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The Tea Party's Inner ACLU
WSJ ^ | 29 April 2012 | The Wall Street Journal

Posted on 04/30/2012 5:28:16 PM PDT by Theoria

A left-right alliance against military detention of terrorists.

The tea party movement has generally been constructive, but every so often it runs off the road. A case in point is its emerging condominium with the anti-antiterror left to block terrorist detentions.

This strange alliance has developed in response to one of Congress's rare bipartisan achievements—the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). That bill affirmed the long-standing distinction between civilian justice and the rules of war by letting the President detain terrorists (including U.S. citizens) captured anywhere and question them as long as necessary. A President can decide to try them in either military or civilian courts, and the right of habeas corpus to challenge detention in court, established by the Supreme Court's 2004 Hamdi decision, is unchanged.

This modest law has sprouted a burst of political delusion in several states and Congress. A tea party outfit called the Tenth Amendment Center calls the law "an unconstitutional and dangerous federal power grab"—though the statute merely codifies existing practice under Presidents Bush and Obama. In the wilder tea party precincts, the talk is that in a second term Mr. Obama might round people up, a la Japanese-Americans after Pearl Harbor.

The paranoia is showing up in state legislatures, and this month Virginia became the first to forbid state employees from "assisting" the feds "in the conduct of the investigation, prosecution, or detention of any citizen" under the provisions of the NDAA. This means that as of July 1 in Richmond a state trooper could not arrest the likes of the late Virginia cleric-turned-terrorist-recruiter Anwar al-Awlaki because he might end up in a military brig. A U.S. missile targeted and killed Awlaki in Yemen on Presidential orders, but Virginia police couldn't detain him.

(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: aclu; military; ndaa; teaparty; virginia

1 posted on 04/30/2012 5:28:26 PM PDT by Theoria
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To: Theoria

This piece is riddle with bias.


2 posted on 04/30/2012 5:45:27 PM PDT by samtheman ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZ-4gnNz0vc)
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To: samtheman

Of course, and I was glad the WSJ put their views on record. Just in case the ‘paranoia’ is correct.


3 posted on 04/30/2012 5:50:55 PM PDT by Theoria (Rush Limbaugh: Ron Paul sounds like an Islamic terrorist)
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To: Theoria

Think that’s what this is, a CYA?


4 posted on 04/30/2012 5:58:18 PM PDT by samtheman ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZ-4gnNz0vc)
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To: Theoria

This piece is an errant urine stream.


5 posted on 04/30/2012 6:23:17 PM PDT by Steamburg (The contents of your wallet is the only language Politicians understand.)
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To: Theoria

It has the perverse effect of making the soldiers on the battlefield judge, jury, and executioners all in one package. The soldiers are discouraged from bringing POWs back from the battlefields. It also puts them at risk for demography by our own pols or pols of the battlefield nation. Ironically, the soldiers would be the ones on trial in front of a military tribunal.


6 posted on 04/30/2012 7:15:45 PM PDT by sefarkas (Why vote Democrat Lite?)
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To: Theoria

“A tea party outfit called the Tenth Amendment Center calls the law “an unconstitutional and dangerous federal power grab”—though the statute merely codifies existing practice under Presidents Bush and Obama.”

Right. That is the point.


7 posted on 04/30/2012 7:40:16 PM PDT by Psalm 144 (Obama's record is an open charnel pit. Romney's too, but under a whitened sepulchre.)
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To: Theoria

I agree, when Awlaki was in Yemen, Virginia police couldn’t detain him.


8 posted on 05/01/2012 4:01:07 AM PDT by mulebones
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