The Trump administration is justifying its boat strikes against drug cartels in the Caribbean as collective self-defense on behalf of US allies, specifically citing cartels’ alleged armed violence against allied security forces and their use of cocaine profits to fund it. This legal analysis, formalized in a classified Justice Department Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) opinion, allows the use of lethal force under the “law of armed conflict,” circumventing federal murder statutes. However, this rationale sharply contrasts with Trump’s public narrative, which focuses on stopping overdose deaths. Critics have voiced skepticism, as the claim that cartels are primarily using cocaine proceeds to wage war rather than for financial gain lacks public evidence and the OLC did not fully vet.
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The pardon of Hunter Biden has ignited a firestorm of criticism, yet the consensus among legal experts seems to be that overturning the pardon is simply not feasible. This isn’t a novel situation; presidential pardons have been a source of contention throughout history, but the current political climate has amplified the outrage.
The intensity of the backlash is perceived by some as hypocritical, pointing to the relative silence surrounding similar actions by previous administrations. The argument is raised that the same individuals now decrying the pardon were largely unconcerned by previous instances of presidential pardons deemed controversial or politically motivated.
The argument that the pardon represents a gross miscarriage of justice often clashes with the legal reality that a presidential pardon is, within the bounds of its constitutional authority, unchallengeable.… Continue reading