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I'm getting even grumpier.
Damn.
I was in a pretty good mood, until I saw this on the Washington Post website a little while ago: Quote:
I couldn't find any further information about this, not even the text of the executive order itself. Google was no help, neither were the White House or Dept. of Justice websites. Have any Dwellars seen anything further on this? Are there any Constitutional scholars in our little community? IANAL, but I have a few questions I'd like to kick around:
p.s.- Hello Kitty is worried, too. |
Very interesting...
Obviously, Dubya and his buddies found a loophole. Or could this somehow be related to the anti-terrorism bill passed recently? |
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It still kinda has a Nightwatch-type feel to it, I'll admit. |
Re: I'm getting even grumpier.
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It *does* sound potentially ugly... |
http://ocelet.hypermart.net/detention.jpg
*June 2002 Evil Terrorist Mastermind Hello Kitty is put on trial at the Special Military Commission for crimes against patriotism. (FoxNews) ;) |
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Remember, these are the same people who wanted to bomb China over a Navy spy plane. It gets rather scary that they make decisions based upon people's fears rather than facts. Last time a White House administration use fear to get what the people did not want: Gulf of Tonkin - which we now know to be a total lie and which another President sued in the Supreme Court to keep us from learning that truth. What is wrong with civilian courts that they cannot be 'trusted' to do justice? Or is it that civilian courts might first require proof? OK, I was surprised at the expression "Homeland Security" which is used in governments that aspire to military dictatorship. However to declare military justice when we are not at war? These are right wing extremists in power. Maybe we just forgot how extremist their thinking really is? The only government that works is a dicatorship dominated by right wing extremists? |
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and The President may introduce the US armed forces into hostilities in the event of
There's no question that we're at war. My question was about the authority of a "special military commission" to try civilians. MaggieL's right... it's all been done before. German saboteurs who were captured in the US during WWII were handled this way. And Lincoln certainly played fast & loose with the Constitution during the War of Northern Aggression. There are plenty of precedents... but were they LEGAL? I still haven't found the answer. |
Like most people in this room I am not a lawyer nor do I profess to be a authority on the constitution. But I do think the administration is taking the attitude that everyone involved with the Sept. 11 attack is in fact part of a militia, regardless of the citizenship or nationality of these individuals. When you think this through, what you then have, is not an assault on the constitution, or the law abiding citizens of this country. I would like to think this is what is happing and not a suspension of our constituently rights.I hope I am right.
:D |
Re: I'm getting even grumpier.
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What makes the President think he can override Article III (the judiciary) by fiat, I don't know. But it seems likely he'll get away with it. |
Star Chamber
Actually, the Star Chamber was an English court used by the monarchs to try nobles and suppress dissent, very secretive, lottsa torture ect... http://encarta.msn.com/index/concise...?z=1&pg=2&br=1
Pretty creepy parallels to Bush's new tool especially when you hear people complaining about our "unfortunate" inability to torture all the foreign nationals we've been picking up. |
As far as the colonials go, this is the kind of thing those guys would have started a revolution over, think I'll look at the Dec of Ind seems like proper courts used to be a big deal... Rep. Ron Paul actually used the "R" word this week. How long do you see these courts and the supposed temporary PATRIOTIC Act lasting? I'm thinking they'll become a permanent part of the empire... war without end and all that.
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Reminds me vaguely of Leni's War Communism policy at the turn of the centuary except in a litigatory framework not an economic one.
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Seriously, though, I seem to recall reading that most (but not all) of the provisions in the bill have a 4-year sunset limit. But a lot can happen in 4 years. Bush's executive order is another matter. I don't think there's any limit on executive orders, is there? Gotta go... gonna run out to the store and stock up on .30-30 ammo before they decide that my Winchester Model 94 is an assault rifle. :mad: |
I think Ron Paul was quoted in an Insight magazine article, Hafta look for it.
Nice choice in assault rifles there. Dad bought me the same for my 16th birthday, good little brush gun. |
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