by JustinFrankl » Tue 17 Oct 2006, 23:35:49
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PenultimateManStanding', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JustinFrankl', 'E')xpressing dissent against this law is punishable by this law.
Show me where that is written.
edit: I see you are no longer here. When you come back, I expect an answer. There is no excuse for a man with a chart topping IQ to misrepresent the facts. Show me that I'm wrong.
Putting aside that expectation-soon-to-become-a-sense-of-entitlement ...

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')n “unlawful enemy combatant” can be any person – not excluding American citizens - determined to be one by a “competent tribunal” established by the President or the Secretary of Defense [Sec.948a(1)(ii)]. What comprises a competent tribunal – or by what criteria they would make such a determination - is not defined.
If I misrepresented something, it was unintentional. I was reading your wiki quote at the same time I was processing the RIP USA post at
this thread, and was a little stunned by the valid claim that "this bill could cause you to be labelled an enemy combatant for protesting ANY government policy."
The Military Commissions Act of 2006 grants the POTUS, or worse, a non-elected official in the Secretary of Defense, discretion for establishing a "competent tribunal" (undefined and without external validation). This tribunal, so far with no checks and balances and also at their own discretion, can declare anyone for any plausible reason they choose an "unlawful enemy combatant".
The law, as written, does not explicitly state that dissent against the law specifically or government in general is punishable under the law. The law, as written, is so broad and vague that picketters at an American auto manufacturer could be viewed as "enemy combatants" due to the importance of the American auto industry to the American economy. "Threatening the economy threatens the War on Terror and the safety of the American people", they could say, "Strikes, Stop-Works, and Sick-Ins will no longer be permitted."
This specific example is of course a strawman, but still valid to illustrate the general case that given the law the way it is broadly written, the US government can now publicly arrest any citizen for any plausible reason in the name of the War on Terror.
Given the law the way it's written, a citizen wouldn't even be able to contest it without knowing why s/he was being held, having no access to a civilian attorney because of "Secret" classified information, while being corced to testify against yourself ("compulsory self-incrimination"). All conducted in private by a closed "military commission".
A more accurate assertion on my part would have been: "Expressing dissent against this law could conceivably be a detainable offense under this law. But under this law, you could conceivably never know exactly why you were being held."
And then I still go back to the issue about power concentration and corruption. The provisions in the law are harsh enough, but things get dicey when they're at the hands of only two individuals. It gets worse if they're at the discretion of an alcoholic cokehead and a crooked liar. But then it gets dismal as we have to deal with Bush and Rumsfeld calling the shots.