So the Supreme Court is hearing arguments on Trump v. America. Brett Kavanaugh argued two things, he argued that limiting the executive's power by prosecuting them in the future for past or current actions sets a bad precedent which isn't a bad argument ex post facto laws aren't great, but we are a nation of laws, and we don't have kings for presidents.
His second argument is a lot more interesting. Why did President Obama not get flak for killing an American citizen(He was Al Qaeda) in Yemen Trump got a whole bunch of Americans killed by egging on protesters/rioters/insurrectionists at the capitol.
Hasan the streamer/Hasanbi's argument is that Trump didn't act according to American interests, and Obama did. Which is a shitty argument. If I or anyone else were president does that mean I/the military/the intel agencies get to gun down people dodging taxes as ex-pats in other countries to deter more ex-pats who dodge taxes? No that would be overkill, and I or anyone else should get prosecuted for that even if it's for American interests. Also, that's way too fucking broad.
I argue a better precedent would be only killing US citizens specifically when not in a war (As the federal government) when they are clear and present danger to Americans from whoever the American citizen you are killing. That would enable Trump to get flak since there was no clear and present dangerous response for the insurrection to hold weight and his actions of killing the Antifa rioter with federal marshals, and President Obama's killing of the terrorist Al Qaeda member who happened to be a US citizen could be legal.