SMHHow is this Hobby Lobby crap not cut and dry?
3/26/2014 10:22:30 AM
http://reason.com/blog/2014/03/25/will-the-supreme-court-save-obamacare-ag
3/26/2014 7:42:26 PM
Well, we've crafted this legal definition of a "minority owned business" that many kinds of business can certify as. We've also written many protections and benefits into law for those certified businesses. We don't really have that for Christians (yet).Despite that, in order to claim discrimination, they used the civil rights act which I believe only uses the word person. So they are still relying on corporate personhood. I think racial extension to corporations should be reviewed along with religion.
3/26/2014 10:29:10 PM
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/30/us/supreme-court-blocks-order-to-restore-7-days-of-voting-in-ohio.html
10/1/2014 5:19:59 PM
Bump for discussion of upcoming shenanigans
6/25/2015 6:24:48 AM
Have the announced what two decisions they're releasing today and tomorrow?
6/25/2015 8:37:09 AM
I don't think they announce the date specific decisions will be released, for whatever reason.edit:oh dang, here is a good explainer on how they release decisions:http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2015/06/supreme-court-explained-obamacare-gay-marriage
6/25/2015 8:50:37 AM
Yeah, I never got all the media rules for SCOTUS. It's like they're still in the 1800s
6/25/2015 8:57:00 AM
Looks like they upheld Obamacare 6-3, no surprise there.They also released the Housing Authority case down in Texas, which I know nothing about.I guess we have to wait till tomorrow or Monday for gay marriage and the EPA mercury rules, which were the two I was most interested in.
6/25/2015 10:20:08 AM
aaronburro is going to be PISSED
6/25/2015 10:25:43 AM
Apparently Scalia wrote the dissent and its full of "zingers toward the majority," (My guess is because his actual arguments are so weak) so I'm sure conservatives will be able to get some mileage out of that.
6/25/2015 10:34:43 AM
that's every decision Scalia writes
6/25/2015 10:38:54 AM
haha troof!!
6/25/2015 10:39:32 AM
Best outcome for the GOP. They can cry and get angry to rile up their constituents but don't have to shoulder the responsibility of fixing something that would have hit deep red areas hard..
6/25/2015 10:44:38 AM
Good shit, this line from the majority is the clincher,
6/25/2015 10:49:10 AM
I was thinking they would overturn it, on the basis that congress shouldn't write technically ambiguous law, but looks like they went with the common sense approach, where it was pretty obvious what the law actually intended.Congress still needs to pass legislation to fix parts of the law that aren't working though.
6/25/2015 11:28:57 AM
Poor aaronburron
6/25/2015 12:20:15 PM
Republicans would have been screwed if it went the other way. they would have been forced to fix the law they have claiming they are against(yet they keep funding it). would have been kinda funny[Edited on June 25, 2015 at 1:11 PM. Reason : a]
6/25/2015 1:02:18 PM
You know they would have put that shit off until after the election
6/25/2015 1:14:01 PM
^i dunno, if 8.7 million people lose their health insurance on the same day dont think that's something you can wait around to address.
6/25/2015 1:16:57 PM
^ yeah they would have been forced to put their hands into ACA, and formally make it part of their platform.As it is now, it's only tacitly part of their platform.This does allow them to keep attacking ACA until the election though, so it's good in a way they don't have to do anything about it.The more they can just ignore the law, the more they can blame any democrat for it next election time.
6/25/2015 1:21:16 PM
Robert's opinion is pretty interesting. He didn't go with Chevron deference nor did he buy the government's argument that "Exchange Established by the State" was a term of art. Instead, he basically said the law as written made no fucking sense and was unworkable, so it was the court's job to rewrite it in a way that does make sense. Not sure I agree, but it definitely kills this issue for good because no future President could withhold the subsidies based on the text of the law now.[Edited on June 25, 2015 at 4:19 PM. Reason : .]
6/25/2015 4:15:44 PM
Yea, it's actually a stronger position than using deference to the agency, pretty surprising. People that watch the court closely are predicting Scalia to author the Michigan v EPA decision. That does not bode well
6/25/2015 5:11:21 PM
Yeah well, a conservative court wasn't going to give us all liberal opinions. Between EPA and Burwell, I'm glad they saved Obamacare.
6/25/2015 5:41:51 PM
6/25/2015 8:01:34 PM
Obergefell v Hodges decision today?m^ is there not a good deal of precedent (or canon or whatever you want to call it) for statutory interpretation? [Edited on June 26, 2015 at 7:38 AM. Reason : X]
6/26/2015 7:36:50 AM
It's a good precedent that the Supreme Court can interpret laws and not just defer to agency interpretation
6/26/2015 9:31:09 AM
Same sex marriages must be granted, 5-4 with 4 dissents written.
6/26/2015 10:05:54 AM
6/26/2015 10:30:56 AM
Um, Clarence Thomas' dissenting opinion reads like in a different time he would have ruled slavery as constitutional .. Wow.
6/26/2015 10:31:31 AM
Yeah, Thomas and Scalia's opinions are "If it's cool with the majority, it's cool with us"
6/26/2015 10:33:57 AM
It looks like aaronburro was right after all; Gay people are totally free to get married!
6/26/2015 10:42:38 AM
With that and the ACA ruling, I bet he's having a wonderful birthday.
6/26/2015 10:43:45 AM
Scalia's dissent is amazing, it's hard to believe an actual Supreme Court justice wrote this. It reads more like a rant from the conservative blogosphere.
6/26/2015 12:33:01 PM
if anyone else wrote that about their job and posted it, they'd be firedhe can do it because he can't be
6/26/2015 12:35:34 PM
^^what an eye-roller. When has the Court EVER been representative of the country - NEVER, and they've ruled on plenty of similar cases. They aren't ruling on the definition of marriage, they're ruling on due process and equal protection of laws.At least he is consistent in this case. Here is his dissent from Lawrence v Texas when he tried to convince us that anti-sodomy laws are constitutional
6/26/2015 1:50:59 PM
Scalia has always been way too happy to forsake his legal views and come up with some bend-over-backwards batshit rationalization to vote with his moral beliefs.
6/26/2015 7:32:09 PM
Thomas is the one who gets me. The dignity of slavery..... And Scalia didn't invent any new, funny phrases in this dissent, so I am not sure how serious he is.
6/26/2015 7:47:23 PM
The Gaypocalypse has already begun [Edited on June 26, 2015 at 9:18 PM. Reason : .]
6/26/2015 8:53:54 PM
6/27/2015 10:24:20 AM
You're doing some selective omission there. While he does talk about congressional intent, it's totally based on the text of the law, not things congressmen were saying in 2010. The law itself made it clear what congress's intent was, and you can't take 3 words out of context to pervert that intent. It's not disconcerting or scary, it's statutory interpretation 101. It's why morons like me who've never attended a single credit hour of law school can understand it.[Edited on June 27, 2015 at 10:59 AM. Reason : .]
6/27/2015 10:53:36 AM
I respectfully disagree, and it was apparently a strong enough argument for it to make it to the courts and a strong enough argument to convince 3 judges. The plain language of the law is pretty clear, there wasn't actually much to interpret. It's not far off from the way that they rewrote it the fist time to make it the individual mandate fine into a tax. It's demonstrably clear that it wasn't what the law said, so they chose to ignore that and "interpret" it as a tax.It's settled law now, but we shouldn't make the mistake of thinking that SCOTUS makes the logically or even Constitutionally correct decision every time. These are the fine folks who gave us Citizens United and Kelo v. New London as well. Sadly the court is often far too much of a political entity and not a dispassionate judiciary as they should be.
6/27/2015 11:13:07 AM
^ Hit the nail on the head.
6/27/2015 9:25:03 PM
For today:The drug used in that botched execution is fine to use Arizona Legislature lost and has cede the responsibility of redistricting to an independent commission EPA must consider the cost of its regulations
6/29/2015 10:40:14 AM
The EPA decision is horrible, the whole point of the EPA rule was to put protecting the environment over costs, like basically every other thing they do. The good news is that most power plants have already made the necessary changes or have invested in doing so since the rules been in effect for 3 years. Democrats need to make protecting the environment a lynchpin issue for 2016 now.[Edited on June 29, 2015 at 10:59 AM. Reason : .]
6/29/2015 10:56:32 AM
Yeah, the EPA thing is kinda The death penalty thing I'm good with, but I think we really should move to inert gas suffocation. The gerrymandering thing is common sense.
6/29/2015 11:00:15 AM
According to a lot of judicial wonks, it's not that big of deal. They'll just reissue the rules with some specific accounting for costs.
6/29/2015 11:21:35 AM
I wonder how the Affirmative action case will go next term
6/29/2015 11:28:59 AM
i have a feeling that a lot of people who have a problem with the supreme court interpreting "by the state" will have no problem with the court interpreting "appropriate" in regards to the EPA decision
6/29/2015 11:43:43 AM
6/29/2015 1:29:56 PM