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Published October 10, 2013
Wherever the American government goes and whatever it does, it remains subject to the confines of the Constitution.
Published October 03, 2013
While the nation’s political class has been fixated on a potential government shutdown in Washington this week, the NSA has continued to spy on all Americans and by its ambiguity and shrewd silence seems to be acknowledging slowly that the scope of its spying is truly breathtaking.
Published September 26, 2013
After President Richard Nixon left office in 1974, a bipartisan congressional investigation discovered many of his constitutional excesses. Foremost among them was the use of FBI and CIA agents to spy on Americans in violation of federal law and the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution.
Published September 19, 2013
Lying to one’s employers (the American people) is a fireable offense, and lying under oath (to Congress) is a criminal offense.
Published September 12, 2013
Does President Obama really expect the American people to approve his bombing and killing in Syria just to avoid his personal embarrassment?
Published September 05, 2013
Can President Obama lawfully bomb Syria to punish its government for violating international norms or to deter it from doing so again? In a word: No.
Published August 08, 2013
It is painfully obvious, when it comes to the NSA's secret surveillance plan, that the government is not troubled by its own violation of the Constitution.
Published August 01, 2013
There is a political wildfire burning in the land, and we should all be grateful to NSA leaker Edward Snowden for igniting it
Published July 25, 2013
When politicians say that liberty and safety need to be balanced against each other, they are philosophically, historically and constitutionally wrong.
Published July 18, 2013
If the government can violate a principle as fundamental and universally accepted as the prohibition on double jeopardy, there is no limit to what it can do.