KingMerv00
Penultimate Amazing
So you can't make a case until a court rules? Good thing the judge in Roe v. Wade didn't demand precedent, or abortion woulod still be illegal.
Not everything has a precedent you know. You're doing the legal equivalent of the truther argument "no steel-framed skyscraper has ever collapsed due to fire before, therefore it didn't happen".
Now here we have a case where Nebraska is given an exception to laws every other state has to abide by, and in fact it is the other states which will have to pay for Nebraska's exception.
You are misunderstanding my point of view. I'm not suggesting you need a perfectly matched precedent to figure out how the court will rule but you do need to at least attempt to ground it in common law if at all possible. People fail to realize that constitutional law is more about reading court opinions than reading the constitution. The OP fails to acknowledge that.
Like I said above the proper way to attack the constitutionality of the bill is to claim it is an overextention of the commerce clause power. Believe it or not, it is an argument with which I have some sympathy. On the other hand, I have zero sympathy with the lack of research when it comes to this stuff.
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