hanc...@bbs.cpcn.com wrote:
>On Wednesday, November 13, 2019 at 1:44:03 AM UTC-5, Adam H. Kerman wrote:
>>I'd like to hear the conservative screaming about this one. Ted Olson,
>>the brilliant former solicitor general from the George W. Bush
>>administration has take the side of the DACA recipients and made a
>>mostly pure Administrative Procedures Act violation argument.
>In my humble opinion, this is more of an ethnical issue rather
>than a legal one. Undoubtedly lawyers for both sides will come
>up with plausible arguments.
If you're a lawyer, ethics are imposed upon you exactly like laws. Try
again, hancock. Ethics imposed upon lawyers require them to represent
their clients' interests, not act on their own in conflict with their
clients.
>To me, the basic ethical issue is that the government made a
>promise to a group of people. . . .
Yeah, well, once it's in court, that doesn't fly.
>A critical promise impacting their lives.
Government fucks up people's lives regularly. You're raising an
irrelevancy here.
>The government ought to honor that promise.
You're talking about government here. What the hell do ethics have to do
with government?
>(Whether that is binding based on the Constitution's credit
>clause I can't say.)
That has to do with states respecting federal law and laws in other
states, nothing to do with your argument.
>Anyway, the simplest thing would've been was to have honored
>the promise to those it was made, but not admit any new
>people to the program.
There's nothing simple about it, given that there was no statutory
basis, and therefore, it could be repealed by a subsequent
administration.
>A secondary ethical issue was why it was done.
It was a power grab by the president of the United States, who intended
to get away with it till the administration changed or was thwarted by a
federal judge.
>As best as anyone can see, it was done merely for spite, to screw
>immigrants and appease Trump's rabid base. There were no
>security issues involved, despite the screaming of Fox News.
Yes, we all know that, hancock, but if Jeff Sessions hadn't been such a
terrible lawyer, he could have written the legal language in such a way
that included no judgment based on prejudice and there would have been
nothing to challenge in federal court.
What if he'd written something for Trump to sign that said nothing more
than Obama's memo to the Secretary of Homeland Security ordering him to
enforce the law in a specific way is rescinded? Then Homeland Security
could have promulgated rules for enforcing various laws in accordance
with statutory language.
That might have prevented judiciary review.