The specific tweet doesn't just not meet the statute by and large, it doesn't meet it AT ALL. Your extrusion that (even though the above person did not direct his tweet directly at the police officer), calling someone a "bitch" because it's vulgar (a word which is not mentioned in the statute from what I can see btw) and therefore constitutes indecency, clearly is a massive, massive overreach. It's an insult! It's not indecency!I said that specific tweet doesn't meet the statute by and large. I did state that it would have to be more. Like there being other tweets, or the person has a history of committing crimes against people after doxing them, or giving said info to people he knows will commit crimes. I am stating the tweet in and of itself isn't enough. If for example, you are re-tweeting to get the message across to a criminal group looking for a target....
This would mean that A: the U.S. first amendment doesn't mean diddly, and B: anyone using vulgar language about someone in passing anywhere on the internet, even in passing when the person being talked about is not present is guilty of "cyber-harassment" (which is an objectively funny name for a law btw), even though the statute was not written to guard against this specific situation, putting them on the hook for a ten large fine and a year and a half in prison. Authoritarian much? Yes. Crazy? Definitely!
Not to mention the butthurt fee-fees idea you had that insults on the internet also are cyber-harassment. If someone feels insulted over the internet, should the one who caused it go to prison for 18 months? Wow. You gonna have to build shitloads more prisons is all I'm saying! lol And I don't think the $10k fines will begin to cover the costs of this law either btw.
Also, how would someone doing other unrelated "bad things" somehow trigger a law which otherwise does not fit an alleged crime? The above statute doesn't mention anything about committing crimes against people after doxing them, or giving info to third parties who may commit crime.
