7/21/2005 3:12:13 PM
7/21/2005 3:25:40 PM
I'm still a little bit worried about Roberts being the anti-Christ due to that crazy lightning storm on the night that he was nominated.
7/21/2005 3:30:11 PM
7/21/2005 3:36:52 PM
Wolfpack2K, Are you retarded? The entire purpose of Supreme Court has ALWAYS been to interprut the Constitution. Even "strict constructionists" must interprut the Constitution. For example, let's say I think the federal government shouldn't have any more powers than those expressly alloted in the Constitution. Well, how far do those powers extend? The federal government has the power to make laws regulating interstate commerce. Would making regulations on food processing fall under those powers (since most foods and sold across state boarders)? How about regulations on labor? Maybe just regulations on labor mobility? One can't use the Constitution without interpruting it. You're confusing "Strict Constructionism" with "Interprutation". The question isn't interprutation or no interprutation, but how much interprutation we should allow. Are there implied powers in the Constitution? If so how many and why? That's the difference between Strict Constructionism and everything else.
7/21/2005 5:09:25 PM
two things:1) borders (no 'a')2) inteprE
7/21/2005 5:54:48 PM
like you've never spelled anything wrong
7/21/2005 6:27:33 PM
i have, but i usually only do it once or twice. not 15 times. i also don't misspell obvious shit like "interpret" or "border"
7/21/2005 6:41:38 PM
OMG flip flop
7/21/2005 6:42:02 PM
Which part of the Constituation did the court rule on in Roe?
7/21/2005 8:38:14 PM
I don't know, but it had something to do with aboartion!
7/21/2005 8:46:39 PM
aaronbrarro, I've never respected a guy that couldn't find more than one way to spell a word. [Edited on July 21, 2005 at 11:23 PM. Reason : and you smell funny/]
7/21/2005 11:22:04 PM
7/21/2005 11:50:13 PM
7/22/2005 12:02:30 AM
7/22/2005 8:10:44 AM
7/22/2005 12:34:32 PM
7/22/2005 1:19:44 PM
^ I didn't say it did. I merely stated that it made it less abhorrent.
7/22/2005 2:08:51 PM
7/22/2005 2:20:38 PM
7/22/2005 5:39:47 PM
I'm not too worried about Roberts and hope my fellow democrats don't make a huge stink about it. That is assuming that no bombshells come out disqualifying Roberts. While he leaves some things to be desired, he's as good as we can expect from Bush. I don't like his comments on Roe v. Wade, and I would have prefered to see a woman or minority nominated.The reason I can accept him is that I think he has a tremendous respect for the Supreme Court, moreso than he feels obligated to the people who appointed him. He will rise above his personal opinions and mellow and will conduct himself as a Supreme Court Justice.
7/22/2005 6:05:31 PM
I find it very suspicious that you didn't mention the constitution.
7/22/2005 6:10:03 PM
7/23/2005 12:24:33 AM
7/23/2005 12:50:42 AM
7/23/2005 1:01:42 AM
8/1/2005 8:29:24 AM
http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/august2005/220805idcards.htm
8/22/2005 11:41:47 AM
I do not believe he would uphold Roe v. Wade as a Supreme Court Justice. Nothing he has said would give that impression.
8/22/2005 2:17:22 PM
Too bad it'll never get overturned.Too bad that, if it did get overturned, it wouldn't stop people from having abortions.What a worthless talking point.In fact, just seeing Roe v. Wade in print makes me want to kill a baby. Not a fetus, per se, but a living, breathing baby.
8/22/2005 2:23:07 PM
I think it will get overturned; John Paul Stevens is older than the earth itself, well heck let's face it none of the pro abortion Justices are young. With Roberts, the court will be 5-4 pro abortion, but will favor restrictions on partial birth abortions and things like that. Only one more retirement is needed. And that is step one. Then, after that, we work on passing laws and enforcing them to make abortion not only illegal but reduce it.
8/22/2005 2:25:15 PM
thank god youre not in charge
8/22/2005 2:27:39 PM
No, the pro-lifers are in charge, and appointing people to the courts every day. And to the Supreme Court when the circumstance arises.
8/22/2005 2:29:20 PM
we shall see
8/22/2005 2:33:58 PM
Incorrect verb tense. We are seeing. Judge Pryor, Judge Janice Rogers Brown, Judge Priscilla Owen, Justice John Roberts, etc etc...
8/22/2005 2:35:05 PM
In three years that could all change, though. Democrats could win the presidency and pro-choice people could get elected. It must really be nerve wracking for someone like you, who cares so much about the issue, to watch this whole process. I guess the beauty is that you can somewhat contribute to the process.
8/22/2005 2:39:55 PM
i was talking about whether or not RvsW will get overturned.just because they are pro-life, it doesnt mean they are necessarily going to overturn a decision thats been law for so long.
8/22/2005 2:42:55 PM
"... Pressed during his 2003 confirmation hearing for his own views on the matter, Roberts said: 'Roe v. Wade is the settled law of the land. ... There's nothing in my personal views that would prevent me from fully and faithfully applying that precedent.'"http://bureaucrash.com/modules/newbb/print.php?form=2&forum=28&topic_id=584&post_id=3844
8/22/2005 3:01:50 PM
Aha! It's not really fair to expect you to see the fallacy you have fallen into because you are not a lawyer. But let me show it to you anyway - he was up for Court of Appeals Judge at that time. Now, the way the legal system works is that lower courts are bound by precedent from higher courts. Even if you do not like it, you do not have the power to overrule it when you are on a lower court - you have to apply it because that is just the way the system works. I'll tell you too - that had I been the nominee, I would have made that exact same statement. There is no other statement to make.So yes, to an appeals court judge, Roe v Wade is the settled law of the land. However, the Supreme Court is not literally bound by any precedent. It can overrule precedent as it pleases. So while it may be settled law to an appeals court judge, a Supreme Court Justice can unsettle it. The roles of Appeals Judge and Supreme Court Justice are different. A Supreme Court Justices makes precedent and can overrule precedent - an Appeals Judge does nothing but follow precedent.
8/22/2005 4:11:18 PM
I think 7 of the justices on the last supreme court were appointed by republicans. But the court continued to implement the socialist agenda...upholding abortion, upholding affirmative action, upholding draconian police state measures, etc.Roberts is just another phony conservative, like George W. Bush and all the other phony conservatives in D.C. If Bush was a real conservative, why did he denounce the Minuteman project and call their members "vigilantes"? Why has he and the republicans in Congress done absolutely nothing to stop illegal immigration, even after 9/11? Why has the size and power of the federal government exploded to record highs under Bush and republican control of congress?People need to wake up to the fact that the left/right, RepubliCON/Democrat paradigm is a scam. Both parties are controlled from the top by the Zionist elite controlling world events. No matter which party is in power, the size and power of the government continues to grow and the socialist agenda is implemented.[Edited on August 22, 2005 at 4:16 PM. Reason : 1]
8/22/2005 4:11:32 PM
8/22/2005 4:15:20 PM
i really feel bad for people who are so blinded by their beliefs that they don't accept reality. [Edited on August 22, 2005 at 4:15 PM. Reason : gh]
8/22/2005 4:15:37 PM
Or rather, accept your version of reality? In that case are you not expressing sorrow for yourself?What makes you think that your predictions for the future are any more valid than mine?As far as not overturning a decision that has been settled law for so long, just look at Lawrence v. Texas from two terms ago.[Edited on August 22, 2005 at 4:17 PM. Reason : add]
8/22/2005 4:17:08 PM
igve me a break. read what you said. if you dont think this:" So while it is likely that Roe v Wade will be overruled, it is not likely that a subsequent court would come in and reinstate it, just as a matter of institutional image and dignity."is portraying an obscured sense of reality, then i dont know what is. but you dont see that. THAT, my friend, is why i feel bad for you.
8/22/2005 4:21:24 PM
Is that all I wrote? Or did I explain my reasoning behind it too, using historical trends? Why do you simply ignore my reasoning and then criticize me for not using any reasoning? The historical trend is there - I can provide a litany of times the Supreme Court has overruled precedent - show me three times in its entire 200+ year history when it went back and reinstated a precedent it had previously overruled.So again, what makes your predictions about the future any more valid than mine? ESPECIALLY when I have provided the historical data to support my predictions and you have provided zippo.[Edited on August 22, 2005 at 4:25 PM. Reason : add]
8/22/2005 4:24:09 PM
8/22/2005 4:25:29 PM
so are you saying that the supreme court has established a "precedent" in not overturning a decision that has been reversed before?[Edited on August 22, 2005 at 4:28 PM. Reason : d]
8/22/2005 4:28:15 PM
Improper use of the term "precedent". Precedent is a decision by a higher court in a case upon similar facts. It does not mean a "pattern of behavior", but rather a rule of law announced by a higher court examining a similar fact pattern.
8/22/2005 4:31:36 PM
im affraid not. a precedent can also be defined as a "convention or custom arising from long practice".if the supreme court has had a history of overturning laws, yet never overturning those overturned laws (if that makes sense), then they have essentially established a historical precedent.[Edited on August 22, 2005 at 4:36 PM. Reason : df]
8/22/2005 4:35:08 PM
yes but a historical precedent is different from a legal precedent
8/22/2005 4:39:39 PM
i agree.
8/22/2005 4:40:56 PM