Wed, Mar 29, 2006 3:16pm ET

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Gibson and Napolitano lavished praise on "our boy Scalia"

Summary: Fox News' John Gibson and Andrew Napolitano lauded U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia while discussing whether Scalia should recuse himself from a case involving a Guantánamo Bay prisoner after Scalia stated that prisoners at Guantánamo Bay have no legal rights.
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Posted by Yellow Bird

Son

GIBSON: But the family member is 250,000 American troops, or 300,000, that have been through the area and gotten shot at by these guys.

According to CNN:

Scalia, asked at Freiburg whether detainees at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have protections under international conventions, gave the suggestion short shrift.

'It's crazy' "If he was captured by my army on a battlefield, that is where he belongs. I had a son on that battlefield and they were shooting at my son, and I'm not about to give this man who was captured in a war a full jury trial. I mean it's crazy," he said. Scalia's son, Matthew, served with the U.S. Army in Iraq.

([link to www.cnn.com]

So, he argues: 1) it is war they cannot use our constitution; 2) they shot at my son.

It is a pity that so many men are in prison, without any status. Even a fetus has more rights nowadays. Those prisoners should be trialed: if found quilty they should be locked away. If not: that will cost the USA a lot of money than.

It is realy Kafka to state that they are quilty because they are in Guantanamo, so they must have done something otherwise they would not have been there. Even if the US constitution does not apply, probably the UN rules will and they should be trialed at a UN court. That is not something to look foreward to.

Posted by rtmesq6717

It not just that they deserve due process...

It's not that they just deserve due process. The military tribunals are a farce. These people are being held and accused by the executive branch of the government. My understanding is that the executive (Bush administration) will appoint a judge who is also a member of the executive branch. The prosecution will also be executive branch appointees. The defense counsel will be a lawyer with the military (the executive branch). The appeals will be within the executive branch. The substantive and procedural rules will also be promulagated by the executive branch. How can this possibly be fair when one enity constitutes the prosecution, defense , judge and the jury?

Don't these people have the right to contend that a mistake was made? Isn't that the reason for a trial: because sometimes what appears to be the obvious isn't really where the truth lies.

Posted by leatherhelmet

Scalia

I think Scalia will give Napolitano and MMFA the Sicilian Salute.

Posted by Scott Johnson in reply to leatherhelmet

Yep

Probably would. His a boorish ass.

Posted by tex

LEATHERHELMET:

It is clear that Scalia is willing to give "the finger" to all of America.

What does the Rightwing suggest for dealing with the problem of "out of control" Justices?

Tom DeLay says, "Congress for many years has shirked its responsibility to hold the judiciary accountable. No longer."

Phyllis Schlafly says, "Congress ought to talk about impeachment."

Michael P. Farris, chairman of the Home School Legal Defense Association, says a Supreme Court Justice "should be the poster boy for impeachment" and "If our congressmen and senators do not have the courage to impeach and remove from office this Justice, they ought to be impeached as well."

The House has impeached 11 federal judges, including former Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase, but the Senate has only convicted and removed seven.

So, our "SOLUTION" to Scalia comes from the Rightwing. Impeach. Remove. Sound insane, fringe, radical? LOL. Consider those proposing it above.

Posted by midsize

Yeah, he's big enough...

...Antonin Scalia is a great man; he can take this.

After all, he has a lifetime appointment to a position of power in which he is accountable to no one. I'm sure a lesser Justice would quail in the face of this criticism, but not our boy -- he's one tough paisan, and no criticism is going to make him fear for his job.

Gibson is an ass.

Leather: I respect Scalia as an extremely intelligent and thoughtful jurist, although I disagree with his politics completely. I think he's a credit to the Supreme Court. Only internet bully-boys and tough guy poseurs would presume that Scalia would do anything so childish as "give the Sicilian salute" to anyone.

Posted by Scott Johnson in reply to midsize

Yep

I agree about Scalia. I saw a talk he and Breyer gave on C-Span about foreign influence on the courts. I quickly understood why people had labelled him as brilliant. He's a compelling advocate for his side. Breyer is probably equally intelligent though didn't come off as nearly as cogent. Scalito is like Scalia without the charisma.

Posted by nerzog in reply to Scott Johnson

Yeah, charisma....

Hitler had it, too.

Scalia is a troglodyte.

Posted by leatherhelmet in reply to midsize

No sense of humor

Having grown up in a mafia town I know that Scalia did the little wave under the chin which basically means go away, not the more famed Italian salute.

The ignorant reporter was too stupid to look up Italian hand gestures or find an Italian to explain it to him.

Scalia ripped the Boston paper a new one in a letter today.

All judges are eccentric, Scalia just happens to have a little personality which is refreshing.

Posted by jbhfour in reply to leatherhelmet

What bullsh*t

That gesture means "FU*K YOU" and EVERYONE knows it. To claim otherwise is just being dishonest. Of course, that's just what we'd expect from an absolute asshole like Scalia, and from you. He apparently thinks that the Geneva conventions are just baloney, 'cause "it's war" and "they shot at my son". This is what you 'thugs like to refer to as "Judicial Activism". His WHOLE JOB is to NOT have an opinion on these things.

Caught on tape: [link to news.bostonherald.com]

If by "personality" you mean "lousy excuse for a human being" then I agree with you- he shows LOTS of that.

I'm sorry, but

We just had MONTHS of blather about how nominees for the Supreme Court couldn't comment on how they might rule in cases that might (hypothetically) come before them, not to mention temper tantrums from everyone on the right that anyone who even probed around the edges of that RIDICULOUS stonewall was out of line.

Scalia is a sitting Justice, and he is clearly telegraphing that he has made up his mind on what may be one of this century's most important cases: one that has the potential to condemn thousands of present and future persons to durance vile with no hope of redress.

If Scalia does not acknowledge this, if not by outright admitting his bias, but by recusing himself, he should be impeached. Period.

I'm not holding my breath, though.

Posted by tex in reply to temphandle brag7loom

TEMP:

In case you haven't noticed, our current batch of NeoCons believe that the RULES are for OTHERS. They are above following the rules they lay down for the mere commoners to follow.

If we were equals, this would be called "hypocricy".

However, since we are now dealing with royalty, it's called "the King's perogative". Bush does not believe the laws apply to Him. Scalia does not have to follow plebian rules set for lesser men. Both men behave as if they get special dispensation from God, just as royalty of old claimed divine direction, which grants that if these men DO it, it must be right and proper. They hold themselves as above suspicion, and criticism of their actions is tantamount to insulting the Almighty Creator ... whom they consult and believe they serve.

Whether this is true arrogance, or an overcompensation for feelings of inadequacy (and a thin skin), is irrelevant. We are a nation of LAWS, not men, and despite the power these men weild, they serve THE PEOPLE, and are ultimately answerable to US. This may come as a rude awakening.

Posted by a_r_k

Scalia Shreds the Constitution's Fabric

Just what part of the phrases, "No Person", and "In all criminal prosecutions", are so difficult to understand that Americans need 9 old verbose blatherers wearing black satin moo moos to augur the Constitution's entrails to divine their original intents?

As to the applicability of Constituional edicts to detainees at Guantanamo Bay, the 13th Amendment, Section 1 is transparently clear:

Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

Does Guantanamo Bay exist within the set of places that is subject to the juristiction of the US Government?

Take these persons into an open court room, and using due process of law, convict them for their inhumane acts. The Bush Administration grinds the very document which legitimises their power under their shoes.

  • the Right to a Jury trial
  • the Right to a Public Presentment of Indictment
  • the Right to a Public Trial
  • the Right to challenge evidence and witnesses used in Prosecution
  • the Right to Obtain evidence and witnesses for the Denfense
  • Habeas Corpus

These are Rights Possessed by All Humans, and a just government would protect them, above all.

A tyrannical executive, a complicit legislature, an acquiescent judiciary...say good night America; the Dreamtime is Fading Away

Posted by cantseefade in reply to a_r_k

The question

"Does Guantanamo Bay exist within the set of places that is subject to the juristiction of the US Government?"

Clearly, the U.S. would argue that it does not as it is on Cuban soil. This case is not so straight forward as your post suggests in that there is a real question as to whether some of the detainees are subject to the benefits of the Geneva convention. Scalia however, should clearly recuse himself from the case after expressing that his mind was already made up on the matter. Thomas should as well since he tags along with Scalia in every other decision.

Posted by ChristianDemocrat in reply to cantseefade

Gitmo on Cuban soil.

By that definition, then Gitmo would be subject to Cuban law. I don't think that even the Justice Department would argue that. But that's not even a consideration with respect to the detainees, unless they happen to commit a crime while at Gitmo.

The issue before the court is really one of jurisdiction as it relates to the reasons for taking the detainees into custody, most of which I understand to have occured in Afghanistan. The Justice Department is attempting to argue that the detainees are prisoners of war, not subject to jurisdiction and protection of civil courts. However, they also claim that the Geneva Convention does not apply since Al Qaeda is not a party to that agreement. (Al Qaeda is not even a recognized state for that matter.) Essentially, Justice wants to have it both ways, with the Executive establishing the courts and juries, i.e., essentially acting a judge, jury and executioner.

Therein lies the problem. With no outside oversight, even the best intentions cannot prevent the eventual abuse of such a system. Some Afghans may have already used the system for personal gain, with the U.S. acting as agent.