The evidence that you tried to argue the congress exempted point and fell flat on your face.
7/1/2012 7:33:21 PM
Did you not say this:The onus is on you since you're calling shenanigans. But, since you fail at proving any point, I'll do your work for you.Then you posted this:
7/1/2012 7:54:21 PM
7/1/2012 8:06:48 PM
I'm sorry, what does means means mean?
7/1/2012 9:22:19 PM
Oh shit, a typo.Sadly, nothing you've said makes sense, so pardon me this mistake.Also, thank you FroshKiller and whoever did the chrome extension for better wolfweb. I'm ignoring you now.[Edited on July 1, 2012 at 9:42 PM. Reason : ]
7/1/2012 9:40:58 PM
^I did the most latest improvements
7/2/2012 4:38:48 AM
These portions from this article are somewhat noteworthy:http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-3460_162-57464549/roberts-switched-views-to-uphold-health-care-law/
7/4/2012 5:41:58 PM
^god forbid they list who the 4 conservative justices are in the article.I can't find a simple list of who voted for or against obamacare anywhere.Finally found itFOR OBAMACARE: Stephen Breyer, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Elena Kagan, and Sonia Sotomayor.AGAINST OBAMACARE: Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Samuel Alito,Clarence ThomasFor reference:Chief JusticeJohn G. Roberts, Jr..............GWBush...............2005Associate Justices by YearAntonin Scalia.....................Reagan................1986Anthony Kennedy.................Reagan................1988Clarence Thomas.................GHWBush.............1991Ruth Bader Ginsburg............Clinton.................1993Stephen Breyer...................Clinton.................1994Samuel Alito.......................GWBush...............2006Sonia Sotomayor.................Obama.................2009Elena Kagan........................Obama................2010[Edited on July 4, 2012 at 6:09 PM. Reason : .]
7/4/2012 6:03:54 PM
Read the syllabus; the references to the "Opinion of the Court" are most important: http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/11pdf/11-393c3a2.pdf
7/4/2012 10:06:24 PM
Bump
11/2/2012 10:05:30 PM
Big Sky, Big MoneyHow has the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision changed campaigns in America?http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/big-sky-big-money/
11/2/2012 11:15:33 PM
Will they throw the election to Dubya Mitt Rethug this year?
11/2/2012 11:17:01 PM
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2012/11/ninth-circuit-gives-ok-warrantless-home-video-surveillanceI'm willing to bet that this gets overturned in the Supreme Court within the next year.
11/30/2012 12:41:10 AM
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/national/2013/02/sonia-sotomayor-racist-prosecutor/62498/not a case, but credibility points have been added
2/26/2013 12:00:08 AM
https://movetoamend.org/recommended-reading/supreme-court-takes-campaign-finance-case-will-rule-contribution-limitsIf you thought Citizens United was bad take a look at this!
2/26/2013 2:10:25 PM
So parts of the Voting Rights Act look like they are about to be struck down?damn[Edited on February 27, 2013 at 3:53 PM. Reason : I guess just pre-clearance]
2/27/2013 3:52:44 PM
I haven't seen a source to confirm this, but if this statement is true, then Family Guy did it first:
3/28/2013 5:01:01 PM
Justices should get 1 25 or 30-year term limit.
3/28/2013 8:16:25 PM
^^However, the conept of sexual orientation as opposed to deviant (or occasional culturally sanctioned) sexual behavior was not seriously advocated until the sixties...the eighteen-sixties, and the term "homosexual" was coined in 1869 and popularized in 1886.(This is why, for example, there is speculation about whether Abraham Lincoln was gay or bisexual, even though neither he nor his contemporaries used the language of sexual orientation, and I hope I'm not invoking Sapir-Whorf too strongly here.)
3/28/2013 8:28:06 PM
Yea, he didn't say that
3/28/2013 8:50:40 PM
That's from a satire site. C'mon dude.
3/29/2013 1:25:17 AM
I know one of the conservative justices said something about gay unions being newer than cell phones and the internet, so this didn't sound so far off. But that's why there was still the disclaimer.[Edited on March 29, 2013 at 2:15 AM. Reason : .]
3/29/2013 2:15:02 AM
^ yeha I heard that too. i believe is it was Scalia. He was expressing his reluctance to make a decision on gay marriage because there hasn't been much investigation on if gays raising kids had a negative effect on the children and society as a whole. then mentioned that this whole thing is newer then cell phones and the internet. what an idiot!
3/29/2013 10:31:54 AM
'twas Alito
3/29/2013 11:45:11 AM
ah...thanks
3/29/2013 2:05:32 PM
South is no longer racist! Officially..
6/25/2013 10:18:22 AM
It's a good, logically consistent ruling. A lot of people are going to complain about it, but if you ever want any kind of reform in the way districts are drawn then something had to happen with the voting rights act. Requiring preclearance in Georgia but not in say... Arizona is not good legislation. The voting rights act made a hugely important impact, but now it's used to protect gerrymandered districts and keep representative districts from being drawn.
6/25/2013 11:54:29 AM
(might wanna re-think using Arizona as an example)[Edited on June 25, 2013 at 12:47 PM. Reason : yeah]
6/25/2013 12:43:03 PM
Well Congress can certainly redraw the maps, although that's obviously not going to happen anytime soon, but the maps in use dated from 1972 iirc?The South is still backwards of course, but not that backwards.
6/25/2013 1:09:29 PM
Ginsburg kills it:http://www.motherjones.com/mojo/2013/06/best-lines-ginsburg-dissent-voting-rights-act-decisionLays out both the logical reasons why she dissents and even provides a handy list of VERY recent discriminatory voting laws attempted in Southern states.
6/25/2013 1:20:54 PM
I thought the decision was pretty good, it just came at a really terrible time when there is little change the formula gets revised.
6/25/2013 2:14:09 PM
can someone give me a simplified plain-english version of the ruling?all i can gather so far is that some states no longer have to get federal permission for voting?
6/25/2013 11:31:34 PM
It's too late for voting, so it doesn't matter.
6/25/2013 11:34:15 PM
cool clarification, bro
6/25/2013 11:39:05 PM
The government can legally store your bank account login information because it is encrypted and you forfeit your protections as a U.S. citizen by using encrypted communications.http://apps.washingtonpost.com/g/page/politics/top-secret-documents-show-rules-for-nsa-surveillance-without-a-warrant/248/The supreme court is powerless at this point. Always has been, really. It took 20 years for their decisions on civil rights to be enforced, and they only were so then because it was politically convenient.
6/26/2013 12:07:03 AM
we have nothing to worry about smc, we're both white males
6/26/2013 12:12:41 AM
6/26/2013 1:01:43 AM
I saw a graphic of the states that would be affected, and they either all or most appeared to be in the south, which are traditionally republican statesBut for example Florida, which is geographically southern, but politically a swing state, probably had some shenanigans going on in 2004, so maybe I don't see why this decision will really do much practically[Edited on June 26, 2013 at 1:06 AM. Reason : and thanks for the explanation]
6/26/2013 1:06:38 AM
6/26/2013 3:25:56 PM
^^ because now every state is a potential 2004 Florida.
6/26/2013 3:30:52 PM
Not that I don't appreciate the insightful constitutional analysis provided here at TSB, but for anyone interested in a more in-depth review of recent opinions and constitutional issues, check out the Volokh Conspiracy:http://www.volokh.com/It's one of my first stops for any breaking con law news. SCOTUSblog is pretty good too, they live blog on opinion days like today.http://www.scotusblog.com/
6/26/2013 4:42:28 PM
don't you dudes mean 2000 Florida?because that was their year[Edited on June 26, 2013 at 8:27 PM. Reason : yeah]
6/26/2013 8:26:31 PM
More like Florida every single year. But yeah I was just following along.
6/26/2013 11:55:47 PM
I wasn't sure if this should go here or in the "Police State" thread. Just our wonderful conservative justices whittling away at the bill of rights once again, this time the 4th amendment:http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-scotus-la-search-20131114,0,6040764.story#axzz2kb2FMPi3
11/14/2013 8:41:19 AM
Brilliant! USA #1 sucks. Of course, most of the population would just happily go along with this.
11/14/2013 9:04:23 AM
^yea, I mean the guy was a gang member and did just kill someone. But even crappy people like that deserve the Bill of Rights - well until they're convicted.Justice Sotomayor:
11/14/2013 9:40:27 AM
Oh yeh, the guy can rot in hell and honestly, I don't care for his rights, even though he should have them, as should all citizens. It's scary to know that our government and our courts are eroding away important limitations of government power and intrusion and the people don't care. The idiotic mantra of "I've done nothing wrong so I have nothing to worry about" is going to result in a very different country down the road, one that the population will end up regretting. I don't see how anyone can trust the supreme court with it's recent rulings and if it rules that this action was constitutional.
11/14/2013 9:55:21 AM
It's officially official. Cops can now arrest escort you off the premises if you refuse a search of your property and ask whomever else is at the residence if they can come in and search. Repeat the process until someone finally relents. What is it about our strict constitutionalist judges that they don't understand what "Get a fucking warrant!" means?
2/25/2014 2:35:02 PM
The Georgia v. Randolph ruling surprises me more than this one. I was always under the impression that anyone rightfully present in a home can consent to a search.But, yeah: "Get a warrant! When you have probable cause to believe a crime has been committed … you've got to secure the premises and get a warrant. I don't know why that's so difficult for police officers to understand." The time, effort and money spent on this case are far greater than whatever it would've taken them to get a warrant.
2/25/2014 3:30:39 PM
Exactly, they basically had the guy on domestic violence charges (why he got taken to jail), and they had decent evidence he matched the description of a gang member associated with multiple crimes. What judge isn't going to grant you a warrant for that? How can these supposed strict constitutionalists kneecap the 4th amendment while simultaneously making other parts of the bill of rights sacrosanct and beyond questioning?Alito, Thonas, and Scalia cannot die retire soon enough, IMO. Their "constitutional scholarship" is killing the common man.
2/25/2014 6:25:01 PM