There Are at Least 20 National Pricing

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Ahad
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Joined: Mon Jul 04, 2022 6:47 am

There Are at Least 20 National Pricing

Post by Ahad »

The Facebook page "On_Array" posted a picture earlier, which said that the United States has at least 20 national security laws, of which the maximum penalty is the death penalty. [1] Another Facebook page, Rainforest, refuted with another image, stating that "the vast majority do not involve American civilians, some laws have been removed, and many have nothing to do with national security at all." [2] 98056112_3950542068353033_91729523506151 Image source: "On the Array" Facebook 99297683_2972532402813943_74700966062939 Image source: "Rainforest" Facebook If we want to compare U.S. legislation involving national security with the "Hong Kong version of the National Security Law" that has recently come into focus,

we should compare the actual provisions and the political system, rather than simply look at the number of provisions. The following only checks whether the 10 "US National Security Laws" mentioned in the picture actually exist (the other 10 refer to another article) . Since the original image is only in Chinese, this article refers to similar content from the May 5 Ta Kung Pao article titled "20 US National Security Pricing
Laws Can Be Abused" [3] to assist in determining the relevant US legislation in question. 11) Diplomatic Missions Act - Existence The Foreign Missions Act regulates diplomatic missions in the United States. [1] Earlier this year, the U.S. government listed five Chinese state-run media outlets operating in the U.S., including Xinhua News Agency and China Global Television Network, as “diplomatic missions,” making these companies subject to the “Diplomatic Missions Act”, including the requirement to register their properties and employees,

etc. [2] 12) "Decree on Sanctions on Persons Disclosing National Economic and Commercial Information" - no corresponding provision found The Ta Kung Pao article has only one sentence: "The Congress promulgated the "Decree on Sanctions for Disclosing National Economic and Commercial Information" in September 1988, replacing the previous inaction or dismissal with a sentence of 3 to 8 years in prison." Searching for this "decree" often only turns up articles with similar content - referring to the 20 national security laws in the United States. [3] After limiting the time of search results, the first two articles that mentioned this "decree" were "Serial (3) Evolution of U.S. National Security Law" from "Daily Toutiao" and "On National Security in the New Situation". The Perfection of the Legal System". [4][5] The article in "Daily Toutiao" also stated that the decree was promulgated in September 1988 and sentenced to 3 to 8 years in prison. Act", which is punishable by 5 to 10 years in prison.
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