Age... Victoria's Privacy Commissioner Anthony Bendall has spoken out against the proposal stating that it's against the presumption of innocence that we value and believe in.
Cannot do anything else but agree. This is akin being able to ask the Post Office to open all the correspondence one exchanges and create a photocopy of it before delivery. Only *the potential *of this to happen (without anyone but the executive power in control) is of the nature to alter the way people communicate. Keep it for long enough and it will alter the way people think/react (instead of not trusting the govt and attempt to keep the executive powers in check - which is a *legitimate* distrust under any democracy - they'll reach a point of *not trusting each other. *I grew for the first 22 years of my life under a communist regime in one of the East European countries. I know how it rolls down from here and I know how it impacts the very fabric of society). Adrian