For any science to be broadly understood, it needs to be communicated in a helpful manner. Indeed, much of my research focuses on how experts communicate their opinions and on the institutions under which that communication is improved. In this post, I turn my eye toward another form of expert opinion, the law.
With law, or any science, we must distinguish between a term of art and a colloquial term. A term of art is a term that has a specialized meaning within a particular field or profession. A colloquial term is a term whose use is not formal; it is used in ordinary conversation. The two uses can be similar but they often differ significantly.
For example, in economics, “cost” is a term of art. When the economist invokes “cost,” we mean “the best alternative you otherwise would have chosen. Cost is what you forgo” (Universal Economics, pg 33). Contrast this with the colloquial use of cost, which typically refers to the money price paid or any negative consequence of an action. For the economist, cost is something that happens at the moment of choice; it is forward-looking and ephemeral. In the colloquial use, cost is backward-looking.

Mixing up the colloquial and the term of art leads to much confusion. Among the most common mistakes my students make is to confuse the two meanings of “cost,” and, consequently, to systemically misestimate the marginal costs and benefits of an action, leading to poor choices. For example, students will often write in their reflections that price-gouging legislation is desirable because it keeps costs low. In this case, we see a failure: the goal of economic education (enhance decision-making ability) is not achieved and a perversion of that goal does occur. (Of course, we should expect these errors to occur among students, which is why I provide many opportunities for these mistakes to occur in the classroom so I can help them see the errors).
In law, we see a similar problem. Confusion between terms of art and colloquial terms can pervert the law. The goal of law is the development and enforcement of general rules of conduct; proper ways of behavior that enhance everyone’s well-being and maximize individual freedom given the constraints of other individuals’ freedoms. (It’s unfortunate that the recent drift among both the American Left and Right is toward identifying law with a hierarchy of power and command – with confusing law with legislation and bureaucratic commands. This authoritarian bent is most worrisome). But colloquial understandings of legal terms have perverted law, turning that purpose on its head and leading to insecurity among everyone.
One recent example involves the word “invasion.” In law, “invasion” has a very specific meaning: “the incursion of an army for conquest or plunder” (Black’s Law Dictionary, 2nd ed).* But “invasion” also has a colloquial use: “an incursion by a large number of people or things into a place or sphere of activity” (e.g. New Orleans had an invasion of football fans during the Super Bowl). The US Constitution gives the national government the authority and power to repel any invasion (Art 1, Sec 8, Art 4, Sec 4). Or, if a state is currently invaded, States may also deploy their forces against an invasion (Art 1, Sec 10). Legal precedence and theory has long held in the US (and before) that “invasion” in this sense refers to armed invasion. Force can only be deployed against force.
More recently, however, some politicians have begun using “invasion” in the colloquial sense. They point to illegal immigration as an “invasion” and thus use that justification to deploy troops and use extra-judicial means to go after immigrants. This is, quite obviously, a perversion of the law: rather than enhance everyone’s safety and freedom, these actions destroy security and freedom by violating peoples’ rights to association, freedom of movement, and right not to be harassed by government officials. The legal system goes from being the guardian of security and rights to being their destroyer. Fortunately, at least in the US, the courts have rejected this colloquial use of “invasion”. But again, this colloquial drift (as well as the justification “they’re just enforcing the law!”) paves a path to authoritarianism.
Now, a term of art can be confusing. There is virtue in making the law clear and easy to understand. But one can go too far. The great Harvard legal scholar Lon L. Fuller gives one such example from Poland:
“During a visit to Poland in May of 1961 I had a conversation with a former Minister of Justice that is relevant here. She told how in the early days of the communist regime an earnest and sustained effort was made to draft the laws so clearly that they would be intelligible to the worker and peasant. It was soon discovered, however, that this kind of clarity could be attained only at the cost of those systematic elements in a legal system that shape its rules into a coherent whole and render the capable of consistent applications by the courts. It was discovered, in other words, that making the laws readily understandable to the citizen carried a hidden cost in that it rendered their application by the courts more capricious and less predictable” (The Morality of Law, Revised Ed. Yale University Press, 1969. Pg 45).
I’ve written about the dangers of arbitrary government in the past. As we are seeing now, the substitution of systematic law for colloquial law, such as broadening the word “invasion” to include people, and “violence” to include speech, opens the door wide for such arbitrary government. The law must not become perverted.
*There is a second definition, “An encroachment upon the rights of another,” but that definition is not relevant to the point I am making, which shall become obvious to the reader in a moment.
READER COMMENTS
Craig
Apr 16 2025 at 1:54pm
“*There is a second definition, “An encroachment upon the rights of another,” but that definition is not relevant to the point I am making, which shall become obvious to the reader in a moment.”
Cliffhanger? Did you by chance not copy and paste the entire post?
Jon Murphy
Apr 16 2025 at 1:56pm
No. The point of the post is about military invasion, not privacy invasion.
Craig
Apr 16 2025 at 2:03pm
I’m sorry I got down there and forgot about the asterisk. I was simply reading that as your last sentence and not as the footnote.
“law must not become perverted.
*There is a second definition, “An encroachment upon the rights of another,” but that definition is not relevant to the point I am making, which shall become obvious to the reader in a moment.”
FTFY 😉
Jon Murphy
Apr 16 2025 at 3:54pm
Yeah I realized the footnote wasn’t obvious after we had talked. Unfortunately, this platform doesn’t have great options for giving footnotes.
Craig
Apr 16 2025 at 2:55pm
For purposes of is a very important phrase in law, so if I say that for purposes of the Due Process clause of the XIV Amendment, the term ‘persons’ shall include corporations (precedent stretching back to Santa Clara RR) well, colloquially most people don’t include corporations as persons, but unequivocally the I Amendment and the like is incorporated against the states by way of the XIV Amendment to protect the I Amendment rights of such corporations as the NY Times.
Of course now we hear about certain Venezuelan nations being deported who belong to Tren de Aragua TdA which the State Department declared to be a foreign terrorist organization. Maybe you agree or not, honestly I had never heard of them before, but the political question doctrine transcends this. The issue is that at the moment the President has the authority to make the determination, that action remains subject checks and balances including elections, Trump obviously in his second term, but there are midterms pending, the legislative branch who can rebuke the President here and/or impeach, indeed some discussion over Trump’s use off emergency powers pertaining to fentanyl allowing him to impose tariffs. Or of course the courts.
Whether those checks and balances occur or not, until then, the political question doctrine applies and Trump has the inherent authority if and when an invasion is happening that is not remotely constrained by what you might think the definition of that word should or should not entail. The authority has been delegated to him to make that determination.
Think Trump invented any of this? Think again, this goes back to 1860 when Lincoln suspended habeas corpus along the military line from Philadelphia to DC because he feared rebel sympathizers would try to disrupt the movement of the federal army to put down the rebellion. Who was Lincoln to do that? Nobody actually, indeed the Constitution says that power belongs to Congress, but when Congress came back into session they ratified his action. Indeed there are whole swaths of laws out there now where Congress makes a general statute and sets general preconditions for invoking them giving the Executive Branch the power to determine if those preconditions are actually met or not.
Its an invasion if Trump says its an invasion because he possesses actual political authority to make that declaration.
Craig
Apr 16 2025 at 3:03pm
Really not much different from Clinton putting a cruise missile down the chimney of the El Shifa pharmaceutical plant. History tells us that the plant wasn’t a threat after all, but at the time Clinton made the determination that it WAS a threat to national security, he made that determination, it was his call to make it, he made it, and he ordered that cruise missile to be launched. Now ultimately you can say that he was WRONG for doing so. Fair comment of course, my guess is he’d probably say himself as much if you asked him, but he had the AUTHORITY to make that determination. Why? Political question doctrine. Now if something like that had the time to go through the halls of Congress and they came to a different determination? Well, ok, fair enough, and perhaps we should reinvigorate the nondelegation doctrine, but until then that was Clinton’s call and this is Trump’s call.
steve
Apr 16 2025 at 9:14pm
Applying your logic POTUS could call anything they want an invasion, even just some Mexican’s lost puppy crossing the border and then claim it’s a political question. In Clintons case there was tons of precedent for POTUS to order a single bombing. There is no precedent for POTUS unilaterally defining something as an invasion.
I would think this also touches upon the major questions doctrine which was used by SCOTUS, correctly I believe, for overturning Biden’s student loan plan. This is clearly a major question and it’s not clear that the law allows Trump to do what he wants to do as he appears to be abusing the definitions of emergency as well as invasion.
Steve
Craig
Apr 16 2025 at 10:05pm
Yes, he can that’s actually the point rather, Clinton called a perfectly peaceful pharmaceutical plant a threat to national security and ordered it to be struck with a cruise missile. In the case that followed it wasn’t disputed that he was wrong, he was, but when El Shifa came to court the court said that decision was vested, a ‘nonjusticiable political question’ so the courts weren’t going to stop him there, indeed that is a difficult bell to unring of course, Clinton would be subject to the electorate and Congress who theoretically could impeach or pull back his authority if they saw fit to do so or if they felt he acted unreasonably. Until then its HIS call to make right or wrong.
steve
Apr 17 2025 at 1:11pm
Clinton didnt arbitrarily decide the plant was making bad stuff. It was based upon current intelligence. That intel was wrong so Clinton made a wrong decision. Note that if Clinton wanted to declare based upon that same intel he would have needed to go to congress. In the current case Trump is unilaterally calling it an invasion when it doesnt even meet the legal definition. He is making major policy decisions based upon an incorrect definition. In this case it’s pretty clear that Congress needs to be included. There wont be many cases setting precedent on this as no other president has acted so far out of norms. As I noted, Biden acted way out of norms trying to get this student loan stuff into action but SCOTUS rejected that.
Steve
Craig
Apr 17 2025 at 6:26pm
“Clinton didnt arbitrarily decide the plant was making bad stuff. It was based upon current intelligence. That intel was wrong so Clinton made a wrong decision. Note that if Clinton wanted to declare based upon that same intel he would have needed to go to congress.”
Well he notifies Congress through the War Powers Act anywhere and that is a long story unto itself.
“In the current case Trump is unilaterally calling it an invasion when it doesnt even meet the legal definition. ”
That’s not quite what is happening. First off let’s point out the rather obvious here that all invasions are threats to national security, but not all threats to national security are invasions and the broader term is really the only one that matters unless we’re discussing TX erecting razor wire in the Rio Grande. Now check out EO 13224 which was Bush II’s executive branch designating organizations as FTOs. And Clinton had one dealing with Colombian narcotics groups that was broadly similar. Trump’s EO is broadly similar to EO 13224 and really builds on it and this EO is built on statutory authority, the National Emergencies Act, etc
Now he can be wrong, he can be arbitrary, but he possesses plenary authority to make that initial call and that stands until and unless that power is checked. It could be as crazy as citing the penguin threat in Antarctica and until the XXVth Amendment is invoked we’re gonna be hunting penguins. In fact the reverse can be true, the finding can be perfectly reasonable and Congress could simply disagree — so be it.
Craig
Apr 16 2025 at 10:30pm
Also one might find interesting Obama’s decision to drone Anwar Aulaqi (if you want to google it I have often also seen the name spelled Awlaki) and he happened to be a US citizen too but he was declared to be an enemy combatant and the US government specifically targeted and killed him. It wasn’t an accident, he didn’t just happen to be in the area unbeknownst to him, no, they were looking for him, they found and they killed him. That was Obama’s call and odds are Aulaqi almost assuredly was a member of Al-Qaida.
Jon Murphy
Apr 16 2025 at 9:42pm
Really? It’s all a political question? Come on, man.
Craig
Apr 16 2025 at 10:23pm
Its Trump’s call. He possesses the authority to make the WRONG decision. As of this message here, the bodies vested with constitutional authority to ‘check’ that authority — aren’t. With respect to tariffs/fentanyl it was contemplated. If Congress wants to do it, DO IT, but until then, its Trump’s call, right or wrong. Lincoln said there was an insurrection requiring the suspension of habeas corpus; probably correct with respect to MD, almost assuredly wrong with respect to PA/DE, Clinton said that pharma plant in the Sudan was a threat to national security, and he was wrong. Yes, it IS a political question, and the President gets to answer it.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 8:51am
No, he doesn’t. Both the Constitution and the courts are quite explicit on that matter.
Craig
Apr 17 2025 at 9:21am
Well, you better cite to a case here then because right now the Executive Branch has powers delegated to it, by the Constitution and also by statute, and since 1860 if the President deems that something is a threat to national security, its a threat to national security unless and until the Congress or Courts say otherwise. Grenada, El Shifa, Aulaqi, I don’t care. President doesn’t have the final say but he absolutely has the first say.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 9:26am
Noem v Abrego Garcia (2025) and the cases cited therein. Not to mention the 4th Amendment.
Craig
Apr 17 2025 at 9:39am
Nothing about that case pertains to whether Trump/State Department can make the determination that that class is a threat to national security. It stands for the proposition that he can challenge his individual inclusion in that class in a fair hearing.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 10:02am
That is precisely what that case is about.
Come on, man!
Craig
Apr 17 2025 at 10:24am
The case is NOT about whether Trump/State Department can designate MS-13 as an FTO. They absolutely CAN do that. To reiterate Congress could choose to disagree of course.
“The United States alleges, however, that Abrego Garcia has been found to be a member of the gang MS–13, a designated foreign terrorist organization, and that his return to the United States would pose a threat to the public. Abrego Garcia responds that he is not a member of MS–13, and that he has lived safely in the United States with his family for a decade and
has never been charged with a crime. ”
MS-13 has been designated as an FTO, nothing about the case is challenging that AT ALL.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 12:00pm
True but irrelevant.
Craig
Apr 17 2025 at 12:22pm
No, your case cite was irrelevant, my post was relevant to proving the irrelevancy of your case cite, so let’s get that straight.
Well, you better cite to a case here then because right now the Executive Branch has powers delegated to it, by the Constitution and also by statute, and since 1860 if the President deems that something is a threat to national security, its a threat to national security unless and until the Congress or Courts say otherwise. Grenada, El Shifa, Aulaqi, I don’t care. President doesn’t have the final say but he absolutely has the first say.
That really IS our paradigm today.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 4:37pm
You’ve just completely contradicted yourself.
Craig
Apr 17 2025 at 5:49pm
I have not stated anything contradictory.
Monte
Apr 16 2025 at 3:51pm
When states argue that the mass flow of illegal immigrants across their borders constitute an invasion, it’s not a perversion of the term, but rather a broad interpretation of it that the Constitution itself does not narrowly define. When the federal government fails in its duty to protect its borders, the states impacted are justified in protecting themselves, especially if criminal elements are interspersed among the illegal immigrants. This idea ties into the principle of self-defense and the broader constitutional framework that provides states with the right to protect their citizens and their sovereignty.
Texas exercised some discretion of, but did not pervert, the term “invasion” when they asserted their right to self defense against criminal trespass.
Jon Murphy
Apr 16 2025 at 3:56pm
Well, that “broad interpretation” is the perversion. It’s the colloquial use, not the legal use. The Constitution doesn’t need to define “invasion” because it is already a term of art.
Monte
Apr 17 2025 at 2:08am
I disagree. In the absence of a strict definition, states reserve the right to interpret terms like “invasion” in the context of mass immigration where criminal elements are a threat. The framers were purposely ambiguous with certain terms to allow flexibility as circumstances evolved over time. Applying “invasion” to an unprecedented surge of unlawful entry – especially involving organized criminal networks – should not be viewed as a perversion so much as an adaptation.
So, while the use of “invasion” may not conform to the term of art, it arguably aligns with the spirit of the provision in protecting states from imminent threats.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 8:00am
I know. But in this case, you are incorrect in your disagreement.
Monte
Apr 17 2025 at 9:07am
Please feel free to elaborate.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 9:26am
This post is my elaboration
Monte
Apr 17 2025 at 9:29am
LOL! Too thin, my friend.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 10:03am
Too thin? You’ve not provided any reason why. Just some vague statements
Monte
Apr 17 2025 at 10:17am
Judicent alii.
Craig
Apr 17 2025 at 11:01am
Particularly when the cartels cited are far more powerful than the pirates of the founding era whose incursions were considered invasions. Entry + Enmity.
Monte
Apr 17 2025 at 2:33am
Further, equating the definition of invasion in Black’s Law dictionary to the one in the Constitution is a misapplication of the term. One is strictly legal, while the other is contextual and political. Using a modern legal dictionary to define a Constitutional term from 1787 is like using ChatGPT to interpret Alice in Wonderland – you might get the words, but you’ll miss the meaning.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 8:00am
The Constitution is a legal document.
Monte
Apr 17 2025 at 9:07am
More so a political document subject to interpretation. It’s less of a statute than it is a social contract.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 9:27am
It absolutely is not.
Monte
Apr 17 2025 at 9:30am
It absolutely is.
nobody.really
Apr 17 2025 at 3:28pm
Monty Python, “The Argument Clinic” (November 2, 1972)
Monte
Apr 17 2025 at 4:26pm
LOL! Thanks for the comic relief, nobody. One last comment: Who’s on first.
Monte
Apr 17 2025 at 10:00am
The American Social Contract in the Declaration and Constitution
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 12:01pm
Look, even if you want to claim that the Constitution and the legal powers of the various branches are not a legal matter, and that “interpretation” matters, those interpretations still need to be reasonable. Words have meaning.
Monte
Apr 17 2025 at 1:50pm
I agree. And calling what happened at the Texas border an “invasion” is a reasonable interpretation of the word within the context of the Constitution.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 4:36pm
No, it’s not, as court after court and the plain meaning of the word has shown. Show me a single case, just one, in all of legal history where an invasion has meant people coming to peaceably work.
Monte
Apr 17 2025 at 5:01pm
Oh please! “People coming in to peaceably work” as well as smuggle drugs, traffic humans, commit crimes, and engage in gang activity. I’m just glad the founders weren’t as obstinate in their opinions as you seem to be with yours.
Oh please. “People coming in to peaceably work” is a half-truth dressed as a whole argument. What happened at the border wasn’t just about day laborers – it included drug smugglers, human traffickers, gang members, and cartel operations with the resources and coordination of paramilitary groups.
craig
Apr 17 2025 at 6:48pm
Indeed and as the EO states: “It has led to the horrific and inexcusable murders of many innocent American citizens, including women and children, at the hands of illegal aliens. Foreign criminal gangs and cartels have begun seizing control of parts of cities, attacking our most vulnerable citizens, and terrorizing Americans beyond the control of local law enforcement. Cartels control vast territories just south of our southern border, effectively controlling who can and cannot travel to the United States from Mexico. Hundreds of thousands of Americans have tragically died from drug overdoses because of the illicit narcotics that have flowed across the southern border.”
Nothing in there about day laborers jamming up parking lots in the morning at Home Depot.
Warren Platts
Apr 17 2025 at 11:16pm
And when you get done with Philosophical Investigations, you really should read Quine’s Word & Object, where he proves that interpretations are severely underdetermined. An interpretation that may seem reasonable to you, it’s pure psychological projection to imagine that everyone else should agree with you that your interpretation is the “reasonable” one.
Warren Platts
Apr 16 2025 at 7:06pm
This is silly and undermines your entire argument. Was the Normandy Invasion undertaken for conquest and plunder? No, it was an act of defense. Meantime, if a foreign adversary wanted to install a potent 5th column, the best way would be to send 10,000 military aged men unarmed. Or if you are transnational criminal cartel, same story. But of course once they’re in the USA, they can acquire all sorts of weapons and other sabotage materiel. This has been alleged. If you want immigration, then it must be legal immigration with proper vetting. Millions of people wading across the Rio Grande is a “term of art” invasion. You are way overthinking this.
Jon Murphy
Apr 16 2025 at 7:10pm
Yes. We conquered Normandy from the Germans. How is that even a question?
Jon Murphy
Apr 16 2025 at 7:13pm
I take a precise definition and apply it to a case. You concoct a conspiracy theory with wider leaps than even Evel Knievel would dare make. I’m the one overthinking?
Warren Platts
Apr 17 2025 at 4:46am
You’re trying to say that there is a set of necessary & sufficient conditions that must be satisfied in order for the sentence “X is an invasion” to be true. Namely, that the invasion force must be an army, the soldiers must be armed, and their goal must be to conquer and plunder (whatever those two words mean). And since 20,000,000 people wading across the Rio Grande are not a formal army and are not (for the most part) armed, then that doesn’t count as an invasion. Thus you win the argument “by definition.”
Sorry, but that sort of philosophy was demolished generations ago by Wittgenstein. You really should check out his Philosophical Investigations. He asked “What is a game?” So what is the “precise definition” of ‘game’? Answer: there is no precise definition! The best you can do is point to what Wittgenstein called a family resemblance. And 20 million people wading across the Rio Grande has a family resemblance to the Normandy Invasion. And yes, there are real national security issues here that must not be ignored.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 8:02am
Words matter, Mr Platts. One cannot just “Humpty Dumpty” their way through an argument. That’s how one perverts the law.
Warren Platts
Apr 17 2025 at 8:51pm
Humpty Dumptyism is exactly what you’re doing. Your “term of art” / “colloquial” distinction is something I’ve never heard of. Your personal definition of “invasion” is totally arbitrary. The meaning of a word is its use. To call 20,000,000 people crossing the border illegally an “invasion” is well within the plain sense, ordinary language usage of that word. Again, if you’re going to wade into these philosophical weeds, I recommend reading Philosophical Investigations.
Mactoul
Apr 16 2025 at 9:37pm
Funny coming from a communist. To be capricious is the very essence of communist “justice”.
Jon Murphy
Apr 16 2025 at 9:43pm
Any authoritarian justice, really. Arbitrary government is arbitrary.
nobody.really
Apr 17 2025 at 3:30am
Funny coming from a columnist.
The premise of this entire argument is that the dispute about the meaning of “invasion” is made in good faith, rather than being a post-hoc rationalization of simply doing whatever the president thinks he can get away with. In fairness, to the extent that the public understands that law exists to protect thier OWN interests against government, the more the public might object to the abrogation of law. But much of the public–perhaps a growing share?–doesn’t hold this view.
Thus columnist (and humorist) Andy Borowitz wrote Profiles in Ignorance: How America’s Politicians Got Dumb and Dumber (2022). He distinguishes between politicians such as Margie Taylor Greene, who appears to be sincerely stupid, and the raft of highly educated politicians who have learned that feigning stupidity is an electoral asset because it lets you pander to your constituents’ tribalism and wish fulfillment.
It matters not what the written law says if the public doesn’t care:
Learned Hand, In Commemoration of Fifty Years of Federal Judicial Service, 264 F.2d xxxviii (2d Cir. 1959).
Mactoul
Apr 16 2025 at 11:57pm
In Trump the American judiciary has met its match in capriciousness and the only question is who is to be the master.
The judiciary, thoroughly infiltrated over the years with Left elements, is law onto itself. Lawfare against Trump, which was no small factor in his victory, analyzed in detail by not Trump-friendly publications such as National Review, was congenial and brought forth no laments, illustrating the operation of friend/enemy dichotomy even in those not acknowledging the dichotomy.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 8:04am
The problem Trump (and Biden before him) face is that the American judiciary isn’t capricious.
Craig
Apr 17 2025 at 12:31pm
If the Judiciary wasn’t historically capricious we wouldn’t be in the position we are in today, its precisely BECAUSE of the judiciary that we no longer have a limited government of enumerated powers. Courts exhibit wanton judicial determinism.
Jon Murphy
Apr 17 2025 at 4:39pm
American courts are historically not capricious. In fact, they are amazingly consistent. There have been bad rulings, yes, but the courts rarely contradict themselves. The evidence is quite clear on how consistent the courts are, especially compared to the rest of the world.
Craig
Apr 17 2025 at 6:38pm
Well, you’re correct they have been amazingly consistent in finding federal authority where there clearly should not have been any.
Mactoul
Apr 17 2025 at 9:21pm
Liberal institutions are not well-adapted to handle Camp of the Saints situations and require a stiff dose of illiberalism, supplied by a singular personality, to tackle scenarios not conceived by the Founders.
That this is a general failing of liberalism and nothing unique to America or to Trump is seen by numerous parallels in Europe.
While in Canada the Mounted Police supplies Hamas sympathizers with coffee and snacks and violently arrest a native woman, Natasha
Mactoul
Apr 17 2025 at 9:22pm
Liberal institutions are not well-adapted to handle Camp of the Saints situations and require a stiff dose of illiberalism, supplied by a singular personality, to tackle scenarios not conceived by the Founders.
That this is a general failing of liberalism and nothing unique to America or to Trump is seen by numerous parallels in Europe.
While in Canada the Mounted Police supplies Hamas sympathizers with coffee and snacks and violently arrest a native woman, Natasha Montreal, for merely peaceably filming the protest.
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