The problem is that there is no due process for these things.
You're always playing a bit of a lottery whenever you interact with, well, just about anything. But when domestic police screw up (or not!) and you get in trouble, there's at least a process in place that tries to smooth things out. It's still not a guarantee, but if you didn't actually do anything wrong, the process makes a decent stab at ensuring that fact comes to light.
But start crossing a border and everything changes. A single wage slave having a bad day can ruin you. Low-level consulate worker decided you screwed something up, even though you think you didn't? Well, too bad. Go find another country to live in.
For whatever reason, we completely throw out all these principles the moment we look at people crossing a border. And worse, everyone thinks this is fine. Foreigners have to rights, and people seem to think that's how it should be.
The problem with foreigners having rights is that it goes against very deep principles in the western tradition. If sovereignty means anything, it means the inherent power to create and enforce borders. Its like one of the defining charecteristics of a biological cell: the establishment of an "inside" and an "outside." Subjecting the inherent power of a sovereign entity to control access through its borders to judicial review upsets that dynamic.
Should the US treat visitors with respect and make the process of entering and leaving predictable and transparent? Yes. But saying foreigners have due process rights goes beyond should into must. And that is incompatible with our traditional views of sovereignty.
I don't really understand this. Judges are part of the government, so how is allowing judges to actually judge things at the border a violation of sovereignty?
I'm talking about rights, not laws. Congress could, for example, pass a law requiring immigration officials to give certain process to people denied visas. Judges could enforce those laws, and nothing about such a scheme would violate sovereignty.[1] But saying that foreigners have a right to such process is different. Where does this right come from? Foreigners are not parties to the Constitution so it can't come from that. It has to come from something "bigger," some higher law that encompasses both the foreigner and the U.S. But unless you believe in some sort of God and divine law, there is no such thing. The sovereign entity is the end of the line--nothing binds its actions other than its own conscience.
[1] Though many people would say it's a separation of powers violation.
See in particular his quote from Scalia's dissent in Boumediene:
“The alien, to whom the United States has been traditionally hospitable, has been accorded a generous and ascending scale of rights as he increases his identity with our society . . . .
“But, in extending constitutional protections beyond the citizenry, the Court has been at pains to point out that it was the alien’s presence within its territorial jurisdiction that gave the Judiciary power to act.” Id., at 770–771.
Not even Glen Greenwald claims that the U.S. Constitution applies to non-citizens trying to board a plane in Cairo.
You're always playing a bit of a lottery whenever you interact with, well, just about anything. But when domestic police screw up (or not!) and you get in trouble, there's at least a process in place that tries to smooth things out. It's still not a guarantee, but if you didn't actually do anything wrong, the process makes a decent stab at ensuring that fact comes to light.
But start crossing a border and everything changes. A single wage slave having a bad day can ruin you. Low-level consulate worker decided you screwed something up, even though you think you didn't? Well, too bad. Go find another country to live in.
For whatever reason, we completely throw out all these principles the moment we look at people crossing a border. And worse, everyone thinks this is fine. Foreigners have to rights, and people seem to think that's how it should be.