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#376 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Here's on very close to home, here. The US government can't grant a perpetual copyright. The British Government can, (a al Peter Pan). |
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#377 |
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That was done via a special clause in the Copyright Act - an Act of Parliament. What precisely would prevent a US government from doing the same?
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#378 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Our constitution explicitly forbids a perpetual copyright. This was part of it from day one. So it doesn't matter what our Congress passes, it would be turned over as unconstitutional. Here's another one, broader and more sinister. The British military serves Her Majesty, and by devolution, Her Majesty's government. The US military does not serve the US government. It's officers and enlisted personnel are sworn to uphold the constitution. Now our government follows the constitution, which defines it's powers, and as it's is constitutional valid, and the military follows it's orders. But it does so because the government is an expression of the constitution, not as an entity in itself. If a government were to decide to pitch out the constitution, the military would be legally in the right to overthrow it, in the name of the constitution. Edit: Actually in that circumstance, they would be required to overthrow the government. Last edited by Greg Anos; 04-19-2009 at 10:17 AM. |
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#379 | ||
eBook Enthusiast
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#380 | ||
Grand Sorcerer
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(Actually I stand corrected. An amendment first pass in 1789 was finally ratified in 1992. It controls how congressmen can vote for pay raises. That is number 27, the first 10 of which were added to the constitution in order to get it passed. 17 changes (one of which cancelled another) in 200+ years is pretty hard to change.) Quote:
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#381 | |||||
"Assume a can opener..."
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You quickly invent a shooting at a boat incident in order to be allowed to invade Vietnam, because you're "afraid of the takeover of Asia by communism". Later, after decades of interventionist US policy, which results in resentment especially in the ME, 9/11 happens, so you invade two oil-rich countries and bomb a few others; here, in London: the Underground is attacked, in Madrid the trains are bombed, in Ireland you have decades of IRA and basque separatist/religious violence happen; and yet all without silly wars. Quote:
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Where is the American "you can't do that" in all of this? Quote:
Because I say that you're talking bullshit, I'm proving the fact that we have absolute government here? There must've been one heck of a premise I'm missing somewhere. What does "inherent limit that a government cannot do" mean? Are you talking about some sort of legal thing? Because, like I said in the part you didn't quote, we *do* have constitutions here too. Got them some time ago, too. Furthermore, have you heard of constitutional amendments? Anything can be done just as easily in the US via those as they can be here. Just have two subsequent governments that can get a 66% vote and you're there. There is no such thing as "something nobody can do". Extraordinary rendition, "enhanced interrogations", and lots of other neat words invented after 9/11."enemy combatants" were invented so as to be able to ignore the geneva conventions, they didn't get the right to a fair trial because they weren't "american citizens" (nor did some bearded americans receive the right to Habeas Corpus), and another bunch were speedily hidden in prisons, where they also couldn't call their lawyer. Or are you talking about the "moral fibre" of americans, which they have in spades, whereas we have none? Because where, exactly, is the "thing that could never happen here", whereas it "easily could" in sheep-ly Europe? Because that's what you seem to be implying here, and that's what I was referring to when I said you were spouting bullshit. That impolite fiction that "some things would never happen here" (whereas elsewhere, where governments are absolute), and especially that that is all made possible because you rightly distrust your government, whereas we are so stupid as to not to do so. And yes, that to me seems as good a reason as any to experience a "burr" under my saddle. The overconfidence is rather distasteful to me. Last edited by zerospinboson; 04-19-2009 at 10:51 AM. |
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#382 | |
curmudgeon
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Xenophon |
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#383 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Zerospinboson, cultural slants are what we are talking about. Does the US have cultural slants? Absolutely! Do they sometimes do thing that their culture is against? Absolutely! Do we think those things are good? Absolutely not!
But Europe has its clutural slants, too! You are not the level playing field, and everybody else is slanted. I have been trying to point out the differences, and why they are differences. Neither side is the level playing field. Until you recognize that every culture has its own slants, including your own, you can't meaningly talk about the differences. The slant that seems to be hitting the hot button is the how the acquistion and use of governmental power is perceived differently by the two cultures. It is a bedrock issue in understanding the differences between the two culture. I have been using as neutral a tone about discussing the differences as I can, in this lively discussion. Go through this entire thread and you won't find my saying the US is best, or right, once. But only when you understand the basis of your own culture's basis for governmental power can you compare it to other basises. |
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#384 |
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You are of course correct, Ralph, in saying that we have a different cultural perspective. Many European countries have 1000+ years of "government", whereas the US was formed in a war against a government which was perceived as being oppressive to the peoples' interests (although the "truth" of that is highly debatable!). I suppose that it's only natural that that fact alone must give us a different "slant" on the role and importance of government in our respective societies.
I don't think that anyone here is saying that the US or European approach is "right" or "wrong", but we all perceive that they are undeniably "different" to one another. |
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#385 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Not follow the law? As I understand it CIA etc. must follow the law (or should) but the corresponding British organizations do not have to follow the laws (as seen in British TV series like The Black Flower were the good guys ends up being blown up by some government organization...).
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#386 |
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I've not heard of that, Tommy. Was this supposed to be some sort of "documentary" series, or fictional? The government certainly has to follow the law, and can be (and often is) prosecuted when it fails to do so. British judges are famously "independent" of government "control".
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#387 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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But this is something I have seen described in non fiction texts about spy organizations and how they work differently in different countries. But maybe I misunderstood something or is not remembering correctly. |
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#388 | |
Retired & reading more!
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#389 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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Your reading of the Constitution is not, in my view, and that of four of the nine justices on the Supreme Court, correct. The 6th Amendment to the Constitution says: "In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial..." Note the words "criminal prosecutions." Are the detainees held at Guantanamo "criminals?" Not that I can see. I say this not to argue the point, but simply to point out that the question is a close one, not a clear one, and therefore your putting it forward as an example is not good for that reason. Then there's the question of whether the military thinks that the detainees have a legal right to a trial. Although I have not served in the military, my father was a career soldier, and I grew up on military bases and within the context of the career military culture. I think I'm on pretty solid grounds that the career military regards the detainees as enemies, not criminals entitled to Constitutional rights. So your example is poorly chosen, because it assumes - incorrectly in my view - that the military agrees with your interpretation of the right to trial. And finally, there is the question of how the American military reacts to unconstitutional orders. First, let me say that in addition to my background as a military dependent, I am also a lawyer and a student of American political and military history. Our military is subordinate to civilian control. It does not "refuse to obey orders." Rather, what happens when the military disagrees with orders is that the officers resign. This is what happened in the American Civil War, when Southern officers, like Robert E. Lee, resigned their commissions in the U.S. Army rather than take arms against succession, which they believed to be constitutional. Had the military, or any substantial portion of it, considered that the detention of prisoners at Guantanamo violated the Constitution, what would have happened is that officers appointed to command positions at the base would have submitted their resignations. In this case, your example doesn't work because you and - maybe - Ralph seem to be assuming that the military in this country would overthrow a civilian government that was acting in an unconstitutional fashion. But it wouldn't. It would just resign in sufficient numbers at the upper level of the officer corps that the government would find itself unable to function, militarily. The American people would take over from there. |
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#390 | |
Connoisseur
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Fashism was not elected--
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Fashism was not elected at least not in Germany and In Austria: In Germany the highst voting part the fashist got was 33 % in 1931, in 1933 when the siszed the goverment they only had gotten 31%. But the president gave Hitler the power to form a minrity goverment that was when the nazis sized the Power In Austria it was even more an accident: The austrian constitution had no privion to call an assambly except through the Speaker and his two vice speakers. When all three resigned on the same day nobody except the cahnclor had the suthrity to call the natianla assambly together and the chanclor sized they Power (to be later made part of Nazu germany ) I am not shure about Italy. |
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