"The Court leaves open the possibility that the Constitution forbids prosecuting the President for any official conduct, instructing the lower courts to address that question in the first instance. ... I would have answered it now. Though I agree that a President cannot be held criminally liable for conduct within his “conclusive and preclusive” authority and closely related acts,... the Constitution does not vest every exercise of executive power in the President’s sole discretion, " — Barrett
"applying it in the circumstances poses no “‘dange[r] of intrusion on the authority and functions of the Executive Branch.’” — Barrett
"For example, the indictment alleges that the President “asked the Arizona House Speaker to call the legislature into session to hold a hearing” about election fraud claims.The President has no authority over state legislatures or their leadership, so it is hard to see how prosecuting him for crimes committed when dealing with the Arizona House Speaker would unconstitutionally intrude on executive power." — Barrett
Also, wasn't the whole Russia-gate thing proven to be bullshit, just like 99.9% of everything that's written in the media? — Tzeentch
That is true. That one is the beneficiary of a transaction doesn't mean he should be. At some point one must prove he is entitled to the benefits. As an uninvited third party, the tax collector cannot provide that proof, therefor he should not be the beneficiary of the transaction. — NOS4A2
When you offer me something in return for my labor, and we both agree, and the transaction is satisfied, that’s a moral transaction. — NOS4A2
A Jewish homeland. That's all it is. If Israel is to be a democracy and a Jewish one it must maintain a certain demographic composition. Israel cannot "drop" Zionism because zionism is what affirms its existence -- Jewish self-determination. — BitconnectCarlos
None of the laws you've cited indicate that Israel discriminates de jure between Jews and non-Jews. — BitconnectCarlos
But if e.g. 90% of the people are in favor of anti-blasphemy laws would you say that it's "democratic" to nullify their will? Or do you just know their true will? — BitconnectCarlos
BTW Greece does favor those with Greek ancestry for citizenship. — BitconnectCarlos
You don't seem to take notice of the inherent contradictions within this idea. What if the majority wants e.g. blaspheming Muhammad to carry a penalty? — BitconnectCarlos
Is a state to promote a certain way of life at all? Or no -- should it stay completely neutral? If a state has a religious character that may be due to democracy; the people may have wanted it. I don't see democracy and a state promoting a certain way of life/ancestral traditions as inherently anti-democratic.
If Israel were to fall it would just become a Muslim state. To impose secularism on a religious population seems undemocratic. — BitconnectCarlos
Can be generalized some while remaining relevant: — jorndoe
Albanese is apparently a controversial figure. According to UN Watch ... — jorndoe
Do you believe in the preservation or destruction of the Jewish state? If you're an anti-zionist then you ultimately aim at it's destruction. I thought I remembered you saying that you were in support of 1967 borders, but perhaps that was just step one of dismantling Israel. — BitconnectCarlos
I would say Israel does pursue the ideal of non-discrimination. Israel has numerous laws that combat discrimination like any western nation. Israel's basic laws include a provision on equalityfor all citizens not just Jews. — BitconnectCarlos
So according to you then violence against legitimate targets, e.g. government forces, is sanctioned until 1967 borders are returned to? Or until Israel is dismantled? A commitment to 1967 borders would still make you a zionist as it would leave the Jewish state intact. — BitconnectCarlos
But do you not realize the West is also institutionally racist and oppressive? Oppression and institutional racism are everywhere. They are charges that can be applied anywhere and every country is guilty of it. — BitconnectCarlos
Why do you consider intentional violence against civilians "resistance?" — BitconnectCarlos
the belief that the best way of honouring the memory of those who died in Auschwitz is to condone the mass killing of Palestinians so that Israeli Jews can feel safe again is one of the great moral perversions of our time.
Looks like you need a nerdy girl. They’re probably the best ones anyway, in the scheme of things. — Mikie
That hysterical rhetoric is childish. Nobody overthrew the government. — fishfry