11/1/2005 9:24:29 AM
The problem is that the Congress does make laws that are illegal under the Constitution. When that happens, the Court has no choice but strike such a low down.I agree though that this argument "don't legislate from the bench" becomes kinda stupid when your side is the one that routinely fights the Congress' decisions.
11/1/2005 9:28:25 AM
OMFG! IF I TYPE IN ALL CAPS PEOPLE WILL LISTEN TO ME!no one really cares, btw.
11/1/2005 9:29:18 AM
and
11/1/2005 9:30:43 AM
I would be curious in looking at the average age of the laws voted against. I wonder if conservatives are more likely to overturn new legislation and the liberalz are more likely to overturn 200 years of precedent. [Edited on November 1, 2005 at 10:06 AM. Reason : asdf]
11/1/2005 10:05:50 AM
^That wouldnt really work either, because they have about 70 years of precedence in their favor. This seems right to me, surprisingly the constitution says a lot about limiting the power of the federal government.
11/1/2005 10:45:02 AM
You mean to say you are curious to find data to back up what you already believe
11/1/2005 10:45:27 AM
11/1/2005 11:20:35 AM
11/1/2005 11:48:27 AM
marriage laws have nothing to do with the supreme court
11/1/2005 11:52:22 AM
11/1/2005 12:09:30 PM
11/1/2005 1:42:19 PM
11/1/2005 1:47:49 PM
The 13th ammendment is part of the constituion so as such it does not allow slavery.[Edited on November 1, 2005 at 1:50 PM. Reason : ]
11/1/2005 1:49:37 PM
I was talking about the original Constitution. You know, "OMF That's not what Teh Founding Fathers (including slave owners and rapists) had in mind" and all that.
11/1/2005 1:51:14 PM
well the founding fathers were against slavery even if they had an extraordinary capacity for hypocricy in that regard, if youre only looking to their words and not their actions then its not too much of a problem. And secondly originalists dont pretend that the constitution doesnt include ammendments or any other such nonsense and instead see the post civil war ammendments as having been a tremendous improvement upon the text. [Edited on November 1, 2005 at 2:05 PM. Reason : ]
11/1/2005 2:03:00 PM
My point is that even the originalists make inferences about what the Constitution implied as opposed to clearly said. As I said, sometime that is due to the fact that the Constitution all but screams in your ears "please to imply" as is the case with the "cruel and unusual punishment". Other times, they apply "common sense". Again, you can talk abstractly all you want, and I'll probably agree with 80% of that as a matter of principle. However, Alito, for instance, said a search warrant saying "search that guy and his home" intended to mean "also strip search his wife and the 10 yr old daughter". Tell me, is this guy a judicial activist as a practical matter?
11/1/2005 2:11:05 PM
11/1/2005 2:26:39 PM
11/1/2005 2:45:18 PM
http://vls.law.villanova.edu/locator/3d/March2004/024532p.pdfthats his opinion, I dont particularly like it but I dont think its as nearly clear cut as you are making it out to be. Secondly I never said that these justices would be perfect in every single case before them, I merely said that they should try to interpret and apply it as strictly as possible not that they accomplish that every time and be infallible.
11/1/2005 3:03:10 PM
The idea of precedent has always seemed silly to me. It would seem that it has the potential to pile new fuckups on top of old ones all the way back to the fuckups that might be in the Constitution itself. But then again, I'm a cynic that admitedly knows very little about the judicial system.So yes, I would agree with this:
11/1/2005 3:04:01 PM
MathFreak, the constitution was not intended to never change. This is where the amending process comes in. "originalist" judges do realize there have been amendments made to the constitution and that further amendments can be made at any time. The only distinction is that non-activist judges interpret what the constitution says and not what they wish it would say. If we amend it to guarantee the right to have an abortion then for all time every originalist will conceid to a womens right to abort. If you want it changed then change it, don't appoint judges to "reinterpret it" because that is what got us into this mess. If Roe v Wade had been decided differently, then maybe a sufficiently large consensus would have been created to amend either the Fed or State constitution to guarantee it. But they didn't, so now that the other party is making appointments, this "right" is threatened.
11/1/2005 3:43:46 PM
11/1/2005 5:39:58 PM
11/1/2005 8:38:25 PM
^^I already said that I didnt particularly like the decision. But when you said this:
11/1/2005 9:04:02 PM
As to judicial activism, I think Thomas Jefferson put it best:
11/2/2005 12:56:06 AM
11/2/2005 1:34:12 AM