http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/22/world/africa/22powers.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
3/21/2011 11:05:58 PM
A previous Congress had passed a law giving Obama the power to do just what he did; now if he still has forces out there in a couple more months, he'll need to either get approval from this Congress or pull a Bu$h.
3/21/2011 11:13:35 PM
Are you talking about the War Powers Act of 1973? That gives the President the authority to order military action (in lieu of congressional approval) if the United States is in imminent danger or under direct attack. The Libyan conflict in no way meets that criteria. Sorry, but this is an illegal act of war.
3/21/2011 11:16:25 PM
ohh okthen 'tis sad but truesame old same old applies here: GTFO as soon as practical
3/21/2011 11:21:49 PM
Should Obama be impeached?http://www.salon.com/news/politics/war_room/2011/03/21/ralph_nader_obama_impeachment/index.html
3/21/2011 11:26:36 PM
a particularly fun quote from the nyt article
3/21/2011 11:39:32 PM
Is the US not legally bound to comply with Chapter 7 resolutions?
3/21/2011 11:42:53 PM
3/22/2011 12:12:15 AM
Awwww, c'mon guys...war in the Middle east is fun!!! We're totally winning!!!
3/22/2011 12:22:37 AM
To be fair, this is the kind of war in the Middle East that we're pretty good at. Bombs, missiles, we've got that covered. We blew all his shit up lickety-split. Occupation we clearly need some work on.
3/22/2011 1:06:50 AM
in defense of obama and the interests of the united states and the UN i suggest you all read this b4 you start shitting yourselves over civilian deaths:
3/22/2011 10:46:47 AM
^ There are already reports of government forces blowing up parts of the civil infratructure like power plants in order to blame it on coalition bombing, as well as reports of dead rebels being taken from morgues and hospitals and being dumped at bombing sites.I heard that on the radio yesterday and don't know where to find a link for it.
3/22/2011 10:54:19 AM
I'm somewhat sure the UN authorization treaty grants the president authority to wage war on the UN's behalf until such time as congress objects.
3/22/2011 11:03:48 AM
The fact that obama is doing this makes me believe the president is just a puppet and theres someone or group running this country behind the curtain.
3/22/2011 11:37:38 AM
Jew what?
3/22/2011 11:45:11 AM
I believe Member States are required to carry out resolutions passed under Chapter VII.Either way, I will certainly agree that Obama has handled the public discourse aspect of this intervention horribly. Within hours of the resolution's passage, I flicked on CSPAN and saw the UK's prime minister presenting the resolution, and his reasons for supporting it, to members of the House of Commons. Each MP was able to ask questions, which he answered. He also ordered his cabinet to prepare an explanation of the resolution and have it sent to Parliament for debate.Compare that to President Obama, who remains on some kind of business trip in South America, who has said very little (and is vague when he does say anything), and who has not made a serious attempt to present the resolution to Congress for its consideration.It's embarrassing and disheartening.[Edited on March 22, 2011 at 11:47 AM. Reason : ]
3/22/2011 11:46:54 AM
3/22/2011 11:51:28 AM
Jewish think tanks.
3/22/2011 11:52:04 AM
^^^Well, let's think about how this would have played out if Bush, McCain, or any other neo-con had been President. We would have been very gung ho with the Libyan conflict. Undoubtedly, we would have taken a leadership role early on - Libya would have been getting bombed 3-4 weeks ago. The liberals would be crying, Europe would be crying, everyone would be upset that the United States was acting unilaterally again.Look at how it actually played out. Obama was indecisive initially, and still kind of is. European powers didn't know how to react to that, and sat there look at us like, "aren't you going to do something?" Sarcozy took the lead, and we're coming in after the fact with military support.I mean, for Christ's sake, we've involved in two full scale wars, and European powers have drawn down their troops in those particular efforts. Why did we need to help here? And the War Powers Act simply doesn't apply. Are we not spending money on these bombs? Then Congress has to approve it! It really is that simple.
3/22/2011 12:09:15 PM
3/22/2011 1:49:39 PM
Who proved me wrong? You? Haha.
3/22/2011 2:32:38 PM
3/22/2011 2:35:36 PM
Chief Justice Marshall, 1829:
3/22/2011 3:21:16 PM
Speaking entirely out of curiosity, as I don't know shit in this area, what is the UN Treaty? wiki link? A google search brings up thishttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Treaty_Series
3/22/2011 5:05:00 PM
A treaty doesn't mean the we just get to skip over the political process (that is, determining if the act is actually constitutional). If you read more into Marshall's statements (http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data/constitution/article02/10.html), it's not at all settled upon what it means for a treaty to be "the law of the land."In any case, you could probably conceive of some situations where a treaty required some action by the executive branch, but proceeding without Congress' approval would be inappropriate. This is one of those situations. A treaty doesn't mean we blindly follow other nations into war; a treaty may be a tentative contract between independent sovereign nations, but the military action is paid for by U.S. citizens, and as such, the house of representatives should be required to authorize force unless we're under immediate and direct threat. Is there any reason you can think of that the President couldn't have gone to the legislative branch before pursuing this course of action? Is it because he was worried that the legislative branch (and the people) would oppose it?
3/22/2011 5:15:17 PM
God damn it, I had a very long response and my computer shit the bed.ThePeter: Read Chapter 7 of the UN Charter, it covers our obligations.d357r0y3r: There is a widespread understanding that treaties are on equal level with constitutional law.I think that the most likely reason he didn't ask congress is because that took time that wasn't available after the UN decree, and nothing in the constitution leads me to believe that its spirit opposes executive action when time is of the essence (as evidenced by the exclusions for an attack on us).
3/22/2011 6:30:22 PM
really? how was time of the essence, again? he already fucking waited 3 fucking weeks. were we about to be attacked? i didn't see that part... there was nothing that precluded him from coming home and saying "hey, you guys OK if we lob a couple hundred tomahawks at these bastards? yeah? ok."[Edited on March 22, 2011 at 6:36 PM. Reason : ]
3/22/2011 6:34:53 PM
For three weeks we didn't have a treaty obligation, mostly.[Edited on March 22, 2011 at 6:50 PM. Reason : time between UN resolution and our action was quite brief]
3/22/2011 6:50:26 PM
yes, it was brief because he didn't consult anyone. if the UN decreed that we should nuke New York, are we obligated to do so?
3/22/2011 6:58:11 PM
Well, we get to veto UN decisions. So for the United States, at least (as well as Russia, Britain, France, and China), that's stupid as hell.Perhaps I should have said that the time between UN resolution and UN action was brief.
3/22/2011 7:02:50 PM
yet, not brief enough to keep England from getting consent... hmmm... It's OK, Obama has never really shown any love for the Constitution anyway, lol[Edited on March 22, 2011 at 7:09 PM. Reason : ]
3/22/2011 7:09:12 PM
I've no idea how much we were involved in the international decision making process. But I'm pretty confident that he could have gotten support if he asked for it, which means there's no political reason for him not to ask.
3/22/2011 7:11:14 PM
its almost like some of you never took civics in high school
3/22/2011 8:24:14 PM
^ stop being an asshole...i didn't know the UN treaty angleit's strange, but I guess it's a justification...still the Executive Branch has way too much powerit would be great if that could be curtailed[Edited on March 22, 2011 at 10:23 PM. Reason : .]
3/22/2011 10:23:46 PM
Yea, congress cant do anything, might as well make all the branches limp noodles
3/22/2011 10:32:55 PM
3/22/2011 10:44:03 PM
Obama was probably worried that a Republican congress would grandstand against him and not agree to the invasion, even though we should have killed this fucktard about 30 years ago.[Edited on March 22, 2011 at 11:47 PM. Reason : at least we get to remind the world about our military capabilities once again.]
3/22/2011 11:46:23 PM
The United States has successfully invaded and occupied two countries in the past decade. We spend more than anyone else on military, except maybe China, who doesn't try to police the world. I don't think anyone's forgotten how good we are destroying shit and telling people how to live.In any case, let's just keep stirring the hornet's nest in the Muslim world. All they end up seeing on TV is U.S. and European planes dropping bombs on Muslim countries. I'm sure there never will be, or ever has been, any blow back from these allegedly good intentioned interventions. We need a serious reversal in foreign policy.[Edited on March 23, 2011 at 12:47 AM. Reason : ]
3/23/2011 12:31:20 AM
"successfully"
3/23/2011 1:18:44 AM
3/23/2011 2:20:01 AM
3/23/2011 7:11:21 AM
3/23/2011 8:57:14 AM
open and continued trade is the most practical and sustainable path to peace.
3/23/2011 9:45:26 AM
Continued trade between authoritarian governments is the surest path to peace... for authoritarian governments.
3/23/2011 9:47:53 AM
Restricted trade has worked wonders keeping Cuba authoritarian.
3/23/2011 9:51:15 AM
see also: iran and north korea[Edited on March 23, 2011 at 9:59 AM. Reason : a]
3/23/2011 9:59:02 AM
The Castro regime's historical ability to do business with fellow communist regimes is, in fact, one of the main reasons it has been able to hang around.^see also: oil deposits and China.You guys are making a totally fatuous argument. The Chinese government doesn't even pretend to conduct its foreign policy with an eye toward "peace;" that is, if peace is understood to entail freedom, democracy, and human rights. Its stated policy is that the internal affairs of other countries are of no concern to them, so long as the country is stable enough to make a buck off of. To the extend that a few countries are able to take advantage of this and use the income to build more civilized societies, great. But that's hardly to be credited to Chinese morality, given that the balance of their foreign policy has been to enable despots the world round.[Edited on March 23, 2011 at 10:11 AM. Reason : ]
3/23/2011 10:02:08 AM
trade leads to communitcation and the spread of ideas. if people get ideas from us about democracy and do care for it then why is that our problem? Choose not to do business with them if you dont like.The worst thing you can do is put someone in the dark and then bomb them because you dont like the way they live. China is slowly moving to democracy. They may never be a real republic or anything, but their people will certainly demand more and more freedoms. Why? Because trade with the US has made them so much better off. meanwhile north koreans dont know what the hell goes on outside their country because no one will talk to them. that makes them way easy to brain wash. I mean all these countries in the middle east getting all uppity are all ones we do trade with. they've seen whats possible in other countries and they want some of that shit. The only reasons any of them are mad at us is because we're the ones that have been propping up their leaders, not through trade, but through direct monetary and military support. They would be more than happy to trade with us. What they dont want is us interfering in their politics.
3/23/2011 10:10:38 AM
3/23/2011 10:32:13 AM
set up page two for discussion...
3/23/2011 11:40:14 AM