1/13/2012 4:59:52 PM
you're trying too hard when you post "set em up" just so you can have the top of the next page two minutes later
1/13/2012 5:19:55 PM
1/13/2012 9:03:34 PM
I did qualify under due process because the state created a system to identify those individual who were to be sterilized. Due Process doesn't necessarily imply court involvement.
1/14/2012 1:58:26 AM
No but I do imagine it implies being informed and the ability to appeal. Otherwise any law the government sees fit to pass is "due process".
1/14/2012 9:13:58 AM
It did provide notice about the impending sterilization and an appeals process. The point is due process rights were not violated by the law. Yes, it is a stain on the history of North Carolina, but under no circumstances should anyone be charged with any crime.
1/14/2012 1:12:11 PM
^ are you kidding? It's pretty clear when you look into this that the law wasn't applied consistently by any stretch. 1920s America just created a law that let douchebag, racist bureaucrats satisfy their cruel instincts.This wasn't an enlightened, thought-out, or principled law like you seem to be implying.
1/14/2012 1:34:14 PM
There is no law that bureaucrats must be either consistent or not douchebags. There is no requirement that laws be enlightened, thought-out, or principled. This was a miscarriage of democracy and we today must accept this is what democracy produces now and then and act accordingly to marginalize and suppress the democratic beast.If we want to put an end to such human catastrophes then we need to close down the legislature and learn to live with the laws we have. [Edited on January 14, 2012 at 2:49 PM. Reason : .,.]
1/14/2012 2:47:15 PM
^^I'm not implying anything. The fact of the matter is there is nothing that can or should be done to the people who carried out the law. The fact of the matter is, it was the law and at the time it was deemed Constitutional. To go back through and ex post facto prosecute people for engaging in legal behavior would be a massive miscarriage of justice. ^Oh great, so we end up with a tyranny of the executive and judiciary. Bravo.[Edited on January 14, 2012 at 3:08 PM. Reason : .]
1/14/2012 3:07:01 PM
^ so are you saying that yes, we should compensate the victims of the law, but no, we shouldn't prosecute the people who wrote and extended the law?
1/14/2012 3:24:23 PM
They should be compensatedBut you cannot prosecute the people who wrote and implemented the laws for various reasons. 1) The law was written back in the 1930s, those legislators are dead2) Even if they are alive, there is still the age old legislative immunity, which should never be destroyed.3) The implementers of the law were no way in violation of the law. Going after them would be ex post facto, which is expressly prohibited by the Constitution.4) Etc.
1/14/2012 3:30:42 PM
1/14/2012 7:09:29 PM
1/14/2012 8:55:39 PM
1/14/2012 11:31:49 PM
1/15/2012 4:57:50 AM
1/15/2012 2:03:21 PM
1/15/2012 6:49:11 PM
And in the future, democracy may decide to punish our current legislators for failing to exterminate today's undesirables. The principle that a future legislature should not be able to imprison people, even past legislators, for stuff that was not a crime at the time, should not be sacrificed just to "get" people you don't like.
1/15/2012 11:41:30 PM
1/16/2012 6:27:34 AM
1/16/2012 7:01:39 AM