fpb

The law and its officers

May 13, 2012 12:11

Point one: Mr Eric Holder, the United States' chief law enforcement officer, has announced that his department will not defend lawsuits involving the Defence of Marriage Act, a federal law duly passed by Congress and signed by (a Democrat) President ( Read more... )

eric holder, democrat folly and corruption, american politics, barack obama, morality

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Comments 7

jordan179 May 13 2012, 17:28:26 UTC
Indeed -- this would be termed "misfeasance" in America (it's "malfeasance" if done with bad intent). Holder could be prosecuted for this, and he's skating on increasingly thinner ice as Obama's Administration loses support in both Congress and the Courts. Obama and Holder have both made this worse by deliberate defiance of both.

Holder's done this before, too, on a more serious matter: the New Black Panther Party voter intimidation case.

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fpb May 13 2012, 18:06:41 UTC
And now the bounty put on Zimmerman's head. What will it take to wake the average Democrat up?

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blue_sky_day May 14 2012, 13:58:45 UTC
They don't really care: a lot of Democrats are opposed to the DOMA, and therefore will approve of this decision
Also, plenty of his supporters probably buy in 100% to the attacks on Zimmerman (even though the news media have been caught lying and distorting aspects of the case).

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fpb May 14 2012, 19:45:59 UTC
The point is that the law is to be defended even if you disagree with it. If Democrats as a mass don't understand this simple and obvious point, they are not worthy of being called citizens of a free commonwealth.

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luckymarty May 15 2012, 00:11:44 UTC
Yes, this announcement was made some years ago, when Obama was still pretending to oppose gay marriage.

I am peripherally involved in a current lawsuit challenging the DOMA: it turns out Congress has its own legal staff (the Bipartisan Legal Advisory Group, with the unpleasant acronym BLAG) which had to petition the judge for permission to provide a defense of the DOMA, because the DOJ lawyers won't.

*

There actually is a respectable argument to be made that the President has a duty to refuse to defend in court laws which he believes to be unconstitutional -- it doesn't fit well in the mouths of those who think "constitutional" is a synonym for "good" and "unconstitutional" for "bad," but it's respectable.

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fpb May 15 2012, 09:31:42 UTC
Sorry, I don't see it. The President has no more right to decide which law is constitutional or not than any other elected or unelected officer, with the exception of judges, [part of] whose job it is. The executive is supposed to execute, that is, carry out, the laws. If we thought otherwise, there would be no defence against, say, a law enforcement officer sympathetic to a terrorist movement deciding that the laws that condemn terrorism are unconstitutional. Or has that already happened?

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luckymarty May 15 2012, 23:22:28 UTC
The President takes an oath to uphold the Constitution. Both Congress and the President have in recent years decided to farm out the duty of deciding what the Constitution is to the Supreme Court. This is an understandable reaction to the prevailing school of constitutional interpretation which has (to be blunt) been corrupted by both theory and practice over the course of the last several decades ( ... )

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