Admiral_K wrote:This is ridiculous. I'll answer any "points" that haven't already been addressed, but by no means am I going to reply to every one of your repeated statements.
Yes, you're answering the lesser issues and leaving the meat of the matter completely unaddressed, which means you're just nitpicking at the edges because you have no rebuttal.
First:
Admiral_K wrote:Thats right NO SUBSTANCE. Unless you want to count a pathetic attempt at a ad hominem attack.
It's not an ad hominem to say that you were being dishonest by quoting me out of context by taking a snippet that was tied to other things you have yet to address.
Admiral_K wrote:Edi wrote:Oh? Evidence, please? Because it certainly seems that e.g. crimes committed by US soldiers abroad can be pursued in US courts, which grants due process to foreigners. Concession accepted.
U.S. soldiers are bound by a code of conduct set for in the laws of the United States. These laws are not in the constitution however. Again, if you wish to produce evidence to the contrary, then by all means do so.
Laws which are rooted in the constitution as are ALL laws of the US. They rely on the USC to give them legitimacy and they must be in accord with the principles set out in the USC. You really are a dumb fuck if you do not understand the hierarchical nature of sources of law.
Admiral_K wrote:Granted by which amendment? The BOR makes frequent mentions of rights granted to "the people". However, since the preamble clearly states We the People of the United States clearly is in reference to citizens of the U.S.
As my good friend Stravo pointed out, Article XIV section 1 states the following:
Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
That's a flat out false reading. Section one defines what it takes to be a citizen of the US, and states that the rights of citizens may not be abridged. However, if the next part (due process and equal protection) were to apply only to citizens, it would say "...nor shall any State deprive any
citizen of..." It manifestly does not say that, but specifically says "person", which extends to people other than citizens as well.
Admiral_K wrote:Actually, toppling the U.S. government is one of the stated goals of most terrorist groups. Not likely to happen, but regardless. Attacks on our soil are most certainly "invasion". The terrorists in Iraq are actively rebelling against the Iraqi government. I'll let the Iraqi government worry about how to treat them.
The terms terrorist attack and invasion are not interchangeable, even though your fantasy house of cards requires it.
Why don't you take a look at the definition of invasion
here?
The relevant definition is
Dictionary.com wrote:Invasion
n 1: the act of invading; the act of an army that invades for conquest or plunder
and terrorist strikes do not by any means fulfill this criterion. You lose.
Admiral_K wrote:Appeal to authority. AGAIN, if you cannot produce references from the constitution to support your claim YOU LOSE. SCOTUS decisions are not by any means permanent, nor are their decisions always correct.
You do not understand, do you? Any discussion on legal issues is always to some extent an appeal to authorities of some kind, which is exactly what you're doing with your bleating about the USC. The SCOTUS is given the right of interpretation in the USC, and while their interpretation stands using it as basis of further arguments is not invalid. Unless you prefer the status of complete anarchy? Besides, the issue of constitutional protections is addressed a couple of paragraphs above in addition to all the other arguments you ignored earlier.
Admiral_K wrote:And if that happens, and the USC is packed with justices that agree with Scalea and Rehnquist, does that make me automatically right and you wrong? Well, technically I'll still be right, and you'll still be wrong.
No, you dumbfuck, you and they will still be wrong because such an overturning decision does not logically follow from the written constitution and the principles underlying it. It is logically inconsistent when compared to the primary sources of law (USC, BOR, first principles) and therefore bullshit.
Admiral_K wrote:Edi wrote:
See above. Now it's my turn, why don't you provide me with a reference from the USC, its amendments or the foundational principles and axioms behind it that restricts the ability of the SCOTUS to interpret existing laws? Extending constitutional law outside US borders in situations where the US is in control is well within the scope of interpreting existing law, and none of your handwaving and bullshit changes that fact.
Ask and ye shall recieve:
Article X: The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.
The Supreme court doesn't have ANY powers not specifically delegated it by the constitution. All such powers are reserved to the states or to the people. Its powers of "interpretation" do not grant SC Justices carte blanche to impose their will in any manner that they see fit. Anytime you have a situation such as this, where the supreme court claims "interpretation" of something that does not exist, it goes beyond simple "interpretation" and into the realm of usurping legislative power.
Earlier you were bleating about the 14th amendment, and now you completely ignore it, saying that the states can do whatever the fuck they wish without SCOTUS being powerless ostensibly because of 10th amendment, but when the situation comes up when the 10th and 14th are opposed, the 14th is more powerful because it is also supported by other sources, such as the 9th: "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."[/quote]
If something a state or the federal government does in any way violates the 14th or 9th amendment (which is really rather broad, as intended), the SCOTUS automatically has jurisdiction and your argument becomes meaningless.
Admiral_K wrote:Edi wrote:
Another argument you pulled out of your arse, I see. The rights of Puerto Rico as an administrative district are distinctly separate from the rights of the people who live there when the whole fucking place is under US jurisdiction. Your handwaving does not affect my argument in the least
If it is an argument "pulled out of my arse" then you should have no problem presenting evidence that it is wrong. If you can't, then kindly shut the fuck up.
The evidence was presented in my previous post, in the detailed explanation of how the concepts of state, sovereignty and jurisdiction form the basis of all legal systems. You blatantly stated that you were not going to bother to reply to them, which means you are admitting defeat because you have no rebuttal.
Admiral_K wrote:Quite frankly, I've had enough of your issue dodging. Either produce constitutional quotes that support your argument that the supreme court has the power to extend the constitution to non citizens, held outside of the United States, or else you lose. Don't bother posting if you don't have anything as I will not be responding to it.
Says the man who admitted defeat by not providing a rebuttal to the core arguments against his position. Fuck off, you're the one who has been dodging and twisting through some truly spectacular contortions and distortions of logic. They avail you nothing, and you just make yourself look dumber by the moment. It's impressive really, even Axis Kast did not manage to make himself look as bad as you have this quickly, it's only taken you about a week while he needed a month or so and several months to sink to the depths he did. But don't worry, I'm accepting your admission of defeat, as you certainly seem to have run out of arguments.
Edi