Detail: Click for original; it's a fair question.
If you can't admit the shared heritage in both English common law and its enforcement, I can't really take you seriously.
What, that we use the same language to say "law" and "law enforcement"?
I've acknowledged the "shared heritage"—
• The Anglican heritage of our legal code is well-known; our nation did emerge from the British Empire. Furthermore, was it Justice Breyer who went on to describe the Bowers decision as a mistake? It seems a fair description, though neither was it the first time the Supreme Court, really, really wanting to find a way to do something, reached back to English Common Law for precedent.
Meanwhile, the Anglo-American heritage of our law enforcement tradition includes murderous supremacism.
(#30↑)
• The English-derived word can attend laws derived from England or anywhere else according to their post Greco-Roman structure.
(#49↑)
—but you chose to not address these points in any substantial manner; your nonsensical response at
#31↑—
• "Our law enforcement heritage comes from the same place as our law heritage. Hence the word "sheriff" deriving from Old English."
—is insufficient to reconcile and support your quotes on a different subject in the comparative context you have presented them. Simply making up pretenses in order to keep asking questions and not have to do any more work than randomly citing information you are not capable of properly discussing.
Citing presidential candidate Barack Obama chiding ethnic and religious discrimination as a question of
habeas corpus, pointing back to our "Anglo-American law", also refers to the fact that we
guaranteed the right
as response against Anglican behavior. That is, if you want the common link in Obama's words from 2008, it is in our American response to the British violation of a principle described in Latin and ostensibly asserted on behalf of British people who were rich enough. Meanwhile, the principle was enshrined as law in a post-Greco-Roman framework spun by French philosophers.
Where Mr. Obama's words overlap with the Attorney General's is in recalling and accounting for supremacism; a white vice presidential candidate was rattling against
habeas corpus according to ethnic and religious labels—in other words, advocating white supremacism—and demonstrating in that argument the corruption one must guard against. The future president offered a reasonable demonstration for one aspiring to recite and affirm the oath of the American presidency.
That is to say, where overlap can, in fact, be described, only reinforces the point that the Anglo-American heritage of our law enforcement tradition includes murderous supremacism.
Meanwhile, Senator Obama's statement is precisely suitable to its occasion: I have acknowleded direct statutory lineage, but you skipped over that part. Mr. Obama describes what should not be a difficult vote; like the antisodomy rules the Supreme Court sought in English common law, so also is
habeas corpus centuries old, and reminding the United States Senate that it should not be difficult to fail to violate the Constitution in a question that has ostensibly lain settled for
centuries is the sort of duty a senator ought to be able to attend as a matter of reflex.
And none of it has anything to do with what Jeff Sessions said.
That you can't offer any useful thesis, that pretentious and incompetent cowardice is what you bring in lieu of proper argument, is
functionally problematic, Vociferous, because people are uncertain what to tell you when you just keep asking questions in a manner that informs us specifically that you still don't get it. Think of it this way: It is not so much a proposition about, "if you can't admit that apples and roses are both plants that are red", but, rather, the question of what red roses and red apples have to do with each other; shared heritage (
and attributes) aside they're not the same thing.
Meanwhile, you need to stop making things up. At some point, you need to be able to offer some manner of affirmative argument; you have thus far failed to do so.
The outrage would have something to do with answering
Mr. Fish↱ by proudly raising a hand and declaring to do one's part, especially since the point of doing so is to be seen; then again, people just don't feel like wasting their outrage. Seriously, it's Jeff Sessions. If we bathe in outrage every time the known supremacist says something supremacist, we could dedicate our lives to it until he finally leaves the human species that it might repair the damage he has done.
____________________
Note:
Mr. Fish. "Not OKKK". Clowncrack. 30 November 2014. Clowncrack.com. 20 March 2018. http://bit.ly/1gCpL6f