If the terrorists hate our freedom, they'll be vomiting with rage with rage when they discover that the Supreme Court has quietly kicked the Digital Millenium Copyright Act in the jewels today. By declining to review a 2003 decision by the District of Columbia Court of Appeals which stated that the Recording Industry can't demand the identities of file-swappers using a mere supoena, the Supreme Court left it standing. This move was a bold strike at the freedom-hating terrorists. I predict that this move will incite terrorist attacks on the civilian population by militant jihadists and the recording industry. They may even join forces, mixing waves of suicide bombings with an intense legal assault of teens and senior citizens who share the latest Destiny's Child and Usher tracks. I can hear the fundamentalist recording industry execs now: "Every act of copyright infringement is like a dagger in the ear of Allah! "
Of course, the recording industry will inevitable proceed with more modification of our federal laws using the senators and congressmen they purchased (*CoughCoughOrinHatchforexampleCough*) with anti-freedom legislation (*CoughCoughINDUCE ActCough*) which will bring a tear of joy to Mullah Omar's eye.