Well, that's one thing that could be (and should be) changed.
The prohibition is established by federal law. Changing it would require Congressional action. Fat chance.
Well, that's one thing that could be (and should be) changed.
Ironically, the courts disagree with you, if the interwebs can be trusted. Stare decisis dates back to the 14th century and is part of English common law.But the role of the arbiter of rules isn't to protect your pwecious (precious) society. It is to research the rules.
I was speaking more generally, not so much in relation to the recently disclosed draft decision.Given that the ruling spends so much time directly addressing Roe, I would hardly call it ignoring precedent.
I'm not aware that the length of time between an original decision and a review of that decision, in terms of the balance between correcting bad decisions and having stability in the law, is a criterion for figuring out that balance.True. But it's been 49 years since Roe v. Wade. It was 58 years between Plessy and Brown which is basically the same time scale, and nobody suggests Brown should have given Plessy precedence.
I'm not aware that the length of time between an original decision and a review of that decision, in terms of the balance between correcting bad decisions and having stability in the law, is a criterion for figuring out that balance.
I don't think it is. Some people seem to be arguing otherwise, though.
How long must a wrong decision stand before it can be overturned? Is overturning a right decision OK if you waited long enough to do it?
True. But it's been 49 years since Roe v. Wade. It was 58 years between Plessy and Brown which is basically the same time scale, and nobody suggests Brown should have given Plessy precedence.
You brought it up (as did someone else). Flip flopping is an issue of duration.If you don't think duration is, then why are you bringing it up?
If you don't think duration is, then why are you bringing it up?
Ironically, the courts disagree with you, if the interwebs can be trusted. Stare decisis dates back to the 14th century and is part of English common law.
I acknowledge that duration is one of the issues that affects flip-flopping (as, a reversal of a decision that happens sooner after the original decision can be more disruptive than a reversal that happens after a longer duration - although there's an argument to be made in the reverse, too), but my point - which I did not make explicit, but will do so now - was more about change itself. That is, given any duration of time, the more times a decision is flipped and flopped back and forth, the worse it is.You brought it up (as did someone else). Flip flopping is an issue of duration.
Huh? I quoted you bringing up the issue substantively in my previous post, #1905.I didn't.
That is because judges are historically bad people who take on roles that are not actually theirs.
Maybe you didn't realize my post was normative and not descriptive.
I think that implies that even if a legal principle has been practiced and applied for hundreds of years, that carries no normative weight. It seems that that implies that the precedent of those hundreds of years of recognizing and applying the principle doesn't count. Yet more irony.
Because the basis of our legal system comes from English common law, including the principle of stare decisis, AFAIK. It's baked into the foundation.Nope doesn't count at all. Why would it?
Not sure what "that" is referring to.Other than having negative consequences, what is the problem with that?
Huh? I quoted you bringing up the issue substantively in my previous post, #1905.
Because the basis of our legal system comes from English common law, including the principle of stare decisis, AFAIK. It's baked into the foundation.
Not sure what "that" is referring to.
Sorry, I didn't mean "bringing up" in the sense of initiating, but in the sense of using as part of a position. Maybe "mentioning" would have been a better choice of word.The issue was brought up previously. If I talk about what has already been brought up, that isn’t me bringing it up.
It's gonna be beyond my meager non-lawyer skills to try to challenge the idea that stare decisis is wrong, so i'm outta here.The only consequence of realizing stare decisis is wrong is the system fails. That seems worth the price to correct an error
Ok, the argument 'well they might just have a different legal theory' assumes that the ruling, as it is in the draft, is consistent with any given legal theory. You can't just say, 'I'm an orginalist!' and have it be a Thought Terminating Cliche like 'I'm entitled to my opinion'. If the findings are not in line with that legal theory, then you're not doing as you claim. More over, if the facts you cite are not what you say they are or not true, it doesn't matter if you're an orginalist, contextualist, consequentialist, or arborist; you remain wrong.
And the draft shows just that. It says that abortion is not consistent with our nation's history and tradition, and also not implicit in the concept of ordered liberty (the Glucksberg test). This is wrong factually, is the wrong test to apply, and is based on a nonsensically cherry picked reference time. Alito decided that the time period that matters is the adoption of the 14th Amendment. Why? **** you that's why. Of course women weren't legally 'the people' according to the Constitution at that time, so using that as the timeframe is just dishonest. Besides that, just saying that most states at the time of the adoption of the 14th had laws against abortion ignores that 'abortion' was only considered to be terminating after the quickening (when movement is observable) which was officially normally between 20 and 24 weeks.
In addition, leaving aside citing things like Thomas' utterly unsupported 'abortion is black genocide' nuttery, the case Alito cites for his test, Glucksberg lists some things explicitly as being deeply rooted in our history and traditions or fundamental to our nation's concept of liberty. Take a guess what makes that explicit reference list? Roe. And Casey.
And like I said, it's the wrong test to apply anyway because it means that the past deprivation of rights becomes justification to keep depriving people of rights.
When something is wrong on it's own terms, the excuse 'it's just a different legal theory' is not supportable. It's evidence of bad faith.
He wants popular opinion to be a non-issue only if said popular opinion is an objection to the court's ruling to overturn Roe.I'm not assuming anything of the sort. That was literally the stated intent.
Yes, their takes on those merits are why they were appointed. They were appointed and approved by people who represent a minority of the population because they would rule cases in a way that conforms with the popular opinion of that minority.
That was the point from before. [snip]
You can't have it both ways....