But, how could we deport someone like the murdering male in San Bernadino, who was born here?
Is there any historical precedent for dealing with traitors within, other than jailing them?
We can not deport a U.S. citizen. We must not allow radical Islam to destroy our constitution and our rights. This is the difficult situation we face.
As to your second question - there are laws on the book for sedition. The risk is that you implement those laws against those who promote or ascribe to radical Islam and another administration like this one comes to power and implements those laws against Christians who have religious beliefs that are not politically correct. If we deport them today they may seek to deport us tomorrow and there is no legal basis to deport citizens.
Shariah law is incompatible with our constitution, laws, and culture. That is something most Americans agree with so it is the obviously a place to start, but everything after that is risky business if government is empowered with additional tools to target groups. We must preserve our freedoms at the same time we preserve our security - a difficult proposition indeed.
From what I know, (not very much), Islam really isn’t a religion in the sense our Constitution intends. It is a theocracy, a system of government, of which religion plays a relatively small part.
So, I don’t understand why our political leaders and the media keep referring to it as a “faith”, when there are court systems and laws that conflict with our own.
It is a real puzzle to me.