NaasPreacher (C4K)
Well-Known Member
He wasn't in "military service"? He was...devoted to the enemy.
Fine, let due process decide that and authorise the executive to act.
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He wasn't in "military service"? He was...devoted to the enemy.
What is there to decide, he admitted it! He is a self professed militant jihadist who used his ability to speak english in his recruitment of other militia. He was in an armed convoy. Our military took him out. No impeachable offense.Fine, let due process decide that and authorise the executive to act.
Even that exception seems to deal only with those in military service. This certainly needs to be clarified. As it is the president is on thin ice at best.
On the differences.
The police do not have the right to simply shoot a suspect on sight. There must be an attempt to arrest him. Even the criminal runs then he puts himself at risk.
In Anwar's case there was no rush. The president had almost two years to get judicial or legislative backing. There is no doubt he would have got it. He simply usurped their authority. That is the problem here.
"Where hostiles go, there is the possibility of hostilities. The U.S. has never accepted the proposition that if you leave the active battlefield, suddenly you are no longer targetable," Kenneth Anderson, an international law scholar at American University's Washington College of Law
Interestingly he also says that the precedent had already been set through 2 world wars as citizens who take up arms with enemy forces have been considered legitimate targets even if they are outside what is traditionally considered the battlefield.
Though I am never in favor of the use of force as a primary means of resolving conflict, this was a legal act by the President.
There are no grounds for impeachment here. (though isn't it ironic how many evangelical/republicans just want anything to use against the President?)
When Congressman Paul says stuff like this he proves more and more why he is incapable of fulfilling the office to which he aspires.
I hope that is not referring to me - according to most GOP/Evangelicals on the board I am an Obamanite.
I would be interested to see how a president issuing a death warrant against a US citizen without any legislative or judicial action is legal. There is a process, he ignored it.
What this president did in this case was totally legal and justified as this man forfeited his civil protections when he left the US and became an enemy of the US.
And what court has ruled this? What law states this?
I am greatly bothered by one man having the power to decide which US citizens live and which die according to his interpretation of the law. That is why we have courts.
>In Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137 (1803), the U.S. Supreme Court, per Chief Justice John Marshall, ruled that the ultimate authority for determining the Constitution’s meaning lay with the judicial branch of government through the power of judicial review. Pursuant to this power, courts are authorized to review laws enacted by government officials and invalidate those that violate the Constitution.
Thanks for reminding me of this ruling. You all hate it, yes?
>In Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 137 (1803), the U.S. Supreme Court, per Chief Justice John Marshall, ruled that the ultimate authority for determining the Constitution’s meaning lay with the judicial branch of government through the power of judicial review. Pursuant to this power, courts are authorized to review laws enacted by government officials and invalidate those that violate the Constitution.
Thanks for reminding me of this ruling. You all hate it, yes?
It is easy to throw away principles in the death of a truly dispicable person, but you are left with precedents...and giving any executive the ability to decide citizenship status unilaterally, guilt outside of courts, and commencing an execution without review is a very poor precedent indeed.
One of the great privilidges our founders fought and died for was that if I am ever accused of a serious crime, as an American citizen, my guilt is not determined by any government official, but by a jury of my fellow citizens. If we compromise such lofty ideals over pragmatism, I believe we endanger the very freedoms for which we are fighting.
It is easy to throw away principles in the death of a truly dispicable person, but you are left with precedents...and giving any executive the ability to decide citizenship status unilaterally, guilt outside of courts, and commencing an execution without review is a very poor precedent indeed.
One of the great privilidges our founders fought and died for was that if I am ever accused of a serious crime, as an American citizen, my guilt is not determined by any government official, but by a jury of my fellow citizens. If we compromise such lofty ideals over pragmatism, I believe we endanger the very freedoms for which we are fighting.
I hope that is not referring to me - according to most GOP/Evangelicals on the board I am an Obamanite.
C4K said:I would be interested to see how a president issuing a death warrant against a US citizen without any legislative or judicial action is legal. There is a process, he ignored it.
Where is the outcry against President Bush for his violating the constitution which he clearly did![/FONT]
As for President Obama, Awlaki was a leader in an enemy organization that was actively attacking the United States. There is ample constitutional precedent for killing enemy leaders in war time, even if they are U.S. citizens, as Lincoln’s experience shows.