jillian
Princess
Are Roadblocks Constitutional?
Are you concerned that roadblocks will infringe on your God-given right to drive a car?
They infringe upon my right to travel.
.
no. they don't.
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Are Roadblocks Constitutional?
Are you concerned that roadblocks will infringe on your God-given right to drive a car?
They infringe upon my right to travel.
.
Wrong on the first count. A detour, even a temporary one is not detainment without probable cause. Pulled over is police detainment and according to the constitution requires probable cause. The nourishment of tyranny on the second count. You are a dictators dream. Ever hear of this litle glitch in your sheep mentality? It's called presumed innocense. Learn it...know it...love it.
Government does not need your cheerleading. Greedy and power intoxicated people will always try to take more and control more for the taking.
Actually, driving is not a "right." It is a privilege. It requires that a license be issued by the State.
In order to protect the people on the roads (and close enough to it to be affected by motorists), the State has a very well defined and long recognized interest in issuing such licenses with conditions. One is that people amy not drive without a license. Another is that one may not obtain a license without passing certain tests. Another is that one may not drive at all under certain conditions (such as when one is intoxicated). And if a motorist violates these provisions, in order to fulfill its obligations to other people on (or near) the road, the State has valid legal authority to cancel licenses and to meet out punishment.
DWI is an area of overlap in that regard. Driving while drunk can get your license punched and get you criminally sanctioned.
To enforce the DWI laws, the State does have the legal authority to conduct traffic stops in a manner that is not otherwise inconsistent with our notions of fairness and justice. It's just one of the impositions one has ALREADY ACCEPTED as a condition of getting and keeping a driver's license. This is why roadblocks are considered Constitutional. Nothing about them allows for the officers to be arbitrary. ALL motorists get pulled over. No race consciousness. No sexism. No profiling. Equal application to all.
Can you make an argument that being "forced" to accept the conditions is somehow a violation of your liberty interests? Yeah. You can say it. But don't count on your argument being found persuasive.
No state shall pass a law that will supercede the constitution. I never signed a document relieving myself of my rights and if I was so foolish there is enough precident that I cannot anyway. It wouldn't matter. One cannot sign away ones constitutional rights. The government does not own anything exclusive of its citizens. We own the government..not the other way around. It would be a better government if more americans understood that.
I presume that you drive. If you do you must have good or corrected eyesight. With the gift of sight you should have been able to witness drivers that are not in control of thier vehicles. Police have these same magical powers of vision. Observing a vehicle that appears not in control is presumption and good reason to be stopped for your public safety. I am not inclined to co sign powers not spelled out in the constitution or interpreted so by those with an agenda not parallel with the wishes of the framers. You can lick fascist boots if you wish.
Probable cause is the standard for arrest, not necessarily a detention. I know you don't agree with that though.
So a cop can pull over any car he or she wants to for no reason whatsoever?
DUI checkpoints are controlled, not random, there is a constitutional difference.
So a cop can pull over any car he or she wants to for no reason whatsoever?
DUI checkpoints are controlled, not random, there is a constitutional difference.
explain it the difference to me. I know the KGB used to love them,
.
So a cop can pull over any car he or she wants to for no reason whatsoever?
DUI checkpoints are controlled, not random, there is a constitutional difference.
explain it the difference to me. I know the KGB used to love them,
.
Actually, driving is not a "right." It is a privilege. It requires that a license be issued by the State.
In order to protect the people on the roads (and close enough to it to be affected by motorists), the State has a very well defined and long recognized interest in issuing such licenses with conditions. One is that people amy not drive without a license. Another is that one may not obtain a license without passing certain tests. Another is that one may not drive at all under certain conditions (such as when one is intoxicated). And if a motorist violates these provisions, in order to fulfill its obligations to other people on (or near) the road, the State has valid legal authority to cancel licenses and to meet out punishment.
DWI is an area of overlap in that regard. Driving while drunk can get your license punched and get you criminally sanctioned.
To enforce the DWI laws, the State does have the legal authority to conduct traffic stops in a manner that is not otherwise inconsistent with our notions of fairness and justice. It's just one of the impositions one has ALREADY ACCEPTED as a condition of getting and keeping a driver's license. This is why roadblocks are considered Constitutional. Nothing about them allows for the officers to be arbitrary. ALL motorists get pulled over. No race consciousness. No sexism. No profiling. Equal application to all.
Can you make an argument that being "forced" to accept the conditions is somehow a violation of your liberty interests? Yeah. You can say it. But don't count on your argument being found persuasive.
No state shall pass a law that will supercede the constitution. I never signed a document relieving myself of my rights and if I was so foolish there is enough precident that I cannot anyway. It wouldn't matter. One cannot sign away ones constitutional rights. The government does not own anything exclusive of its citizens. We own the government..not the other way around. It would be a better government if more americans understood that.
I presume that you drive. If you do you must have good or corrected eyesight. With the gift of sight you should have been able to witness drivers that are not in control of thier vehicles. Police have these same magical powers of vision. Observing a vehicle that appears not in control is presumption and good reason to be stopped for your public safety. I am not inclined to co sign powers not spelled out in the constitution or interpreted so by those with an agenda not parallel with the wishes of the framers. You can lick fascist boots if you wish.
You missed the point.
The point is not that a State can pass a law that trumps the Constitution. It cannot validly do so; but nothing I have suggested says anything even remotely along those lines.
The point is that no Constitutional issue is even presented when you are stopped in that fashion for purposes of insuring compliance with your obligations pursuant to a LICENSE.
If your license is taken away from you, it is not a "taking" of property under the Constitution.
If the Government is trying to perform one of its lawful duties in a manner that involves administration of mere licenses, they are not violating any Constitutional right you have.
Put it in another light. If we were to follow the path you seem to suggest, the State (i.e., the police officer) would be unable to pull you over unless the officer saw you weaving in your lane or otherwise demonstrably violating some "rule of the road." Why should you (or any other driver) be heard to argue that you have a "right" to drive drunk -- thereby endangering the rest of us -- until and unless a cop has specific probable cause to pull YOU over?
What Constitutional-level "right" do you have to be free from the State's enforcement power over licenses GRANTED by the State?
Your PRIVILEGE to drive (not a right -- a privilege) is CONDITIONED on the granting of a license to you BY the State. One of the conditions is that you must stop at a valid traffic checkpoint.
No state shall pass a law that will supercede the constitution. I never signed a document relieving myself of my rights and if I was so foolish there is enough precident that I cannot anyway. It wouldn't matter. One cannot sign away ones constitutional rights. The government does not own anything exclusive of its citizens. We own the government..not the other way around. It would be a better government if more americans understood that.
I presume that you drive. If you do you must have good or corrected eyesight. With the gift of sight you should have been able to witness drivers that are not in control of thier vehicles. Police have these same magical powers of vision. Observing a vehicle that appears not in control is presumption and good reason to be stopped for your public safety. I am not inclined to co sign powers not spelled out in the constitution or interpreted so by those with an agenda not parallel with the wishes of the framers. You can lick fascist boots if you wish.
You missed the point.
The point is not that a State can pass a law that trumps the Constitution. It cannot validly do so; but nothing I have suggested says anything even remotely along those lines.
The point is that no Constitutional issue is even presented when you are stopped in that fashion for purposes of insuring compliance with your obligations pursuant to a LICENSE.
If your license is taken away from you, it is not a "taking" of property under the Constitution.
If the Government is trying to perform one of its lawful duties in a manner that involves administration of mere licenses, they are not violating any Constitutional right you have.
Put it in another light. If we were to follow the path you seem to suggest, the State (i.e., the police officer) would be unable to pull you over unless the officer saw you weaving in your lane or otherwise demonstrably violating some "rule of the road." Why should you (or any other driver) be heard to argue that you have a "right" to drive drunk -- thereby endangering the rest of us -- until and unless a cop has specific probable cause to pull YOU over?
What Constitutional-level "right" do you have to be free from the State's enforcement power over licenses GRANTED by the State?
Your PRIVILEGE to drive (not a right -- a privilege) is CONDITIONED on the granting of a license to you BY the State. One of the conditions is that you must stop at a valid traffic checkpoint.
I would argue that driving is not a privilege and is indeed a right with the qualifier that your driving right does not present a danger to the public. Hence the liscence which ensures the public that you know the rules and have demonstrated you can operate a vehicle safely.
If we were to follow the path you seem to suggest, the State (i.e., the police officer) would be unable to pull you over
That would be my position exactly. Unless a clear danger to the publiic is demonstrated and a violation has occured the police should mind thier own business and pursue known crimes.
I do not believe someone should drive drunk. I rarely drink myself and never drive intoxicated. That is a false threat. It is usually obvious when someone is not in control of thier vehicle. Your arguement suggests that drunk drivers just all of a sudden drive irratically and cause accidents. In my experience drunk drivers are for the most part obvious and as much as they can be a threat it is up to all drivers to be vigilant against many possible dangers. My arguement is backed up by "shared liability" in accidents applied by both police and insurance carriers. If found that the "innocent" party could have avoided an accident they are held liable also to whatever degree they were negligent in avoiiding the collision. IE...If you saw someone was not safely in control of thier car and did not give them wide birth you are also part of the problem. Lets say the bad operator was not drunk but experiencing a medical emergency. Shit happens. Do you throw the unlucky person with the physical imparement in prison even if they knew they were having problems and did not pull over?
I as the true republican am in favor of more freedom and less government intervention. It is the phoney neo republicans that are so in favor of legislating personal behavior when your personal behavior is your own responsibility as well as most of your own survival.
No moreso than the cops blocking roads and such during a big sporting event.
Being asked to deture around an obstical such as a sporting event is light years from being stopped en masse without probable cause and forced to be tested for substances. Anyone that believes that this is constitutional is an enemy of our countries foundational instruments. This is not the former soviet union sport. If you concede that this is a police state then perhaps it is high time to start nourishing our failing freedom with the blood of tyrants.
They both use the same excuse. Public safety.
If you are not doing something wrong why worry?
That would be my position exactly. Unless a clear danger to the publiic is demonstrated and a violation has occured the police should mind thier own business and pursue known crimes.
Drunk drivers do drive erratically cause a lot of accidents, dimbulb.I do not believe someone should drive drunk. I rarely drink myself and never drive intoxicated. That is a false threat. It is usually obvious when someone is not in control of thier vehicle. Your arguement suggests that drunk drivers just all of a sudden drive irratically and cause accidents.
In my experience drunk drivers are for the most part obvious and as much as they can be a threat it is up to all drivers to be vigilant against many possible dangers.
My arguement is backed up by "shared liability" in accidents applied by both police and insurance carriers. If found that the "innocent" party could have avoided an accident they are held liable also to whatever degree they were negligent in avoiiding the collision. IE...If you saw someone was not safely in control of thier car and did not give them wide birth you are also part of the problem.
Lets say the bad operator was not drunk but experiencing a medical emergency. Shit happens. Do you throw the unlucky person with the physical imparement in prison even if they knew they were having problems and did not pull over?
You could, but you wold be wrong.I would argue that driving is not a privilege and is indeed a right
So the road hog who drives like a maniac should be able to have no more responsibility than the person they collide with because they were obviously a road hog and you should damn well get the hell out of their way!It is usually obvious when someone is not in control of thier vehicle. IE...If you saw someone was not safely in control of thier car and did not give them wide birth you are also part of the problem.
All this seems to presume that an auto on public property has the same rights as a persons home?
Then break their perceived "monopoly"All this seems to presume that an auto on public property has the same rights as a persons home?
So the state can monopolize the highways and streets and then claim that because the same are "public" property there is no expectation of privacy? That, therefore, The gestapo may stop you whenever for whatever.
.
Then break their perceived "monopoly"All this seems to presume that an auto on public property has the same rights as a persons home?
So the state can monopolize the highways and streets and then claim that because the same are "public" property there is no expectation of privacy? That, therefore, The gestapo may stop you whenever for whatever.
.
Buy a bunch of land and build a road and drive as you please.
.
You missed the point.
The point is not that a State can pass a law that trumps the Constitution. It cannot validly do so; but nothing I have suggested says anything even remotely along those lines.
The point is that no Constitutional issue is even presented when you are stopped in that fashion for purposes of insuring compliance with your obligations pursuant to a LICENSE.
If your license is taken away from you, it is not a "taking" of property under the Constitution.
If the Government is trying to perform one of its lawful duties in a manner that involves administration of mere licenses, they are not violating any Constitutional right you have.
Put it in another light. If we were to follow the path you seem to suggest, the State (i.e., the police officer) would be unable to pull you over unless the officer saw you weaving in your lane or otherwise demonstrably violating some "rule of the road." Why should you (or any other driver) be heard to argue that you have a "right" to drive drunk -- thereby endangering the rest of us -- until and unless a cop has specific probable cause to pull YOU over?
What Constitutional-level "right" do you have to be free from the State's enforcement power over licenses GRANTED by the State?
Your PRIVILEGE to drive (not a right -- a privilege) is CONDITIONED on the granting of a license to you BY the State. One of the conditions is that you must stop at a valid traffic checkpoint.
I would argue that driving is not a privilege and is indeed a right with the qualifier that your driving right does not present a danger to the public. Hence the liscence which ensures the public that you know the rules and have demonstrated you can operate a vehicle safely.
If we were to follow the path you seem to suggest, the State (i.e., the police officer) would be unable to pull you over
That would be my position exactly. Unless a clear danger to the publiic is demonstrated and a violation has occured the police should mind thier own business and pursue known crimes.
I do not believe someone should drive drunk. I rarely drink myself and never drive intoxicated. That is a false threat. It is usually obvious when someone is not in control of thier vehicle. Your arguement suggests that drunk drivers just all of a sudden drive irratically and cause accidents. In my experience drunk drivers are for the most part obvious and as much as they can be a threat it is up to all drivers to be vigilant against many possible dangers. My arguement is backed up by "shared liability" in accidents applied by both police and insurance carriers. If found that the "innocent" party could have avoided an accident they are held liable also to whatever degree they were negligent in avoiiding the collision. IE...If you saw someone was not safely in control of thier car and did not give them wide birth you are also part of the problem. Lets say the bad operator was not drunk but experiencing a medical emergency. Shit happens. Do you throw the unlucky person with the physical imparement in prison even if they knew they were having problems and did not pull over?
I as the true republican am in favor of more freedom and less government intervention. It is the phoney neo republicans that are so in favor of legislating personal behavior when your personal behavior is your own responsibility as well as most of your own survival.
I get your gist. Seriously, I get what you're saying. But the law does view it differently. I don't think there's any question but that -- in the eyes of the law -- driving is a privilege and it is BECAUSE it's a privilege that the State gets to issue licenses. If it wasn't a mere privilege, but was instead a "right," as you believe it should be viewed, then the State would have no legitimate authority to condition your driving on having a license and a registration and insurance.*
There is an area of overlap. When you get pulled over for a non-randomly based traffic stop, your freedom of movement is affected. This is why a search stemming from an invalid stop can end up having the evidence being suppressed. But a uniform traffic stop (like every fifth car or all cars) gets them past the concern of arbitrary and suspect police behavior. And the regulatory purpose is sufficient in the other regards.
_______________________
* The right to bear arms is a right, by contrast, and yet the State still claims to be able to condition citizen gun-ownership on the obtaining from the State of a license. I believe this contradictory set of results (i.e., the State conditioning a privilege on the obtaining of a license and the State conditioning a RIGHT on the obtaining of a license) is really at the core of 2nd Amendment debate issues.
I would argue that driving is not a privilege and is indeed a right with the qualifier that your driving right does not present a danger to the public. Hence the liscence which ensures the public that you know the rules and have demonstrated you can operate a vehicle safely.
If we were to follow the path you seem to suggest, the State (i.e., the police officer) would be unable to pull you over
That would be my position exactly. Unless a clear danger to the publiic is demonstrated and a violation has occured the police should mind thier own business and pursue known crimes.
I do not believe someone should drive drunk. I rarely drink myself and never drive intoxicated. That is a false threat. It is usually obvious when someone is not in control of thier vehicle. Your arguement suggests that drunk drivers just all of a sudden drive irratically and cause accidents. In my experience drunk drivers are for the most part obvious and as much as they can be a threat it is up to all drivers to be vigilant against many possible dangers. My arguement is backed up by "shared liability" in accidents applied by both police and insurance carriers. If found that the "innocent" party could have avoided an accident they are held liable also to whatever degree they were negligent in avoiiding the collision. IE...If you saw someone was not safely in control of thier car and did not give them wide birth you are also part of the problem. Lets say the bad operator was not drunk but experiencing a medical emergency. Shit happens. Do you throw the unlucky person with the physical imparement in prison even if they knew they were having problems and did not pull over?
I as the true republican am in favor of more freedom and less government intervention. It is the phoney neo republicans that are so in favor of legislating personal behavior when your personal behavior is your own responsibility as well as most of your own survival.
I get your gist. Seriously, I get what you're saying. But the law does view it differently. I don't think there's any question but that -- in the eyes of the law -- driving is a privilege and it is BECAUSE it's a privilege that the State gets to issue licenses. If it wasn't a mere privilege, but was instead a "right," as you believe it should be viewed, then the State would have no legitimate authority to condition your driving on having a license and a registration and insurance.*
There is an area of overlap. When you get pulled over for a non-randomly based traffic stop, your freedom of movement is affected. This is why a search stemming from an invalid stop can end up having the evidence being suppressed. But a uniform traffic stop (like every fifth car or all cars) gets them past the concern of arbitrary and suspect police behavior. And the regulatory purpose is sufficient in the other regards.
_______________________
* The right to bear arms is a right, by contrast, and yet the State still claims to be able to condition citizen gun-ownership on the obtaining from the State of a license. I believe this contradictory set of results (i.e., the State conditioning a privilege on the obtaining of a license and the State conditioning a RIGHT on the obtaining of a license) is really at the core of 2nd Amendment debate issues.
I base my constitutional arguement on freedom of assembly. I believe that freedom of assembly strongly implies freedom of travel to that assembly.
Yep. It is.Our little two-horse town is allegedly going to be conducting a comprehensive roadblock campaign this upcoming weekend, stopping everybody who is unfortunate enough to be at the wrong place at the wrong time to be assessed for alcohol levels. They must be really hard up for money. Natch, I had plans to attend someone's BD party, replete with live band and, of course, 'potent' libations.
This whole thing strikes me as a blatant disregard for the 4th amendment. Your thoughts?
Really? Because there are plenty of privately owned toll roads in my part of the country.Then break their perceived "monopoly"So the state can monopolize the highways and streets and then claim that because the same are "public" property there is no expectation of privacy? That, therefore, The gestapo may stop you whenever for whatever.
.
Buy a bunch of land and build a road and drive as you please.
.
Excuse Mr. Sucker, but entrepreneurs are not going to finance roads when the government is determined to own and controlled the roads and byways.
.
Really? Because there are plenty of privately owned toll roads in my part of the country.Privately - as in NOT owned by the government.
I would argue that driving is not a privilege and is indeed a right with the qualifier that your driving right does not present a danger to the public. Hence the liscence which ensures the public that you know the rules and have demonstrated you can operate a vehicle safely.
If we were to follow the path you seem to suggest, the State (i.e., the police officer) would be unable to pull you over
That would be my position exactly. Unless a clear danger to the publiic is demonstrated and a violation has occured the police should mind thier own business and pursue known crimes.
I do not believe someone should drive drunk. I rarely drink myself and never drive intoxicated. That is a false threat. It is usually obvious when someone is not in control of thier vehicle. Your arguement suggests that drunk drivers just all of a sudden drive irratically and cause accidents. In my experience drunk drivers are for the most part obvious and as much as they can be a threat it is up to all drivers to be vigilant against many possible dangers. My arguement is backed up by "shared liability" in accidents applied by both police and insurance carriers. If found that the "innocent" party could have avoided an accident they are held liable also to whatever degree they were negligent in avoiiding the collision. IE...If you saw someone was not safely in control of thier car and did not give them wide birth you are also part of the problem. Lets say the bad operator was not drunk but experiencing a medical emergency. Shit happens. Do you throw the unlucky person with the physical imparement in prison even if they knew they were having problems and did not pull over?
I as the true republican am in favor of more freedom and less government intervention. It is the phoney neo republicans that are so in favor of legislating personal behavior when your personal behavior is your own responsibility as well as most of your own survival.
I get your gist. Seriously, I get what you're saying. But the law does view it differently. I don't think there's any question but that -- in the eyes of the law -- driving is a privilege and it is BECAUSE it's a privilege that the State gets to issue licenses. If it wasn't a mere privilege, but was instead a "right," as you believe it should be viewed, then the State would have no legitimate authority to condition your driving on having a license and a registration and insurance.*
There is an area of overlap. When you get pulled over for a non-randomly based traffic stop, your freedom of movement is affected. This is why a search stemming from an invalid stop can end up having the evidence being suppressed. But a uniform traffic stop (like every fifth car or all cars) gets them past the concern of arbitrary and suspect police behavior. And the regulatory purpose is sufficient in the other regards.
_______________________
* The right to bear arms is a right, by contrast, and yet the State still claims to be able to condition citizen gun-ownership on the obtaining from the State of a license. I believe this contradictory set of results (i.e., the State conditioning a privilege on the obtaining of a license and the State conditioning a RIGHT on the obtaining of a license) is really at the core of 2nd Amendment debate issues.
I base my constitutional arguement on freedom of assembly. I believe that freedom of assembly strongly implies freedom of travel to that assembly.