You took a course for one year but I've been reading about the subject for the last 15+ years. Besides, a course like that probably tells you "what is" and not why something is right, wrong, just, unjust, moral or immoral, because that's not the purpose of the course. That said, it has no bearing on right and wrong, what should or should not be, and only on what is legal or not legal (which is not the same thing as right and wrong). I already know this isn't a free country. Evidence in daily life, no book or 1 year course needed to see that.FordSVTFan said:I agree with you. But after taking one year of Constitutional Law and reading the 1400 page book that goes along with it. I can tell you we have no absolute rights in this country, there is almost always an exception.
For instance since the days of the Magna Carta, there has been the right to a writ of Habeas Corpus, but the 2006 Military Commissions Act has virtually suspended the writ of habeas corpus.
There are no exceptions, period, or they aren't rights. You can call it what you want, but it isn't a right if it can be taken away. This government has violated the rights of its citizens way too many times. I'm frankly sick of it, which is why I speak up all the time on the subject (freedom), to the chagrin of the conservative boneheads here who see nothing wrong with the draft but somehow think they are for freedom.
Anyway...