When Power Turns to Discretion: Lessons from the Boat Strikes

When Power Turns to Discretion: Lessons from the Boat Strikes

In early September, the United States government began using military force against small boats in the Caribbean and the Eastern Pacific. The descriptions of the people on those boats shifted from day to day. Sometimes they were called traffickers. Sometimes cartel members. Sometimes enemy combatants. What never changed was the fact that many were killed without arrest, without evidence presented to the public, and without any form of due process.


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The Fragility of Privilege
Philosophy, Society, Freedom, Essays, History & Society Brian Mahaney Philosophy, Society, Freedom, Essays, History & Society Brian Mahaney

The Fragility of Privilege

Rights are not a gift from government. They are a claim built into what it means to be human. You can suspend them by force, fail to honor them in law, or ignore them in practice. But you cannot erase their source without denying the person who bears them. That is the heart of the matter, and one of the oldest arguments in political thought.

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