Maleficent13
<font color=blue>Heh Heh, you're all gonna die<br>
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2003
- Messages
- 9,227
I cannot believe I'm about to start a debate on this, but I am so intrigued by these. I will be honest and say I was unfamiliar with them until the last few days.
But now that I know they exist, I cannot stop thinking about them.
This is my interpretation of what they are: Little ditties the President (any President, not just the current one) adds to a bill he's signing into law, indicating his opinion of said bill/law.
Now, however, I find that on some of the bills Bush has approved, he has added signing statements that in effect act as a disclaimer, stating he reserves the right not to follow the law he is enacting?
Is this constitutional? I mean, can you sign a bill into law and then say, well, this is for everyone else but not me? I am not being sarcastic about this; I am truly interested in how this works.
But now that I know they exist, I cannot stop thinking about them.This is my interpretation of what they are: Little ditties the President (any President, not just the current one) adds to a bill he's signing into law, indicating his opinion of said bill/law.
Now, however, I find that on some of the bills Bush has approved, he has added signing statements that in effect act as a disclaimer, stating he reserves the right not to follow the law he is enacting?
Is this constitutional? I mean, can you sign a bill into law and then say, well, this is for everyone else but not me? I am not being sarcastic about this; I am truly interested in how this works.
Why waste the time enacting the law if certain people don't have to follow it?
about whether they are binding...I don't think they are supposed to be, but?

I thought I was going to be inundated with all kinds of reasoning for or against it! I'm glad to know I'm not the only one
) and here's my opinion on this: