Ethics of Representative
The other night I saw two delegates from Florida interviewed. Both were elected to vote for Trump at the convention. The two were Cruz supporters and freely admitted on national television they ran as Trump delegates only so they could switch their vote to Cruz on the second ballot if there was one. I gather is part of the Cruz “ground team” procedure. The rules allow this. The two were asked if they thought they were doing anything unethical by being elected to vote for Trump with an agenda to vote for Cruz. Both answered it was not unethical. What is the opinion in the Gulch?
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I must now do a Sherman having found out I could have run for President all those years ago as I was born in UK of one US Citizen parent.
If nominated I shall not run.
If elected i shall not serve.
I'm having too much fun Objectively
Tilting at Subjective wind mills philosophically.
Sourcing your comments is always a good idea as it helps the rest of us follow your thinking to a conclusion. With thanks for those who are at that level.
The Supreme Court has never made a judgement on natural born citizen and refused to overturn the one made in Pennsylvania.
Congress refused to comment any further on the subject and backed up the Pennsylvania decision on the matter.
No one else has bothered to push the issue in the court system
The Department of Immigration and Naturalization now counts as native born and natural born those born outside the country of at least one US Citizen parent.
This is the last time I'm offering diaper service on the matter.
Here is the beginning of the resources any competent individual would have checked prior to commenting
Harvard Law Review: Ted Cruz is a natural born citizen and ...
https://winteryknight.com/.../harvard......
Jan 14, 2016 - Donald Trump has been questioning whether Ted Cruz is eligible to run for ... Harvard Law Review: Ted Cruz is a natural born citizen and is eligible to become President ... A legal opinion from the Harvard Law Review.
Harvard scholar: Ted Cruz's citizenship, eligibility for president
www.theguardian.com › US News › Ted Cruz
Jan 10, 2016 - Harvard scholar: Ted Cruz's citizenship, eligibility for president 'unsettled' ... Cruz has since cited a bipartisan Harvard Law Review article by two former ..... ever have an opinion that was helpful to a rightwing nutter like Trump.
Ted Cruz is not eligible to be president - The Washington Post
https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinio......
Jan 12, 2016 - Mary Brigid McManamon is a constitutional law professor at Widener ... [Opinion: Yes, Ted Cruz is a “natural-born citizen”] ... This notion appears to emanate largely from a recent comment in the Harvard Law Review Forum by ...
On the Meaning of “Natural Born Citizen” - Harvard Law ...
harvardlawreview.org/2015/03/on-the-m...
Mar 11, 2015 - Harvard Law Review Forum ... See Christina S. Lohman, Presidential Eligibility: The Meaning of the Natural-Born ... candidate, Senator Ted Cruz, was born in a Canadian hospital to a U.S. citizen mother. ... See, e.g., Laurence H. Tribe & Theodore B. Olson, Opinion Letter, Presidents and Citizenship, 2 J.L.
Harvard law professor: Ted Cruz's eligibility to be president is
www.rawstory.com/.../harvard-law-prof......
Jan 11, 2016 - Harvard law professor: Ted Cruz's eligibility to be president is 'murky ... Cruz has since cited a bipartisan Harvard Law Review article by two ...
Constitutional Scholars Explain Why Ted Cruz Is Eligible to ...
abcnews.go.com/Politics/constitutiona......
Jan 6, 2016 - Legal scholars say Ted Cruz is eligible to occupy the Oval Office. ... as President,” the bipartisan duo wrote in a Harvard Law Review article in March 2015. ... Laurence Tribe, a professor at Harvard Law School, told ABC News ...
Ted Cruz has a very real birther problem: The law is not settled
www.salon.com/.../ted_cruz_has_a_very......
Jan 22, 2016 - The founders did restrict the presidency to natural-born citizens. ... over the eligibility of Canadian-born Ted Cruz to serve as president awakened ... to the Harvard Law Review to argue the opposite side from Harvard's Lawrence ... In 1774, Thomas Jefferson published “Summary View of the Rights of British ...
The debate over whether Ted Cruz is eligible to be ... - Vox
www.vox.com/explainers/2016/1/14/1077...
Jan 15, 2016 - Is Ted Cruz constitutionally eligible to serve as president of the United States? ... And court opinions that have mentioned the term in passing while ruling ... But it's a stretch to say, as Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe did earlier .... It's not like this dilemma was unforeseeable: A law review article about ...
Is Cruz Eligible to Run for President? A Primer -- NYMag
nymag.com/daily/.../01/cruz-eligible-...
Jan 22, 2016 - Cruz is clearly a citizen under the second qualification, so what's the problem? ... in an often-cited March 2015 op-ed in the Harvard Law Review. ... in a CNN opinion piece that Cruz might not have been eligible if he were born in 1790. ... When Cruz was my constitutional law student at Harvard, he aced the ...
Ted Cruz - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ted_Cruz
Rafael Edward "Ted" Cruz (born December 22, 1970) is an American politician and the junior United States Senator from Texas. He is a candidate for the Republican nomination for President of the United States in the 2016 election. Cruz graduated from Princeton University in 1992, and from Harvard Law .... While at Harvard Law, he was a primary editor of the Harvard Law Review, ...
And your only answer is accept what I say at face value with nothing to back it up? Get real. I noted Mr. or Mrs. or Ms. Lbrty didn't mind adding to his/her or their comment.
Objectivism of which you are a stranger demands facts and background and does not judge in a prejudicial manner for that you want Socialism and the philosophy of Plato.
Does that answer your question?
And you want me to accept t.
Several items I think are of import:
1. That Cruz' campaign understands how the delegation process works (for good or evil) with bound and unbound delegates. They have been educating delegates on that process and getting involved to make sure delegates favorable to that campaign are in place as much as possible. Cruz is working - and working hard - to secure the nomination.
2. That Trump's campaign doesn't understand how the delegation process works. Article after article of talking to party leaders of any level indicate that Trump has done nothing at a grass-roots level in many states to obtain delegates. He has been relying solely on popular opinion. Trump has done little to nothing to secure the nomination.
=> That Trump's campaign is probably going to lose in a contested convention because it has not spent the time or resources necessary to win over other candidates' delegates to himself.
I remain open to more information if you have more to provide or a separate context you feel it appropriate to add.
Back up one and two steps. Who made the rules and who gave them the right to make the rules. Just like the rules for all of politics it's a sum total of party members who vote the party leadership into office and provides the legal and ethical cover.
If the people making the rule did so in violation of party rules or policies they could be blamed.
Same applies to the rules governing the Democrat or socialist side of the equation and others such as five percent rule, winner take all rule.
Or what gave the Republican leadership the right to become members of the Socialist Coalition?
One answer is the abdication of responsibility of the party members.
However, you are correct and completely on the same path to truth that I am.
False accusation is the first aggressive step of people with evil intentions.
Without that information go back one step and the charge itself is baseless and unethical. Until facts have been presented no determination can be made.and to attempt to do so is unethical and immoral.
Not our job to change diapers. Your (whoever presented this example) charge your responsibility. Judging without some proof the charge is valid and then on the merits of the charge is pre judging before facts are in evidence another way of saying prejudicial. Any chance it will be presented and if not this should have been presented in tht manner as a made up example and presented in that manner. I cannot accept 'memory' without confirmation and the rest of the requirements of at the least that required to establish probable cause.
I'm with CBJ -- the whole political process is so deeply illegitimate on so many levels that just about any action that may slow down or stop any of its many invasions of liberty becomes justifiable. Disobeying the law will only be wrong per se if we first get a completely rightful set of laws.
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