Stacyhs
Penultimate Amazing
To be fair, it is hard to take Toobin seriously, and especially the matter of whether he has respect for others. I disregard his opinion on Scalia.
Of course you do.
To be fair, it is hard to take Toobin seriously, and especially the matter of whether he has respect for others. I disregard his opinion on Scalia.
I'm sure there is another occupation that he is even more widely known for....I think was Jeffrey Toobin, an American lawyer, author, political commentator and legal analyst for CNN!
Roving gangs of feminists, gunning down Republican legislators....
They could easily argue that the 10th Amendment reserves the power to regulate abortion (among other powers "not delegated to the United States by the Constitution") to the States.The justices who so argue citing the Framers original intent disingenuously ignore the 9th amendment which reserves, to the people, rights which are not enumerated in the Constitution or the other Bills of Rights.
Originalism is what Scalia used when it suited him. He ignored it when it didn't.To me "originalism" ...
This is the dirty secret of the Constitution. It doesn't really mean much of anything. It's just a mechanism for lending reflected legitimacy to the cultural assumptions of whoever dominates the SC. It's the modern equivalent of the priests interpreting the will of the Gods. The moment significant numbers of people realise that, the Emperor is going to need a new set of clothes.Originalism is what Scalia used when it suited him. He ignored it when it didn't.
Alito is using it the same way.
What votes? Election polls are snapshots in time. Candidates can gain or lose support in days. But polls about political and social beliefs tend to be reliable and consistent. Someone who supported Roe v. Wade last week or last month or 30 years ago is not likely to change his mind overnight. And numerous polls over years and decades indicate that a substantial majority of Americans want abortion to be legal and available on the terms, more or less, than Roe provides. If the issue was presented in a national referendum, legal abortion would win.
You also have a whole bunch of systematic polling biases. Some sections of the population are harder to reach, some don't want to answer polls, some don't want to answer honestly. If you look into the methods of lots of polls, there is often a heck of a lot of subjective decision making involved in turning the raw data into something that genuinely reflects the population. Just because all the polls say mostly the same thing, doesn't mean they are right. Are they that great at predicting election percentages?Yes it would, but the election matters, the polls don't. You can take all the polls you want regarding Roe v. Wade, but people will be voting for Representatives and Senators, and most people aren't single-issue voters. Millions of pro-choice people may still vote for anti-choice candidates for other reasons. Millions of people who respond to polls with pro-choice answers may not show up to vote at all.
You can take all the goddamn polls you want, BUT ALL THAT MATTERS IS WHO ACTUALLY VOTES AND WHO THEY VOTE FOR! Period!
Originalism is the compromise of the generous absolutist: it's only relatively relative.Originalism is what Scalia used when it suited him. He ignored it when it didn't.
Alito is using it the same way.
You also have a whole bunch of systematic polling biases. Some sections of the population are harder to reach, some don't want to answer polls, some don't want to answer honestly. If you look into the methods of lots of polls, there is often a heck of a lot of subjective decision making involved in turning the raw data into something that genuinely reflects the population. Just because all the polls say mostly the same thing, doesn't mean they are right. Are they that great at predicting election percentages?
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You can take all the goddamn polls you want, BUT ALL THAT MATTERS IS WHO ACTUALLY VOTES AND WHO THEY VOTE FOR! Period!
The justices who so argue citing the Framers original intent disingenuously ignore the 9th amendment which reserves, to the people, rights which are not enumerated in the Constitution or the other Bills of Rights.
They could easily argue that the 10th Amendment reserves the power to regulate abortion (among other powers "not delegated to the United States by the Constitution") to the States.
This wasn't really in doubt from the 1820s until the 1970s.So a state has the power to violate the privacy of a woman seeking an abortion?
This has been true since Gitlow v. New York (1925), but only for selected rights.It seems to me that the court's decision on NY gun laws means the protections of the Bill of Rights extend to state actions.
Yes.Is the court saying the state can't stop you from carrying a gun but it can violate the privacy of women and families seeking abortions?
If that question arises, I do not expect it will be because the Dems had the wherewithal to codify something like Casey or Roe. Instead, it will be because the GOP managed to pass a federal ban.But the real question might end up being whether the Congress via the Supremacy Clause has the authority to preempt state laws that conflict with any federal law protecting abortion rights.
Not a bad analogy, IMO.In this case the idea that Kentucky woman has to cross the Ohio river to Illinois to get a safe and legal abortion sounds like a Dred Scott thing to a lot of people.
In this case the idea that Kentucky woman has to cross the Ohio river to Illinois to get a safe and legal abortion sounds like a Dred Scott thing to a lot of people.
Not a bad analogy, IMO.
In both cases, SCOTUS had the chance to advance human rights, and in both cases they went with narrow originalism instead.