Quote:
Originally Posted by alexamenos
I'm trying to say something more fundamental than that. Namely, if the president is not going to follow the rules, then what we think doesn't really matter. We the people may think a particular cause is worthy, but what we're really doing is ceding the power to the president to do what he likes, when he likes, without respect to laws which he's sworn to uphold and without respect to the very important separation of powers.
The constitution is unequivocally clear on which branch of government has the authority to declare war (it's not the executive branch nor is it the UN Security Council). The president has sworn to uphold the constitution. The president, by launching an attack on a foreign country without authorization from congress has unquestionably committed a very high crime, and all that this implies.
The prudent course of action would be for congress to impeach Obama and then set about debating whether we should wage war on Libya.
This of course isn't going to happen. The train is so far off the tracks that congress will (for the most part) manage not to notice the abject executive usurpation of their powers. They'll probably just order up some freshly printed dollars from the fed to pay for the Libyan mission creep, then get to work on the next boondoggle.
The train is so off the tracks.
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Can't argue with that.
But it makes me wonder where is the breaking point? When is a president kicked out of power? Lying to congress about sexual relationships seems to be close.