I agree with her that concerns over the conduct of litigation are a different animal. One thing that the OLC never got to see is the full range of legal/constitutional arguments against the executive order. Those became more visible once lawsuits were filed.
It's kind of ironic. She put a "ban" on legally defending the ban until she was convinced otherwise. Kind of like the ban on Syrian refugees.
She probably would have been better off saying the executive order needed extreme vetting...
Jersey Girl wrote:Res Ipsa wrote:I agree that we DKS. We may NKS. Frankly, that's why I hadn't been commenting on her actions/firing. I have lots of questions, but I don't have much on which to base an opinion.
To determine whether the executive order is legal/constitutional would take a fair amount of research and analysis. I would like to hope that it was done by somebody. I'd like to hope it was written down in an analysis somewhere.
Listen, tell me where I am wrong. This isn't the first halt on travel/immigration, is it? Other administrations have done this, haven't they? So Trump and his folks, enact a temp 90 day halt on travel/immigration using a list of problematic countries developed by the Obama administration.
So why are folks hopping up and down over this? Because it was poorly executed? What?
Context is everything. I am firmly convinced that populist totalitarians operate in very distinct patterns. One of those patterns is scapegoating. Trump scapegoated immigrants, especially Mexicans and Muslims, throughout his campaign. He sowed fear and loathing of those groups in his rallies. That's how populist totalitarians gain power -- they define an enemy and present themselves as the only on that can save the people from that enemy.
I think we can all agree that the moral response to the holocaust is "never again." I think we can also all agree that the executive order does not order the gassing of Jews. The moral question, I think, is if you are genuinely committed to "never again," when do you start opposing the totalitarian. Do you wait until you see a Jew being gassed? Or until you see a picture of Jews being gassed? Or until you see Jews rounded up? Or until you see newspapers being filled with articles about the criminal jew? Or until you see a travel ban on Jews? Or you hear a politician scapegoating Jews? When, exactly, do you stand up and say "Hey guys. Been there. Done that. Never again."
Looking at past instances of travel bans, it seems to me they were all in response to a specific event that created some legitimate concern. And they were targeted to that even. Here, the entire premise of a ban is the assertion that, somehow, our vetting process is inadequate. Trump went around on the campaign trail and told the flat out lie that we didn't vet refugees at all. And now that lie has been leveraged into the "fact" that our vetting is so inadequate, we have to stop admitting people for some period of time or indefinitely. It makes zero sense. It makes zero sense to indefinitely ban Syrian refugees that have gone through a two-year vetting process from entering the U.S. when no Syrian refugee has ever killed an American in a terrorist incident. The way it makes sense is "See, I'm the guy who can save you from those murderous Muslims"
The ban is theater. It's not needed. It's not justified. It's there solely to portray Trump as a man of action. There is no reason to believe that the ban will save any American's life, and lots of reason to believe it will radicalize some folks into becoming terrorists that wouldn't have otherwise.
I fully support anyone who wants to review our screening processes to improve them. But the ban has nothing to do with that. The ban has to do with promoting the strongman.
When I read the executive order, I began to think "it's time." When I saw the cruel and callous way it was implemented, I was sure. My conscience tells me that it's time to start resisting.
That's the difference for me.