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Bush administration arrests former human shields.

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  • #61
    You don't even have to shoot. Merely carrying a weapon for the enemy makes you an (unlawful) enemy combatant. That's in a totally different category than an unarmed protestor in terms of their legal status, their rights if captured, and for purposes of both civilian criminal law and military law.


    My point was that they didn't have to be successful for what they did to be wrong.

    Congress never used the terms "war" nor did the President. Authorizing unspecified military action doesn't create a state of war. Were we at war with Sudan when we cruise missiled a target there? Were we at war continuously with Iraq when we enforced the No-fly zones ever since the end of the gulf war, under UN authority? A legal state of war for purposes of determining a party as an "enemy" for a treason prosecution is distinct from whether Bush's actions were authorized by Congress, and therefore legal.


    I suggest you post a poll and see how many people would NOT call that little "unspecified military action" a war...

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    • #62
      Congress did NOT declare war on Iraq, only gave the president permision to use force, much like congress in 1964 did NOt declare war anywhere, but gave the President the athority to send forces to South Vietnam, and eventually the authority to bomb North Vietnam.
      If you don't like reality, change it! me
      "Oh no! I am bested!" Drake
      "it is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong" Voltaire
      "Patriotism is a pernecious, psychopathic form of idiocy" George Bernard Shaw

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      • #63
        Originally posted by skywalker
        My point was that they didn't have to be successful for what they did to be wrong.
        Mine is that from a legal perspective (after all, we're talking about an arrest and pending prosecution), they're incomparable. If they'd been carrying a weapon, they could find themselves at Gitmo waiting for an eventual date with a gurney.


        I suggest you post a poll and see how many people would NOT call that little "unspecified military action" a war...
        Popular perception is irrelevant to the legal definition for purposes of prosecuting treason. Treason prosecutions are very rare in US history, and very hard to prove, and the Framers of the US Constitution made it that way on purpose, given the "treason is anything the King says it is" approach of our former sovereigns.
        When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."

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        • #64
          What do you think a court would decide?

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          • #65
            Originally posted by skywalker
            I'm working on the assumption that there is something "wrong" with bombing a target that is protected by a willing human shield. Remove that assumption and I'm fine.
            The point was not to put pressure on the military. While soldiers pointing guns might hesitate, bomber pilots 5,000 feet up aren't even going to know there's a human shield there. Anyway, the human shields weren't stationed at miltiary targets but civilian targets.

            The point was to cause the politicians to hestiate. While Bush is basically a sociopath and wouldn't hesitate to order the deaths of fellow Americans, Congress might be a little more squeemish about killing the children of their constituants.

            Americans also seem to value the lives of Americans more than anyone else, and so if the US military were killing American citizens abroad, maybe the American people would care a little more about the "collateral damage" going on. Course, none of those people were actually willing to put their lives on the line for others. Course, there's no point in dying if you don't think it's going to make a difference.
            Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree...

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            • #66
              Hang them.

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              • #67
                Re: Bush administration arrests former human shields.

                Originally posted by Oerdin
                In the run up to the last Gulf War there were several westerners who volunteered to go to Iraq and become human shields for the government of Saddam Hussan. Many of these people chained themselves to oil refineries, strategic highway bridges, hospitals, and even military facilities. These people claim they were simply excersizing their right to protest an "evil, unlawful, and unjust war of aggression" though the US government has decided to charge US citizens who went to Iraq as human shields with violating the Sanctions law Congress put in place at the beginning of the first gulf war. The sanctions law prohibites US citizens from visiting or spending money in Iraq except for a handful of carefully spelled out reasons. Violating the law carries a maximium penalty of 12 years in jail and a $1 million fine.

                I'm thinking these people did the crime and now they need to do the time. They went to Iraq knowing they were breaking the law but they just felt the law didn't apply for them. What's your take on this?

                http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3126220.stm
                But sometimes people need to break laws to protest injustice.

                Martin Luther King Jr. epitomized protesting against segregation laws in the 1950's and 60's, but at the same time, peacefully submitting to being arrested.



                So were these anti-war protestors protesting against a real injustice?

                But it does appear that they are not willing to accep the punishment that will result from their actions.
                A lot of Republicans are not racist, but a lot of racists are Republican.

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                • #68
                  Originally posted by skywalker
                  What do you think a court would decide?
                  A trial court will convict, no doubt. As the law is written, they're clearly guilty the moment they actually boarded any commercial transportation with the intent to go to Iraq.

                  What an appellate court will decide, and whether it will get to SCOTUS, are two different things, and either of those could go either way.

                  It's getting to be a rather interesting area of law - the US takes the position (when it wants) that US law applies outside the US, to citizens and non-citizens alike, but that the US Constitution doesn't apply outside the US.

                  If Iraq was already under US occupation or the war had already started, and they defied orders of occupation forces with responsibility for the area, then they'd be SOL. They arrived beforehand though, so it's a bit of an issue, since they were only trivially engaged in commerce.

                  Another interesting issue is where are they going to try them? This administration in general has pushed the limits of forum and venue to get favorable judges - prosecuting porn cases in western Pennsylvania where the defendants are in southern California, prosecuting Lindh in northern Virginia when neither he nor the crime had any connection with that Federal district.

                  Is Ashcroft going to make a determination to prosecute each one in the Federal District Court for the districts they live in? (the normal practice) Or is he going to order a particular US Attorney to attempt a consolidated prosecution in a government friendly judicial district? It'll be an "interesting" development, either way.
                  When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."

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                  • #69
                    the war was legally declared
                    It was? I believe Congress merely authorised the President to use force if HE decided to use force. The Constitution doesn't give Congress the power to authorise other people to decide if and when a war will be declared. Not that the SCOTUS will care what the Constitution says.

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                    • #70
                      Well, hopefully these anti-war Americans who acted as human shields can find their way to Canada and hopefully our government will have the guts to once again grant protection to Americans resisting their governments warmongering, just like we did with the draft dodgers in the Viet-nam era.

                      I hope Dubbya gets the boot and is replaced with someone with at least a tad of brains.
                      There's nothing wrong with the dream, my friend, the problem lies with the dreamer.

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                      • #71
                        Yeah, they can follow people like Ghandi as the greatest criminals of history ... But of course, only time will tell.
                        "Ceterum censeo Ben esse expellendum."

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                        • #72
                          I fail to see why US would like to bomb schools, water pumps, hospitals or powerplants. Because thats where they were chaining themselves, not to iraqi tanks or saddams palaces.
                          Que l’Univers n’est qu’un défaut dans la pureté de Non-être.

                          - Paul Valery

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                          • #73
                            let them get prosecuted. it's a waste of money, but hell, when has the government not wasted money?
                            B♭3

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                            • #74
                              Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
                              A trial court will convict, no doubt. As the law is written, they're clearly guilty the moment they actually boarded any commercial transportation with the intent to go to Iraq.

                              What an appellate court will decide, and whether it will get to SCOTUS, are two different things, and either of those could go either way.

                              It's getting to be a rather interesting area of law - the US takes the position (when it wants) that US law applies outside the US, to citizens and non-citizens alike, but that the US Constitution doesn't apply outside the US.

                              If Iraq was already under US occupation or the war had already started, and they defied orders of occupation forces with responsibility for the area, then they'd be SOL. They arrived beforehand though, so it's a bit of an issue, since they were only trivially engaged in commerce.

                              Another interesting issue is where are they going to try them? This administration in general has pushed the limits of forum and venue to get favorable judges - prosecuting porn cases in western Pennsylvania where the defendants are in southern California, prosecuting Lindh in northern Virginia when neither he nor the crime had any connection with that Federal district.

                              Is Ashcroft going to make a determination to prosecute each one in the Federal District Court for the districts they live in? (the normal practice) Or is he going to order a particular US Attorney to attempt a consolidated prosecution in a government friendly judicial district? It'll be an "interesting" development, either way.
                              I meant, would a court consider it a state of war?

                              Comment


                              • #75
                                Re: Re: Bush administration arrests former human shields.

                                Originally posted by MrFun
                                But sometimes people need to break laws to protest injustice.

                                Martin Luther King Jr. epitomized protesting against segregation laws in the 1950's and 60's, but at the same time, peacefully submitting to being arrested.

                                So were these anti-war protestors protesting against a real injustice?

                                But it does appear that they are not willing to accep the punishment that will result from their actions.
                                As you said, he submitted to being arrested. So should they.

                                However, in a DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY (where they can vote), they should not break the law (they can protest, but not break), because the law is decided by the will of the majority.

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