I'm sure he's already mentioned that the previous administration set the precedent.RoyGBiv wrote: The only surprise in all this is how Obama has not yet found a way to spin "blame" for this on the GOP.
He was right, but it was FDR, a DemocRat
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
I'm sure he's already mentioned that the previous administration set the precedent.RoyGBiv wrote: The only surprise in all this is how Obama has not yet found a way to spin "blame" for this on the GOP.
That sounds a lot like MS 13 and the Mexican drug cartels, except many of them are foreign invaders on US soil. They're killing Americans and the military should be used against these invaders, whether they're in uniform or unlawful combatants.The Annoyed Man wrote:I would add this:
In the hypothetical event that there was a broad armed rebellion against the federal government in which the rebels (whatever their religious/social/political persuasion) sought to overthrow the sitting government by violent means, you can bet that this same government would use whatever means were at its disposal to kill the rebellion's leaders and instigators.
Probably the Arizona Minutemen and similar groups.jocat54 wrote:Cobra Medic wrote:it's moral for American citizens to hunt down and kill violent gang members. It's right for those guys in NM and AZ to ambush drug runners coming in from Mexico. It's good for a parent to go after a pedophile who molested her kid
Sorry, not understanding what you are saying (red highlight)--I hope.
After the latest report of the foiled terrorist plot involving the drug cartel being recruited as a hired assassin, we should use the same tactics across the border. I know that the individual that posed as the cartel member was an informant, but the door is now open to the fact that the drug cartels are not only criminals but terrorists too.tbrown wrote:Probably the Arizona Minutemen and similar groups.jocat54 wrote:Cobra Medic wrote:it's moral for American citizens to hunt down and kill violent gang members. It's right for those guys in NM and AZ to ambush drug runners coming in from Mexico. It's good for a parent to go after a pedophile who molested her kid
Sorry, not understanding what you are saying (red highlight)--I hope.
'Forbes Claims Ron Paul Was Wrong About the Fifth Amendment' by thenewamerican.com wrote: But we do have the exact opposite example from George Washington during the Whiskey Rebellion. President Washington did order rebellious citizens to "disperse and retire peaceably to their respective abodes," and he did call out the militia to stop what he labeled "overt acts of levying war against the United States" during the Whiskey Rebellion. But that was only after Washington received permission to use force from Congress and had sent a delegation to meet with the violent insurgents in western Pennsylvania. And even after that, Washington used minimal force. He did not automatically try to "take out" any insurgents as Obama has done in the war on terror. After the Whiskey Rebellion ended, the U.S. Senate applauded Washington's "lenient and persuasive measures" that avoided unnecessary bloodshed.
In fact, when a man and a boy were killed by federal militia under Washington's command, Washington ordered both shooters arrested and handed them over to Pennsylvania state prosecutors. Washington did this even though the man had been killed while clearly resisting arrest. Judges later ruled that both shootings were accidental and set the militia members free, but Washington's example in the only two deaths under his command is a sharp contrast with Obama's assassination list today. As Thomas Slaughter noted in his book The Whiskey Rebellion, "Federal officials had hoped to instill fear among dissidents, but not necessarily to kill them; friends of order had no wish to open themselves to charges of oppression or to create martyrs useful to the political opposition."
Original thenewamerican.com article.
They're a bigger clear and present danger to the USA.anygunanywhere wrote:After the latest report of the foiled terrorist plot involving the drug cartel being recruited as a hired assassin, we should use the same tactics across the border. I know that the individual that posed as the cartel member was an informant, but the door is now open to the fact that the drug cartels are not only criminals but terrorists too.
The difference is simple:Cobra Medic wrote:A vigilante killing the gang member who murdered his kid in a drive-by is not targeting the criminal because of religion or race, but because of what the criminal personally did. It's a very realistic and fair comparison, In both cases, legal/court justice is difficult, so street justice comes into play.Keith B wrote:That is a totally unrealistic comparison. al-Awlaki was not targeted for being a Muslim.Cobra Medic wrote:In the same way a lynch mob or vigilante is acting in self defense.Purplehood wrote:I consider it a combat-related death.
Could be that a reason to criticize or rationalize not supporting the action is because Obama authorized it. A common reaction has become to be to opposed to what ever he does no matter how logical.Charles L. Cotton wrote: I may be mistaken, but it appears that most, if not all, people arguing the killing was "wrong" are Ron Paul supporters. I understand supporting a candidate, but how far will you go? Arguing that killing the guy was "wrong" is the political equivalent of walking off a cliff because Ron Paul jumped first.
Chas.
We should apply the same standards to gang members waging war against Americans. Some of them aren't even US citizens, so there's no question they're foreign invaders and combatants that can be legally killed by any American in the name of homeland security. We should also send the military against them. Those foreign enemies have infiltrated our cities and are a bigger threat than men living in caves in Afghanistan.atticus wrote:I don't think we have to re-invent the wheel on this one. I understand that Abraham Lincoln was faced with similar arguments during the War Between the States, and that Americans who chose to serve under the Confederate flag were determined NOT to be entitled to criminal court proceedings. They, like Anwar Not-so-lucky, had U. S. citizenship, but chose to fight against the U. S. Note that, when they were captured alive and if then charged with a crime, they were tried before military tribunals. But they were all fair targets of war when on the battlefield. After the war, President Johnson cleared the decks by ordering a general amnesty to those who had fought against the U. S. Even Robert E. Lee had to worry about charges of treason. But that's all post-war stuff. During the war, it's pretty clear that Americans, albeit Confederates, who were combatants against the U. S., did not have a right to a civil trial for their participation in the war. To me it means that the claims that we assassinated a U. S. citizen, and violated Anwar's rights, are meritless. He chose to take the field of battle against the country of his birth. You pays your money and you takes your chances.