al-SCOTUS
Boumediene v. Bush, Satire, Supreme Court

Photoshop commentary by TerrellAfterMath.
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Category Archive 'Boumediene v. Bush'
15 Jun 2008
al-SCOTUSBoumediene v. Bush, Satire, Supreme Court
Photoshop commentary by TerrellAfterMath. 13 Jun 2008
Can the Left Defend Boumediene?Boumediene v. Bush, Guantanamo Detainees, Justice Anthony Kennedy, Left Think, Obsidian Wings, Supreme Court, The Law, War on TerrorHilzoy thinks she can, but her arguments amount only to extravagant assertions that everyone, everywhere, and at all times, in peace and in war, tra la! has the same judicial rights and the same access to US courts as a US civilian accused of a domestic crime in peacetime residing in the United States.
Shooting at US forces in Afghanistan or conspiring in Karachi to arrange attacks on the civilian populations of US cities are the kinds of circumstances in which people normally enjoy the protections of US citizenship and the protection of US courts? Apparently that’s what Hilzoy, a graduate of Princeton, thinks. Hilzoy:
From Hilzoy’s perspective, there is no legal distinction whatsoever between the United States and foreign soil, no issues of distance, remoteness, or lack of US sovereignty matter. There is no difference between US citizens and aliens, and there is no difference between peace and war. One expects Hilzoy (and perhaps Justice Kennedy, too) to leap in front of the muzzle of some frontline marine’s rifle, crying out: “Don’t you shoot that chap in the turban (the one firing the AK47)! He’s entitled to counsel, a fair trial, and a full course of appeals before he can be punished. Don’t you go violating his rights, you brute. 13 Jun 2008
How Did Justice Kennedy Get To His Boumediene Decision?Boumediene v. Bush, Guantanamo Detainees, Johnson v. Eisentrager, Justice Anthony Kennedy, Rasul v. Bush, Supreme Court, The Law, War on TerrorIn JOHNSON v. EISENTRAGER, 339 U.S. 763 (1950), the Supreme Court ruled:
observing:
So how does Justice Kennedy arrive at a different conclusion?
The only readily comprehensible distinctions Justice Kennedy makes are Bush has shilly-shallied around too long. There should have been more timely military trials and the Guantanamo Naval Station is somehow more under “the absolute and definite control” of the US Government than a prison operated by the US Army in Germany in 1950 was, while WWII involved a different historical context and mission, i.e. was the “Good War.” (1) perhaps has some merit. (2) simply amounts to a rationalization. Justice Kennedy’s arguments are weak, and they are clearly self-interested. What this is really all about, as in Rasul, is plain Judicial Branch imperialism and overreaching, the refusal to accept limits to jurisdiction or the supremacy of the Executive in time of war. Justice Kennedy has produced a very irresponsible opinion, which will surely result in the release of some dangerous and fanatical enemies of the United States, very probably leading to further loss of American lives. Members of today’s American intelligentsia, even those sitting on the Supreme Court, are commonly incapable of seeing what was obvious even to the Ancient Romans, who closed the Temple of Janus in time of war to symbolize the fact that inter arma enim silent leges. |