Jim, I'm not annoyed at all. What I'm confessing is that my eyes are being opened. I confess to having once had better faith in the process than I do now, and it is disconcerting, to say the least. The Senate has become a den of thieves, a whitewashed tomb. They think they are "co-presidents" rather than servants of the states that sent them there. And once they get there, they are so eager to be recognized members of the club that they forget about home. "Home" becomes DC, and they never want to leave its enchantments. They will sell the country down the river if that's what it takes to stay there. They've got theirs, and to hades with everyone else.b322da wrote:Not to "annoy" you, TAM, and not to open that dispute I avoided earlier, at least I will not join it if it develops, in my opinion it is also not absolutely clear that an Executive Agreement, not improperly often also termed a treaty, cannot lawfully authorize legislative and/or executive, power outside the fixed terms of the Constitution. In that earlier thread we both mentioned this question was almost, but not entirely (sorry, mewalke) universally laughed at as being impossible, including by at least one lawyer, and I knew I would start a particularly unhelpful debate if I said this then. Please understand that I am not making a case, I am just raising an issue which, whether they accept the truth of it or not, could be of great, if not critical, interest to members of this forum. Much too often people think that the law is what they want it to be, but not necessarily what it really is.
I mean this to be only a caution about our members being too sure about complex legal matters. Being too sure about a question which is unclear enough to rise to the Supreme Court can, to use a meaningful term here, lead to poor situational awareness.
If that should ultimately be the case, there may be another reason entirely why Sen. Reid tabled the UN treaty other than just waiting for a possible GOP disaster in 2014 due to its being so split up. Things that happened nationwide on November 4 have caused some, but not all, credible commentators to opine that we clearly saw evidence of this in New Jersey, Virginia and Alabama -- Alabama, of all places.
I only mean to say that in my humble opinion this question is also open to a decision by the Supreme Court if it gets the question. Funny things happen on the way to the law books, TAM. :)
Jim
And Reid is in charge of it. He has no regard for the Constitution, other than how it can be used to bolster his power.
But that is the Senate. SCOTUS can be far more insidious, because against them, The People have almost no electoral recourse. . . . .particularly since Harry Reid's Senate advises and consents on their nominations. SCOTUS is accountable to nobody; not even to the Senate that places them in office. In that environment, Bond v. U.S. ought to scare the pants off of anyone who loves individual liberty.