The United States is about freedom. Central to any system of freedom is the “rule of law” – the principle under which all persons, institutions, and entities are accountable to laws that are:
Publicly promulgated,
Equally enforced,
Independently adjudicated, and
Consistent with international human rights principles.
What we have seen throughout United States history, up to and including recent events, is that when we ignore the “rule of law,” as we often have, we do so at our own peril.
During the slave years, there were obviously two sets of rules. It took over 600,000 lives to attempt to straighten that out. Then there was the mistreatment of American Indians. That error, which caused untold misery, was followed some years later by the Jim Crow laws. Known as “separate but equal,” they pretended to be consistent with the rule of law, but everyone knew they weren’t. The races were separate, and they weren’t equal. Suffering ensued.
Fast-forward to today, and you see that “sanctuary cities” have a separate rule of law for illegal aliens. College campuses twist themselves into pretzels describing what is “allowed speech” and what is “hate speech.”
In Broward and Dade Counties, Florida, school administrators along with local police created a two-tiered rule of law. As Jack Cashill wrote recently, “[t]he spurious ‘same behavior’ insinuation would put the onus on law enforcement to treat black students more gingerly than they would non-blacks.” Many argue that this policy led directly to the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting.