name calling. Nice![]()
It's not?![]()
I understand you more.
name calling. Nice![]()
Yeah, it really is.
I wish that were the case. Then you would realize the level of your stupidity.Now I know. Thank you WH and Shasta,we are all better off reading your well articulated comments.
And?Check the time of when I edited my comments.
Initially, I giggled at the notion that spursncowboys knows more about the Cons ution than John Paul Stevens.
Then I laughed. Heartily.
you mean how the sc works?
That, too.
Likewise. It's always a pleasure to talk to a rational intelligent human being about important issues with an open mind. , if I didn't talk to people like you I would have never learned anything. I feel like the yellow journalism (i know that term isn't technically correct but it serves the point) that is so prevalent now by both sides makes it much much harder for people like you and me to talk because you have to wade through so many parrots to get to a person.
I think we can agree to disagree... but in no way do I think that it should halt further debate. People have changed my mind before and I've changed some myself.
I remember my sister asking me a question that really made me drop my jaw once.
It was about gay couples adopting kids... I thought it would put them at a disadvantage...
She asks me... so they would be better off growing up in the orphanage than in a loving home with a gay couple?
Got me there.
Mind Changed.
bravo, i apologize sincerely.![]()
By lay it out for us profe I just meant show your work. You're just pointing at your own point, SnC. You really haven't even made it yet.
In your own words, what's the difference between a right and a privilege, and what the does that have to do with the conversation we're having right now? Or were having?
(The honorific was surely facetious, but surely it not the worst conceit in the world to pretend someone else is your teacher, and let some other random jackass play the Maestro for a change.)![]()
Last edited by Winehole23; 03-25-2010 at 03:18 AM.
(drinks can of Lone Star)
Last edited by Winehole23; 03-25-2010 at 01:36 AM.
You've GOTTA be kidding me, right? You HAVE to be a troll.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Habeas_..._United_States
The Suspension Clause of the United States Cons ution specifically included the English common law procedure in Article One, Section 9, clause 2, which states:“The privilege of the writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it.”
Doesnt' that run exactly counter to "innocent before proven guilty"?
For all those guilty until proven innocent, we have a whole separate tier of justice now.
Sec24Row7 would seem to have the point here. JMO.
Last edited by Winehole23; 03-25-2010 at 04:52 AM. Reason: whole separate tier
I also know that SnC has no flipping idea how important the Founding Fathers thought habeas corpus was.
Eh, I'll throw him a bone. two, in fact.
"A bill of rights [should provide] clearly and without the aid of sophisms for... the eternal and unremitting force of the habeas corpus laws, and trials by jury in all matters of fact triable by the laws of the land and not by the law of nations." --Thomas Jefferson to James Madison, 1787. ME 6:387
"... of the liberty of conscience in matters of religious faith, of speech and of the press; of the trail by jury of the vicinage in civil and criminal cases; of the benefit of the writ of habeas corpus; of the right to keep and bear arms.... If these rights are well defined, and secured against encroachment, it is impossible that government should ever degenerate into tyranny." - James Monroe
The wiggle room isn't in Habeas at all, it's in the power of the President to do certain things.
To have his own jails, for example.
Where even US citizens can be placed beyond any ordinary legal recourse, and tried before special military tribunals.
Many argue that the President doesn't even have the right to suspend habeas corpus, and that power actually lies in the legislature, since the provision is listed under Article 1 of the Cons ution.
Worth repeating.
the detainees under the three person military commission recieve a form a habeas corpus.
I know that the founding fathers kept it in a high light. i also realize that they meant to put privilege, and not right.
Assumptions and name calling can be put away. I have done alot of work in this exact subject.
If you've done the work, please explain the distinction between 'privilege' and 'right', and the legal theory behind the two terms' distinction.
If you could also, please explain why some of the Founding Fathers considered habeas corpus the surest way of preventing tyranny, and then decided to consider it a 'privilege' instead of a 'right'.
Thanks.
Oh, and wasn't habeas corpus originally denied to detainees until a court ruled that they must have some form of it? I believe that is the case.
which case are you talking about?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boumediene_v._Bush
On June 12, 2008, Justice Kennedy wrote the opinion for the 5-4 majority holding that the prisoners had a right to the habeas corpus under the United States Cons ution and that the MCA was an uncons utional suspension of that right.
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