Khross wrote:
Said judiciary answers to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, which functions as a special district court under the existing system. It, however, only has jurisdiction on cases arising from individuals and actions covered by the UMJC. As the challenge to Don't Ask;Don't Tell was issued by now civilian parties, they are statutorily not covered by this court. Consequently, since the Court you want already exists, why should it be extended to civilians? More to the point, what is the Constitutional basis for exempting the military from the normal course of juridical proceedings?
I didn't say it should be extended to civilians. I don't need any basis for exempting the military from normal judicial proceedings because there are no normal judicial proceedings under the Constitution. There is nothing int he Constitution establishing anything other than the Supreme Court, its original and appellate jurisdictions, and the fact that Congress establishes the rest.
Diamondeye wrote:
You are requesting special dispensation. For starters, civilians can only file challenges in their district residence, unless they're granted class-action status. Secondly, what avenue does your proposed system leave for civilians challenging military doctrine and policy? Again, Congress has already established an appeal pathway to the Supreme Court for individuals covered by the UCMJ, but that blanket does include individuals no longer beholden to enlistment or service contracts.
What's your point? Since Congress can make the rules for the courts, creating a new process and a new inferior court would mean creating new rules for that as well.
Second, civilians should not be challanging military doctrine and policy unless that civilian is directly impacted by them in some way that affects the civilians' rights. Being in the military is not a right.
I am not requesting sepcial dispensation. Period. You are outright lying every time you say that.
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What is inadequate about the current system?
It allows people, civilian or military, to challange military policeis that are purely internal. There should be no avenue for that, other than to address A) individual complaints that policies were not followed or B) that the military is violating the Constitution. In the latter case, the military is a national entity. It has one policy that applies everywhere. If that policy is to be reviewed, it should be only by the USSC so that people cannot go jurisdiction shopping.
Civilians should have their say in the military through Congress or the President. They should not be able to affect internal military mnatters through the courts outside of direct, personal harm based on some form of unequal treatment they received
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I've made no such statement. I've asked you to substantiate your position with a valid constitutional argument. Your response to this matter is to declare such inquiry as irrelevant. Why is it irrelevant to seek your reasoning on a matter?
That's because you do not understand that I don't need to provide any Constitutional reason why anything should be a certain way. Congres has the power to make it this way; that is the only Constitutional issue.
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In fact, your responses are nothing short of the same dismissively hostility that a former posted used.
They are nothing of the sort. What's similar to that fomer poster is your continued insistence on not comprehending what someone else is saying, and appointing yourself the arbiter of what can and can't be said while lecturing everyone else.
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You are eschewing technicalities and specifics why?
I'm not. I've pointed out that you are incorrect.
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It seems to me that if you command such a vast and perfect understanding of the Constitution, you would be able to provide the argument requested.
Except that I don't need to. I do not have to show why anything should work a certain way under the Constitution, only that it is legal under the Constitution, which it is. Why I think it should be that way has zero to do with whether anything is Constitutional since I am not challanging the Constitutionality of the current system. I am challanging its effects. As for perfect understandings, your own arrgoant proclaiminations about how the Constitution is supposed to work render your sarcasm both ironic and absurd.
Diamondeye wrote:
It is neither prejudicial language nor a strawman. It is a request for you to explain your position, which stands as nothing more than a bare assertion.
My position has been explained in detail. You are simply whipping out "bare assertion" because you think that simply calling something a bare assertion makes it one and allows you to avoid dealing with points.
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The evidence to the contrary is, quite honestly, the lack of anything more than your repeated statement that things should be different with no moral, ethical, logical, or substantive argumentation as to why. If the existing juridical structure is insufficient for handling such matters, then why is it so? How can it be changed? And what is the Constitutional basis for that change? Your failure to answer these questions merely demonstrates an unwillingness, on your part, to engage a discussion you entered into without considering what was actually being discussed.
I have already explained this. Federal judges are not qualified to rules on internal military matters. They do not know anything about military effectiveness (some may, but that cannot be assumed) and it is too easy to go "district shopping" by simply finding a case in a sympathetic location. The Supreme Court is no more qualified, but its final say is an absolute of the Constitution and at least it would eb one, consistent entity.
I did not fail to answer anything. You failed to read and comprehend them.
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Indeed, Taskiss stated that the Court had no place making that ruling.
I am not responsible for Taskiss's comments.
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I simply pointed out that under current policies of judicial review and judicial practice that the Administrations statements were both fallacious and misguided.
I am not defending any action by the administration either.
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You and Taskiss, however, have asserted that the Court is attempting to regulate the military when the legal specifics of the case addressed an Executive Order governing the execution and enforcement of a Federal Statute.
I am not asserting any such thing. The fact that you're lumping my arguments in with Taskiss's indicates that you haven't read what I;ve said, don't understand, and honestly don't give a ****, you just want to argue against what he said and find it convenient to ascribe it to me.
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The question at hand, in point of fact, deals with a Federal Law and NOT any code or statute contained with the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So, again, I ask you why the established court structure is insufficient for handling this question of law? What specific quality about this case should exempt it from such things?
Explained already.
Diamondeye wrote:
Except it has everything to do with the discussion. Since the legal challenge at hand has NOTHING to do with military law, why should it be the province of some military court or special military avenue of resolution in the judicial system? More specifically, since the suing parties are civilians uncovered by the UCMJ, why should their challenge and question be directed toward a special judicial system involving the U.S. military? What is the basis for your argument?
I did not say it had anytihng to do with military law; I pointed out the military courts as an example that every case does not have to necessarily go through the district-circuit portion of judicial structure.
Second, I have not suggested that the new court I propose be part of UCMJ since its purpose is not to administer UCMJ. Its purpose is to handle essentially civil complaints that policy was not followed by the military. It would consist of well trained but nonmilitary judges not answerable to SECDEF or POTUS but to the USSC
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See, the lack of evidence here is on you, as you neither know the specific case in question nor have you read it. Rather, because a specific Federal Statute and Executive Order may affect military operations, you feel they must be deal with by special avenues that protect the military institution and shield it from reasonable challenges by non-involved civilians.
Completely unsupported assumption on your part.
Diamondeye wrote:
Oh, wait, so I have to provide evidence the Constitution mandates a particular structure when it is, in point of fact, you who suggest that the current Court structure is inadequate? How does that work?
No, you have to provide evidence tht it is the "normal" structure and that changing it amounts to "dispensation. The words "district court" and "circuit court" are where in the Constitution exactly?
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Moreover, since there already exists a specific structure for dealing with matters of rule, law, and individuals governed by the UCMJ, why should we add another structure for dealing with civilians questioning a Federal Statute and Executive Order? Filing said suit while serving would have resulted in their dismissal. Having been dismissed, they filed their suit in Federal Court.
Oh **** well for them. Maybe they should not be challanging a policy that the President clearly has the power to make, or, by extension (contrary to your asserion I have read the case and I do know they did not actually challange the law itself) the law supporting it. In fact, they actually did something counter to their own purpose by doing it.
You don't seem to get that internal military policy about how it is going to go about fighting are not matters for civilians to directly affect. That's what Congress and the President are for.
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But, you know, I'm not making anything up. That would be you, Diamondeye. You have continued to assert that you 1) have a better knowledge of what I know than I do; 2) have a better knowledge of how things should be without explaining what you think the inadequacies of the current system are; and 3) continued to assert people are wrong without answering questions that require you explain your system rationally and within the legal framework already established by our Constitution and juridical practice.
I've explained in detail. However, since you apparently want to read Taskiss's position, assume mine is the same, and then argue with it, you're in no position at all to bith about me asserting I know more than you. You've clearly displayed your own ignorance.
Moreover I don't need to explain anything "within the Constitution" since what I;m proposing is Constitutional, nor do I need to explain a change to the judicial frameork within the existing framework. I especially don't need to explain it to you, since you simply switch your opinion on judicial framework depending on its convenience for you.
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It seems to me, despite your propensity to get stupid on all issues involving the U.S. Military, you simply have no clue what you keep requesting, stating should be.
No, the real problem here is that you get stupid on issues involving the Constition about which you evidently know very little, and now you're just claiming I "get stupid on the military" because you know perfectly well I know far more about that than you and want to do the same as Monty: try to call it into question because you don't like it.
Diamondeye wrote:
There are no fictions in my posts. I have asked you questions. You have refused to answer questions. In turn, you have claimed said questions are fictions and insulting me. But, you know, you keep ignoring the fact that the challenge to DADT was filed against the executive order and not the federal law you keep mentioning; just like you keep ignoring that the challenge was issued against points of policy distinctly not covered by the UCMJ or the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces.
I have answered your questions. You have not read them. You have continued to ignore, misunderstand, and fail to respond to my points, and you are simply making whatver claims worked for you against Monty, thinking that must work against anyone you disagree with. Evidently you've become too lazy to actually discuss things any more.
I am not ignoring anything about the challange; in fact I fund it amusing that it actually strengthens the ban on gays.
So, you can either man up and answer my questions, say you can answer my questions, or apologize for trying to strong arm your way through a discussion you butted yourself into without reading or comprehending what was actually said.
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Because, point blank, the judge's ruling and this case had nothing to do with policy exclusively the province of the U.S. military.
And, point blank, you're wrong. DADT affects nothing but the military. The fact that it was an executive policy does not mean it should be treated like every other executive matter. Incompetant judges should not be ruling on matters they have no grasp of. The President is Commander in Chief; as an executive policy his orders about how the military should conduct a certain aspect of buisness are completely within his power and should not be challanged by civilians on any basis other than violating some other portion of the Constitution. The challangers in this case really should not have been allowed to challange the policy at all unless they can show it was unfairly applied in their case, or on some other Constitutional violation.
Your behavior in this thread is appalling Khross. You've admittedly lumped my position in with Taskiss's, you've completely ignored my explainations, and you've evidently ignored where I also said that a Constitutional ammendment to accomplish the same thing would be fine with me too, which would render all your bellyaching irrelevant.