DFK! wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Khross wrote:
Diamondeye:
And where does granting diplomatic immunity to an international police organization with sanction to operate in the United States fall?
Not under treason, unless some direct connection between that international police force and an enemy could be shown.
It falls under "removal from office".
It pretty much fits the second two definitions of treason under a quick dictionary.com search...
Just FYI.
Treason is clearly defined as a crime in the Constitution, and in any case, dictionary definitions are not used when determing when a crime has been committed. The crim as defined in the law (in this case the Constitution) is.
The way you phrase your question puts the status of judges as experts for me to compare myself to. Thats an appeal to authority regardless if you realize it is.
I also consider being "trained" to be a negative in this area for several reasons. The training in law school does not encourage critical thinking, it encourages thinking within the flawed framework of our legal system which includes how to manipulate emotion and to rely on appeals to tradition as if they are sound. It teaches you to go by conflicting information and largely to ignore case law pre 20th century (even when such items have not been overturned). The training mostly consists of the "interpretationist" theory. Training for me as an originalist would be nothing more than indoctrination in the current group think.
Am I better educated on constitutional law than many of the judges? I believe so because they come to the wrong conclusions using spurious reasoning at best and ignoring several aspects of the law.
Aizle wrote:
Elmarnieh wrote:
The parts of the Constitution that I have studied so far - I understand as clearly as if I had been in that hot building swearing for my point of view for months.
What makes you say that? What is your source for that knowledge?
Elmarnieh wrote:
Appeal to authority.
Many judges are over-ruled themselves or make decisions based on their wants, desires, or political cravings. The Supreme Court itself is over-ruled so you cannot appeal to an authority which both takes numerous different positions, and takes conflicting positions.
Appeal to tradition. As constitutional law has been corrupted with case law history which the weak court defers to instead of correcting (see Thomas's dissent in Raich v Gonzales).
I'm not making any appeals, nor have I made any statements. I'm asking clarifying questions. And I note that you haven't answered the second one. Do you feel you are better trained and educated on constitutional law than those who handle these issues as a part of their occupation?
Quote:
The way you phrase your question puts the status of judges as experts for me to compare myself to. Thats an appeal to authority regardless if you realize it is.
I also consider being "trained" to be a negative in this area for several reasons. The training in law school does not encourage critical thinking, it encourages thinking within the flawed framework of our legal system which includes how to manipulate emotion and to rely on appeals to tradition as if they are sound. It teaches you to go by conflicting information and largely to ignore case law pre 20th century (even when such items have not been overturned). The training mostly consists of the "interpretationist" theory. Training for me as an originalist would be nothing more than indoctrination in the current group think.
Am I better educated on constitutional law than many of the judges? I believe so because they come to the wrong conclusions using spurious reasoning at best and ignoring several aspects of the law.
All you're really doing is appealing to your own authority instead of a judge's. You haven't said anything to establish the actual merits of your position. For example, you talk about a "flawed framework" but you do not establish why it is flawed. If you're trying to convince others, you should make some argument that they find convincing, not just one that works within your own assumptions.