Amanar wrote:
If we apply your logic in these kinds of cases, aren't all orders lawful until deemed unlawful by a judge? Therefore, soldiers should obey all orders until a judge directs them otherwise.
Not at all. Soldiers are trained on the nature of unlawful orders, and there is ample history in the military as to what orders are and are not lawful based on past cases. As I pointed out above, past cases mean some laws are already known to be unConstitutional. Furthermore, no one is disagreeing with the idea that officials should not follow laws they reasonably believe to be unConstitutional. What's being pointed out is that this belief does not make it so until the courts make a determination.
You're trying to make a direct comparison between orders and laws, and they aren't the same. Orders are specific to the situation. They are governed by regulations, in turned governed by laws, in turn governed by the Constitution. There's 2 extra layers in there that make tings completely different.
The point about" but it was always unConstitutional" is irrelevant here. What that does is prevent the finding from being "grandfathered" around. For example, if there's a law against ****, and you get 5 years for **** a sheep, and then the law is overturned, the government cannot argue that you must finish your 5 years because you were found guilty before the finding was made. Similarly, you cannot argue that your arrest and trial were a violation of your rights because those were done in good faith belief that the law was valid. Maybe you thought it was unConstitutional all along, but the fact that you were found correct after the fact does not make your belief either objectively true, nor something the justice system should have known, retrospectively.
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This would be pretty absurd. Obviously soldiers have to judge from themselves whether an order is lawful or not. Yes, they should definitely err on the side of assuming all orders are lawful and just obey them without asking questions, but there are still times when they will be given a clearly unlawful order and it's their responsibility to refuse it.
And as I pointed out, soldiers are given training to know such things, and avenues (JAG, the Inspector General, simply asking the commander or his superior for clarification) and previous cases exist to assist the soldier in their decision. The soldier's personal principles don't determine what is or is not lawful; the principles of the Army do.
Again, the situations are not comparable because orders are specific to a situation. They are not laws, and the same principles don't apply. For example, if I order a soldier "go to the range and qualify with your assigned weapon" and the soldier does indeed go, and fire his weapon, but fails to qualify, I cannot prosecute him for disobeying my order - incompetence is not disobedience. I would have to show that he either failed purposefully, or that he did not go to the range, or refused to fire at all.
By contrast, if you drive a car, but for whatever reason fail to stop at a red light, your incompetence in that instance of failing to obey a traffic signal
is a violation of the law. You may have had every intention of following the signal, but got distract for whatever reason and went through it.
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Similarly, citizens are required to interpret matters of law. At the most basic level, we're required to know the laws, ignorance is not an excuse for breaking it (I don't agree with this personally, but that's the common saying and legal opinion). I can't say for a fact whether an act I am planning on taking is against the law or not, but I'm not going to consult a lawyer on every decision I make.
Obviously not. However, your personal opinion as the the Constitutionality of a law is not an excuse for breaking it. You can make the argument, and a judge will make a determination, and eventually maybe the USSC will hear the case.
It's irrelevant that it was "always unConstitutional". No one knew that until the determination. Look at
Brown v. Board of Education. Separate but Equal was "always unConstitutional", right? Nope, it wasn't. In
Plessy v. Fergueson that same court found the opposite. So it was "always Constitutional" until
Plessy, but then Always unConstitutional once we got
Brown? Or the original court was just wrong because unConstitutional always wins over Constitutional? Or just because Plessy offends our sensibilities, so we want it to be "correct"?
No. That is not what "always unConstitutional" is about. As I pointed out, it prevents people from continuing to apply effects of the alw that occurred prior to the decision on the basis that the law was Constitutional at that time. It in no way implies that those that agreed with the court's eventual decision were pointing out some objective, obvious truth.
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But there can be other situations where we are required to interpret the law. For example, it's generally illegal to aid someone in the commission of a crime. If a friend asks you for help and you think they may be committing a crime, you're going to have to rely on your own judgment of the law.
That's judgement as to facts, not to the law.
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This goes beyond ordinary citizens too. For example, President Obama asserts that he has the right to ignore laws he believes to be unconstitutional. Heck, everyone in the government who takes an oath swearing to uphold the Constitution has to interpret it just so they know what the hell to uphold.
Everyone has that right because everyone has a right to a trial. You can't simply be tossed in jail without a hearing, so therefore any law can be challenged. You cannot, however, demand that other people adhere to your opinion of Constitutionality if the matter has never been heard. You can make arguments why they should, but they are not in any way betraying the Constitution by disagreeing with you.
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I think it's clear that everyone can, and in fact is required to, interpret the law. We give them a lot of leeway, only expecting them to know the basics of what a "reasonable" person should know. The people in turn give the government the benefit of the doubt by generally following all laws that are passed and not questioning their validity. But there are exceptions, and blindly following a written law when it obviously conflicts with a law of higher authority could land you behind bars.
And this has nothing to do with the point. Anyone can interpret the law, what anyone cannot do is represent their interpretation as authoritative. People like to try to toss out court rulings on such matters that they don't like with the argument that the
ruling itself is unConstitutional, or they try to act as if a court ruling is unimportant when it hasn't happened yet because their interpretation is somehow authoritative.