Kerberos said:
You're reading things into the Constitution that just aren't there;
No, I'm not.
making an oath doesn't give you total liberty to execute the oath,
It does if you have executive power. That's what "executive" means.
The Constitution explicitly gives the authority to interpret the constitution to the Supreme Court, not the president: Article 3 Section. 2. Clause 1: "The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity, arising under this Constitution".
Now you're the one reading in things that aren't there. That only refers to trying cases in a court of law. It DOES NOT APPLY TO EXECUTIVE ORDERS. Executive orders may be invalidated by the judicial branch, but that doesn't speak to the point at all.
What it means is that he has to execute the laws that Congress passes,
AND he can refuse to execute those laws if necessary to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution.
The President doesn't have to enforce unconstitutional lawsm but he does not have the authority to determine whether a law is unconstitutional, that power is explicitly reserved to the courts.
No, it is not. YOU ARE WRONG. ONLY in cases of law that come to court. Separation of powers.
Badnarik wants to refuse to implement laws that Congress passes in direct violation of the Constitution
This is WRONG, WRONG, WRONG and repeating it doesn't make you right.
What the f*ck do you think the point of that oath is in the first place???
As for Section 4 it's what is commonly called a rubber paragraph, it states that Congress can Impeach for "high Crimes and Misdemeanors." With no definition of what constitutes a high crime or misdemeanour it basically means whatever Congress wants it to mean, with the possible exceptions of gay-walking and shoplifting.
That's bull$#!7, too. "High crimes and misdemeanors" had a very specific meaning in Common Law, and only referred to the most egregious of offenses. The impeachment clause is there as a defensive measure, to get a dangerous person out of office before he destroys the country. As Alexander Hamilton wrote in Federalist #65, "Impeachable offenses relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to society itself.'"
It certainly includes refusing to implement laws that Congress passes.
No, it doesn't. Not by a long shot. YOU ARE JUST PLAIN 100% WRONG BY ANY READING OF THE CONSTITUTION.
