RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (Full Version)

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rulemylife -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 8:50:05 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY


Assuming that political pressure was used to "encourage" BP to make such a fund, then the basic concept of "the rule of law", not "the rule of men" was indeed violated, even if no written law was violated.

Pressure can mean many things, but in this instance, if the judgment of one man caused BP to commit funds outside of a legal requirement, against their desire, then that was the imposition of a man's will over the "will" of law, and a clear violation of one of the most common concepts of "the rule of law".

Now, if BP themselves decided, for public relations or moral reasons to do the same thing, then that would have been a free expression and act of contrition/public relations/morality.

Do we know how the decision actually occurred?  No.  Therefore, unless or until evidence comes out that it was a "forced" decision, no one can truly say that they know it was a violation of the concept of "rule of law".

The circumstances, however, are suspicious, and it is not in the interests of BP to admit the facts of the case, so I doubt we will every know.

However, the main topic was the lack of understanding of the NYT in understanding what "the rule of law" is, and now (in my mind) has become about the fact that it seems that not many on the left side of the political equation understand what it is, either.

Firm



Your magical "rule of law" then is based on morality.  Correct?

So how do you come to the conclusion that Obama was immoral by forcing those who caused damage to others to accept responsibility?




FirmhandKY -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 8:50:37 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Real0ne

quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY

FR:

The topic of conversation isn't about (necessarily) the BP "payment" of $20 billion.  It is about a NYT reporter not understanding that the "rule of law" is not some ancient, drug up, old fashioned concept, but the very basis of the US system of governance.

The US government's apparent coercion of the BP payment is an example of its failure to follow the rule of law.

Firm



which one of the over 60,000,000 rules law might that be man?

what is due process and the "rule of law"


Federalist 62:

It will be of little avail to the people, that the laws are made by men of their own choice, if the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood; if they be repealed or revised before they are promulgated, or undergo such incessant changes that no man, who knows what the law is to-day, can guess what it will be to-morrow. Law is defined to be a rule of action; but how can that be a rule, which is little known, and less fixed?

Doing what you are talking about, and what Madison above talks about is using the form to overcome the substance of "the rule of law".

"One way to be free from the rule of law is by denying that an enactment has the necessary attributes of law."

***

The "rule of law" as I am discussing it (with thanks to Wikipedia):

Although credit for popularizing the expression "the rule of law" in modern times is usually given to A. V. Dicey, development of the legal concept can be traced through history as far back as Ancient Greece.

British jurist A. V. Dicey popularized the phrase "rule of law" in 1885.  Dicey emphasized three aspects of the rule of law: (1) no one can be punished or made to suffer except for a breach of law proved in an ordinary court; (2) no one is above the law and everyone is equal before the law regardless of social, economic, or political status; and (3) the rule of law includes the results of judicial decisions determining the rights of private persons.

In addition to the formal and substantive interpretations of the term "rule of law", another leading interpretation is the functional definition, which is consistent with the traditional English meaning that contrasts the "rule of law" with the "rule of man."  According to the functional view, a society in which government officers have a great deal of discretion has a low degree of "rule of law", whereas a society in which government officers have little discretion has a high degree of "rule of law". The rule of law is thus somewhat at odds with flexibility, even when flexibility may be preferable

All government officers of the United States, including the President, the Justices of the Supreme Court, and all members of Congress, pledge first and foremost to uphold the Constitution. These oaths affirm that the rule of law is superior to the rule of any human leader.

Firm




FirmhandKY -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 8:52:56 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: mnottertail

rule of law?  nobody is above the law is about how that sifts out.

I believe it was fundamentally destroyed with Ws signing statements. I assume that's what you meant by not knowing history, or the noblesse oblige and lese magiste we should have in this country regarding the looting of our treasury, orchestrating an illegal invasion of a soveriegn nation without provocation,  slow undoing of our rights, and our engaging in torture and so many other things in this country.

And now, just now, a few nutsuckers have come to consiousness?    

A dichotomy can be identified between two principal conceptions of the rule of law: a formalist or "thin" and a substantive or "thick" definition of the rule of law. Formalist definitions of the rule of law do not make a judgment about the "justness" of law itself,  (that would be the take of these nutsuckers) but define specific procedural attributes that a legal framework must have in order to be in compliance with the rule of law.

Substantive conceptions of the rule of law go beyond this and include certain substantive rights that are said to be based on, or derived from, the rule of law (that would be those of us who are of reason).


Wikipedia is great, isn't it?

But maybe you should attribute as well.

Firm




Musicmystery -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 8:58:57 AM)

quote:

asserted that the $20 billion escrow fund that the Obama administration forced BP to set up to pay damages from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill circumvented “the rule of law,” Hayek’s term for the unwritten code that prohibits the government from interfering with the pursuit of “personal ends and desires.”

So take them to court. If that's the case, it will be struck down. If not, move on.

BP agreed, vs. forced, and set aside money it was going to have to pay anyway--a good PR move, considering many of the Exxon claims were never collected. And, transferring funds is something the government does well.

What does this accomplish? Little, except lending some credibility to the expectations that claims will be paid.

The rest of the rhetoric is predictable from the camp that's determined to label everything Obama illegal--including citizenship.

Yawn.




rulemylife -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 9:05:12 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY

The "rule of law" as I am discussing it (with thanks to Wikipedia):

Although credit for popularizing the expression "the rule of law" in modern times is usually given to A. V. Dicey, development of the legal concept can be traced through history as far back as Ancient Greece.

British jurist A. V. Dicey popularized the phrase "rule of law" in 1885.  Dicey emphasized three aspects of the rule of law: (1) no one can be punished or made to suffer except for a breach of law proved in an ordinary court; (2) no one is above the law and everyone is equal before the law regardless of social, economic, or political status; and (3) the rule of law includes the results of judicial decisions determining the rights of private persons.

In addition to the formal and substantive interpretations of the term "rule of law", another leading interpretation is the functional definition, which is consistent with the traditional English meaning that contrasts the "rule of law" with the "rule of man."  According to the functional view, a society in which government officers have a great deal of discretion has a low degree of "rule of law", whereas a society in which government officers have little discretion has a high degree of "rule of law". The rule of law is thus somewhat at odds with flexibility, even when flexibility may be preferable

All government officers of the United States, including the President, the Justices of the Supreme Court, and all members of Congress, pledge first and foremost to uphold the Constitution. These oaths affirm that the rule of law is superior to the rule of any human leader.

Firm



Want to talk about your confirmation bias theories Firm?

You spout off about that then go to Wiki to find whatever you can to confirm your latest pseudo-intellectual nonsense.

A society does not conform to the rule of law, a society establishes the rule of law.

There is no magical fundamental truth of law that every society adheres to.





FirmhandKY -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 10:28:01 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

Want to talk about your confirmation bias theories Firm?

You spout off about that then go to Wiki to find whatever you can to confirm your latest pseudo-intellectual nonsense.

What bias am I displaying, exactly, anyway?


quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

A society does not conform to the rule of law, a society establishes the rule of law.

Never said anything different, although there is plenty of room for a discussion on the subject, either way, or both ways.



quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

There is no magical fundamental truth of law that every society adheres to.

Where exactly did you get the thought that there was, or that I believed there was?

Firm




FirmhandKY -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 10:33:56 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Musicmystery

quote:

asserted that the $20 billion escrow fund that the Obama administration forced BP to set up to pay damages from the Gulf of Mexico oil spill circumvented “the rule of law,” Hayek’s term for the unwritten code that prohibits the government from interfering with the pursuit of “personal ends and desires.”

So take them to court. If that's the case, it will be struck down. If not, move on.

I don't care about the specifics of this case, insofar as it is unprovable, one way or another, what kind or if undue pressure was used to secure the commitment of funds.  It was simply a quote from the article's author, in which she lead into the discussion about "the rule of law" being some ancient, not modern, fogy old concept.

It is the concept of "the rule of law" being an outmoded concept that I was commenting on.

quote:

ORIGINAL: Musicmystery

BP agreed, vs. forced, and set aside money it was going to have to pay anyway--a good PR move, considering many of the Exxon claims were never collected. And, transferring funds is something the government does well.

What does this accomplish? Little, except lending some credibility to the expectations that claims will be paid.

The rest of the rhetoric is predictable from the camp that's determined to label everything Obama illegal--including citizenship.

Interesting view point.

What "rest of the rhetoric" exactly?

And you seem to think I've claimed "everything Obama" is "illegal", including his citizenship?

Care to rethink that, or at least back it up?

Firm




FirmhandKY -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 10:39:20 AM)

FR:

What exactly does my lefty brethren have against the following concepts?

(1) no one can be punished or made to suffer except for a breach of law proved in an ordinary court;
(2) no one is above the law and everyone is equal before the law regardless of social, economic, or political status; and

(3) the rule of law includes the results of judicial decisions determining the rights of private persons.

(4) The "rule of law" is preferred over the "rule of man."

Firm




AnimusRex -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 10:52:06 AM)

I find it odd that the same people who cry out "rule of law!" with respect to a the President seeking to force a corporation to pay damages, sudden go mute when the same President asserts his right to summarily imprison or even execute any American citizen based on nothing more than his belief that said person is dangerous.

In theory, Obama could simply order the execution of the BP executives, and be done with it.

Not that he would, but according to neocon legal theory, he could.

In response to Firm, this lefty has nothing against rule of law- we have been screaming about it since the War on Terra began.




Real0ne -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 11:34:00 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: AnimusRex

I find it odd that the same people who cry out "rule of law!" with respect to a the President seeking to force a corporation to pay damages, sudden go mute when the same President asserts his right to summarily imprison or even execute any American citizen based on nothing more than his belief that said person is dangerous.

In theory, Obama could simply order the execution of the BP executives, and be done with it.

Not that he would, but according to neocon legal theory, he could.

In response to Firm, this lefty has nothing against rule of law- we have been screaming about it since the War on Terra began.


that is because most people have little working information on exactly how this country works.

If you wish to research it look to the lieber code from lincolns day.  roughly 1864ish.  It spells out the common law of war and one must remember that anything a government enacts unless there is a "specific" repeal or promulgated sunset it is still active to this day.

Long story short; lincoln declared martial law and it has never been rescinded.   The "corporate" "commercial" citizen was created by the 14th and subsequent legislation.   It was actually in the works 30 years before lincoln and takes time to implement.

technically the government at large is a form of military consolidation of corporations all based around the banking industry through constructive fraud.

As an example; now this is not a slap you in the face example, but spend a few years studying law and you will see the point crystal clear.

Why is there a "military" flag in a court room?  What does the military have to do with the law of the common peaceful civilian people?   Unless of course its really a government of the People?

Who have they sworn to protect?  Those who work under the constitution or the creators not subject to it?

Then read the laws of nations to give you a picture of the SOP in a military take over of a country.  There are many levels and degrees of enforcement of martial law you know.   It does not need to take the appearance of curfews at 9pm etc.... to be a martial "form" law.   Combine that with lex mercatoria the ucc and the attachment process and you got a sure fire winner to extort a pile of money! 





FirmhandKY -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 11:42:56 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

Your magical "rule of law" then is based on morality.  Correct?

Conclusion without evidence.

But a pretty good thread topic, all on its own.


quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

So how do you come to the conclusion that Obama was immoral by forcing those who caused damage to others to accept responsibility?

If Obama "forced" BP to pay billions of dollars, outside the law, before legal proceedings, then it's immaterial whether or not they would later owe it due to their responsibility for the damage they caused.

This

1. Action
2. Establishment of guilt by law.
3. Punishment in accordance to the law.

Not:

1. Action
2.  Punishment at the command of a man.
3.  Establishment of guilt by law

Firm




Musicmystery -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 11:48:13 AM)

quote:

you seem to think I've claimed

You know me better than this.

I said "from the camp." When I mean you personally, I'm not shy about saying so.

It's a public message board, and things are written in that light (vs. personal email).





Real0ne -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/9/2010 12:01:09 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY

quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

Your magical "rule of law" then is based on morality.  Correct?

Conclusion without evidence.

But a pretty good thread topic, all on its own.


quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

So how do you come to the conclusion that Obama was immoral by forcing those who caused damage to others to accept responsibility?

If Obama "forced" BP to pay billions of dollars, outside the law, before legal proceedings, then it's immaterial whether or not they would later owe it due to their responsibility for the damage they caused.

This

1. Action
2. Establishment of guilt by law.
3. Punishment in accordance to the law.

Not:

1. Action
2.  Punishment at the command of a man.
3.  Establishment of guilt by law

Firm




depends on which law form...

They have evidence all right....

Traffic tickets follow the rule of law but whom was injured for no plates?

Rule of law is rather vague by comparison of  "law of the land" which puts us square into substantive law.  (well unless they recently changed or skewed that definition as well)

If you are in commercial presumption rules.

judge here is the sworn affidavit of the tax bill we sent him and he did not pay it.

but but but I dont use any of those services judge!


Show me the contract!

Are you a res-ident?   IN the State of xyz?  IN the municipality if abc?  Do you own the property?

judgment for the city.

They will completely bypass any argument for substantive discovery.

Like produce the contract, the legislation and referendum and ballot records that the people voted that it applies to the people.

Its all presumed to be true if the government is the resource when we all know if their lips are moving its a lie.

So have we followed administrative rule of law?  Yes  therefore we have operated by the "rule of law".

Does it however conform to the law of the land?  no

was it just?  well you all tell me....


quote:

This

1. Action
2. Establishment of guilt by law.
3. Punishment in accordance to the law.

Not:

1. Action
2.  Punishment at the command of a man.
3.  Establishment of guilt by law


when dealing with BP that is strictly commercial charters and commercial charters are based in fiction, legislated acts etc.

quote:

This

1. Action
2. Establishment of guilt by law.
3. Punishment in accordance to the law.

Not:

1. Action
2.  Punishment at the command of a man.
3.  Establishment of guilt by law


law of man are primarily "i said so" law and are legislative

Substantive law, law of the land requires a living injured party and a jury of peers.

judge has virtually NOTHING to do it.

All courts are "presumed" to establish facts by some rule then apply those rules and applicable law.

The depth, merits and substance of the facts is what distinguishes justice from fraud.

Was a living body injured?





EternalHoH -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/12/2010 1:42:18 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata

But the operative word there is "personal". Corporations aren't "persons" in any sense that someone with half a brain would accept (legal definitions to the contrary notwithstanding).

K.




You might want to check in with the Supreme Court before you make too much of an assumption that personhood and corporations are a mutually exclusive concept.




GotSteel -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/12/2010 7:16:50 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata
I have to agree that Hayek is worth reading, for anyone who hasn't. But the operative word there is "personal". Corporations aren't "persons" in any sense that someone with half a brain would accept (legal definitions to the contrary notwithstanding).

K.


Someone with half a brain would understand that an appeal to ridicule to justify throwing out the legal definitions in a legal matter is ridiculous.




Real0ne -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/12/2010 7:29:46 PM)



yeh if you expect the BAR fly infestation to do it.







rulemylife -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/13/2010 5:47:27 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY

quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

Your magical "rule of law" then is based on morality.  Correct?

Conclusion without evidence.

But a pretty good thread topic, all on its own.


That wasn't a conclusion, it was a question.

Note the question mark.


quote:

ORIGINAL: FirmhandKY
quote:

ORIGINAL: rulemylife

So how do you come to the conclusion that Obama was immoral by forcing those who caused damage to others to accept responsibility?

If Obama "forced" BP to pay billions of dollars, outside the law, before legal proceedings, then it's immaterial whether or not they would later owe it due to their responsibility for the damage they caused.


The key word here is forced.

When you negotiate with someone do you feel as if anyone is being forced?

Like Aunt Nancy told us "just say no".

It was an agreement well within the law.

And I have to ask again the question I posed earlier, why are pro-business conservatives so upset by an agreement that helps the businesses hurt by the spill?






Moonhead -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/13/2010 5:53:56 AM)

Because next it'll be Union Carbide paying off the Indians in Bhopal, or Nestle paying a fair trade for cocoa and coffee, or even Walmart paying sweatshop employees enough to eat more than once a day, and then capitalism will come crashing down in flames...




Real0ne -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/13/2010 9:39:03 AM)

when your corporate charter is authorized and therefore governed under the united states you aint got a bitch imo




Moonhead -> RE: NYT's Discovers Insidious TEA Party belief: Rule of Law (10/13/2010 10:35:42 AM)

Everybody knows your opinion, effendi: that's why most of the forum finds you hilarious, I suspect.




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