Horseman 77 wrote:
We dont need people to reinterpet the Constitution We know what it means.
strange. I thought interpreting the constitution and determining wether modern law is in accordance with it is
exactly what the Supreme Court does...
Obviously, every american has his/her own interpretation of the constitution. what I am saying is that the only interpretation that "legally" matters is that which the Supreme Court finally gives out.
Acting upon your own interpretation of the constitution is bound to get you in trouble with the law, and just as Beatdown Patrol has said, you will have to face the consequences if you do.
Beatdown Patrol wrote:
Responsible citizens DO have a right to question both of those decisions, but questioning a decision and abiding a decision are two different things. There have been many government decisions that I have questioned, there are many government decisions that I currently question, and I am sure that there are going to be many government decisions that I question in the future. However, my agreement or disagreement with those decisions is not necessarily an indication that I will or won't abide by them. If I decide NOT to abide by them because of either rebellion, protest, or whatever...then my logical expectation is that I will face consequences if caught.
Look at it like speeding. Here in the US, we have speed limits that many feel are very restrictive and are used as nothing more than revenue generation for many police departments. Now...there are three choices that people have.
1) Shut up and abide by the decision handed down by the officials that we put into office
2) Ignore the law, thereby setting one's self up for tickets, fines, legal reprocusions, etc.
2) Start one of many processes to change the law to conform to one's own interests
Unfortunately, humans tend to take the path of least resistance, so most people divide into two camps, the conformists and the non-conformists. Trying to change the law takes time, effort, and money so speeding or not speeding is easier more convienent solution.
I hope you are not comparing speeding to opening fire at Federal Agents. The implications are obviously a lot different.
what I meant to say was that some arguments made here seem to imply that any crime ( even murder ) could be justified by simpy saying "well, sir, I was of the opinion that the law was unconstitutional and so I reserved my right not to abide it and killed the f*****.."
Sticking to the principle means sticking to it whatever the circumstances. If you argue that soldiers follow orders given to them by the elected government because the law requires it ( even if they think that decision is unconstitutional ), you will also have to acknowledge that this principle must be upheld for
every law, including those that led to the raid at Waco.
whatever happened after the ATF agents tried to execute search and arrest warrants for the ranch was a tragedy, and maybe the Fed's are to blame for the end result. But if the davidians had abided the law and allowed the search to be conducted, the whole situation could have been avoided in the first place.
No one of us was there to see what really happened and every report obviously gives a slightly different account, and - more importantly - makes different conclusions.