The Constitution outlines a system of procedural justice in which we are all to receive equal treatment under the law. Those taking an oath to support and defend the Constitution accept an implicit duty to apply the standards of the Constitution impartially. The standards apply to friend and foe alike. At West Point, we memorized something called Worth's Battalion Orders, which states: "But an officer on duty knows no one. To be partial is to dishonor both himself and the object of his ill-advised favor…. Look at him who winks at and overlooks offenses in one, which he causes to be punished in another, and contrast him with the inflexible soldier who does his duty faithfully, notwithstanding it occasionally wars with his private feelings. The conduct of one will be venerated and emulated, the other detested as a satire upon … honor."