Is the Libyan war legal? Was Bin Ladens killing legal? Is it legal for the president of the United States to target an American citizen for assassination? Were those enhanced interrogation techniques legal? These are all questions raised in recent weeks. Each seems to call out for debate, for answers. Or does it? Now, you couldnt call me a legal scholar. Ive never set foot inside a law school, and in 66 years only made it onto a single jury (dismissed before trial when the civil suit was settled out of court). Still, I feel at least as capable as any constitutional law professor of answering such questions.
My answer is this: they are irrelevant. Think of them as twentieth-century questions that don't begin to come to grips with twenty-first century American realities. In fact, think of them, and the very idea of a nation based on the rule of law, as a reflection of nostalgia for, or sentimentality about, a long-lost republic. At least in terms of what used to be called foreign policy, and more recently national security, the United States is now a post-legal society. (And you could certainly include in this mix the too-big-to-jail financial and corporate elite.)
Its easy enough to explain what I mean. If, in a country theoretically organized under the rule of law, wrongdoers are never brought to justice and nobody is held accountable for possibly serious crimes, then you dont have to be a constitutional law professor to know that its citizens actually exist in a post-legal state. If so, Is it legal? is the wrong question to be asking, even if we have yet to discover the right one.