JamesDillon
Master Poster
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2006
- Messages
- 2,631
I suppose it's because the most relevant Supreme Court case on point happened to be about funding terrorists, not funding churches. As I've explained at length already, Supreme Court decisions are enormously influential sources of law that carry a lot of weight even when they aren't directly binding on the outcome of a decision. Texas didn't pick the analogy out of thin air; it looked at the body of recent Supreme Court decisions, found one that was relevant, and cited it. Which is exactly what happens all the time in legal argumentation.And yet, the TX AG didn't choose to compare withholding money from PP to withholding money from churches. Or to withholding money from any other group.
He chose to compare it to withholding money from terrorists. He went out of his way to specifically use the term "terrorist" in his motion to the court, instead of merely citing a statute or case law reference. Unlike the other examples you selected for comparison.
Why do you suppose that is? Surely the finevoterspeople of Texas would be equally understanding of an AG who compared Planned Parenthood to church social programs as they would to a comparison with terrorists.
Right?
As for the use of the term "terrorist"-- it's a parenthetical citation explaining the holding of the case. Again, not at all uncommon or inappropriate. And, again, no judge reading that is going to understand it to draw a comparison between Planned Parenthood and the terrorist organizations at issue in HLP.
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