Annachie wrote:Strangely PeterZ, SCOTUS disagreed, it must be 10 or 12 years ago now.
You know SCOTUS, that body that decides what is constitutional and/or legal.
Simply put, Habeus Corpus aplies to anybody who is being detained by the US, no matter where they are or what their nationality.
If Habeus Corpus applies, then so does the 5th.
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Sorry but the people are NOT being detained. They are simply not being allowed entry. That is in essence what immigration means, allowing entry. So, if the President's not allowing entry into the US is defined as detaining foreign nationals and Habeas Corpus applies, then foreign nationals, all foreign nationals, have a right to enter the US. This means the federal government must seek to individually remove them from the US after they freely enter the US at their whim.
This interpretation asserts Article 1, section 8 of the US Constitution grants Congress ONLY the power to decide which foreign national with free access to enter and leave the US can become a citizen. Furthermore, it makes the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 and the United States Refugee Act of 1980 unconstitutional for simply asserting that there is a limit on the number of refugees that may enter the US. In addition all the aliens jumping the border and those that have yet to jump the border but for some reason cannot have standing to sue the government for restricting their access. That access being protected by the 5th Amendment as prohibiting unlawful detention.
In your words...ya fucking what?