As he did with immigration......
This part
“....Even when international understandings are validly created by treaty (which requires approval by two-thirds of the Senate), they are not self-executing, as the legal lexicon puts it meaning they are not judicially enforceable and carry no domestic weight. Whether bilateral or multilateral, treaties do not supersede existing federal law unless implemented by new congressional statutes. And they are powerless to amend the Constitution. ......”
Would apply to how many other treaties? What else has 0 done that fits this pattern??
(Or other presidents; FRmail welcome on this part of my question)
He doesn’t need any approval. He has a pen and a phone don’t you know.
Since the Constitution is now not enforced by the other 2 branches, who’s to say he can’t do anything he wants?
obams has demonstrated time after time that he can do as he damn well pleases. The Constitution be damned, and thus far, no one in authority, to wit: Congress, has told him nay. So why should he think otherwise?
Ping.
....and everyone thought Barry was running the country....
Whoever took Constitutional Law from Barack Hussein Obama, if the claim is true that taught that course an adjunct professor in Chicago, deserves a full refund with interest. Did his “teaching” career end with those sexual harassment complaints from some male students? Maybe he learned Constitutional Law so he’d know exactly in what way and how would violate it.
Would the UN even trust Obama anyway ,LOL
He can and he will. Congress, effectively in the control of the Democrats will make some noise but will fund anything that the Sultans demands and will not pass anything he does not want. Hussein can do any damned thing he wants to do. Congress, even if it legislates against what he does has to pass al aw which he will veto. Congress cannot override any veto. The President with 35 senators is a dictator especially if the nominal opposition is under the operational control of the Democrats as the Senate Republicans are under the control of Harry Reid.
The Senate would have to approve any Treaty, but what Obama is doing is not that. Just an agreement not worth anything.
I seem to recall a similar statement about the kenyan's illegal Amnesty scheme ....
Obama the new Nero see history does repeat it’s self stupidity causes it.
"The important distinction so well understood in America between a Constitution established by the people and unalterable by the government, and a law established by the government and alterable by the government, seems to have been little understood and less observed in any other country." - James Madison, Federalist 43
We can be thankful that the framers of our Constitution and early justices understood that Constitution's purpose and wrote volumes explaining its underlying principles and ideas. Those writings are there for us to read--if we care enough to do so!
Excerpted below are the concluding paragraphs from Justice Joseph Story's "Commentaries on the Constitution. . . ."
The final paragraph of that powerful document serves as a cautionary warning for today's attacks on its principles and limitations on government power.
" CHAPTER XLV. CONCLUDING REMARKS.§ 1903. We have now reviewed all the provisions of the original constitution of the United States, and all the amendments, which have been incorporated into it. And, here, the task originally proposed in these Commentaries is brought to a close. Many reflections naturally crowd upon the mind at such a moment; many grateful recollections of the past; and many anxious thoughts of the future. The past is secure. It is unalterable. The seal of eternity is upon it. The wisdom, which it has displayed, and the blessings, which it has bestowed, cannot be obscured; neither can they be debased by human folly, or human infirmity. The future is that, which may well awaken the most earnest solicitude, both for the virtue and the permanence of our republic. The fate of other republics, their rise, their progress, their decline, and their fall, are written but too legibly on the pages of history, if indeed they were not continually before us in the startling fragments of their ruins. They have perished; and perished by their own hands. Prosperity has enervated them, corruption has debased them, and a venal populace has consummated their destruction. Alternately the prey of military chieftains at home, and of ambitious invaders from abroad, they have been sometimes cheated out of their liberties by servile demagogues; sometimes betrayed into a surrender of them by false patriots; and sometimes they have willingly sold them for a price to the despot, who has bidden highest for his victims. They have disregarded the warning voice of their best statesmen; and have persecuted, and driven from office their truest friends. They have listened to the fawning sycophant, and the base calumniator of the wise and the good. They have reverenced power more in its high abuses and summary movements, than in its calm and constitutional energy, when it dispensed blessings with an unseen, but liberal hand. They have surrendered to faction, what belonged to the country. Patronage and party, the triumph of a leader, and the discontents of a day, have outweighed all solid principles and institutions of government. Such are the melancholy lessons of the past history of republics down to our own.
§ 1904. It is not my design to detain the reader by any elaborate reflections addressed to his judgment, either by way of admonition or of encouragement. But it may not be wholly without use to glance at one or two considerations, upon which our meditations cannot be too frequently indulged.
§ 1905. In the first place, it cannot escape our notice, how exceedingly difficult it is to settle the foundations of any government upon principles, which do not admit of controversy or question. The, very elements, out of which it is to be built, are susceptible of infinite modifications; and theory too often deludes us by the attractive simplicity of its plans, and imagination by the visionary perfection of its speculations. In theory, a government may promise the most perfect harmony of operations in all its various combinations. In practice, the whole machinery may be perpetually retarded, or thrown out of order by accidental mal-adjustments. In theory, a government may seem deficient in unity of design and symmetry of parts; and yet, in practice, it may work with astonishing accuracy and force for the general welfare. Whatever, then, has been found to work well in experience, should be rarely hazarded upon conjectural improvements. Time, and long and steady operation are indispensable to the perfection of all social institutions. To be of any value they must become cemented with the habits, the feelings, and the pursuits of the people. Every change discomposes for a while the whole arrangements of the system. What is safe is not always expedient; what is new is often pregnant with unforeseen evils, and imaginary good.
§ 1906. In the next place, the slightest attention to the history of the national constitution must satisfy every reflecting mind, how many difficulties attended its formation and adoption, from real or imaginary differences of interests, sectional feelings, and local institutions. It is an attempt to create a national sovereignty, and yet to preserve the state sovereignties; though it is impossible to assign definite boundaries in every case to the powers of each. The influence of the disturbing causes, which, more than once in the convention, were on the point of breaking up the Union, have since immeasurably increased in concentration and vigour. The very inequalities of a government, confessedly founded in a compromise, were then felt with a strong sensibility; and every new source of discontent, whether accidental or permanent, has since added increased activity to the painful sense of these inequalities. The North cannot but perceive, that it has yielded to the South a superiority of representatives, already amounting to twenty-five, beyond its due proportion; and the South imagines, that, with all this preponderance in representation, the other parts of the Union enjoy a more perfect protection of their interests, than her own. The West feels her growing power and weight in the Union; and the Atlantic states begin to learn, that the sceptre must one day depart from them. If, under these circumstances, the Union should once be broken up, it is impossible, that a new constitution should ever be formed, embracing the whole Territory. We shall be divided into several nations or confederacies, rivals in power and interest, too proud to brook injury, and too close to make retaliation distant or ineffectual. Our very animosities will, like those of all other kindred nations, become more deadly, because our lineage, laws, and language are the same. Let the history of the Grecian and Italian republics warn us of our dangers. The national constitution is our last, and our only security. United we stand; divided we fall.
§ 1907. If these Commentaries shall but inspire in the rising generation a more ardent love of their country, an unquenchable thirst for liberty, and a profound reverence for the constitution and the Union, then they will have accomplished all, that their author ought to desire. Let the American youth never forget, that they possess a noble inheritance, bought by the toils, and sufferings, and blood of their ancestors; and capable, if wisely improved, and faithfully guarded, of transmitting to their latest posterity all the substantial blessings of life, the peaceful enjoyment of liberty, property, religion, and independence. The structure has been erected by architects of consummate skill and fidelity; its foundations are solid; its compartments are beautiful, as well as useful; its arrangements are full of wisdom and order; and its defences are impregnable from without. It has been reared for immortality, if the work of man may justly aspire to such a title. It may, nevertheless, perish in an hour by the folly, or corruption, or negligence of its only keepers, THE PEOPLE. Republics are created by the virtue, public spirit, and intelligence of the citizens. They fall, when the wise are banished from the public councils, because they dare to be honest, and the profligate are rewarded, because they flatter the people, in order to betray them."
- Justice Joseph Story - "Commentaries on the Constitution. . . ."
If EVER there was an impeachable act in our nation's history, this has to be it. "actively conspiring against the Constitution and Congress [and all Americans and the USA). Yet all the opposition is able to muster is a feckless letter to Iran. The Civil War and WW II were perilos times, but this is darn close. And we are all just spectators. Our goose is cooked.
We knew in 2007 this guy hated America and wanted to hurt us. We were ridiculed.