Exactly the same. Sure, kids make smaller targets, but they can also take less damage. Ergo they too should avoid traveling to a foreign country and hanging out with people who have openly declared war on the country who control the drones. Sure, children don't usually get a voice in that decision, but that's why they have parents. If those parents make stupid decisions, then their kids suffer, as they always have and always will.
Know who else has children? Americans watching the Boston Marathon, working in the Twin Towers or on military bases or in recruiting offices or in synagogues. Iraqis shopping in open air markets. Israelis drinking coffee in cafes. Turks trying to get to work. French citizens trying to enjoy a national holiday. One side is trying to protect all these children while at least trying to avoid killing the children of and around the terrorists. The other side is trying to think up strategies to kill more children while using their own as shields whenever possible.
Not sure how this is relevant to my point, which was simply that MongGrel's argument that those people hanging out near possible drone targets deserved their fate due to their own bad choices was flawed. There are plenty of people who never got to make that choice.
President Obama has certainly put the drone Americans policy into overdrive, but in a way that list is also due process. A fair number of people have input into whether or not that person is a legitimate target, and if so, what level of likely civilian casualties is acceptable to kill that target. Sure, it's an imperfect and potentially dangerous system. All systems involving the taking of life are inherently imperfect and potentially dangerous systems. Doing nothing, or allowing terrorists to use civilians and/or children as absolute shields, is also inherently imperfect and potentially dangerous. This is the world that we and the Muslims have built.
That list is not due process by any commonly understood meaning of the term. For one thing, due process requires an impartial adjudicator which obviously does not exist in this case. As always the problem is the same: you guys are endorsing a system where the president is the judge, jury, and executioner for anyone he deems to be a terrorist. That's not an exaggeration either. I also never said that having children nearby conferred some sort of immunity.
I feel like the whole kid discussion has gotten totally away from the actual issue, which is that the president can kill any US citizen he chooses without trial so long as they are not on US soil simply by saying they were a terrorist and he couldn't get them otherwise.
