Ziggurat
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2003
- Messages
- 61,643
I wonder in the near future if she will be called Justice Barret, or simply Ofjesse?
Wow, that's original.
I wonder in the near future if she will be called Justice Barret, or simply Ofjesse?
I wonder in the near future if she will be called Justice Barret, or simply Ofjesse?
As you say, that's YOUR view. That doesn't mean diddly squat legally.
He makes decisions that are based on political ideologies. That some are late overturned by the SC are evidence that they are not based on their Constitutionality. It is not the purview of the president to decide the constitutionality of a law. Period.
Of course. That's rather obvious, Captain.
EXACTLY! Which is what I said. The president does not make decisions about a law's constitutionality. That is the purview of the SC, not the president.
Jesus H. Christ. What part of "No, it's not different," are you having difficulty understanding? Is it the "No"? Or the "It's not different" part? Or do you still think the president decides what's constitutional? If so, I suggest a refresher course in Civics.
The part where only ACB got any flak for uttering this patently offensive phrase that everyone should know is offensive.
The President does indeed decide what is Constitutional.
Any particular POTUS may not be very good at deciding that and POTUS is not the final judge of what is and isn't Constitutional; but, the President's duty, after all is to uphold the Constitution. When POTUS acts, there's an underlying assumption that the action falls under his powers in the Constitution. Assumedly, POTUS has counsel on the Constitutionality of any particular executive action. Not even Trump has acted in a way blatantly outside his enumerated powers, at least not in any way that previous Presidents have not also done. Here's an Atlantic article discussing Obama's record on the Constitutionality of his actions.
My point is twofold:
First, that the president makes decisions about how to implement law, and defends the constitutionality of those decisions when challenged. This is important - at least as important as the Supreme Court's role in deciding those challenges.
Second, and therefore, you are wrong to dismiss Biden's view of "sexual preference" on the grounds that he's a presidential candidate, not a Supreme Court nominee.
//Slight hijack//
Yeah the whole "Hold up the blank piece of paper to show you aren't taking notes" thing was clever but... Damn lady have you met the internet? You couldn't have sat down and designed something more open to being memed.
Before reading the article, I tried to name them, and I came up with the same 4. Protest seems like it is covered broadly when you say speech and assembly. If you have a right to speech and a right to assemble, that seems to cover protesting.
All of that requires that the virus exist to begin with, and none of it was what ACB was asked about.
Barrett was a lawyer, not a judge at the hearings.
The point with Barrett not being able to name the five freedoms is that this is a softball question in a job interview for one of the 9 top jobs in the field in the country. It's like she's trying to persuade a publisher to publish what she claims to be the definitive book about British pop music of the 1960s and could only name 3 of the Beatles.
Nobody here should give a **** if they or other posters can't name the five freedoms - because nobody here is interviewing for a position as a constitutional expert appointed to the highest court in the US.
.I see four freedoms. Maybe it's down to different schools of thought.
Religion, speech, assembly, petition. Any answer that encompasses those four concepts is satisfactory, in my opinion. It accurately describes the amendment, and accurately reflects the mainstream intererpetation of the amendment.
What? She is currently a U.S. Court of Appeals judge, one level below he Supreme Court.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amy_Coney_Barrett
The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to a speedy review of President Trump's attempt to exclude unauthorized immigrants from the census numbers used to reallocate seats in Congress.
Last month, a lower court ruling blocked Trump's push, calling a presidential memo that called for that unprecedented change unlawful. And now the justices have expedited consideration to hear oral arguments in the case on Nov. 30.
The hearing is set to take place a month before federal law says the latest state population counts for reapportioning the 435 seats in the House of Representatives among the states are due to the president. The timing increases the potential for Trump to try to make the change to who is included in the numbers during his current term in office.
.I see four freedoms. Maybe it's down to different schools of thought.
Religion, speech, assembly, petition. Any answer that encompasses those four concepts is satisfactory, in my opinion. It accurately describes the amendment, and accurately reflects the mainstream intererpetation of the amendment.
We'll see just how much of a rainy day originalist Barrett is if she gets sworn in in time to vote on the Census question the SCOTUS has fast-tracked for a hearing. She clerked with Scalia, another rainy day originalist.
An "originalist" should go by the words on the paper, not make her own determination of what the men writing the Constitution meant.
NPR: Supreme Court Speeds Up Case On Trump's Push To Alter Census For House Seats
For the record, the TX GOP changed redistricting in between the Censuses so I hope Biden remembers that if he needs to negate any of Trump's meddling.