Old Rocks
Diamond Member
Laws change, being a patriot doesn't. Pardon him.
And how does his obstruction of justice represent the act of a patriot?
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Laws change, being a patriot doesn't. Pardon him.
And how does his obstruction of justice represent the act of a patriot?
OK, back to your original question. Does Patriotism excuse breaking the law? Does it warrant a pardon?
One would have to define how the act that was committed was patriotic. Did it actually defend the nation? Or did it just defend someone that the perpetuator thought represented the nation? On the first question, the answer would have to be an unequivical yes before the pardon was even considered. On the second, that kind of thinking, that government leaders that represent the nation are above the laws of the nation, is how nations lapse into dictatorships.
This is one of those questions with which one can see a million hypothetical situations. In the case of Libbey, he defended members of the Bush administration. His actions were to the detriment of the nation itself.
Should Bush pardon Scooter Libby? If I were Bush and I thought Scooter was a patriotic man I'd pardon him.
Laws change, being a patriot doesn't. Pardon him.
I'm not in the justifying others actions business, you'd have to ask him.Quote:
Originally Posted by Old Rocks View Post
And how does his obstruction of justice represent the act of a patriot?
please, explain exactly (to the best of your abilities) what you mean when you say Libby's actions were patriotic? Libby was prosecuted for his actions and not his ideology or ideas.
How is Libby a patriot?
To the best of my abilities?
Ok, how about... I never said Libbys actions were patriotic. That seems like a good place to start. The question was hypothetical, right? IF I believed someone had been patriotic would that be more important than following the law? In my mind, yes it would. So in a case like that I would pardon him.
Stupid, yes. Incapable of abstract thought, no.
Laws change, being a patriot doesn't. Pardon him.
And how does his obstruction of justice represent the act of a patriot?
I'm not in the justifying others actions business, you'd have to ask him.
LOLthanks for my first neg rep you POS
I love girlyman/boys when they get all riled up over bs.
you cry "I don't care" as you care all too much. hahahahahahahahahahahaha
badadoooosh!
The exchange below is at odds with what you are saying? If not maybe you can put on your concrete thought hat and explain it? Then again, maybe you can't.
The question was here: "Should Bush pardon Scooter Libby? If I were Bush and I thought Scooter was a patriotic man I'd pardon him."
The question can be hypothetical or not. You were not asked to justify Libby's action or those of some hypothetical criminal who claims her/his actions were those of a patriot. You were asked how a specific act by a particular person was patriotic. Then you said what you said. It puzzled me.
How is it at odds with anything? I think patriotism is more important that laws. So, if I believe Scooter acted as a patriot I would pardon him. I don't know what you find confusing about that. I haven't offered an opinion about whether or not I think what he did was patriotic and I'm not going to. I don't know enough about what happened. I think at the very least he was being loyal and for that I respect him.
I have enormous respect for people who are loyal, but loyalty has to have boundaries. I value loyalty very highly in my personal relationships. It si why lots of people I meet want to be my friend and very few get invited.
Patriotism is more important than laws? Too broad a generalization to have any substantive meaning at all. It is an inane comment. sorry.
try taking a stand on the issue. is Patriotism always more important than any laws? can patriotism be misplaced or abused?
Sorry I was too broad for you. Oh wait, no I'm not, I don't care what you think. I'll take a stand on issues I feel like taking a stand on, this isn't one of them.
To me being patriotic takes priority over obeying laws. Most laws probably won't need to be broken to remain loyal to my country, but if they did I would do it. It's pretty simple I don't know why you're trying to make it complicated.