Al Jazeera clip features lawyer on Declaration principles and presidential targeted killing authority
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Summary
The short clip features constitutional lawyer Bruce Fein discussing principles from the Declaration of Independence regarding consent of the governed and unalienable rights. He contrasts historical progress on equality and voting rights with what he describes as backward steps in unchecked presidential authority over lethal force. Fein argues the president can designate and kill individuals, including US citizens, as threats without judicial oversight. The segment is part of Al Jazeera English coverage critical of Trump-era executive actions. Sourcing centers on Fein's commentary with no additional guests or on-screen graphics referenced.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately conveys Fein's views and the text of the Declaration but presents an incomplete picture by omitting the program's origins under prior administrations and the executive branch's internal legal rationales. Courts have largely declined to intervene on standing or separation-of-powers grounds rather than endorsing unlimited power. The hyperbolic phrasing 'kill anybody he wants' risks overstating the claimed scope, which is tied to specific national security designations. Viewers miss the bipartisan continuity of drone and targeted killing policies as well as congressional authorizations like the AUMF. Framing emphasizes regression under the current president without balancing documented legal constraints or policy evolution.
Key Moments
Declaration of Independence establishes government by consent of the governed to secure unalienable rights to life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness, with right to alter or abolish destructive government
Direct quotes match the National Archives transcription of the Declaration
US has advanced on equality by enfranchising minorities and women and ending Jim Crow
Reflects documented 20th-century constitutional amendments and civil rights legislation
President has authority to kill anyone designated a threat, including US citizens, with no judicial check or accountability
Critiques echo ACLU and others on Obama-era program continued under Trump; DOJ memos and AUMF provide claimed basis, but courts have not fully reviewed on merits
Notable Concerns
- Overstated scope of presidential authority without noting legal memos or bipartisan precedent