blackangst1
Lifer
- Feb 23, 2005
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Originally posted by: TastesLikeChicken
What I understand is that OLC opinions are drafted by experts in this case to explain how to avoid breaking the law while doing what we needed to do to maintain valid interrorgation capabilities during a time of crisis. Nor has a single person in here, including you, argued how or where the contents of the memos are in violation of the law. It certainly skirts the edges, no doubt. But skirting the edge of the law doesn't imply a law is broken. But instead of discussing that all I get is a bunch of strawmen rebuttals, red herrings, and ad homs in return.Originally posted by: eskimospy
I think TLC's problem is that he doesn't understand the difference between OLC opinions that were drafted to support positions of the president, and actual binding law.
An OLC memo saying 'this doesn't break the law' means approximately shit as to whether or not the action ACTUALLY breaks the law or not. This is further complicated by the fact that the legal reasoning in these memos is so horrifically poor that Bush's own outgoing OLC chief repudiated Bybee's work. So not only are the memos not equivalent to actual court decisions and real statutory authority, they were so badly written that they have been disowned by the very administration that commissioned them.
So prove that these memos broke the law. I'll be waiting.
This.
