When Barack Obama issued an order last week that will allow some undocumented immigrants to say in the United States without fear of prosecution, people generally supported it or opposed it based on the way they see the issue of immigration. Those who favor fewer restrictions on immigration welcomed the order. Those who don’t really like immigration denounced it.
The more I think about it, the more I think the immigration debate is completely secondary to the real issue. No matter whether you favor immigration or oppose it — for whatever your reasons — you should be afraid of this order, because it’s a very blunt statement by a sitting U.S. president that he can ignore laws that he doesn’t like.
Tomorrow, we expect the U.S. Supreme Court to issue its ruling about the constitutionality of key provisions of ObamaCare. If the court strikes down the law as unconstitutional, what’s to stop Obama from using the same principle he used with immigration and simply say he won’t abide by the law as interpreted by the court?
Now let’s look at the opposite case. Let’s say that the court upholds ObamaCare on Thursday. Then let’s say that Mitt Romney is elected president in November. Why couldn’t he simply issue an order for his administration to ignore the health care reform laws if he wanted to? How would that be any different from what Obama has done?

We’re celebrating Lucy’s second ‘adoptiversary’ in our furry home
Loss of cultural consensus means violent conflict in decades ahead
Monkeys celebrating new donation button, hoping for more bananas
Advocating peace requires more than hating those who start wars
When strangers tell us things we want to hear, we want to believe
Genuine love is always extreme — and it rarely makes any sense
How one woman’s grand gesture for love turned into a nightmare
Lie like a professional politician: Step-by-step guide in 3 lessons
Murdered family cat in Arkansas is latest victim of partisan political hate