Amanar wrote:
You're basically just ignoring my entire argument and restating the opposite. Do you have any support for these statements?
The bill of rights restricts what the government can do to people. It makes no distinction between people inside or outside the country, or citizens versus non-citizens.
I'm ignoring your argument because it's silly. The Constitution does not bother to explain that it does not apply to people outside the United States, especially non-Citizens outside the United States because it isn't necessary that it explain that. Wars, by definition, involve attacking foreign people, inside or outside the country. Are you seriously suggesting that if this country were invaded we would have to arrest and try each and every enemy soldier before shooting him because the Constitution doesn't make any distinction between him and anyone else? That every single enemy soldier ever killed or injured in war has been a victim of the violation of his rights under the criminal justice system? The Constitution grants war powers to the legislature and executive; it does not need to explain the difference between war and enforcing the law.
Non-criminal laws like immigration (to be clear, there are both administrative and criminal immigration laws. The criminal ones put you in jail like any other crime; the administrative ones are what get aliens deported.) do not grant the same rights to citizens and non-citizens. The courts have already decided on this; an alien has whatever right to be in this country Congress says he does and due process for him is whatever Congress says it is because the power to determine what foreigners may or may not enter the country, when, and how, is inherent in both the nations's sovereignty and in Congress's power to establish rules of naturalization.
U.S. citizens, on the other hand, cannot be arrested or charged administratively for immigration matters
at all. They are completely, utterly immune and can only be arrested and charged with actual immigration crimes, and cannot be deported under any circumstance whatsoever unless a naturalized citizen is discovered to have falsely obtained citizenship.
The simple fact is that the Constitution does not need to make a distinction between citizens and non-citizens or people inside of our outside the country because they simply don't need explanation. The simple fact that areas outside the country are outside are governance and the existence of a concept of war that the Constitution refers to with the assumption people know what a war is establishes that.