• Initiateofthevoid@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 hours ago

    The British soldiers at the Boston Massacre and Nazi war criminals of the Holocaust had their day in court.

    That’s what due process is. Everyone -everyone - enemy or not, gets a trial. That’s how it should be, that’s how it needs to be, or there is no justice.

    That’s why “expedited removal” is nothing but fascism. No due process, no justice at all.

  • wpb@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    It is important to add that even though the US has committed atrocities, for decades, from Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos through Iraq, Afghanistan, and Gaza; illegal invasion, torture, genocide, war crimes; nothing meaningful ever came from it. There has never been Nuremberg trial equivalent for the United States, and there never will be. Every single president since Eisenhower, every single one, no exceptions, has been a war criminal by the standards of the Nuremberg trials and the Tokyo tribunal, and not one of them ever spent even a day in court for it.

    There are no consequences for war crimes committed by Americans. None. Aside from 9/11, but the ones who died, the ones who suffered, were not the ones responsible for the atrocities committed by the US. So sure, “just following orders” isn’t a valid defense, but you won’t need one anyway.

    • AeonFelis@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      The Nuremberg trials did not happen because the Nazis were wrong. They happened because the Nazis lost the war.

    • monotremata@lemmy.ca
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      13 hours ago

      Trump is sending 2000 national guard troops to LA in response to anti-ICE protests there, over the explicit objection of Governor Newsom, who would normally be involved in any National Guard deployment in his state. The protests were mostly peaceful, and the local police were handling them, so this is entirely an effort to escalate the situation and show force against a state that doesn’t want Trump interfering.

  • yetAnotherUser@discuss.tchncs.de
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    16 hours ago

    That’s only partially true.

    For starters, nearly everything German soldiers did was legal under German law.

    Side tangent: GDR soldiers who killed civilians trying to flee the country could easily be prosecuted after reunification because this was explicitly illegal under GDR law.

    It’s harder to prosecute “legal” crimes. It requires establishing there are “natural laws” which stand above any law humans put in place. For instance, slaughtering civilians is one such violation of “natural law”. It’s more complex but that’s the rough summary.

    Besides, most German soldiers simply became prisoners of war and faced little to no legal consequences. The Nuremberg trials were mostly for those who gave the illegal order - no one has time for millions of legal cases.

    I have little to no clue about US law but as far as I can tell, executive orders are legal until deemed illegal by a court. The order would therefore have to violate “natural law” - not the constitution - or be so obviously illegal beyond any reasonable doubt to allow for prosecution of those who follow it. Both of those are a very high bar to clear.

    • SomeAmateur@sh.itjust.works
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      15 hours ago

      This is a reason why I kinda like the psudo religious concepts that back US founding documents.

      Now before everyone gets to typing about annoying evangelicals or whatever (trust me I understand) you don’t have to believe in christianity or any other religious institution for the “natural law” concept to work. All it takes is an understanding that human rights are a default and don’t magically disappear because your area’s govt says so.

      It’s summed up nicely by this quote from John Locke.

      “And where the Body of the People, or any single Man, is deprived of their Right, or is under the Exercise of a power without right, and have no Appeal on Earth, there they have a liberty to appeal to Heaven, whenever they judge the Cause of sufficient moment.”

  • Skyrmir@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    Remember that we had to fight a world war before we got to decide that just following orders wasn’t an excuse?

    There are steps between ‘Human rights and abuse of power’ before we get to ‘put on trial for atrocities’. We’re not preparing for those steps right now.

  • troed@fedia.io
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    21 hours ago

    While true, most of them are likely one paycheck away from having their family living in the streets. That’s a powerful deterrent against refusing orders that the US has somehow mastered. That too.

      • troed@fedia.io
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        18 hours ago

        Of course, but most people will prioritize their own family members over others. It’s an explanation, not an argument against being moral.

      • I_Has_A_Hat@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        Except it will. As will “I was just following orders”. It works for cops. It worked in Vietnam. Hell, it even worked for the majority of Nazi’s; only a small percentage actually faced reprocussions for their actions.

        Welcome to real history, where the good guys don’t always win and the bad guys don’t always lose.

  • BigDiction@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    I have faith that there are many people in the military chain of command who are smart enough to ‘interpret’ orders and posture deployments in a way that does not escalate and lead to killing.

    ICE and the civilian LEO have less discipline and the risk of escalation is immensely higher. I’d take the National Guard who follows orders and is subject to court martial over the jack boots any day of the week.

    • snooggums@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      They will just be fired like everyone else who puts up resistance to the current administration.

        • snooggums@lemmy.world
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          12 hours ago

          The National Guard is a combination of full time and mostly weekend reservists. Some are full time to keep everything running.

          The National Guard is also state level and the most likely part of the military to refuse unlawful orders, at least from blue states. I expect those in red states to be pretty awful though, and they have already been tasked with enfocing immigration in states like Texas.

  • Kirp123@lemmy.world
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    21 hours ago

    The US literally sanctioned the ICC judges. There’s not gonna be a Nuremberg trial for them lol.

    • MNByChoice@midwest.social
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      16 hours ago

      Could change rapidly. I doubt Nazi Germany started under the purview of the ICC. (I think ICC was created in response.)

      • ohulancutash@feddit.uk
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        11 hours ago

        There was no jurisdiction at the time. The Nuremberg trials were essentially kangaroo courts with no solid basis in law, performed because the gravity of the Nazi crimes was so great something had to be done. As such some of the judges were uneasy about handing down death sentences, as many of the crimes they were charged with were not crimes in the Third Reich, and international law hadn’t developed sufficiently to take over.

        The ICC came around in the 1990s, partially in response to calls from those involved in the Nuremberg trials for provision for a more robust and legal process, that didn’t rely on conquest first.

    • ohulancutash@feddit.uk
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      20 hours ago

      American soldiers aren’t in the jurisdiction of the ICC or any international court anyway.

      • NoneOfUrBusiness@fedia.io
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        17 hours ago

        America isn’t in the jurisdiction of the ICC, but American soldiers who commit crimes within ICC countries are. This means that American soldiers according to international law can, for example, be prosecuted for crime they commit in support of Israel’s genocide.

      • MartianSands@sh.itjust.works
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        20 hours ago

        That really isn’t how that works. The US has declared that they won’t allow the international courts to get involved, but that doesn’t necessarily prevent those courts from disagreeing.

        “Jurisdiction” is only a thing when a court answers to some higher authority who has limited what that court can do. Since the international courts theoretically don’t answer to the US government, they can make any ruling they like.

        They’re unlikely to bother, since they probably won’t be in a position to enforce any ruling against typical foot soldiers, but they absolutely could if it came to that point

  • hogmomma@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Yes, it IS as cut and dry as that, but actually determining if those orders are, in fact, legal isnt. It shouldn’t matter who you ask or when, but, unfortunately, it does.

  • paranoia@feddit.dk
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    20 hours ago

    When a soldier did not follow orders in nazi Germany they were executed. Would you rather be executed now for treason or maybe not at all later?