In the very beginning from the very foundational words of the constitution "All men are created equal" it was a document written and based on interpretation, thus in the mist of it the slave was not considered human.
I think you're thinking of the Declaration of Independence. Oops, lol, that was funny, okay I got myself there.[/b]I believe Snowden was wrong in what he did because he failed to realize the importance of human life and security over the words of the constitution, which is not a Document written under inspiration of God.
Regarding the importance of human life as well as the proper oversight we've been told by Obama et al that is being used, consider http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/19/drone-signature-strike_n_3421586.html. So while Obama claims there is oversight going on, in effect the oversight is ineffective.
In the name of security, we can murder innocent people, and then say, such casualties are inevitable in our fight against al Qaeda, an organization we helped to fund and worked with. I have problems with that.
It is hypocrisy to keep our innocent civilians from being murdered by murdering the innocent civilians of other nations.
Do you recall how Sister White identifies the repudiation of the First Amendment of the Constitution as being sort of the final sin of America? Then how can you not be concerned about the repudiation of the Fourth Amendment? The U.S. is speaking more like the Dragon than the Lamb in these matters.
The Patriot Act states that during national Emergencies the rights of the people can be suspended, I believe the Congress passed it after 9/11.
And what gave Congress the authority to suspend our constitutional rights? Please cite the article in the constitution that gives Congress such authority.
Our federal judiciary, executive branch, and legislature have no more authority than what the Constitution allows. That is a foundational principle and gets brought up in a wide variety of topics.
Our government as far back as world war II, the imprisonment of Japanese Americans, have always done things contrary to the constitution to keep people safe. The question is not whether the Constitution allows but rather whether the good of the people is served. I took the time to go back and read the constitution again, only to realize again that the United States has for long in many circumstances disregarded the rule of law in one way or the other. Perhaps the better question is, does the constitution need an upgrade?
Obviously, before the current President, the government has long, according to the constitution, overstepped its boundaries,
I think we will agree with that. The President takes an Oath of office to uphold the Constitution but both parties when their guy gets in office does everything in their power to trample it for money or greed. "We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, ensure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America" these words written long ago have been framed in the contextual understanding of those who read it. The 13Th amendment abolished slavery, but the true context of the constitution could not possibly have excluded them in the beginning (this is not meant to invoke race into the equation but just to give a glaring example of the implementation and interpretation of the Constitution).
Obviously when the Constitution was written the Atom bomb had not been invented nor the internet or various other advanced technologies. It could be surmised that the constitution does not even apply to those advancements. ---I would state that the constitution needs to be opened up by two third of the states votes but then we would come away with a vastly different constitution one I am not sure that would be better than the current one interpreted by the courts. ----Obviously the 200 year old document cannot cover all that is happening in the world today, or even account for the dangers that did not exist during its inception. The question is asked should the United States for the sake of freedom lose its freedom to the destructive devices of technology? When ever in history has one man been able to carry a device in his suitcase with the ability to destroy an entire city? The government is entrusted with the solem duty even outside the constitution of keeping its citizens
free and safe this embodies the constitution at its highest level.
As far as Ellen White writting go, I am concerned because of what she has written about the end of time. However, I must put it in its proper context, the enemy is not the Government but rather the perverted religious leaders who follow Satan. The Great Controversy frames the end of time in the context of what evil Satanic filled Christians will do in the name of God. Interestingly we read her writting and think they apply to the United States Political parties when in fact she is framing through her writting it in the light of what people thinking they speak for God will do.
The drone strikes were done to American citizens who were inciting the world to destroy the united states through every mean necessary. Do you think for one minute the constitution was written and design to protect those people?