please tell me you don't vote.And if you don't support these strikes, you support terrorist strikes against your own people if you live in the US. Because if we leave these people unchecked, you can bet they'll kill us given the chance.
please tell me you don't vote.And if you don't support these strikes, you support terrorist strikes against your own people if you live in the US. Because if we leave these people unchecked, you can bet they'll kill us given the chance.
please tell me you don't vote.
Thank god.Please tell me you don't think my vote actually counts even if I did.
Thank god.
My own judgment would not be reliable in such a scenario and thus would be irrelevant. People look out for their own no matter what they're guilty of.
My own judgment would not be reliable in such a scenario and thus would be irrelevant. People look out for their own no matter what they're guilty of.
Valnen,let's maybe try to make you see things through a different prism.
Assume your mother was accused by the US military of planning terrorist strikes against the US population. And that they said they have proof of such plans.
Would you be fine with them drone striking her house then and there? Even if you never saw the evidence? Even if it was never brought to trial? Even if your father might still be living there and is completely oblivious to the whole thing?
Valnen,let's maybe try to make you see things through a different prism.
Assume your mother was accused by the US military of planning terrorist strikes against the US population. And that they said they have proof of such plans.
Would you be fine with them drone striking her house then and there? Even if you never saw the evidence? Even if it was never brought to trial? Even if your father might still be living there and is completely oblivious to the whole thing?
Thanks for this.
Imagine if there was a superpower right now that isn't the US and you or your countrymen have been labeled as terrorists and authorized for drone strikes?
That shit is terrifying.
This is what right wing militia types accuse Pres. Obama of wanting to do while taking everyone's guns. It bears no relation to reality. Read his speech for why he concluded the drone program is the least bad option to deal with Al Qaeda affiliated terrorists in 2014.
If I ever join an organization that pulls off the equivalent of 9/11 in China and tells millions of people it is their religious duty to kill Chinese civilians, and my group sets up shop in some lawless mountainous region, i will not be particularly shocked if china attempts drone attacks on my group.
Yes and yes. Death is what he deserves to planning to attack and kill innocent people.
No he has a right to due process, totally different.
I'm just gonna repost what I said in a similar thread a while back, it details the administrations process for targeting suspected terrorists with drone attacks as well as US citizens:
(DOJ White Paper on Drone Strikes/Targeted Killing)
This is what right wing militia types accuse Pres. Obama of wanting to do while taking everyone's guns. It bears no relation to reality. Read his speech for why he concluded the drone program is the least bad option to deal with Al Qaeda affiliated terrorists in 2014.
How much longer will it be before drones begin to strike at domestic enemies, on American soil? And the definition of enemy is anyone who disagrees with this administration? Not far off at all I should think.
Its been recently reported that there is a new litmus test for military duty. A leaked memo indicates that on duty military have been asked if they are willing to fire on American citizens if they refuse to give up their guns. If the person in question says no, then they are relieved of duty. Obviously, this must be a clue as to the future actions of this administration.
My guess is that fairly soon we will see a major disaster, a crisis, it could be a real terrorist attack, a false flag operation, something major that will give the state the excuse to pull out all the stops and, believe me, they will not let it go to waste. In the chaos, the drones will be launched, martial law will be enacted, and people will be rounded up.
just like they had proof for WMD's....
you shouldn't blind yourself because your scared.
the "guy points a weapon on your head" thing doesn't work...
the government shouldn't have that much power without a trial.
One google search found this gem:
That's from the "Tea Party" section of something called beforeitsnews.com. The top headline now is "Ohio National Guard Training For Attacks From 2nd Amendment Tea Party Patriots."
From yesterday, but just wanted to chime in. There were WMD's, just not the kind you're thinking of. WMD don't just mean Nuclear weapons. There were Weapons of Mass Destruction found though.
From yesterday, but just wanted to chime in. There were WMD's, just not the kind you're thinking of. WMD don't just mean Nuclear weapons. There were Weapons of Mass Destruction found though.
You're essentially saying innocent people should be put in unnecessary danger for no good reason.
Because if we leave these people unchecked, you can bet they'll kill us given the chance.
We already arrest people for planning crimes and we're not in martial law.
From yesterday, but just wanted to chime in. There were WMD's, just not the kind you're thinking of. WMD don't just mean Nuclear weapons. There were Weapons of Mass Destruction found though.
I meant to address this earlier. The DOJ White Paper on the assassination of American citizens is the equivalent of the Bush DOJ torture memos. Every lawyer who worked on or endorsed either is unfit to practice law and should be disbarred.
That is an utterly ridiculous assertion, the DOJ White Paper on Targeted Killings is based on sound legal reasoning and case law.
One google search found this gem:
That's from the "Tea Party" section of something called beforeitsnews.com. The top headline now is "Ohio National Guard Training For Attacks From 2nd Amendment Tea Party Patriots."
What? What does that article have to do with the legal justifications of targeted killings?
"As a result, even when the agency correctly identifies and targets a SIM card belonging to a terror suspect, the phone may actually be carried by someone else, who is then killed in a strike. According to the former drone operator, the geolocation cells at the NSA that run the tracking program known as Geo Cell sometimes facilitate strikes without knowing whether the individual in possession of a tracked cell phone or SIM card is in fact the intended target of the strike.
Once the bomb lands or a night raid happens, you know that phone is there, he says. But we dont know whos behind it, whos holding it. Its of course assumed that the phone belongs to a human being who is nefarious and considered an unlawful enemy combatant. This is where it gets very shady."
Every single person, citizen or not, has the right to a fair trial.
Citizenship does NOT grant you extra protections under the law.
The ONLY things citizenship grants you are the right to vote, the right to hold office, and the right to serve in a jury.
Also, citizenship is determined by the government, anyways. Can be revoked, recognized, ignored, etc as they see fit, really.
A tourist has no less right to an attorney or due process than a citizen. That's ridiculous
Amendment V
No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
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Amendment VI
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.
The fact that the only controversy about the drone strike is the person's citizenship status is a sad commentary on how America, and Americans, show a complete disregard for anyone other than their own.
I extensively studied national security in law school.
Long story short, this is a sticky situation. There are also no such thing as advisory opinions from the Hague about citizens who purposefully avail themselves to the benefits/warm embrace of terrorist organizations.
COA 1 is you kill him - as a member of Al Qaeda in a foreign land during a common article 2 non-international armed conflict, according to the Geneva Conventions, he is an unprivileged belligerent and is not afforded the same rights as an American citizen on US soil.
COA 2 is you get someone else to do it.
COA 3 is just leave it alone, because he's non-essential anyway, and hope you capture his ass at some point and bring him home to face the music.
What I personally get hung up on is why due process is such a concern with US citizens but seems to get thrown out the window when it comes to non-citizens. I know that you personally don't approve of the majority of military action taken against terrorism in the last decade or so, but I don't think that everyone crying "due process" here feels that every person who has died as a result of the conflict over terrorism deserved the same thing. That every member of Al Qaeda who wasn't American also deserved a trial. And that bothers me.
I don't like citizenship as a magic shield. If there are circumstances where a non-American does not require a trial then there are circumstances where an American doesn't require a trial. Anything else feels like a contradiction in human rights.
That is an utterly ridiculous assertion, the DOJ White Paper on Targeted Killings is based on sound legal reasoning and case law.
Local authorities are working with the Taliban or will have to enter the area they are operating in as part of a massive military operation. Pretending like a squad car can just drive to his address and put the cuffs on him is completely misrepresenting the situation on the ground.
I honestly can't see it. Could you elaborate further, if it is not much of a bother?
What can you not see? Criticizing the Obama Administration's drone policy because 'what if Barack Hussein Obama drones your mom at her house in Sherman Oaks?' is not a good argument against drone policy. It's an expression of anti-government paranoia favored by Tea Partiers and truthers.
Not at all. It's fraud: http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showpost.php?p=47367052&postcount=152
"In wartime the role of the military includes the legalized killing (as opposed to murder) of the enemy, whether lawful combatants or unprivileged belligerents, and may include in either category civilians who take part in hostilities....No distinction is made between an attack accomplished by aircraft, missile, naval gunfire, artillery, mortar, infantry assault, or other, similar means. All are lawful means for attacking the enemy and the choice of one vis-a-vis another has no bearing on the legality of the attack. If the person attacked is a combatant, the use of a particular lawful means for attack (as opposed to another) cannot make an otherwise lawful attack either unlawful or an assassination."
W. Hays Parks, Memorandum of Law: Executive Order 12333 and Assassination, Dep't of the Army Pamphlet 27-50-204, reprinted in Army Law 4 (Dec. 1989).
See, e.g., Idaho v. Horiuchi, 253 F.3d 359, 367 (9th Cir. 2001), vacated as moot, 266 F.3d 979 (9th Cir. 2001). The court stated that[l]aw enforcement agents may use deadly force only if they reasonably believe that killing a suspect is necessary to prevent him from causing immediate physical harm to the agents or others, or to keep him from escaping to an area where he is likely to cause physical harm in the future.Id. at 367; see also Harris v. Roderick, 126 F.3d 1189, 1201-02 (9th Cir. 1997)
First of all forgetting the President's CiC power to repel sudden invasions or attacks ...
...the AUMF explicitly authorizes the President to use "all necessary and appropriate force" against "nations, organizations, or persons" associated with the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Al-Qaeda is an avowed enemy of the United States and a perpetrator of those attacks and thus would naturally fall under the authority of the AUMF. Consequently, the ability to neutralize or kill individuals associated with the enemy is a natural part of the law of war, or as Hamdan would describe an "important incidentof war,"and expressly granted under the AUMF. In fact, I cannot think of a more important incident of war than the ability to kill the enemy.
Second, with regards to US citizens and the Fifth Amendment the Constitution calls for "due process" before an individual is deprived of his life or liberty, that does not necessarily mean a trial. A full trial is the easiest means of fulfilling this requirement but it is not the sole or required means, rather the Constitution states that an individual must be given some form of process before they are deprived of their liberty and/or life, as such that it is not an "arbitrary killing."
On top of this, the Court has clearly stated that the right to due process is not absoulte and must be balanced as laid forth in Matthews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319 (1979): "Process due in any given instance is determined by weighing the private interest that will be affected by the official action against the Government's asserted interest, including the function involved and the burdens the Government would face in providing greater process." With regards to an imminent attack on the United States conducted by a person who has associated himself with a declared enemy of the U.S. the weight of the government's interest is much higher than the private interests of the citizen.
Furthermore, the Courts have noted exceptions to the due process requirement with regards to the safety of others:
See, e.g., Idaho v. Horiuchi, 253 F.3d 359, 367 (9th Cir. 2001), vacated as moot, 266 F.3d 979 (9th Cir. 2001). The court stated that [l]aw enforcement agents may use deadly force only if they reasonably believe that killing a suspect is necessary to prevent him from causing immediate physical harm to the agents or others, or to keep him from escaping to an area where he is likely to cause physical harm in the future.Id. at 367; see also Harris v. Roderick, 126 F.3d 1189, 1201-02 (9th Cir. 1997)
Thus, killing a suspect when apprehension is impossible or possible only at risk of serious harm to the arresting officers or others is reasonable as a last resort. Killing when apprehension is possible without risk of serious harm to self or others is not, and violates the Fifth Amendment.
We don't need to forget it. The DOJ White Paper authorizes use of force well beyond those bounds by abusing the English language to redefine the meaning of the word "imminent."
The AUMF is a law passed by Congress. It is not the constitution. Moreover, the acts that the administration alleges are being committed by the American in question are criminal in nature. The government cannot bypass the process due individuals it alleges are committing crimes merely by invoking the English word "war," which is what it is in fact doing. If the US Congress passes a law authorizing the president to use "all necessary and appropriate force" against "murderers" who "kill American citizens," then per this argument the president could simply declare individuals to have committed murder and assassinate them without their ever seeing a court of law. Clearly, the AUMF does not resolve this issue.
The constitution does in fact require trials for anybody that the US accuses of engaging in behavior for which it seeks criminal sanctions (prison confinement, execution). Never before in the history of this country has it been claimed that the government has the power to deprive a citizen of life without a trial. Even treason--the gravest crime--requires a trial per the constitution. Deprivations of liberty that do not rise to penal confinement and deprivations of property may occur with less process than a trial. But that's not what is at issue here.
None of this applies to people whom the government accuses of criminal acts and seeks to punish by deprivation of liberty or life. These are governed explicitly by the Bill of Rights. You are talking about deprivations of liberty or property interests in the non-criminal context.
Note that while you have quoted the law, you subsequently misstate it by adding the gloss "when apprehension is impossible." That is not the law and not even the DOJ White Paper claims it to be the law. It is true that the government may use force when necessary to prevent the threat of imminent death or serious bodily injury, but that circumstance simply is not and cannot be present in the case of an American citizen abroad. A person in Pakistan will never present an immediate threat of death or injury to people in the US in the sense that is meant constitutionally. Conspiracy will never cut the mustard in that regard.
A person in Pakistan will never present an immediate threat of death or injury to people in the US in the sense that is meant constitutionally. Conspiracy will never cut the mustard in that regard.
Therefore, you read it wrong.
I don't see how you are coming to the conclusions are are drawing and completely throwing out the window the AUMF. Congress has the ability to declare war, the AUMF is an instrument of Congress in which they authorize the use of force. Thus, you comparison of a law allowing the President to kill all murderers in the US is inapt. The United States involved in a war with Al-Qaeda and its direct affiliates, those individuals that associate themselves with the enemy fall under the AUMF and subsequently any killing of such individuals would be lawful under the law of war.
If we were to take your logic to its natural conclusion you would essentially be saying that the US would be unable to kill individuals especially US citizens even when involved in a declared war and the individual is on the battlefield. The law has never held such a proposition, and to do so with fly in the face of the general principles of war.
Your statement here is just plain false, and adheres to such a narrow reading of the word "imminent" that it would prevent the use of force to stop pretty much any attack against the US. Under your restrictive reading "imminent" would only apply essentially when the target's "finger were on the trigger" as one would say. That is an impossible standard and one that simply cannot be applied to terrorists. A senior Al-Qaeda official is going to be involved in planning attacks against the U.S., the fact that we don't know when the "bomb will go off" doesn't undercut the imminence factor.
How is this even a debate, Pradator drone this motherfucker.
The AUMF is an act of Congress. It does not and cannot tell us what process is due an individual under the constitution. To be sure, I don't disagree that the military could kill an American fighting with an enemy on a battlefield. But surely you must recognize that Pakistan is not a battlefield...
While my analogy about Congress declaring law on murderers was a little out there, try this one on for size: Could Congress declare war on right-wing militias? For example, could Congress pass a law authorizing the president to use "all necessary and appropriate force" against "nations, organizations, or persons" associated with the 1995 Oklahoma City terrorist attack?
There is no need for such a stretch because we have a real historical example, the Civil War. President Lincoln under his powers as CiC was able to use all necessary and appropriate force to bring about an end to the armed insurrection that was the Civil War despite the fact that those individuals still remained protected under the Constitution.
Now, that is not to say that this is all settled concrete law, the fact is we are in uncharted waters right now. Never before has the US been involved in a war with a non-state actors (not counting the early conflicts with the Barbary Pirates) this fact requires a rethinking of the laws of war. Now, you asserted that "surely Pakistan cannot be considered a battlefield!" However, a reading of the AUMF does not support your point, it authorizes the President: "to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons."
It does not list a place, it is not bound or confined to Afghanistan, indeed Afghanistan is not mentioned anywhere in the AUMF. Rather, the AUMF is targeted towards those groups or individuals responsible for 9/11 mainly Al-Qaeda. Thus, a strike on an Al-Qaeda official in Pakistan would be permissible. However, that does not mean that the AUMF is unlimited. Again, it states those individuals, organizations, etc. responsible for 9/11 while Al-Qaeda may fall into that category other groups, including those that arose after 9/11 would likely not fall under the AUMF such as Al-Shabab or the Pakistani Taliban.
Under these circumstances the administration relies on the inherent authority of the President to repel invasions or imminent attacks. Now, the logic for "imminent attacks" is a bit concerning but at the same time it makes sense. Essentially the administration holds the view that if you are a senior Al-Qaeda official, for example, then you are automatically seen as someone planning an attack against America or its interests, therefore due to the fact that terrorists due not announce when they attack and seldomly appear on our radar that individual is a constant imminent threat. Thus, in situations where capture or arrest is infeasible lethal force is authorized to prevent such an attack.
Again, the logic makes sense even if it presents the opportunity for abuse. If Osama Bin Laden were to appear on our radar in say Yemen, and lets say for these purposes he's a US citizen, then he clearly would present an imminent threat against the US especially after 9/11.
And, if capture of him were infeasible in that country then lethal force would accordingly be allowed.
Now, I won't say that there is no argument to had on your side but to essentially claim this is all illegal and against settled law is just plain false.
Targeted killing is not punishment for treason. U.S. citizens who serve as soldiers for the enemy can be shot without trial during military operations but must be afforded a trial as traitors if they can be captured. So too U.S. citizens who are leaders at the strategic level for the enemy can be targeted and killed without trial during military operations but must be afforded a trial as traitors if they can be captured. Targeted killing is not a punishment for a crime but a military operation.