Author Topic: Issues in the American Creed (Constitutional Law and related matters) SCOTUS  (Read 663099 times)

ccp

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Sotomayor - calls for changes in law she does not like
« Reply #1650 on: October 03, 2021, 05:25:13 AM »
She lamants .  (the point being - she does not let law stop her from dissenting every chance she gets in a liberal DNC partisan way)

And in a speech on Wednesday liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor said that “There is going to be a lot of disappointment in the law, a huge amount.”

“Look at me, look at my dissents,” she said.


“You know, I can’t change Texas’ law,” she said on Wednesday, “but you can and everyone else who may or may not like it can go out there and be lobbying forces in changing laws that you don’t like.”

“I am pointing out to that when I shouldn’t because they tell me I shouldn’t,” she said. “But my point is that there are going to be a lot of things you don’t like” and that she believes the people can change.

Justice Sotomayor penned her own dissent of the Supreme Court’s decision on the Texas law.

“The Court’s order is stunning,” she said. “Presented with an application to join a flagrantly unconstitutional law engineered to prohibit women from exercising their constitutional rights and evade judicial scrutiny, a majority of the Justices have opted to bury their heads in the sand.”

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Issues in the American Creed (Constitutional Law and related matters)
« Reply #1651 on: October 03, 2021, 01:48:12 PM »
It fairness it must be acknowledged that per current C'l law, the Texas law clearly violates Roe.


ccp

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G M

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Re: noticing more MSM attacks on SCOTUS
« Reply #1654 on: October 05, 2021, 10:18:25 AM »
https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/hospitals/how-many-employees-have-hospitals-lost-to-vaccine-mandates-numbers-so-far

the abortion issue will accelerate this.

Is that the link you intended?

Of course, the left is preparing to push for additional justices to ensure the left dominates SCOTUS forever.

You aren't voting your way out of this.

ccp

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Link correction
« Reply #1655 on: October 05, 2021, 10:54:43 AM »

Crafty_Dog

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Which United States Constitution
« Reply #1656 on: October 19, 2021, 12:09:50 AM »
https://amgreatness.com/2021/10/17/which-united-states-constitution/

FIRST PRINCIPLES
Which United States Constitution?
The choice between the Madisonian Constitution or the Wilsonian “living constitution” is stark and pressing indeed.
By Phillip Keuhlen

October 17, 2021

Fifty years ago my United States Naval Academy Class accepted its individual commissions. Each officer swore an oath of indefinite duration to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; to bear true faith and allegiance to the same; and to well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which they entered. It is an interesting formulation, for it requires one’s allegiance to, and defense of, our founding document and by extension the principles it embodies.

For virtually all of us there was clarity about what was meant by the Constitution of the United States. Even in the unlikely event that a midshipman had arrived at the Academy unschooled in civics, one did not graduate without passing course H303, U.S. Government and Constitutional Development. Prospective officers understood the Constitution of the United States to be one of the organic laws of the United States, the Madisonian instrument designed by the Constitutional Convention, ratified in 1789, and adapted in the Bill of Rights and succeeding amendments, to protect the principles of the American founding stated in the first of the organic laws, the 1776 Declaration of Independence.

One cannot help but wonder which United States Constitution today’s generation of serving officers intends to support and defend when they swear and live their oaths of office. For, make no mistake, while the Madisonian Constitution, as amended, and the Declaration of Independence are still the written laws of the land, the United States is administered today by an entirely different constitutional regime, underpinned by a radically different set of principles. Each officer must face the moral and ethical questions of which to support and defend, and what that defense may entail.

The first principles of the American founding are concisely stated in the Declaration of Independence, the first official act of our Congress and the fountainhead of American law.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights,

that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these Rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed” (emphasis added)

The political philosophy of natural law and natural rights championed in the Declaration was enshrined by the Congress as our nation’s statement of first principles. In the U.S. Code Congress has placed it at the beginning, under the heading “The Organic Laws of the United States of America,” ahead of the Constitution. James Madison, the father of the Constitution, said that it was “the fundamental act of union,” the first lawful document by which we illuminate the constitutional principles of Americans.

But, what do the words mean? The founders stated that our rights were individual rights; that they were shared in common by all mankind; that they were conferred by God, not by a state; and that they were ours by right, not rationed by government as a means to its ends. They proclaimed these values incontrovertible, requiring no defense. They declared that the legitimate function of government was to secure the natural rights of individual citizens, and that the power of governments to secure those natural rights derived only from the consent of the people.

The Constitutional Convention labored to craft a document that could be passed out of convention and be ratified by the states. The result was a Constitution founded upon natural law, designed to defend the natural rights of citizens, and equipped with safeguards intended to preserve the union, minimize abuse of power, and assure justice for all. The principle features designed to protect the Republic and constitutional governance included:

Separation of powers between the legislative (enact law), executive (enforce law), and judicial (interpret law) branches of government;
Multiple provisions to protect minorities, as individuals, classes or as States, from the tyranny of a majority by features such as due process, a bicameral legislature, and an Electoral College; 
Formal processes for amending the Constitution; 
Formal processes for electing the president; and 
Reservation of powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, to the states or the people respectively.

The founders’ political philosophy of natural law stands in stark contrast to the contemporaneous philosophy of utilitarianism espoused by Jeremy Bentham. Bentham found the motivating principle for society in the shorthand phrase, “The greatest good for the greatest number.” This view, rejected by the founders, embraced the state as the arbiter of a “common good;” found right and wrong to be relative, defined in terms of the effect on the “common good;” believed that the “common good,” and hence government by the state that defined it, was preeminent over individuals. In utilitarianism, personal liberty exists only to the extent it is bestowed by governments, granted in the context and support of the state defined “common good.”



There is a profound, irreconcilable, difference between the first principles of American values stated in the Declaration of Independence and the beliefs of Bentham and his philosophical heirs such as John Stuart Mill, Georg Wilhelm Hegel, Karl Marx, Herbert Marcuse, and Erich Fromm. Those political philosophers provide the philosophical underpinning of contemporary utilitarian-based Progressive movements. For over a century, the proponents of Progressivism have unceasingly advanced a vision and values directly opposed to those the country was founded on. They have mounted sustained legislative, judicial, and executive programs that have incrementally subverted the United States Constitution. They have supplanted it with a regime of governance that compromises essential elements of Madisonian constitutional governance, effectively replacing it with an antithetical political philosophy. And like the proverbial frog cooked in the pan of water brought slowly to boiling, many are totally unaware of this changed constitutional environment.

The seminal political architect of changes that have been impressed into American constitutional governance over the past century was President Woodrow Wilson. Under the cover of the national emergency of World War I, Wilson initiated two radical transformations to Madisonian constitutional governance of limited powers.

The first, his doctrine of a “living constitution” circumvents provisions of the constitution by constituting the Supreme Court functionally as a permanently sitting constitutional convention, usurping the power to make law reserved to the elected Congress and inventing new law and constitutional provisions by judicial action, contrary to the Madisonian Constitution’s separation of powers. 

Wilson’s “administrative state” is an even more profound transformation of constitutional governance. Eliminating the separation of powers entirely, it empowers unelected, unaccountable bureaucratic agencies to reign sovereign over the people, able to make rules with the force of law, enforce them, and adjudicate breeches of them, often absent the due process guaranteed by Madisonian governance.

Wilson’s transformations were founded on the Hegelian concept of a state that is sovereign over the people. The Hegelian state functions to define the interests of the community and delimits individual liberty to conform to this revealed state interest. Wilson and his successors have substituted the state as the source and arbiter of citizen’s rights, eliminating the Madisonian construct of the state as the servant of the people, governing with their consent in defense of their inalienable rights bestowed from the Creator’s fountainhead.

Wilson’s Progressive successors have consolidated and extended the transformation of constitutional governance that he initiated. Under cover of another national emergency, the Great Depression, President Franklin Roosevelt radically extended the definition of interstate commerce in Article 1, Section 8 of the constitution. Initially rebuffed by the Supreme Court in his attempt to usurp powers reserved to the states, Roosevelt threatened legislation to pack the Supreme Court with supporters. Thus threatened, the court acceded to Roosevelt’s vast expansion of the extraconstitutional regulatory state. This further overturned constitutional protections such as the separation of powers, the presumption of innocence, and standing for judicial review.

Today, the Progressive effort to subvert and functionally replace the Madisonian Constitution and the rights that underpin it continues apace, with current events replete with examples.


Faced with a thin majority of Supreme Court Justices who profess a nominally Madisonian view of the Constitution and jurisprudence, and who are the sole bulwark against elective tyranny, today’s Progressives once again propose to pack the Supreme Court to further consolidate their power.

Several state legislatures have attacked the Constitution by enacting statutes to enable direct election of the president via the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact. This perversion intends to circumvent several constitutional provisions. These include those for the election of the president; for amendment of the Constitution; and for interstate compacts. At its core it would disenfranchise many voters by requiring state electors to cast votes based on the voting in other states, rather than in their own.

Progressives have attacked freedom of speech both directly and indirectly under cover of anti-extremism and fantastic allegations of insurrection with political indoctrination, cancel culture, speech codes, and
Prominent Progressives have attacked freedom of religion, perverting the Constitution’s intended protection of religious expression. They express open hostility to religion, designed to suppress religious expression and to attack qualification for public office on the basis of professed religious belief. They have initiated numerous government actions to coerce individuals and religious organizations to take actions contrary to their faith.

So which United States Constitution does the current generation of serving officers support and defend? The formally adopted Madisonian Constitution and its Lockean vision of liberty underpinned in natural law, inalienable rights, and legitimacy based upon the consent of the governed; or the Wilsonian constitutional regime and its Benthamite/Hegelian underpinning in a statist defined “common good” of contingent rights and liberties?

Will they embrace and fight for the defining values and rights conferred by natural law as enshrined in our founding documents, or abdicate the legacy our forefathers fought and died for and accede to the elective statist tyranny, moral relativism, and legal positivism (judge-made law) of the descendants of Bentham?

Make no mistake; the choice between these visions is the critical issue of our American age. Each officer, whether in our individual actions as citizens in civic affairs—or in organizational leadership to our communities, businesses, or government agencies—faces profound moral and ethical decisions in this regard. We will define our place in history, and bequeath our greatest gift or curse to our posterity, in the choice we make between them. A significant portion of our body politic unabashedly attacks the vision and values America was founded on, embracing a diametrically opposed vision and set of values, while others simply sleepwalk through it all, content to go along to get along.

From the earliest days of the American experiment, preeminent American leaders have understood how fragile it is. Franklin, asked about the form of the new government after the Constitutional Convention replied, “A Republic, if you can keep it.” Washington warned in his farewell address about the risk of losing shared common vision and values to factionalism. Lincoln, above all, understood and emphasized that preserving America and its common founding vision and values required covenantal rededication by each succeeding generation.

The United States of America has been engaged in a struggle over the choice between our formally adopted Madisonian Constitution and the competing, incrementally advanced Wilsonian constitutional regime for over a century. Taking inspiration from Patrick Henry’s speech before the Virginia Convention at St. John’s Church in Richmond on March 23, 1775, we argue that those who believe in America’s founding values but deny this reality have eyes, but see not; have ears but hear not. Hearkening back to a time of youth perhaps, they cry for a return to civility and restraint in public discourse, crying “Peace, peace!”—but there can be no peace between these alternatives.

We are potentially at a tipping point in the history of our Constitution and constitutional governance. Those who crusade for Wilsonian governance and its rejection of America’s founding values are today ascendant in government institutions and much of public culture. They already display the inclination to suppress opposition by such means as are available to them, including political indoctrination and broad proscription/punishment of “political speech” in the Armed Forces. Those who take an oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States of America face choices in the execution of that responsibility.

What does it mean to support the Constitution? Is their obligation passive or active? Does military service alone fulfill the obligation to support and defend the Constitution? Is there an obligation to speak up publicly, either inside or outside the military organization to support the Constitution? Is such speech a “political” or “extremist” activity or is it a core element of carrying out their oath of office? All are fair questions, yet all must be preceded by officers first consciously answering for themselves, “Which Constitution of the United States am I defending?” The choice between the Madisonian Constitution that remains the law of the land or the Wilsonian “living constitution” that subverts its intent, denies its underpinning values, and is increasingly the basis of current governance is stark and pressing indeed.



About Phillip Keuhlen
Phil Keuhlen graduated from the U.S. Navel Academy in 1971 and earned a Master of Arts in National Security Affairs, with distinction, from the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, CA. He spent his Navy career in nuclear submarines, was Commanding Officer of USS Sam Houston (SSN-609), and retired from Naval Service in 1992. His second career was as a senior manager for major Federal contractors to the Department of Energy's nuclear weapons complex, principally at the Savannah River Site in SC and the Hanford Site in WA. Phil retired again in 2013 but continued consulting on technology development until early 2018. He is finally succeeding at retirement.

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Crafty_Dog

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The Amendment that remade America
« Reply #1657 on: October 31, 2021, 06:04:50 AM »
The Amendment That Remade America
The First? The Second? No, the 14th—the basis for every claim against a state government for violating individual rights. Randy Barnett and Evan Bernick say it’s time to assert its original meaning.
By Tunku Varadarajan
Oct. 29, 2021 6:08 pm ET


What’s the most important amendment to the U.S. Constitution? The First, which guarantees the freedoms of religion, speech and assembly? If you favor gun rights, perhaps the Second? Criminal-defense lawyers might be inclined to invoke the Fifth. Randy Barnett and Evan Bernick make a case for an amendment that isn’t even in the Bill of Rights—the 14th, ratified in 1868.

That amendment, among its other provisions, bars states from abridging “the privileges or immunities” of citizens or depriving any person of life, liberty or property “without due process of law.” It’s best known for guaranteeing to all persons “the equal protection of the laws.”

The 14th Amendment “not only changed the structure of our federalism, but it extended the protection of fundamental rights,” Mr. Barnett says. Before its ratification, the Supreme Court had held in Barron v. Baltimore (1833) that the Bill of Rights didn’t limit states’ authority. That started to change in 1897, as the court “incorporated” various rights, holding that the 14th Amendment’s Due Process Clause obligates the states to respect them.

By the end of the 20th century, all of the First and Fourth Amendments had been incorporated, as had most of the provisions of the Fifth, Sixth and Eighth Amendments, along with unenumerated rights such as privacy and travel. In 2010 the court added the Second Amendment to the list, and in 2019 the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against excessive fines. Thus every challenge to a state or local law or action that alleges an improper establishment of religion, the imposition of cruel and unusual punishments, or anything in between is also a 14th Amendment challenge.


Consider New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen, a gun-rights case on which the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on Wednesday. It concerns “the right to bear arms outside the home, which most states protect and a few outliers do not, such as California and New York,” Mr. Barnett says. “So that’s a 14th Amendment case.”

In District of Columbia v. Heller (2008), the high court found that the Constitution protects “individual” gun rights. “That was truly a Second Amendment case,” Mr. Barnett says, “because it was about the federal government and D.C., a federal entity. But the ruling, by itself, didn’t protect the right to keep and bear arms from any of the 50 states in the union.” That protection arrived in McDonald v. Chicago (2010), which held that the Second Amendment is enforceable against states through the 14th Amendment. (Heller and McDonald, unlike Bruen, involved the right to “keep” firearms in the home.)

Mr. Barnett says the historical evidence is overwhelming that Second Amendment rights belong to individuals. “But if there’s any doubt about that, raised by the existence of the Militia Clause of the Second Amendment, there’s no doubt whatsoever that the 14th Amendment’s Privileges or Immunities Clause was aimed at the protection of the individual right—in this case the individual rights of the freed blacks to keep and carry their own weapons.”

Messrs. Barnett and Bernick make their case in a new book, “The Original Meaning of the 14th Amendment.” They are both law professors, and both describe themselves as libertarians, though their politics differ. Mr. Barnett has long been associated with the conservative legal movement and was a leading theorist behind the 2012 challenge to ObamaCare. Mr. Bernick is a self-professed “libertarian of the left” who in 2015 testimony before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights argued for the abolition of qualified immunity for police officers.

Mr. Barnett, 69, is a professor of constitutional law at Georgetown. Mr. Bernick, 35, teaches at the Northern Illinois University College of Law. They met at a 2016 academic conference, where they bonded over the 14th Amendment. Mr. Barnett asked the “very astute” young scholar if he’d like to collaborate on a book. Mr. Bernick readily agreed.

In addition to their libertarian inclinations, the two share a commitment to the constitutional philosophy of originalism, which Mr. Barnett defines as the belief that “the meaning of the Constitution should remain the same until it’s properly changed by amendment.” Mr. Bernick adds: “Randy and I are trying to correct what is a longstanding originalist narrative about the limited force of the 14th Amendment.” They argue instead that it was meant to be sweeping, and that even today the court’s interpretation of it is in some ways too cramped.

The justices’ misinterpretation of the 14th Amendment, Messrs. Barnett and Bernick say, began only five years after its ratification and involved three key 19th-century decisions. The Slaughter-House Cases (1873) upheld a Louisiana monopoly that regulated butchers. The justices found that the Privileges or Immunities Clause required states to respect only the rights associated with federal citizenship, not state citizenship. In dissent, Justice Stephen Field wrote that his colleagues had made of the clause “a vain and idle enactment.”

Mr. Barnett says the majority feared the “terrible consequences” of an amendment that would “greatly disrupt the pre-existing arrangement between the states and the federal government.” The majority “really wanted to restore the federalism that they were more familiar with before the Civil War.”


Then, in U.S. v. Cruikshank (1876), the court held that the Bill of Rights doesn’t apply against the states. The justices overturned a white man’s conviction on federal charges of violating the civil rights of black protesters by participating in a Colfax, La., massacre in which scores of them were murdered.

In the Civil Rights Cases (1883), the high court struck down the Civil Rights Act of 1875, which barred racial discrimination in public accommodations. The justices said Congress had exceeded its authority under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment, which gives it “the power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions” of the amendment.

Messrs. Barnett and Bernick believe the Supreme Court has never given the 14th Amendment its full effect or allowed Congress to exercise all of its delegated constitutional power to enforce it. The justices upheld the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in Heart of Atlanta Motel v. U.S., decided barely five months after the bill became law, and they have effectively overturned Cruikshank through a series of incorporation cases.

But the Privileges or Immunities Clause is still moribund. In McDonald, Justice Clarence Thomas argued for overturning Slaughter-House and incorporating the Second Amendment via the Privileges or Immunities Clause rather than the Due Process Clause. But no other justice joined his opinion. Had the other conservatives on the court shared Justice Thomas’s approach, Mr. Barnett says, “our book would probably not need to be written. Our book, in some senses, is for the four justices who didn’t want to join with Justice Thomas.”

The 14th Amendment “gave Congress and the Supreme Court the power,” Mr. Bernick says, “to protect individual citizens and persons from having their fundamental rights violated by their own state governments.” This ran counter to the Constitution’s original federalist structure, under which, as Mr. Barnett puts it, states were “on their own” when it came to protecting the rights of their citizens.

“That had to be the case,” he says, “because otherwise slavery would have been unconstitutional under the original Constitution. The most egregious violation of rights that you can imagine is chattel slavery—and chattel slavery was consistent with the federalism originally established by the Constitution.” (Slavery was abolished by the 13th Amendment, ratified in 1865.)


The 14th Amendment also undid a basic political premise of the 1787 Constitution. The Framers believed, in Mr. Bernick’s words, that “the primary systematic threats to liberty were going to come from the federal rather than the state level.” Local threats to liberty, they thought, could be countered by vigorous political action. “The entire project of Reconstruction, the Civil Rights Acts of 1866 and 1875, as well as the Reconstruction’s constitutional amendments”—the 13th, 14th and 15th, which protects voting rights—“rested upon the belief that that older vision of federalism was inadequate to the needs of protecting liberty.”

The most significant misinterpretation of the 14th Amendment, as Messrs. Barnett and Bernick see it, is the judicial disregarding of the Privileges or Immunities Clause. Judges see it as an impenetrable “inkblot” (to borrow a metaphor Robert Bork used in a different constitutional context), the recognition of which would serve as a license to judges to invent new rights. In its original conception, Mr. Barnett says, the Privileges or Immunities Clause “protects rights that are fundamental to what we call ‘republican citizenship’—citizenship that’s grounded in natural rights and civil equality.”

Those include rights guaranteed by the Constitution and the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which extended citizenship to all persons born in the U.S. “without distinction of race or color, or previous condition of slavery or involuntary servitude.” They also include rights that are deeply rooted in tradition and history, as evidenced by the laws of the states.

Some of these rights are listed in the text of the Constitution, such as the freedom of speech. “Others are not,” Mr. Barnett says, “like the right of parents to raise their own children.” The key question is what the privileges of citizenship are, not what they ought to be.

Mr. Barnett says the Privileges or Immunities Clause is unpopular across ideological lines. “Conservatives don’t care for the clause,” he says, “because they think it’s going to open up the protection of unenumerated rights, some of which, let’s just say, they don’t really want to see protected.” Liberals think the clause is “going to legitimate the protection of certain rights, like economic liberty rights, that they don’t want to see protected.”

Yet the court since the mid-20th century has read the Due Process and Equal Protection clauses expansively, and the professors agree it would be impossible to imagine modern American law without it. “It’s difficult to think of a seminal Supreme Court case that does not have to do with the 14th,” Mr. Bernick says.

He names Brown v. Board of Education (1954), which held segregated schools unconstitutional; Gideon v. Wainwright (1963), which guaranteed the right to legal counsel for criminal defendants; Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), which established a “right to privacy” and accorded married couples the right to obtain contraception; Roe v. Wade (1973), which extended that right to include abortion; and Obergefell v. Hodges (2015), which found that same-sex couples have the “fundamental” right to marry.

The last two are still controversial; most legal conservatives think they were wrongly decided. “I don’t think those are originalist decisions,” the liberal Mr. Bernick says. “They make claims about the meaning of the 14th Amendment, and Roe in particular has a long discussion of the history of abortion law, but neither of them is an example of public-meaning originalism in practice. So they’re not entitled to any presumption of correctness that might attach to a good-faith, reasonable effort to determine public meaning.”

Which brings us to another pending case, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. On Dec. 1, the state of Mississippi will ask the high court to uphold a law banning abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy, in what Mr. Bernick calls “a frontal challenge to Casey v. Planned Parenthood and the rule that effectively prohibits restrictions on abortion prior to the point of viability.” (Casey is the 1992 decision that upheld what a three-justice plurality called Roe’s “central holding.”)

The legal arguments on both sides of the abortion issue are ultimately about the 14th Amendment, Mr. Bernick says. “Is the right to terminate a pregnancy among the privileges or immunities of citizenship? Are unborn fetuses constitutional people?” The answers “turn on the original meaning of ‘persons’ and ‘citizens’ in the 14th Amendment.”

Mr. Varadarajan, a Journal contributor, is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and at New York University Law School’s Classical Liberal Institute.



DougMacG

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Issues American Creed, Constitutional Law, Mississippi "13 week" abortion case
« Reply #1660 on: December 02, 2021, 09:51:11 AM »
This seems small to me, abortion is not banned (in one state) but limited to the first 13 weeks, violating the "trimester" framework of Roe v Wade.  But this is giant in the world of Leftism, to lose any ground on the right to slaughter your unborn.

I can't find the takeaways I was reading but here are other sources.

https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/supreme-court-mississippi-abortion-case-2021-12-01/
https://www.scotusblog.com/2021/11/roe-v-wade-hangs-in-balance-as-reshaped-court-prepares-to-hear-biggest-abortion-case-in-decades/

https://notthebee.com/article/justice-thomas-asks-where-abortion-is-found-in-the-constitution-what-specifically-is-the-right-here-that-were-talking-about

https://www.hillfaith.org/hillfaith/think-about-this-12-facts-about-a-15-week-old-unborn-baby-you-may-not-know/

https://news.yahoo.com/5-takeaways-supreme-court-showdown-012038390.html

https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/chris-queen/2021/11/30/supreme-court-determines-the-fate-of-roe-v-wade-starting-this-week-n1537697

https://www.theepochtimes.com/justice-thomass-moment-arrives-as-supreme-court-reviews-abortion-rights_4131450.html?utm_source=partner

To the Left, the mother is a victim, not a participant in getting pregnant, yet abortion after rape (less that 1% of them) is still legal in Miss.

Breitbart:  Conservatives Think a Fetus ‘Should Have the Same Legal Rights as Full-Grown Black People

[Doug] Strange that  the disparate impact gets ignored by the Left, black unborn 5 times more likely to die than white.


The other odd point is that we are only talking about the federal government's power to take away the states' right to regulate this kind of thing.  People can still cross state lines and do what is legal in the other state.


ccp

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"there is only one solution": Pass the Judiciary Act
« Reply #1661 on: December 05, 2021, 10:50:20 AM »

DougMacG

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Re: "there is only one solution": Pass the Judiciary Act
« Reply #1662 on: December 05, 2021, 12:59:42 PM »
aka "pack the court":

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/12/democrat-politicians-renew-calls-pack-supreme-court-add-liberal-judges/

the Left  - never take no for an answer

Seems to me Manchin and Synema have already been vindicated.  America didn't want this left wing clown show.  Neither did their states and they knew it early on.  Why cave now.

Joe Manchin doesn't need the Democrat Party; it's exactly the other way around.  Same for Jon Tester in Montana, and others. 

Crafty_Dog

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WT: Sixth Amendment SCOTUS case
« Reply #1663 on: December 06, 2021, 02:18:34 AM »
Supreme Court case places Sixth Amendment in peril

Arizona’s legal challenge could endanger the right to appeal based on ineffective assistance of counsel

By Marc Hyden

With many Americans focused on headline- grabbing U.S. Supreme Court cases, it would be easy to miss a critically important case that has flown under the radar: Shinn v. Jones and Ramirez. Despite the consolidated case’s low-profi le, it has the potential to fundamentally reshape the criminal justice system in a manner that should offend conservatives’ core sensibilities — that of protecting life, liberty, and unalienable rights.

The case revolves around something quintessentially American — the right to an attorney and a fair trial. According to decades-old case law , the Sixth Amendment provides Americans the right to “effective assistance of counsel,” but not all lawyers are created equal. There are plenty of reports of defense attorneys showing up to court drunk, sleeping during the trial or simply ignoring exculpatory evidence. Thanks to the Sixth Amendment, if an attorney’s assistance was so inadequate that it influenced the case’s outcome , then the courts can order a retrial.

To obtain such relief, appellants must traverse the arcane appeals process, but if state appellate courts rebuff them, they can apply for relief in federal court via a writ of habeas corpus. This process is incredibly time-consuming. In fact, the time between sentencing and execution in capital cases can easily exceed 20 years . During the interim, new evidence of ineffective counsel can arise, which brings us to the crux of Shinn v. Jones and Ramirez, and the stakes are high — very high. Both Barry Jones and David Ramirez face death sentences for separate cases in Arizona, but appeals attorneys presented evidence in federal court, questioning their verdict and sentence, respectively. In 1995, despite steadfastly maintaining his innocence, Mr. Jones was convicted of an unconscionably heinous crime — child abuse resulting in death — although there is evidence that suggests he may not be guilty. Medical evidence available at the time would have poked holes in the prosecutors’ case against Mr. Jones, according to court documents , but his counsel failed to introduce it . While I can’t say for certain whether Mr. Jones is innocent, it seems that the jurors passed their verdict based on incomplete evidence.

Meanwhile, Mr. Ramirez’s guilt isn’t in question. A jury convicted him in 1990 of a gruesome double murder. Still, there’s reason to believe that Mr. Ramirez suffers from an intellectual disability, has brain damage, and endured serious childhood trauma. However, his lawyers originally failed to provide any evidence of this. Why is this important? Because mitigating evidence such as this would have virtually ensured that he received a sentence other than death.

Mr. Jones’ and Mr. Ramirez’s new attorneys have since brought the aforementioned evidence to light in federal court. They claimed that more effective counsel could have easily raised all of this evidence during the original trials, and as a result, their clients deserve retrials. It’s not unheard of for appeals attorneys to make such 11th-hour assertions in desperate bids to save their clients, but they made a good case. How good? Federal courts overturned Mr. Jones’ conviction and ordered a new hearing for Mr. Ramirez .

Normally, this would ultimately trigger a retrial for Mr. Jones and a new sentencing hearing for Mr. Ramirez, but instead, the State of Arizona appealed the decision. Citing a provision in the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), Arizona asserts that new evidence demonstrating the ineffectiveness of counsel cannot be considered in habeas petitions if the defendant’s lawyers neglected to develop the evidence in state court proceedings.

The State of Arizona’s interpretation of the AEDPA is unique, to say the least. To date, no appellate court has adopted such a reading, and the United States District Court in Arizona found the State of Arizona’s argument laughable, calling it “ simply illogical.” After all, it makes no sense for the law to allow federal courts to entertain evidentiary hearings on claims of ineffective counsel but then to forbid the consideration of the same evidence simply because post-conviction relief counsel failed to raise it in state court.

If the U.S. Supreme Court sides with Arizona, the state will subsequently execute Mr. Jones and Mr. Ramirez despite the evidence. This will also set a dangerous precedent that new evidence of ineffective counsel — in all criminal cases, not just capital cases — can never be considered in federal court even though such claims almost always rely on new evidence.

This will lead toinsidious effects that will reverberate throughout the criminal justice system—ensuring that an untold number of Americans, including the wrongly convicted, will never get a fair trial. This should concern all Americans—especially the U.S. Supreme Court’s conservative wing.

Conservatives believe in law and order, but you can have neither as long as Americans are wrongly denied their constitutional rights and stripped of their lives and liberties. Yet, that could become a regular occurrence if the U.S. Supreme Court rules in favor of Arizona.

Marc Hyden is the director of state government affairs at the R Street Institute—a free-market think tank—and he used to work for the National Rifle Association

DougMacG

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Re: Issues in the American Creed (Constitutional Law, Bill of Rights
« Reply #1664 on: December 15, 2021, 11:51:07 AM »
https://fee.org/articles/12-marvelous-quotes-on-the-bill-of-rights/

12 Marvelous Quotes on the Bill of Rights
On this very day in 1791—December 15—a young United States of America formally adopted the first ten amendments to its Constitution that we call the Bill of Rights.
Wednesday, December 15, 2021

On this very day in 1791—December 15—a young United States of America formally adopted the first ten amendments to its Constitution that we call the Bill of Rights.
Wednesday, December 15, 2021


History Bill of Rights U.S. Constitution Natural Rights George Carlin Thomas Jefferson Civil Rights
Americans over the age of 60 will likely remember the hilarious TV game show that ran for 25 years (1965-1980) called Hollywood Squares. On the show, host Peter Marshall (still living at age 95) once directed this question to comedian Paul Lynde: “Pride, anger, covetousness, lust, gluttony, envy and sloth are collectively known as what?”

Sustained laughter ensued when Lynde replied, “The Bill of Rights.” (The correct answer, of course, is the Seven Deadly Sins.)

It was on this very day in 1791—December 15—that a young United States of America formally adopted the first ten amendments to its Constitution that we call the Bill of Rights. Those amendments were fundamental and foundational, as bedrock as it gets, without which adoption of the Constitution itself might not have occurred. In fewer than 500 words, many of our most cherished liberties are expressed as rights to be protected. It’s a roster of instructions to government to keep out of where it doesn’t belong.

Not long ago, the late and famous trial attorney F. Lee Bailey (1933-2021) posed a poignant question to which he provided a disturbing answer: “Can any of you seriously say the Bill of Rights could get through Congress today? It wouldn’t even get out of committee!”

Bailey was likely right, which makes it even more urgent that Americans renew a learned passion for the Bill of Rights. Toward that end, I offer here a sample of thoughts in its defense:

_____
The concept that the Bill of Rights and other constitutional protections against arbitrary government are inoperative when they become inconvenient or when expediency dictates otherwise is a very dangerous doctrine and if allowed to flourish would destroy the benefit of a written Constitution and undermine the basis of our government. - Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black

Show me that age and country where the rights and liberties of the people were placed on the sole chance of their rulers being good men, without a consequent loss of liberty? - Patrick Henry
The Bill of Rights wasn’t enacted to give us any rights. It was enacted so the Government could not take away from us any rights that we already had. - Kenneth G. Eade, author

The very purpose of a Bill of Rights was to withdraw certain subjects from the vicissitudes of political controversy, to place them beyond the reach of majorities, and to establish them as legal principles to be applied by the courts. One’s right to life, liberty, and property, to free speech, a free press, freedom of worship and assembly, and other fundamental rights may not be submitted to vote; they depend on the outcome of no elections. - Robert H. Jackson, Supreme Court Justice

Education on the value of free speech and the other freedoms reserved by the Bill of Rights, about what happens when you don't have them, and about how to exercise and protect them, should be an essential prerequisite for being an American citizen — or indeed a citizen of any nation, the more so to the degree that such rights remain unprotected. If we can't think for ourselves, if we're unwilling to question authority, then we're just putty in the hands of those in power. But if the citizens are educated and form their own opinions, then those in power work for us…In the demon-haunted world that we inhabit by virtue of being human, this may be all that stands between us and the enveloping darkness." - Carl Sagan, astronomer

 "There are two ways to choke off free expression. We've already discussed one of them: clamp down on free speech and declare some topics off-limits. That strategy is straightforward enough. The other, more insidious way to limit free expression is to try to change the very language people use" - Dennis Prager, author

"Before a standing army can rule, the people must be disarmed; as they are in almost every kingdom of Europe. The supreme power in America cannot enforce unjust laws by the sword; because the whole body of the people are armed and constitute a force superior to any bands of regular troops that can be, on any pretense, raised in the United States." - Noah Webster

"The constitutions of most of our States assert, that all power is inherent in the people; that they may exercise it by themselves, … or they may act by representatives, freely and equally chosen; that it is their right and duty to be at all times armed; that they are entitled to freedom of person, freedom of religion, freedom of property, and freedom of the press." - Thomas Jefferson
"In 1942, there were 110,000 Japanese American citizens in good standing, law-abiding people who were thrown into internment camps simply because their parents were born in the wrong country. That's all they did wrong. They had no right to a lawyer, no right to a fair trial, no right to a jury of their peers no right to due process of any kind. The only right they had: "Right this way" into the internment camps! Just when these American citizens needed their rights the most, their government took them away! And rights aren’t rights if someone can take them away. They’re just privileges." - George Carlin

"The first article of the Bill of Rights provides that Congress shall make no law respecting freedom of worship or abridging freedom of opinion. There are some among us who seem to feel that this provision goes too far, even for the purpose of preventing tyranny over the mind of man. Of course, there are dangers in religious freedom and freedom of opinion. But to deny these rights is worse than dangerous, it is absolutely fatal to liberty. The external threat to liberty should not drive us into suppressing liberty at home. Those who want the Government to regulate matters of the mind and spirit are like men who are so afraid of being murdered that they commit suicide to avoid assassination." - Harry Truman

"In respect to political rights, we hold woman to be justly entitled to all we claim for man. We go farther and express our conviction that all political rights which it is expedient for man to exercise, it is equally so for women. All that distinguishes man as an intelligent and accountable being, is equally true of woman; and if that government is only just which governs by the free consent of the governed, there can be no reason in the world for denying to woman the exercise of the elective franchise, or a hand in making and administering the laws of the land. Our doctrine is, that “Right is of no sex." - Frederick Douglass

"The Bill of Rights is the United States. The United States is the Bill of Rights. Compromise the Bill of Rights and you dissolve the very foundation upon which the Union stands… Nowhere in the Bill of Rights are the words ‘unless inconvenient’ to be found." - A. E. Samaan, historian


For additional information, see:
Rights and Non-Rights: Distinguishing the Two by Lawrence W. Reed

Historic Figures Who Recognized that Speech is Freedom’s First Line of Defense by Lawrence W. Reed

The Holiday That Isn’t by Lawrence W. Reed

George Mason: Father of the Bill of Rights by Raymond Polin

The Bill of Rights is America’s Bulwark Against Government Overreach by Gary Galles

Mercy Otis Warren: Conscience of Great Causes by Lawrence W. Reed

Crafty_Dog

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ET: Gorsuch
« Reply #1665 on: December 27, 2021, 02:26:46 AM »
Justice Neil Gorsuch: Religious Freedom’s New Champion
Rob Natelson
Rob Natelson
 December 26, 2021 Updated: December 26, 2021 biggersmaller Print
Commentary

Eight of the nine Supreme Court justices are Catholics or Jews—groups historically victimized by religious discrimination. Yet the court’s emerging leader in defending religious freedom is its only mainline Protestant.

Some see Neil Gorsuch, nominated by former President Donald Trump to succeed the late Justice Antonin Scalia, as Scalia’s natural successor: Both were or are highly intelligent, very well educated, generally (but not purely) originalist in constitutional interpretation, and eloquent writers. But Gorsuch, the Episcopalian, is showing himself even more dedicated to religious freedom than Scalia, the committed Catholic.

No doubt there were earlier indications of this side of Gorsuch, but they have come to the fore in the current pandemic. It’s a good time for that side to show itself, because in public emergencies, constitutional rights often are shunted aside. Indeed, in this emergency the federal judiciary’s record of defending constitutional rights has been mixed at best.

But Gorsuch’s record has been anything but mixed. When his fellow justices defend religious liberty only tepidly, Gorsuch’s concurring opinions stake out stronger positions. When his colleagues do not defend religious liberty at all, he dissents.

Gorsuch Opposes Anti-Religious Pandemic Orders
On Nov. 25, 2020, the justices issued their opinion in Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo (pdf). The Diocese and an Orthodox Jewish congregation had sued to void then-New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s severe capacity restrictions on houses of worship. The plaintiffs won, but only by a bare 5–4 majority.

Gorsuch penned a concurring opinion pointing out how Cuomo’s order—like those in many other states—both discriminated against communities of faith and privileged secularism. Here is a sample:

At the same time, the Governor has chosen to impose no capacity restrictions on certain businesses he considers “essential.” And it turns out the businesses the Governor considers essential include hardware stores, acupuncturists, and liquor stores. Bicycle repair shops, certain signage companies, accountants, lawyers, and insurance agents are all essential too. So, at least according to the Governor, it may be unsafe to go to church, but it is always fine to pick up another bottle of wine, shop for a new bike, or spend the afternoon exploring your distal points and meridians. Who knew public health would so perfectly align with secular convenience? …

Even if the Constitution has taken a holiday during this pandemic, it cannot become a sabbatical.

In another part of his opinion, Gorsuch took on the judiciary’s uncritical reliance on Jacobson v. Massachusetts (pdf). Jacobson is the 1905 Supreme Court mandatory vaccination case that many cite improperly to justify dictatorial pandemic powers.

Gorsuch Defends Religions Favoring Traditional Marriage
On June 17, 2021, the Supreme Court issued Fulton v. Philadelphia (pdf). This was not a pandemic case. Rather, religious organizations had sued the City of Philadelphia over a policy of discriminating against religions that reject same-sex marriage. The justices unanimously struck down the policy.

However, the court’s decision in Fulton was a flimsy one, because it allowed the city to continue discriminating merely by changing one of its paper forms. Gorsuch’s concurring opinion (joined by Justices Thomas and Alito) pointed out how flimsy the court’s decision was. Gorsuch also called for overruling Employment Division v. Smith (pdf), a 1990 precedent he believes insufficiently protects religious freedom. Scalia had written the opinion for the court in Smith. Gorsuch’s concurrence was gracious enough to cite one of Scalia’s writings even while asking the court to overrule Scalia.

Gorsuch’s Fulton concurrence, like many of his opinions, featured some witticisms, such as “Trailblazing through the Philadelphia city code turns out to be no walk in the park”… “playing along with this statutory shell game.”

Gorsuch Pushes Back Against A Biased Vax Mandate
In John Does 1-3 v. Mills (pdf), issued on Oct. 29, SCOTUS refused to review a Maine state order that heath care workers be vaccinated, irrespective of religious objections. The objections were based on the fact that all three vaccines were developed using material from aborted children. (I suspect the vaccines’ connection to abortion is one reason so many “progressives” want everyone vaccinated—so that everyone’s complicit.)

Gorsuch, again joined by Thomas and Alito, dissented. He contended that Maine’s order flunked even the standard set by Scalia in the Smith case. He finished his dissent this way:

This case presents an important constitutional question, a serious error, and an irreparable injury. Where many other States have adopted religious exemptions, Maine has charted a different course. There, healthcare workers who have served on the front line of a pandemic for the last 18 months are now being fired and their practices shuttered. All for adhering to their constitutionally protected religious beliefs. Their plight is worthy of our attention. I would grant relief.

Gorsuch Calls Out Hochul’s Bigotry
New York’s new governor, Kathy Hochul, has proved even less tolerant than her immediate predecessor. Cuomo had planned to include a religious exemption in his order mandating vaccinations for health care workers, but Hochul deleted it. The final order permitted exemptions for medical reasons but not for religious reasons. Furthermore, Hochul amended New York regulations so that any fired religious dissenter would be denied unemployment benefits as well.

The case of Dr. A v. Hochul (pdf) challenged these actions. But on Dec. 13, SCOTUS declined to intervene.

Thomas, Alito, and Gorsuch all dissented, saying they would have taken the case. Gorsuch’s dissent described the bigotry motivating Hochul’s order:

Governor Hochul acknowledged that “we left off [the religious exemption] in our regulations intentionally.” … Asked why, the Governor answered that there is no “sanctioned religious exemption from any organized religion” and that organized religions are “encouraging the opposite.” …  Apparently contemplating Catholics who object to receiving a vaccine, Governor Hochul added that “everybody from the Pope on down is encouraging people to get vaccinated.” …

Speaking to a different audience, the Governor elaborated: “How can you believe that God would give a vaccine that would cause you harm? That is not truth. Those are just lies out there on social media.”

Hochul apparently doesn’t know that fallible man, not infallible God, made the vaccine. Gorsuch continued:

The day before the mandate went into effect, Governor Hochul again expressed her view that religious objections to COVID–19 vaccines are theologically flawed: “All of you, yes, I know you’re vaccinated, you’re the smart ones, but you know there’s people out there who aren’t listening to God and what God wants. You know who they are.”

Under the Supreme Court’s precedents, Hochul’s deliberate targeting of a religious minority should have been grounds for immediately quashing her order. Gorsuch commented on the court’s abdication of responsibility:

The Free Exercise Clause [of the First Amendment] protects not only the right to hold unpopular religious beliefs inwardly and secretly. It protects the right to live out those beliefs publicly in “the performance of (or abstention from) physical acts.” …

Today, we do not just fail the applicants. We fail ourselves. It is among our Nation’s proudest boasts that, “f there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in [matters of] religion.” West Virginia State Bd. of Ed. v. Barnette, 319 U. S. 624, 642 (1943). In this country, “religious beliefs need not be acceptable, logical, consistent, or comprehensible to others in order to merit … protection.” Thomas v. Review Bd. of Ind. Employment Security Div., 450 U. S. 707, 714 (1981). Nor is the free exercise of religion “limited to beliefs which are shared by all of the members of a religious sect.” … Millions have fled to this country to escape persecution for their unpopular or unorthodox religious beliefs, attracted by America’s promise that “[e]very citizen here is in his own country.” …

As today’s case shows, however, sometimes our promises outrun our actions. Sometimes dissenting religious beliefs can seem strange and bewildering. In times of crisis, this puzzlement can evolve into fear and anger. It seems Governor Hochul’s thinking has followed this trajectory, and I suspect she is far from alone.

After recounting how the Supreme Court failed to protect religious freedom in a 1940 case, only to reverse itself in 1943, Gorsuch added:

Today, our Nation faces not a world war but a pandemic. Like wars, though, pandemics often produce demanding new social rules aimed at protecting collective interests—and with those rules can come fear and anger at individuals unable to conform for religious reasons. If cases like [the 1940 decision] bear any good, it is in their cautionary tale. They remind us that, in the end, it is always the failure to defend the Constitution’s promises that leads to this Court’s greatest regrets. They remind us, too, that in America, freedom to differ is not supposed to be “limited to things that do not matter much. That would be a mere shadow of freedom. The test of its substance is the right to differ as to things that touch the heart of the existing order.” … The test of this Court’s substance lies in its willingness to defend more than the shadow of freedom in the trying times, not just the easy ones. …

Still, it seems the old lessons are hard ones. … But how many more reminders do we need that “the Constitution is not to be obeyed or disobeyed as the circumstances of a particular crisis … may suggest”?

Yes, “the old lessons are the hard ones.” Time will vindicate Justice Gorsuch. And his dissent in Dr. A v. Hochul will be recognized as a masterpiece.

Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

DougMacG

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Issues Constitutional Law, Covid and mandates
« Reply #1666 on: January 09, 2022, 07:16:06 AM »
« Last Edit: January 09, 2022, 10:19:52 AM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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VA and the ERA
« Reply #1667 on: January 10, 2022, 02:21:28 AM »
VIRGINIA

Herring says Virginia can’t revoke its ratification of ERA

Issued statement just days before leaving office

BY STEPHEN DINAN THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Virginia’s legislature cannot rescind its ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution, Democratic Attorney General Mark Herring said in an opinion, acting just days before he leaves office.

Mr. Herring said the Constitution sets out procedures for ratification but is silent on revoking ratification, so it was not part of the founders’ design. He said Virginia law also only talks about ratification, not revocation.

“For the foregoing reasons, it is my opinion that Virginia cannot rescind its ratification of the ERA,” wrote Mr. Herring.

He will be replaced by Republican Jason Miyares, who has told The Washington Times he will review the state’s legal stance on the ERA.

Democrats in Virginia rushed to ratify the ERA in January 2020 after winning control of both chambers of the state’s General Assembly in elections in 2019. The state became the 38th to vote to ratify — putting the ERA over the two-thirds threshold the Constitution requires for a new amendment to be added to the founding document.

But that vote, as well as votes by Illinois and Nevada, came decades after the deadline Congress set, sparking a major constitutional conundrum that still confounds policymakers.

In addition to the deadline issue, five other states that previously ratified the ERA voted to revoke that vote — including several that acted before the original deadline for ratification. Without them, the amendment would stand at just 33 ratifications, well below the threshold.

Those issues are being fought in federal courts now, with Virginia — acting through Mr. Herring — as the lead plaintiff in the critical case. Mr. Miyares, who will soon take over, has indicated he expects that lawsuit to be dismissed.

The Equal Rights Amendment’s key text reads: “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.”

Congress submitted the amendment to the states in 1972, with a ratification deadline of 1979. Only 35 states had ratified at that point — including the several that also voted later to revoke.

Congress then passed a law to extend the deadline to 1982.

It’s unclear whether the extension is legal, much less any ratifications after that deadline. Add to that the question of revoked ratifications and the push for recognition as the 28th Amendment is fraught with complications.

The National Archives has been blocked from recognizing Virginia’s ratification vote by a federal Justice Department opinion issued during the Trump era.

The long delay between the 1972 submission and Virginia’s 2020 ratification vote also highlights other problems with the amendment, such as what the intention was. Gay rights were not part of the 1972 debate in Congress or the early ratifying states, but were front-and-center in the General Assembly when Virginia voted nearly five decades later.

Mr. Herring’s opinion came in response to a request from state Sen. Mamie E. Locke, a Democrat from Hampton.

Democrats lost control of the state House in November’s elections, but still hold the Senate, 21-19. That lessens the likelihood of a revocation, at least until after the next General Assembly elections in 2023

DougMacG

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Justice Thomas, Healthcare vaccine mandate dissent
« Reply #1668 on: January 14, 2022, 03:12:51 PM »
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/leahbarkoukis/2022/01/14/clarence-thomas-dissent-n2601851

Justices Clarence Thomas filed a dissenting opinion, which was joined by Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch, and Amy Coney Barrett.

Below are some of the most important quotes from that opinion.

1. "Here, the omnibus rule compels millions of healthcare workers to undergo an unwanted medical procedure that 'cannot be removed at the end of the shift,' In re MCP No. 165, 20 F. 4th 264, 268 (CA6 2021) (Sutton, C. J., dissenting from denial of initial hearing en banc)."

2. "The Government has not made a strong showing that this agglomeration of statutes authorizes any such rule. To start, 5 of the 15 facility-specific statutes do not authorize CMS to impose 'health and safety' regulations at all. [...] These provisions cannot support an argument based on statutory text they lack. Perhaps that is why the Government only weakly defends them as a basis for its authority."

3. "[T]he Government proposes to find virtually unlimited vaccination power, over millions of healthcare workers, in definitional provisions, a saving clause, and a provision regarding long-term care facilities’ sanitation procedures. The Government has not explained why Congress would have used these ancillary provisions to house what can only be characterized as a 'fundamental detail' of the statutory scheme. Had Congress wanted to grant CMS power to impose a vaccine mandate across all facility types, it would have done what it has done elsewhere—specifically authorize one."


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4. "If Congress had wanted to grant CMS authority to impose a nationwide vaccine mandate, and consequently alter the state-federal balance, it would have said so clearly. It did not."

5. "These cases are not about the efficacy or importance of COVID–19 vaccines. They are only about whether CMS has the statutory authority to force healthcare workers, by coercing their employers, to undergo a medical procedure they do not want and cannot undo. Because the Government has not made a strong showing that Congress gave CMS that broad authority, I would deny the stays pending appeal. I respectfully dissent."

Crafty_Dog

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Here is the health worker mandate decision
« Reply #1669 on: January 18, 2022, 02:01:21 AM »
« Last Edit: January 19, 2022, 03:33:51 PM by Crafty_Dog »


ccp

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ccp

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sec post "dark money" pressure to retire
« Reply #1672 on: January 26, 2022, 04:15:24 PM »
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2022/01/26/jcns-severino-stephen-breyer-bullied-into-retiring-by-left-wing-dark-money-groups/

does anyone understand how "dark money " works to shove out a Supreme Court Justice?

ccp

Crafty_Dog

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Re: Issues in the American Creed (Constitutional Law and related matters)
« Reply #1673 on: January 26, 2022, 06:55:31 PM »
Generally, https://www.foxnews.com/politics/dark-money-network-left-wing

Here, I'm guessing by financing the "Breyer Retire" campaign.



ccp

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Re: Issues in the American Creed (Constitutional Law and related matters)
« Reply #1675 on: January 27, 2022, 05:25:00 PM »
"I'm guessing by financing the "Breyer Retire" campaign."

I still don't get where all this anonymous money goes

to advertising
to greasing palms
to lawyers
to where ?

https://www.opensecrets.org/news/2022/01/breyers-supreme-court-vacancy-even-more-dark-money-2022-midterm-elections/

Does freedom of speech/where money is spent  guarantee anonymity of speech?


Crafty_Dog

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Re: Issues in the American Creed (Constitutional Law and related matters)
« Reply #1676 on: January 27, 2022, 05:36:33 PM »
Right of you to identify this question.

Crafty_Dog

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Justice Thomas' wife
« Reply #1677 on: January 31, 2022, 12:21:25 PM »
Critics say Ginni Thomas’s activism is a Supreme Court conflict. Under court rules, only her husband can decide if that’s true.

Ginni Thomas, left, signed a letter in December criticizing the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol — just one month before her husband, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, right, ruled on a key matter involving the committee's probe. That vote has led some critics to again demand stricter rules for recusals on the court. (Patrick Semansky/AP)
By Michael Kranish
Today at 6:00 a.m. EST



Ginni Thomas’s name stood out among the signatories of a December letter from conservative leaders, which blasted the work of the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection as “overtly partisan political persecution.”

One month later, her husband, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas took part in a case crucial to the same committee’s work: former president Donald Trump’s request to block the committee from getting White House records that were ordered released by President Biden and two lower courts.

Thomas was the only justice to say he would grant Trump’s request.

That vote has reignited fury among Justice Thomas’s critics, who say it illustrates a gaping hole in the court’s rules: Justices essentially decide for themselves whether they have a conflict of interest, and Thomas has rarely made such a choice in his three decades on the court.

“I absolutely do believe that Clarence Thomas should have recused from the Jan. 6 case,” said Gabe Roth, executive director of Fix the Court, a nonpartisan advocacy group, who called the Supreme Court “the most powerful, least accountable, institution in Washington.”

While the Supreme Court is supposed to operate under regulations guiding all federal judges, including a requirement that a justice “shall disqualify himself in any proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned,” there’s no procedure to enforce that rule. Each justice can decide whether to recuse, and there is no way to appeal a Supreme Court member’s failure to do so.

Unlike in lower courts, there is no other judge that can step in, and thus a recusal by one justice would mean considering the case with only eight justices, increasing the chance it could not be resolved.


Thomas, 73, has recused himself 32 times in the last 28 years, mostly on petitions never granted by the court, according to research by Roth’s group. (He recused himself more often in his first two years on the court, due partly to conflicts with his previous employment.) He has recused himself in a family matter, sitting out a case involving a college that his son attended. But Thomas has never bowed out of a case due to alleged conflicts with his wife’s activism, according to Roth.

Ginni Thomas has long been one of the nation’s most outspoken conservatives. During her husband’s time on the Supreme Court, she has run organizations designed to activate right-wing networks, worked for Republicans in Congress, harshly criticized Democrats who she said were trying to make the country “ungovernable,” and handed out awards to those who agree with her agenda. Ginni Thomas also worked closely with the Trump administration and met with the president, and has come under fire over messages praising Jan. 6 crowds before the attack on the Capitol. In a number of instances, her activism has overlapped with cases that have been decided by Clarence Thomas.

Supreme Court allows release of Trump's Jan. 6 records
On Jan. 19, the Supreme Court rejected former president Donald Trump’s request to withhold records from the House committee investigating the Capitol attack. (Reuters)
Thomas’s vote in the Jan. 6 case is such a striking conflict of interest, critics say, that some hope it sparks further support for long-sputtering efforts to toughen rules governing the justices — an effort bolstered by a White House commission last month that noted the inherent problem with court’s recusals.


“It doesn’t get more partisan than sending a letter to the Republican caucus” criticizing the Jan. 6 committee, said Rep. Hank Johnson (D-Ga.), author of several bills that would require an independent review to determine when Supreme Court justices should recuse. He said in an interview that Clarence Thomas’s conflicts with his wife’s work make him “the poster child” for passing the ethics legislation.

However, some scholars said Clarence Thomas had no reason to recuse in cases such as the Jan. 6 decision. Louis J. Virelli III, the author of “Disqualifying the High Court: Supreme Court Recusal and the Constitution,” said in an interview that a spouse’s ideological position alone is no reason for a justice to recuse.

“Ginni Thomas is not a party to the case, nor is her organization as I understand it, so the fact that his spouse would prefer one outcome in the case is not in and of itself disqualifying,” Virelli said. He also said he did not believe it would be constitutional for Congress to impose a “recusal mandate” on the Supreme Court.


Caroline Fredrickson, a Georgetown University law professor who served on the White House commission, said that she could think of no precedent for Justice Thomas’s decision to rule on issues closely linked to his wife’s activism.

“In every case that has come up, he has shown no interest in recusal and has in fact seemingly been defiant,” Fredrickson said. “To be a Supreme Court justice and to be married to a firebrand activist who’s trying to blow things up” is unique. “It’s so out of bounds that if it weren’t so frightening, it would be comical.”

Fredrickson said that while Thomas theoretically is supposed to recuse himself when there is a perceived conflict, “there’s no binding mechanism” to enforce it. “It’s sort of the honor system, it depends on their own evaluation. … It’s kind of crazy. They’re supposed to be responsible for keeping us all on the right side of the law. And in fact, they don’t have any responsibilities themselves.”


But Michael Ramsey, who also served on the White House commission and is a former clerk for conservative justice Antonin Scalia, said he saw no reason for Clarence Thomas to recuse in the Jan. 6 case. “If Justice Thomas says he is not influenced by his wife, I believe him,” Ramsey said in an interview.

Ginni and Clarence Thomas, and a Supreme Court spokesperson, did not respond to a request for comment.

Neither Clarence nor Ginni Thomas appear to have spoken publicly about his stance on recusals related to her work, but in the past he has batted back criticisms of his objectivity. Amid demands that he recuse himself from an Obamacare case in 2011, Thomas said critics “seem bent on undermining” the court.

In a recording obtained by Politico at the time, he said his wife gave “24/7 every day in defense of liberty,” and that “there is a price to pay today for standing in defense of your Constitution.”


Ginni Thomas, who served as an attorney for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, met Clarence — then the head of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission — on lunch date in 1986, and they were married the following year. Four years later, Clarence Thomas survived tumultuous nomination hearings and began serving on the Supreme Court.

Ginni Thomas, already known for her conservative activism, eventually went to work for House Majority Leader Richard K. Armey (R-Tex.). She pushed back against Democratic complaints that there was a conflict of interest between her work and her husband’s Supreme Court rulings, telling the Wall Street Journal that “You really are seeing with Supreme Court or congressional spouses an evolution” in the roles men and women play.

The first major case that drew national attention to that potential conflict came in 2000, when the fate of the presidential campaign between Republican George W. Bush and Democrat Al Gore came before the Supreme Court. At the time, Ginni Thomas was working with the Heritage Foundation to recommend people for jobs within a possible Bush administration. Some Democrats called for Clarence Thomas to recuse himself from hearing the case that would decide the presidency, but Ginni Thomas told the New York Times at the time that “There is no conflict” and that she rarely discussed cases with her husband.


It was a pivotal, historic moment, and Gore faced a decision that would set the tone for politicians dealing with the court for years. Pressed by his aides about whether to call out the perception of the conflict, Gore instead instructed his deputy campaign manager Mark Fabiani to issue a statement that said, “The vice president has the highest regard for the independent judiciary, so we’re not going to comment on the various questions that have been raised.”

Thomas then joined with the 5-4 majority that ruled for Bush.

Today, Fabiani looks back and sees Gore’s faith in the independence of the judiciary as a turning point in history.

“It’s an attitude that, today, seems positively quaint,” Fabiani told The Washington Post in an email. “I wish we had objected more vigorously to the Vice President’s high-minded advice … Ginni Thomas’ claim in 2000 that she doesn’t talk to her husband about Supreme Court business now seems laughable. Is there a single opinion that Justice Thomas has ever written that is inconsistent with his wife’s far right-wing views?”


Gore did not respond to a request for comment.

In 2011, a group of 74 House Democrats wrote a letter to Clarence Thomas urging that he recuse himself from ruling on whether to uphold the Affordable Care Act, known as Obamacare. The letter noted that Ginni Thomas had received $686,589 between 2003 and 2007 from the conservative Heritage Foundation, which opposed the health care law. (Clarence Thomas had not disclosed the source of her income, as required; he was not required to disclose to amount of her earnings.) In addition, the letter said Ginni Thomas received an undisclosed salary from a nonprofit group she ran called Liberty Central that received undisclosed donations, which was made possible by Clarence Thomas’s vote with the 5-4 majority in the Citizens United case.

Clarence Thomas did not heed the request from House Democrats and he did not recuse in the 2012 case that upheld Obamacare. He was in the minority in that 5-4 decision. (Republicans had also called on Justice Elena Kagan to recuse from ruling on Obamacare, due to her work as solicitor general in the Obama administration — but she also remained on the case and voted to uphold the law.)

Ginni Thomas later founded Liberty Consulting, which she still operates. Her website does not list clients but provides a list of conservative charities that she supports, and says she speaks to “activist groups around the country.”

Ginni Thomas has reveled in her role as one of the nation’s leading right-wing activists, saying that conservatives must not “be complicit as the left moves its forces across our country.”

The Post reported in 2018 that she shared a post that accused Democrats of committing fraud in the midterms. She claimed that students who campaigned for gun control after surviving the mass shooting at a Parkland, Fla., high school were “dangerous to the survival of our nation.” She claimed President Barack Obama wiretapped Trump.

She wrote to officials in Clifton, Va., in 2020 urging that they take down a Black Lives Matter banner, saying “Let’s not be tricked into joining cause with radical extremists seeking to foment a cultural revolution because they hate America.”

When Ginni Thomas interviewed her husband in 2018 for a video produced by the Daily Caller News Foundation and featured on the conservative website the Daily Signal, he told his wife that being a justice “would be impossible without you. I have to be honest. It’s sort of like, how do you run with one leg? You can’t.” He also pushed back against those who suggested he should rule a certain way because he is Black. “As a judge you don’t get to be on one team or the other. You have to think independently in order to live up to the oath that you take.”

Ginni Thomas, in recent years, cultivated close ties to the Trump administration and other Republican leaders — an arrangement that critics say has created a number of potential conflicts for her husband.

In 2019, Ginni Thomas gave what she called an “Impact Award” to then-Rep. Mark Meadows (R-N.C.), who co-founded the Freedom Caucus, a group of hard-right Republicans in the House. In accepting the award, Meadows, who later became Trump’s chief of staff, told the audience he had “teamed up” with Ginni Thomas to combat charges against Trump in the first impeachment trial.

Meadows has refused to comply with a subpoena from the Jan. 6 committee, leading the committee to refer the matter to the Justice Department for possible prosecution — a matter that could wind up before the Supreme Court. Meadows could not be reached for comment.

Advocates have also said potential conflicts may extend to people who work with Ginni Thomas and file amicus “friend of the court” briefs. The New Yorker earlier this year detailed how the Center for Security Policy, run by Frank Gaffney, paid Ginni Thomas’s company for consulting services; tax returns reviewed by The Post show the center paid $101,500 in 2017 and $134,500 in 2018 for consulting.

Gaffney and others filed an amicus brief in 2017 supporting Trump’s travel restrictions on people from Muslim-dominated countries. The court upheld the restrictions by a 5-4 vote, with Clarence Thomas in the majority.

“We know that she has been a paid consultant to groups that have submitted these briefs before the court,” Johnson, the Georgia congressman, said.

Gaffney did not respond to a request for comment.

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), who said that amicus briefs have flooded the Supreme Court in an effort to sway justices, has introduced legislation that would require those who file such briefs to disclose the source of the financing.

“They're not even at the point of letting the parties and themselves and the public know who's really behind the amicus front groups,” Whitehouse said in an interview.

Ginni Thomas has worked closely with the Trump administration on an array of matters, leading a group of conservative activists who met at the White House with the president, and going to the White House to celebrate his acquittal in his first impeachment trial. Her actions on Jan. 6, 2021, have also drawn scrutiny.

Hours before the attack on the Capitol, she celebrated the crowd at the “Save America” rally on the Ellipse, where Trump and others made baseless claims that the election had been stolen. She urged people to tune into C-SPAN “for what Congress does starting at 1:00 p.m. today. LOVE MAGA people,” referring to Trump’s slogan, “Make America Great Again.” In a subsequent post, she wrote, “GOD BLESS EACH OF YOU STANDING UP OR PRAYING.”

After the protesters stormed the Capitol, Ginni Thomas updated her post to note that it was written before the violence. She later wrote a message to a group of about 120 people who had clerked for her husband, suggesting that she would refrain from inserting herself in such divisive political matters.

“I owe you all an apology. I have likely imposed on you my lifetime passions,” she wrote. “My passions and beliefs are likely shared with the bulk of you, but certainly not all. And sometimes the smallest matters can divide loved ones for too long.”

In the wake of that apology, reported last year by The Post, she wrote, “Let’s pledge to not let politics divide THIS family, and learn to speak more gently and knowingly across the divide.”

Nonetheless, months later, Ginni Thomas inserted herself into one of the most fraught political issues of the moment: the investigation into what led to the insurrection.

She was among a group called the Conservative Action Project who signed a Dec. 15, 2021, letter to House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) decrying the probe. The letter said that the two Republicans on the panel, Reps. Liz Cheney (Wyo.) and Adam Kinzinger (Ill.), should be removed as members of the House Republican Caucus, complaining that the committee put out “improperly issued subpoenas and other investigatory tactics designed not to pursue any valid legislative end, but merely to exploit for the sake of political harassment and demagoguery.”

Eight days later, Trump’s lawyers asked the Supreme Court to stop White House records from his administration from being turned over to the congressional committee. “Congress may not rifle through the confidential presidential papers of a former President to meet political objectives,” the filing said.

Meadows, the self-described teammate of Ginni Thomas, filed an amicus brief in support of Trump’s request.

On Jan. 19, the Supreme Court rejected the request. Clarence Thomas, the lone justice to say he would have sided with Trump, did not explain his reasoning.

Alice Crites and Robert Barnes contributed to this report.

DougMacG

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Re: Justice Thomas' wife
« Reply #1678 on: January 31, 2022, 02:17:51 PM »
I have 100% confidence in the integrity and independence of Justice Thomas, but admit this bothers me when it happens on the other side.  cf. Nancy Pelosi's husband.

ccp

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Constitution not a living and breathing document
« Reply #1679 on: February 04, 2022, 04:10:52 PM »
is what she said

but huffpost pajama boy who labels her extremist as well as the guy who sleeps with Chinese spies
purposely misinterpret what she says

https://www.yahoo.com/news/lawmakers-rip-rep-lauren-boebert-090414931.html

has anyone heard MSM label Omar AOC etc as an "extremist"




ccp

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Re: Issues in the American Creed (Constitutional Law and related matters)
« Reply #1680 on: February 25, 2022, 07:19:18 AM »
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ketanji_Brown_Jackson

Harvard grad AGAIN

is there no one else
besides havard yale?

8 of the 9 justices from harvard / yale

there is something wrong with this imho




ccp

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repubs blocking biden nominees
« Reply #1681 on: March 08, 2022, 08:18:52 AM »
https://thefederalist.com/2022/03/08/republicans-are-successfully-blocking-biden-nominees-and-his-scotus-nominee-could-be-next/

I have not read this in detail
they repubs must be doing this during Graham's br breaks

ccp

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SCOTUS: State Supreme Courts NOT State legislators can pick Congress. maps
« Reply #1682 on: March 09, 2022, 05:51:11 AM »
http://republicbrief.com/scotus-announcement-causes-major-problems-for-gop/

as thought Supreme Courts are impartial  :roll:

like they were in the '20 election with voting laws ignored

ccp

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A look at Ketanji Brown
« Reply #1683 on: March 16, 2022, 09:44:19 AM »
https://www.heritage.org/courts/commentary/look-ketanji-brown-jacksons-most-noteworthy-judicial-decisions

what we do know seems partisan activist to me

no surprise

Dems never make the same mistakes repubs do in picking justices

DougMacG

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Re: A look at Ketanji Brown
« Reply #1684 on: March 16, 2022, 11:02:36 AM »
https://www.heritage.org/courts/commentary/look-ketanji-brown-jacksons-most-noteworthy-judicial-decisions
what we do know seems partisan activist to me
no surprise
Dems never make the same mistakes repubs do in picking justices

Yes, partisan activist.  No real paper trail as an appellate judge.  Will she be a great Justice?  No one can know.  Does she meet minimum requirements of background?  Yes.  But this is not Amy Coney Barrett.

Is she the most qualified candidate available?  Of course not.  She was picked by first eliminating most alternatives with litmus tests:
1. Black
2. Women
3. Stated litmus test on Roe v Wade
4. Age
5. Inexperience, lack of a cross examinable paper trail.

If I were a Senator, the above unacceptable preconditions means I start with a no vote, this is not the best possible constitutional pick, and let her prove otherwise which is impossible.  To just say she will be impartial and call "balls and strikes" is no longer credible; it is to copy what others said before her and didn't do.

The confirmation comes down to the opinion of a few R's, the usual suspects, and Joe Manchin.  (Did he switch parties yet, or does he like representing a fossil fuel state while his party freezes and starves us away from abundant resources).

If this is to be the first appointment of a black woman to the Court, Joe Biden owes us Janice Rogers Brown.  Oh wait, Joe says 'she ain't black!'

DougMacG

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Re: Issues in the American Creed (Constitutional Law and related matters)
« Reply #1685 on: March 23, 2022, 07:05:28 AM »
Jackson looks like a weak nominee to me.  Of course it's hard to wow people when your objective is to hide your views.  Picked because she's a woman, she doesn't know what a woman is - or when life begins - or that we are a constitutional republic, not a democracy. A lifetime as an abortion advocate and never contemplated when life begins, that's depth!

In terms of sharpness and clarity, she is the opposite of Amy Coney Barrett.

She may be a predictable vote for the political left but not a Justice who strongly influences others.

Looks like she is the placeholder. 'Law clerks' directed by the cabal that runs Biden and the country will write her opinions. So much for separation of powers.
 -------

Katie Pavolich:
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/katiepavlich/2022/03/23/judge-jacksons-failure-to-define-woman-met-with-calls-for-disqualification-n2604924

If she isn't the best person for this job, I wouldn't hesitate to vote against her but it will be hard to find a weaker voice for the Left to take this seat.
  - - - - - - -
I'm more worried about Clarence Thomas.
https://www.cbsnews.com/amp/news/clarence-thomas-hospitalized-supreme-court-flu-not-covid/



Crafty_Dog

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WSJ: Good Separation of Powers Decision
« Reply #1688 on: March 27, 2022, 12:34:45 AM »
An Assist to the Supreme Court in Restoring the Separation of Powers
A judge moves the ball on presidential control over federal agencies.
By The Editorial Board
Follow
March 24, 2022 7:04 pm ET


A major judicial project of the coming years should be reasserting the separation of powers as properly understood in the U.S. Constitution. A small, but perhaps consequential, step in that direction arrived March 18 in a federal court ruling against the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC).

Federal Judge Jeremy Kernodle ruled that a Congressional restriction on the President’s power to remove members of the CPSC is unconstitutional (Consumers’ Research and By Two LP v. CPSC). The plaintiffs are education companies that were denied fee waivers for Freedom of Information Act requests by the CPSC.

In their claim for relief they also included that the CPSC’s structure violates the Constitution “by insulating the commissioners from presidential removal.” Judge Kernodle agreed, and his reasoning could move the law on independent federal agencies another step toward proper Presidential control.

The Founders vested all executive power in a single President for political accountability. But in the 20th century Congress eroded that unitary control by establishing independent agencies (the SEC, FTC, etc.). The Supreme Court blessed the arrangement far too readily, most famously in a misbegotten 1935 case known as Humphrey’s Executor that said Congress could limit the President’s ability to fire agency commissioners.

The Supreme Court has chipped away at Humphrey’s Executor in recent years, notably in cases involving single directors at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and Federal Housing Finance Agency. President Biden took advantage of both cases by forcing the directors appointed by President Trump to resign.

Judge Kernodle has now ruled that the same logic applies to an agency such as the CPSC that is governed by multiple (five) commissioners. We’ll spare you the arcane legal details, but suffice to say the opinion is a logical extension of recent Supreme Court rulings. It is likely to be upheld by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court if the Biden Administration chooses to appeal.

In that event Humphrey’s Executor would be hollowed out enough to be a dead letter even if it isn’t formally overturned as a precedent. Such a decision would also further isolate Morrison v. Olson (1988) as the bastard child of constitutional law. Morrison upheld the independent counsel statute and was the cause of Antonin Scalia’s greatest dissent.

Judge Kernodle’s ruling won’t have large immediate policy consequences because he didn’t rule that all CPSC decisions are invalid even if the agency is improperly structured. But his opinion is significant for assisting the Supreme Court’s effort to return Congress, the executive branch and the judiciary to their proper constitutional lanes.

The Court may soon pare back its doctrines of Auer and Chevron judicial deference to administrative agencies, which might cause Congress to write clearer laws. The Justices are also more forcefully applying their “major questions” doctrine to scrutinize agency decisions such as the vaccine mandate. Kudos to Judge Kernodle for lighting the constitutional way forward.

ccp

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what about Supreme Court nominees who lie to get onto the Bench
« Reply #1689 on: March 27, 2022, 09:57:40 AM »

pretends to be an originalist when everything in their history says they are not:

some good points:


https://www.nationalreview.com/2022/03/ketanji-brown-jackson-closet-originalist/

G M

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Re: what about Supreme Court nominees who lie to get onto the Bench
« Reply #1690 on: March 27, 2022, 12:53:13 PM »

pretends to be an originalist when everything in their history says they are not:

some good points:


https://www.nationalreview.com/2022/03/ketanji-brown-jackson-closet-originalist/

They are a cancer, killing us from the inside.



Crafty_Dog

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How the Founding Fathers bridged gap between pro and anti Federalists
« Reply #1692 on: March 30, 2022, 06:06:50 AM »
How dead French aristocrat helped Framers create Constitution

Bridging gap between Federalists, Anti-Federalists

By Aaron S. Van Allen

Editor’s note: This is one in a series examining the Constitution and Federalist Papers in today’s America.

In considering the Constitution, it is essential to remember that there were two factions involved in the discussion — the Federalists, who prioritized liberalism, and Anti-Federalists, who prioritized democracy — and one dead French aristocrat and political philosopher who helped them both find their way.

One should not freight the term “liberalism” with a 21stcentury connotation. During the Age of Enlightenment, particularly within 18th-century America, liberalism carried multiple definitions dependent upon the interpreter. In this setting, “liberalism” means simply a system of government that protects the rights of the individual. Democracy, supported by the Anti-Federalists, is fairly self-explanatory. The question with which the Framers grappled was how to create a system of government balancing democracy and liberalism.

The question is more complicated than it initially appears. In ancient Greece, particularly Athens, there was plenty of democracy, but no liberalism. One need only reference Socrates and his ultimate demise as evidence of that. In Great Britain, liberalism wholeheartedly existed, but there was a deficiency of democracy.

The Federalists and Anti-Federalists both agreed the answer was federalism: a system of government where powers are divided among a national, centralized government and regional, state governments. Do not mistake the term “Anti-Federalist” as being anti-federalism; this is an unfortunate misconception. The Anti-Federalists merely disagreed with the Federalist plan on the type of federalism initially suggested at the Constitutional Convention.

Anti-Federalists believed that democracy could exist only on a small scale. Thinking about Plutarch’s Athens, or Rousseau’s Geneva, one finds validity in that belief.

For this reason, Anti-Federalists were vocally opposed to Federalist assertion of the necessity of “extending” the democratic sphere. The Anti-Federalists believed that the extension of a pure democracy eventually would give rise to a tyrannical, centralized government — whether formulated in a despotic executive or an overly powerful legislature.

For their part, Federalists believed that democratic institutions, organized on a local spectrum, would lead to a nation divided: my country Virginia, my country Massachusetts, etc. Consequently, they favored a centralized government that would be the glue holding the smaller, democratic institutions of the states together as a unifi ed nation.

Enter Charles Louis de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu — a French aristocrat who had died in 1755 — and his political treatise “The Spirit of the Laws.”

The Anti-Federalists admired Montesquieu and referenced Books (chapters) I-IX as the basis of their ideas about the primacy of democracy. The Federalists admired him as well and focused on Book XI as their guide with respect to liberalism and creating durable institutions that protect political liberty.

Influenced by Montesquieu, James Madison and the Framers created the first layer of separation of powers: federalism. The centralized government would act to hold the union together and protect individual liberties while not overly infringing upon the rights and authorities of the individual states.

It is federalism that provides the balance, that protects individual liberty while representative democracy administratively and more efficiently operates on a smaller scale within the states. The Federalists acknowledged that each state personifies different cultures — and that was to be respected. The responsibility of the federal government was to protect an individual’s right to privacy and property — not create a national culture, dialogue, etc. That responsibility was given to the states.

Montesquieu was not done contributing to the young republic yet. In addition to separating powers between levels of government, he advocated separating powers within levels of government.

Madison and the Framers ultimately wanted to construct a federalism in which the national government would not become tyrannical upon the states and in which the whims and emotions of those represented within the smaller democracies of the states would not result in an overly tyrannical federal government. Consequently, they also adopted Montesquieu’s idea of separation of the powers within the national government.

The political authority of the federal government is divided into the legislative (Article I), executive (Article II) and judicial (Article III) branches of government. Montesquieu proposed that these branches should be separate and independent from the others to effectively and efficiently defend the liberty of the body politic.

Furthermore, and solely through separation of powers, checks and balances find their port of origin. The separate, independent branches perform checks on the others to ensure, again, one does not become tyrannical.

Madison explains in Federalist 48 : “It will not be denied, that power is of an encroaching nature, and that it ought to be effectually restrained from passing the limits assigned to it. After discriminating, therefore, in theory, the several classes of power, as they may in their nature be legislative, executive or judiciary, the next and most difficult task is to provide some practical security for each, against the invasion of the others.”

Without Montesquieu’s ideas on how democracy can be protected by federalism and tyranny checked by separation of powers within a national government, it is entirely possible that the Federalists and Anti-Federalists may not have been able to bridge their substantial differences and create our national Constitution.


• Aaron S. Van Allen is an adjunct professor of Government at Liberty Universit

ccp

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bipartisan approval!!!
« Reply #1693 on: March 30, 2022, 10:46:47 AM »

ccp

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SCOTUS 8:1 vote
« Reply #1694 on: April 21, 2022, 10:22:44 AM »
https://www.yahoo.com/money/u-supreme-court-declines-extend-142820098.html

of course the MSM headline is designed

to invoke immediate anger for the heartless mostly conservative SCOTUS in hurting the poor the elderly
blah blah blah

Certainly also telling is the expected lone dissent ........





DougMacG

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Re: Issues in the American Creed (Constitutional Law and related matters)
« Reply #1696 on: May 03, 2022, 09:00:56 AM »
From Justice Byron White's Roe dissent:

"Decisions that find in the constitution
principles and values that cannot fairly be read into that document
usurp the people's authority.'

P.41 of the draft.

DougMacG

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Re: Constitutional Law, Alito draft opinion strikes down Roe
« Reply #1697 on: May 03, 2022, 09:31:17 AM »
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/05/02/read-justice-alito-initial-abortion-opinion-overturn-roe-v-wade-pdf-00029504

98 pages.

Some observations as I read it:
1.  Crafty already mentioned, the leaking of it is a horrible breach of the Court and breach of trust.
2. It is authentic.  No saboteur could fake reasoning this thorough and sound.
3.  The document leaked is labeled Justice Alito's first draft dated Feb 10, probably circulated to the other Justices intended to sign on with it.  Maybe it got circulated to all the Justices, because those writing dissents need to know what is in the ruling they are dissenting.
4.  IMHO it has Justice Amy Coney Barrett's hand all over it.  Better to let the more senior J. Alito author and take ownership of the opinion than such a recent (Trump) appointee.
5.  The thoroughness and complete workability of this is designed to settle the matter (meaning return it to the states). 
6.  In the end, it returns the matter to the states where such a contentious matter belongs.  It does not pretend to know, decide or define life, potential life, viability, due or undue burden or anything else.  It returns those questions and issues to the people and to the states.

The ruling, if signed and approved, says:
"The constitution does not confer the right to an abortion.  Roe and Casey must be overruled, and the authority to regulate abortion must be returned to the people and their elected representatives."    - Justice Alito ruling first draft

[Doug]  How dare they return an unresolved, contentious issue to the people and their elected representatives!
-----------------
Appendix A is a history of 37 states regulating and restricting the right to an abortion prior to Roe.  In other words, it was not a widely or universally recognized right throughout this country's history that didn't happen to get enumerated in the constitution, bill of rights or further amendments.  It was not considered a right until Roe [was wrongly decided]. 

Appendix B goes further, lists states (and District of Columbia) that, in our history, banned all abortions (without judicial or constitutional challenge).

This is not a pro-life or pro-choice ruling.  They are ruling on jurisdiction.  They are ruling that there isn't a federal constitutional justification for the Court to interfere with reasonable, rational basis legislation by the states on the matter.

One last point, how come the dissent isn't leaked?
« Last Edit: May 03, 2022, 10:04:51 AM by DougMacG »

DougMacG

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Constitutional Law, WSJ, No, other rights are not threatened
« Reply #1698 on: May 06, 2022, 07:54:23 AM »
The Abortion Disinformation Campaign
Don’t believe the claims that other rights are in jeopardy if Roe v. Wade falls.
By The Editorial Board
Updated May 4, 2022 7:53 pm

First, they ban abortion. Next will be a contraception ban. Then a ban on same-sex and even interracial marriage. Soon we will all be living in “The Handmaid’s Tale.”

That’s the parade of horribles that Democrats and the media are trying to sell Americans after the leak of a draft Supreme Court opinion that would repeal a constitutional right to abortion.

If Roe v. Wade falls, it “would mean that every other decision related to the notion of privacy is thrown into question,” President Biden warned Tuesday. “Does this mean that in Florida they can decide they’re going to pass a law saying that same-sex marriage is not permissible?” If we can borrow a word he likes, the President is peddling disinformation.


The press is full of similar pearl-clutching about which precedent the Supreme Court might strike down next. Is it Obergefell (2015), which enshrined gay marriage? Griswold (1965), which overturned a state law prohibiting married couples from buying contraceptives? What about even Loving v. Virginia (1967), which guaranteed interracial marriage?

In the marriage cases, there are also what the Court calls “reliance interests” at stake. Hundreds of thousands of Americans are married to people of the same sex. The Supreme Court isn’t going to invalidate those unions and disrupt so many lives. The same goes for interracial marriage. By the way, Justice Clarence Thomas is married to a white woman.

Roe also stands apart on what Justice Alito’s opinion calls “workability” grounds. Roe has continued to inspire a mass of litigation as modified by Casey’s “undue burden” test. No one really knows what that burden is, so states bring case after case to contest it. By contrast, Obergefell, Griswold and similar rulings have not been challenged by what Justice Scalia called “give-it-a-try” litigation.

Democrats don’t want Americans to know all this because their political goal is to frighten them into believing that Justice Alito is some black-robed Pharisee bent on invading their bedrooms. It’s simply not true. Repealing Roe would merely return abortion policy to the states and democratic debate. That’s all.