Beelzebuddy
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2010
- Messages
- 10,608
Did they?
Yeah, they did.
Did they?
Well, I have it on good authority* Democrats demanded a report. So all’s good.Democrats in the Senate should have made it more clear that they have no faith in the rushed mini-Investigation regardless of the outcome at the beginning of the week.
Now, it is feels like a shifting of goalposts to demand another, broader investigation.
Yeah, they did.
Always after me lucky yarms!The world is run by the Irish and the Jews.
Not going to take your word for it.
Did they?
Not going to take your word for it.
why do you care?
You think Republicans will jump ship?
His imaginary friend T-Bone, the tough but gentle drug pusher who Spartacus befriended.
Not going to take your word for it.
I giggle every time I see this.
The lawyer is creepy.
But the old married dude who is screwing the porn stars [because they remind him of his daughter] and paying them hush money is GREAT!
No one is claiming that a judge's temperament must be evaluated differently compared to others in authority (and that is not a claim that it can not be evaluated differently). The claim is that legal experts are more qualified than lay folk to evaluate judicial temperament. those are two very different claims.I keep seeing this claim, but no explanation for why a judge's temperament must be evaluated differently than anyone else in a position of authority.
Law professors generally have experience in court. I recall that the letter states this. I am a professor, and I have professional experience in my field, too.Moreover, to the extent that it is any different, law professors are not experts on judicial temperament. Law professors spend most of their time teaching and doing research. They spend much less time in front of a judge than trial lawyers do. So why is this petition just for law professors? That makes no sense, if actual experience with judges is what matters. But it isn't, because it's all an argument from authority fallacy.
I don't think practicality is a consideration here. I'm just picturing Trump huddled over a cheeseburger, glowering at a potential nominee and saying he needs them in his court, or asking if they're on the same page, or some other plausibly-deniable-but-really-not overture, and from the ones which didn't immediately protest such a flagrantly illegal act, Kavanaugh is the best of a very bad lot.
That *probably* didn't happen, but it feels too truthy to discount altogether.
If I gave you a quote of Trump saying the FBI had free rein, would it make a difference to you? What would it change about your worldview, finding that you were wrong on this question?
But of course you would accept Trump's.
Your non sequitur yet another example of poor reasoning in this thread.
Maybe you should ask these guys.
If you want to make an argument for an alternative, then actually make it.
So you're going with a semantic quibble about what counts as "direct", ignoring the fact that neither you nor they have ever actually interacted with Kavanaugh, and pretending as if actual interaction doesn't make any difference. Winner of an argument there, Belz.
First off, as I mentioned above, law professors have less experience with judges than trial lawyers, so if experience with judges is actually relevant then the petition wouldn't have been restricted to law profs. Second, people behave differently in different circumstances. To the extent that being a legal expert gives you unique insight into judicial behavior in court, it does not give you any unique insight into the behavior of judges outside of court. And this was absolutely outside of court.
This is an appeal to authority fallacy.