7/1/2010 4:11:16 PM
7/1/2010 4:45:51 PM
^ Hear, hear!
7/1/2010 5:07:17 PM
7/1/2010 5:12:45 PM
In addition to specific amendments, this is what liberals often forget or ignore--note well the position of the Constitution.
7/1/2010 5:31:16 PM
^ I disagree that liberals forget or ignore it.
7/1/2010 5:34:12 PM
7/1/2010 6:06:54 PM
I think we can agree that God does not speak for all liberals.
7/1/2010 6:33:50 PM
^ Who does? And I indicated as much:
7/1/2010 6:44:27 PM
7/1/2010 7:15:18 PM
7/1/2010 7:37:11 PM
^ you realize if that were the common practice, instead of writing laws designed to be interpreted by a court system, then legislators would just be changing the constitution willy-nilly instead of just ignoring it? That seems more dangerous than ignoring it at the peril of a legal challenge.
7/1/2010 8:02:59 PM
What do you think people mean when they say "activist judges"?
7/1/2010 8:07:27 PM
7/1/2010 8:11:22 PM
In other words, you have no idea what they mean.
7/1/2010 8:13:29 PM
I know perfectly well that the only people that use them are conservatives, and only when they disagree with a judge. It's code for "this judge is in favor of gay marriage, abortion rights, and banning guns," regardless of if any of that is true or justifiable.
7/1/2010 8:15:17 PM
^^^^ you don't think the amendment process could be amended (didn't California do this with their constitution)?Has there been ANY democratic government EVER that has remained stagnant from its roots? Is that even possible for a human institution where there's plenty of hands in the pot?[Edited on July 1, 2010 at 8:20 PM. Reason : ]
7/1/2010 8:19:19 PM
7/1/2010 8:40:04 PM
7/1/2010 8:40:13 PM
^^ right on. Now for ya'll other folks, im not saying ammendments are bad, im saying loose interpretations create inequalities.I mean, think about it from a regular law perspective. Our drug laws are a great example. Imagine you're a well off white kid and you get caught with a decent ammount of pot. You've got a good lawyer and he pitches some speech about how you're just an innocent college kid and its not really a crime, right? I mean obama's gonna legalize it! Heck its even legal for medical use already!! So you get off with a minor sentence, maybe some community service.Now imagine same situation but you're a poor black dude. You cant afford a good lawyer. Even if you could you're not gonna get sympathy from a white ass jury like in the first situation. So the judge comes in and gets all huffy and hands down some jail time because he wants to set an example or some bullshit. You are fucked.Its even worse because the black guy has no voice in politics. If he says "hey look at this shit im getting unequal justice!" everyone ignores him. As long as the white guy isn't affected by the law it never changes. But if you started jailing white kids for that shit the law would disapear from the books in days. Thats what im talking about when i mean loose interpretation leads to inequal justice. You may think that when that first person gets off that our laws are outdated and its the right thing™, but its not. Enforce the law equally, fix it when its bad.[Edited on July 1, 2010 at 10:03 PM. Reason : g]
7/1/2010 10:01:52 PM
^ the law is written to be enforced equally.You want to pass another saying "hey guys, we're SERIOUS about this law... really" or to make it a zero-tolerance policy?What you seem to be arguing for is "social engineering," which is 90% of what politicians do anyway, to try and get people in your example to not be racist and enforce the law properly.There's is no legislative solution to the problem you describe. That's a human problem, not a legal one.And if you've ever read a dissenting opinion to supreme court rulings, they clearly don't think they're taking a more loose interpretation of the constitution. They just view their interpretation as strict in a different way. The fact that you even perceive one side as being more "loose" than the other is a skewing of reality by the right-wing media, or your own bias.Congress may not take the Constitution seriously, but the judiciary typically does.[Edited on July 1, 2010 at 10:08 PM. Reason : ]
7/1/2010 10:05:58 PM
im not calling for a legislative solution, im saying whereever possible put people in place who will best uphold the law as written. And in the case of the supreme court that means a strict interpretation of the text. I dont see why anyone is so upset by that anyhow. A strict interpretation ensures maximum personal freedom which i would hope you're in favor of.
7/1/2010 10:10:17 PM
7/2/2010 2:44:09 AM
I think there was once a Bill being considered which would've required congress to site the specific part of the Constitution that grants the authority for each piece of legislation.
7/2/2010 11:05:12 AM
First of all, the US is the oldest constitutional republic ever, in the entire history of the human race. That in and of itself is an amazing thing.Second, the US Constitution is intended to be a framework that can be interpreted or amended. the only way the Constitutional Convention was able to get all 13 states to ratify it was to leave many aspects vague and unsettled. the States at the time had extremely divergent opinions on many fundamental issues, and the entire Constitution was a compromise. The framers constructed the Constitution in the way they did because they fully expected that their current debates would be settled in one way or another by future generations.Third, the Congress by design was intended to be able to act fast (relatively) based on the will of the people their members represented. Since public opinion is a fickle thing, the Supreme Court was intended to have a long-term view so that laws were ultimately constitutional as it is interpreted and amended.
7/2/2010 12:33:50 PM
7/2/2010 12:46:31 PM
7/2/2010 8:43:59 PM
Obama and Supreme Court may be on collision coursehttp://www.latimes.com/news/health/la-na-court-roberts-obama-20100706,0,7184862.storyThe bizarre thing about this article is that it accuses the conservative majority in the Supreme Court of "judicial activism" for upholding the Constitution. I don't get it. If it turns out that a law (say, a gun law, or campaign funding law) is unconstitutional, it has to be overturned. That's not judicial activism. I'm wondering if people even know what the phrase means, or they're intentionally obfuscating the subject for the sake of confusing people that don't know any better.In another article (http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bs-ed-kagan-confirmation-20100706,0,5603954.story), it talks a lot about the desirability of a Justice to uphold "settled law." Why is that what we should asking for? There's a lot of bad laws in this country that were made decades ago. We should repeal them; if Congress is unwilling to do that, the Supreme Court should reject them. That's not judicial activism - that's tossing out unjust laws that weren't constitutional to begin with.
7/6/2010 1:37:22 PM
"upholding the Constitution" is becoming a euphemism for conservative jurisprudencemuch like "law and order" used to be and possibly still is a euphemism for keeping the brown man downand "freedom" is a euphemism for imperialistic theocracy"ignorance is strength" indeed
7/6/2010 4:11:06 PM
Quality analysis. Thanks for that.
7/6/2010 4:18:20 PM
They're just little kings decreeing their whims. Law has nothing to do with it, and even if it did, laws are made by imbeciles.Death to America.
7/6/2010 8:25:32 PM
8/5/2010 4:35:41 PM
At the level of the supreme court, all judges are "activists". The entire justice system is based on the premise of "pass the buck" referrals to earlier judgements until you get to that point, then you can just make shit up as you go along.Supreme court justices are our version of the monarchy, little judges on their thrones. Not a bad thing...oligarchies and dictators are often best at making the tough decisions.
8/5/2010 4:39:05 PM
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2010/08/06/remarks-president-and-elena-kagan-reception-honoring-her-confirmationAugust 06, 2010President Obama:
8/7/2010 8:03:09 PM
I guess she should go ahead and recuse herself now in anticipation of the marriage equality case that is likely to hit the Supreme Court since there is hints and rumblings that she might be a gay herself, right burro?
8/7/2010 8:35:27 PM
8/8/2010 9:44:38 PM
^^She did recuse herself from a DADT related decision (although that was b/c she had actually engaged in that debate in a substantive way, unlike with marriage equality as far as I know).Just saw this, kind of nice to see that even the top court officials are still subject to jury duty calls:http://www.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/01/21/political.circus/index.html
1/21/2011 2:12:00 PM
WHAT? SHE DIDN'T RECYCLE?
1/21/2011 2:14:09 PM
they can apply the $4 to her carbon offset balance.
1/21/2011 2:27:56 PM
1/21/2011 5:58:21 PM
I think its a richer debate to have both the right and left positions staked out by well qualified and thoughtful individuals, but I agree that the moderate position should be well presented, and a shift towards the middle would be a good thing from the current right leaning court.
1/21/2011 8:08:35 PM