Bran Mak Morn wrote:
We know how birthers love to rewrite definitions. They started with "natural born citizen." But my favorite now is the rewrite of the "Full Faith and Credit Clause" to mean "Hawaii has to obey subpoenas from Georgia" like this one:
http://www.thepostemail.com/2012/01/07/ ... stitution/Quote:
If the state of Hawaii does that, the judge has the right to jail them. The way that works is that he writes a contempt order and sends it to the law enforcement of the state of Hawaii, and if they fail, then they’re violating the Constitution and we need to get the federal court in Hawaii involved. The Full Faith and Credit Clause of the Constitution states “must honor the judgments from courts duly constituted in other states.” They don’t have a choice, and law enforcement must follow the orders of courts from other states. If they don’t, they’re violating their oath. That’s where we’re at now!
Whoever wrote that has clearly misquoted the Constitution. But as a practical matter, it is a
nearly correct (if very slightly overbroad) statement of the law. The real problem as I see it is that a subpoena is not a judgment. Period. End of discussion.
The other part – about how an administrative law judge in one state can find an official in another state in “contempt of court” and have them arrested and jailed in the other state – well, that’s just plain hilarious birferpuff.
My hunch is that whoever wrote that little two-part fantasy probably
does have some experience with contempt of court orders. Namely, it's probably a deadbeat dad who got nailed in another state. So why is that different? Hint: Among other not-so-subtle distinctions, when that child support order that you scofflawed was entered, the adjudicating court had personal jurisdiction over you. Get it? I didn't think you would.
Edit: A coupla words.