theprestige
Penultimate Amazing
"The right to keep and bear arms" seems plain enough. Do you deny such a right exists?
So, we've seen putdowns of "originalism" and of "textualism" when it comes to constitutional interpretation.
What's an alternative?
The Supreme Court has the power of judicial review. They can declare a law invalid. When doing so, what sort of theory should guide them? What limits are there in their ability to do so? Is there a name for a school of thought that isn't textualism and isn't originalism, but which describes the proper role for justices tasked with conducting judicial review of laws passed by the legislatures of the states or by the federal legislative branch?
And in that case times changed. The country evolved. We didn't evolve to believe life really starts at conception.It's only common sense when someone agrees with you on the meaning of those two words..
Slave owners truly believed owning another (sub)human being was fair and just.
We as the people in this country.
It would make more sense not to be overturning a 50 yr precedent without more reason than your own personal beliefs.
I just assumed you would ignore any question you found inconvenient, and I was right.
There's a lot of confusion between textualism and originalism. The words of the law or Constitution have meaning, but, as noted in my last post, there are situations that the framers could not have foreseen. Even more significantly, there are things that are implied by the words of the Constitution, but which were not actually intended by the framers who wrote the laws. In those cases, an originalist would say, "Hold on. They didn't mean that, so we don't have to do what they said." A textualist would say, "I don't care what they intended. Here's what they said, and that's what we're going to do." The only place where the original meaning comes in is that if a word's meaning has drifted over time, the definition of an original phrase should be the one used by those who wrote the sentences that are being interpreted.
I doubt that anyone is a purist on either side. I would count myself much closer to a textualist, but I would say that the concept of substantive due process is implied by the words that they wrote. As such, I support a whole raft of interpretations that depend on substantive due process, even though the framers didn't intend them. An originalist would disagree.
And a living constitutionalist? I have no idea what they would say because I can't understand how they would place any constraints at all on the Supreme Court. It seems to me that they would have to accept any and all rulings of the Supreme Court, because regardless of what the High Nine said, that was the "living" part.
Well, the US Constitution was a great progressive document, much ahead of its time when it was written. Now, despite of many additions and modifications, it's rather a clumsy and increasingly harmful document. I think you guys should go back to the drawing board and come up with Republic v. 2.0 - otherwise you might slowly sink into a fundamentalist and superstitious Gilead.
Well, the US Constitution was a great progressive document, much ahead of its time when it was written. Now, despite of many additions and modifications, it's rather a clumsy and increasingly harmful document. I think you guys should go back to the drawing board and come up with Republic v. 2.0 - otherwise you might slowly sink into a fundamentalist and superstitious Gilead.
Well, no. They didn't try to, and nothing they did could be used to imply that they will. To my way of thinking, it's best to address the specific case or the specific issue that's under discussion, but when it comes to Roe v. Wade, people seem compelled to bring in other things that are either completely unrelated, or connected only by the flimsiest thread.
I think on the subject of law, people should address the Supreme Court rulings, specifically. On the subject of social effects, I think people should address abortion, specifically.
If the best you've got is "They might attack interractial marriage", then you've got nothing. It's not very difficult to see that they won't attack Loving v. Virginia at all, so it's not relevant.
Everything will be "dramatic hyberbole strawman that's never going to happen you're being paranoid" until it happens and then it will be too late to do anything about it.
By design and with intention.
There's a certain retro-ness to this idea. For decades the Republican party made a lot of empty promises to the Christian extremists in their party in order to capture their votes, but only rarely delivered on them. The party was very comfortable waving carrots, like overturning Roe, to keep this part of the base pulling hard for them.
There will be zero states where it will be illegal to terminate a pregnancy in cases where the mother's life is in danger. It won't happen, anywhere.
Jen Psaki said:.
@POTUS
strongly believes in the Constitutional right to protest. But that should never include violence, threats, or vandalism. Judges perform an incredibly important function in our society, and they must be able to do their jobs without concern for their personal safety.
This is an interesting case, and what it shows is that legislators can pass really bad laws.
Under the Texas law in question, that situation, if described accurately, should have been a case where abortion should have been perfectly legal, under either Texas law or considering Roe v. Wade, which was, and is, still in effect.