Trump expected to surrender to Fulton County jail on Thursday or Friday next week - eviltoast

Former President Donald Trump is expected to surrender himself to the Fulton County jail at the end of next week – on Thursday or Friday, a senior law enforcement official with knowledge of the surrender told CNN.

  • FreeLikeGNU@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Pretty sure you said:

    Or: hey, we can label ANYONE we want as “ENEMY COMBATANTS” and they will have NO RIGHTS and we will torture them.

    You don’t think sending an entire ethnic group who are also American citizens to internment camps in the dessert forcing them to abandon their homes, work, friends, businesses is what you just described?

    • flossdaily@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      That’s slightly different. (Very slightly). Those American citizens actually did have the right to fight their incarceration in court.

      … It just so happens that the court absolutely shit the bed in a 6-3 ruling about their constitutionality

      On the other hand, internment camps were effectively ended by the the supreme Court the next year.

      Contrast that with “enemy combatants” who had NO ACCESS TO THE CIVILIAN COURT SYSTEM.

      • FreeLikeGNU@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I don’t see how “slightly different” could support the argument that things were effectively better at the time citizens were put into camps. The legal system supported a racist policy by “6-3 ruling about their constitutionality”. Furthermore:

        internment camps were effectively ended by the the supreme Court the next year.

        No. It was over two years before the order was suspended and the last of the camps shut down. The order was not officially terminated until 1976!

        Over the spring of 1942, General John L. DeWitt issued Western Defense Command orders for Japanese Americans to present themselves for removal. In December 1944, President Roosevelt suspended Executive Order 9066, forced to do so by the Supreme Court decision Ex parte Endo. Detainees were released, often to resettlement facilities and temporary housing, and the camps were shut down by 1946.

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executive_Order_9066