Posted on 09/26/2005 4:05:53 PM PDT by tjbravo
In his televised address on September 15, President Bush declared that "It is now clear that a challenge on this scale requires greater federal authority and a broader role for the armed forces--the institution of our government most capable of massive logistical operations on a moment's notice." Senator John Warner (R-Va.), chair of the Armed Services Committee, goes further. In the wake of Katrina, he's suggested weakening Posse Comitatus, the longstanding federal law that restricts the government's ability to use the U.S. military as a police force. Pentagon spokesman Lawrence Di Rita called Posse Comitatus a "very archaic" law that hampers the president's ability to respond to a crisis.
(Excerpt) Read more at cato.org ...
I am with you..NO! NO! AND NO!!!!
Just because he offers to do something, is no proof it can or will be done.
Look at the behavior by the local government involved in this discussion.
Look at what he is offering.
He's spanking the brats.
You see it too.
As the civilian authorities(Federal, State and Local) increasingly prove their incompetency there will come a time in the future when some military leader will say "Who needs you!"
This is true, but the move to Federalize was predictable after the attacks the Administration and the President had to endure after Katrina. People should be very careful what they ask for.
yoo-hoo
That said, how many mouths does the Federal Gov't feed who ARE NOT in the armed forces? Can looting be considered a federal crime, such that the FBI can "investigate"?
Can mitigating a flood fall into the purview of the Bureau of Land Management?
Can an evacuated city be considered a "Wilderness Area", subject to Federal Parks authority?
Can IRS agents fill sandbags?
I agree, but the thing that gets me is that hurricane scientists have been warning for years, well over 20 years, that if Americans continued to build and move into vulnerable coastal areas, disaster was inevitable.
Well, Americans by the millions moved into those areas and we had a disaster. Yet not once have I heard it mentioned that everyone knew the danger, that we had been warned about it for so long.
i agree.
Bucket used to hold only one candidate.
(C'mon George, we already have mexico and that little border thing to disagree over, don't make it SO much worse.)
yeah I could have sworn I read about that somewhere.
Healy: The Posse Comitatus Act is no barrier to federal troops providing logistical support during natural disasters.
Pentagon spokesman Lawrence Di Rita called Posse Comitatus a "very archaic" law that hampers the president's ability to respond to a crisis.
With nothing more to go on, isn't the problem with Di Rita's comment and not Bush's?
Congress passed the law for good and prudent reason, seeing the abuses caused by having the military acting as law enforcement during the Reconstruction period. The American Revolution was partly caused by British troops trying to act in a law enforcement capacity
The frame of mind that makes for a good soldier generally makes for a bad cop. Something to keep in mind as our police forces become increasingly militarized
Watch this:
http://www.gunowners.org/abcnews.mpg
This is NOT what we want more of. We do NOT want active duty military performing these type of actions. There is no check on their power, essential to the "checks and balances" in our system. Even this type of use of National Guardsmen, that is the breaking into occupied homes at gunpoint and confiscating their weapons, is worrisome to me. I have Second Amendment concerns over that and that's without mentioning the possible Third Amendment concerns with them occupying the church.
"The frame of mind that makes for a good soldier generally makes for a bad cop."
The issue here is whether the federal military or the state military makes a better cop. The NG is no better trained to be a police force than the federal forces.
"Something to keep in mind as our police forces become increasingly militarized"
The militarization of local police forces is also a separate issues.
The point I was making is really this. There were a number of complaints on this thread that repealing or amending Posse Comitatus was unconstitutional. There is a difference between a law and an article of the constitution.
The only time there should be a military police (militarized civil police are just another name for military police), is if the USA is invaded by another nation.
The US Constitution deals with this in my opinion; there isn't to be a standing army at all. Now, the government and people have floated away from this by illegal means (to lawfully violate the US Constitution requires an amendment to it). In any case the basic intent is clear: don't go in this direction.
Without research, I'm going to step out on a limb... I'd imagine PC was enacted to limit the growing use of US military for executing the law resulting from the Indian wars. It probably seemed like a natural progression. Using it again foreign agents seems somewhat legal (although ugly and mean), since the Indians nations are separate from the US (that's why they remain under Federal control) almost like a US territory. PC was created to stop the seeming natural progress from US military executing Federal law/rules against foreign nations (Indian nations), to executing civilian law against sovereign citizens and institutions.
Given what I surely see at the intent, PC shouldn't have been required but apparently was. This is just like marriage which the definition of was clear to all until people got evil enough.
Given a long study of lawful law, and our lawful law, please help prevent the perversion of the most basic and fundamental structures of law: the division between civil and Admiralty law and jurisdictions. Every real American knows this is one of the cornerstones of the very foundation of our Republic and must never be played with.
Our good people have (Revolutionary War) and (I'd assume) will fight such breeches of basic law structure with all means necessary.
Please note that any recent militaristic appearances to civil law in the USA are a result of an ongoing war (against a terror network) and as such are part of the constitutional War Powers act. As such they expire after the war is over (lawfully).
This administration is laying the foundation for tyranny faster than Clinton.
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