Author Topic: Issues in the American Creed (Constitutional Law and related matters) SCOTUS  (Read 663574 times)

DougMacG

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Yes.  What if he came out of the bank with a suitcase filled with a million dollars and said he just robbed the bank, but it turns out the money all came from his account.  No crime.

What if he said he could shoot someone on 5th avenue and his supporters would stand by him, but he meant that shooting would be in self-defense or he wouldn't have done it.  It would be a legal, justifiable homicide.  No crime.

What if the current president called a small crowd at the White House transjester, when in fact they claim to be transgender. Wrong words, even with a tape recorder on, don't make these people transjester.
« Last Edit: June 13, 2023, 10:33:38 AM by DougMacG »

ccp

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 :-o

Doug,

you should have been a DC lawyer!

 :-o

Crafty_Dog

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"I have come around to your opinion but more because of this then your post"

Hey!!!   :-D :-D :-D

 

Crafty_Dog

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CCP:

I have ignored Newsmax but what I heard in that has me willing to reconsider.


ccp

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progs going after conservative justices
« Reply #1805 on: June 22, 2023, 05:38:03 PM »

Crafty_Dog

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Tough and very important case to lose, subtle issues
« Reply #1806 on: June 23, 2023, 12:54:16 PM »
https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/jun/23/alejandro-mayorkas-non-deportation-policy-survives/?utm_source=Boomtrain&utm_medium=subscriber&utm_campaign=newsalert&utm_content=newsalert&utm_term=newsalert&bt_ee=woGTyblYupFQeYYN3cFwtEUW71vPhelBaTOqO7OXD4EIOXh4N5DxO2N4yHrTGKC6&bt_ts=1687534730708

Mayorkas’ non-deportation policy survives Supreme Court challenge


The Supreme Court breathed new life into President Biden’s lenient immigration policies Friday, giving the Homeland Security Department tacit approval to refuse to arrest and deport illegal immigrants even where the law says it must try.

In an 8-1 ruling, the justices said Texas and Louisiana couldn’t sue to force the administration to carry out a law that requires the government to attempt to arrest, detain and deport illegal immigrants with significant criminal records.

“In sum, the States have brought an extraordinarily unusual lawsuit. They want a federal court to order the Executive Branch to alter its arrest policies so as to make more arrests,” wrote Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh in the key opinion. “Federal courts have not traditionally entertained that kind of lawsuit; indeed, the States cite no precedent for a lawsuit like this.”

The ruling’s implications stretch far beyond immigration, suggesting that federal courts can’t — or won’t — step in to police prosecution and law enforcement decisions, except in particular circumstances.

The result, warned one justice, will be presidents increasingly willing to disregard the laws passed by Congress, and lawmakers who find their only recourse to an unruly executive is impeachment.

“Relegating Congress to these disruptive measures radically alters the balance of power between Congress and the Executive, as well as the allocation of authority between the Congress that enacts a law and a later Congress that must go to war with the Executive if it wants that law to be enforced,” wrote Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr.


At issue in the case is a memo issued by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in 2021 that ordered immigration agents and officers to limit the illegal immigrants they tried to arrest and deport. No longer would being in the country illegally be sufficient grounds for deportation, and even those who did have serious criminal records also had to be considered for leniency.


Texas showed in court that because of that policy, Homeland Security was forcing it to release criminals back onto the streets.

Among them was Heriberto Fuerte-Padilla, an immigrant in the country illegally who was driving drunk in 2020 when he smashed into the car driven by a Texas teenager, killing her. He tried to flee the scene, but police caught up with him.

Homeland Security said under Mr. Mayorkas’s policy that Fuerte-Padilla wasn’t a priority for deportation, so Texas should release him into the community when he’d served his time on the state charge.

Friday’s ruling produced a complicated set of opinions.

Five justices, led by Justice Kavanaugh, said Mr. Mayorkas’s decision-making could not be questioned by Texas or the courts.

“In light of inevitable resource constraints and regularly changing public-safety and public-welfare needs, the Executive Branch must balance many factors when devising arrest and prosecution policies,” Justice Kavanaugh wrote. “That complicated balancing process in turn leaves courts without meaningful standards for assessing those policies.”

Three other members also shot down Texas’s case but on different grounds. They said there was no obvious solution a court could deliver for Texas — what’s known in legal speak as “redressability.”

Even if Mr. Mayorkas’s memo was vacated, courts can’t compel a change in the department’s behavior, Justice Neil M. Gorsuch said in a concurring opinion joined by Justices Clarence Thomas and Amy Coney Barrett.

Justice Alito said everybody got it wrong and warned that the ruling could convey an imperial power on the presidency that could only be stopped by Congress either passing a law to strip money from the president or outright impeaching him.

He compared that to an absolutist English king ignoring a law passed by parliament — something he said even the English ceased after the Glorious Revolution in the late 1600s.

Justice Kavanaugh insisted his ruling was not as wide-ranging as critics suggested. He said it applied only to arrest and prosecution decisions.

But Justice Gorsuch said there’s no way to draw that line based on the Constitution, which doesn’t include a specific prosecution power but rather charges the president with an “executive power” and a duty to make sure the laws are “faithfully executed.”

“These provisions give the President a measure of discretion over the enforcement of all federal laws, not just those that can lead to arrest and prosecution,” Justice Gorsuch said. “So if the Court means what it says about Article II, can it mean what it says about the narrowness of its holding?”

Immigrant rights advocates hailed the decision, saying it frees Mr. Biden to pursue a gentler policy.

“This is a victory for common sense over chaos and a blow against Republicans’ reliance on the anti-immigrant judicial pipeline,” said David Leopold, a former president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association.

He suggested the ruling could also be used against GOP state challenges to the DACA program for illegal immigrants who came to the U.S. as youths.

Andrew “Art” Arthur, a former immigration judge and congressional aide responsible for crafting immigration laws, said the ruling upends immigration law.

“What this decision effectively does is it takes immigration decisions out of the hands of Congress, where the Constitution has placed them, and effectively places it in the hands of the executive branch,” said Mr. Arthur, who is now with the Center for Immigration Studies.

Mr. Arthur said another administration with differing ideological beliefs from the Biden administration could cite the court’s ruling in refusing to pursue prosecutions of environmental law or income tax payments.

In issuing its ruling, the high court may be trying to replace a lid on a Pandora’s Box it opened in 2007 with Massachusetts v. EPA, a case that found a state could sue to force the administration to take action based on speculative claims of damage from future climate change.

That ruling has been cited in subsequent cases as giving states the power to bring lawsuits to force presidential action on everything from environmental policy to immigration.

In Friday’s decision, the majority said in a footnote that the Massachusetts case was different.

Justice Alito, in his dissent, said that was a skimpy way to brush aside a crucial precedent.

“So rather than answering questions about this case, the majority’s footnote on Massachusetts raises more questions about Massachusetts itself — most importantly, has this monumental decision been quietly interred?” Justice Alito said.

===============================

https://www.theepochtimes.com/supreme-court-rules-states-cant-challenge-biden-deportation-policy_5351742.html

The Supreme Court ruled 8–1 on June 23 that Texas and Louisiana may not challenge the Biden administration’s 2021 decision to focus its deportation efforts on individuals deemed to be a threat to public safety.

The new, complex decision allows the government’s selective immigration enforcement policy, which had been blocked by a lower court, to take effect.

The case was one in a series brought by Republican-controlled states that have helped to frustrate Biden administration policies related to immigration and border security.


The Homeland Security Memo

Texas and Louisiana sued the Biden administration over a policy announced in a Sept. 30, 2021, memorandum (pdf) by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas that claims it is impossible to remove the estimated 11 million illegal aliens present in the United States. Mayorkas has been heavily criticized by Republicans for his allegedly lax approach to immigration enforcement. Some Republicans in Congress want to impeach him for dereliction of duty.

“We do not have the resources to apprehend and seek the removal of every one of these noncitizens. Therefore, we need to exercise our discretion and determine whom to prioritize for immigration enforcement action,” the memo states.

The document prioritizes the arrest and deportation of suspected terrorists, people who have committed crimes, and illegal aliens recently apprehended at the border.

The memo praises the “majority of undocumented noncitizens who could be subject to removal [even though they] have been contributing members of our communities for years.”

“They include individuals who work on the frontlines in the battle against COVID, lead our congregations of faith, teach our children, do back-breaking farm work to help deliver food to our table, and contribute in many other meaningful ways,” it states.

But the states argued that the federal government is illegally refusing to enforce the nation’s immigration laws by prioritizing only certain enforcement categories at the expense of others. They said that the federal Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) requires that specific criminal aliens, such as aggravated felons, must be detained upon release from criminal custody pending a decision on whether to remove them from the country. The law also requires that aliens subject to final orders of removal must be detained pending their removal, they said.

The states argued that the immigration statute requires authorities to detain and deport even those deemed to pose little or no risk to the public.

Instead, the Biden administration said in the memo that it would embark on case-by-case determinations instead, which the states said leaves the door open for violent criminals to return to the nation’s streets.

“Keeping our citizens safe is one of the most fundamental duties of government, perhaps even the most fundamental. The Biden Administration has tried to ignore that duty, but we’re fighting every single day to remind them,” Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Republican, said on Nov. 29, 2022, the day the case was heard by the court.

The Memo Was Blocked

The Mayorkas memo was blocked last year by U.S. District Judge Drew Tipton, a Trump appointee, who ruled that Texas had legal standing to pursue the case because it could show the state was harmed when illegal aliens who should have been detained by the federal government found their way to the state and committed crimes there.

The now-suspended policy is similar to one enforced by then-President Barack Obama but differs from the more aggressive policy pursued by his successor, then-President Donald Trump, who limited the role of discretion in the enforcement of immigration laws.

The Biden administration asked the Supreme Court to stay Tipton’s order, but on July 21, 2022, it refused to do so. Conservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett, along with the three liberal justices–Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson—dissented, indicating they would have granted the stay.

New Majority Opinion

The new majority opinion (pdf) in the case, United States v. Texas (court file 22-58), was written by Justice Brett Kavanaugh. The opinion says that precedent dictates that states lack legal standing to challenge the policy.

Four other justices—John Roberts, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, and Ketanji Brown Jackson—joined Kavanaugh’s opinion.

Justices Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, and Amy Coney Barrett agreed with the outcome but for different reasons.

The sole dissenting opinion was filed by Justice Samuel Alito.

The states here “have brought an extraordinarily unusual lawsuit,” Kavanaugh wrote for the majority.

“They want a federal court to order the Executive Branch to alter its arrest policies so as to make more arrests. Federal courts have not traditionally entertained that kind of lawsuit; indeed, the States cite no precedent for a lawsuit like this. The States lack Article III standing because this Court’s precedents and the ‘historical experience’ preclude the States’ ‘attempt to litigate this dispute at this time and in this form.’ And because the States lack Article III standing, the District Court did not have jurisdiction,” he wrote.

Article III of the U.S. Constitution lays out the powers of the judicial branch.

Because resources are limited, the government must prioritize some enforcement areas over others.

The executive branch “invariably lacks the resources to arrest and prosecute every violator of every law and must constantly react and adjust to the ever-shifting public-safety and public welfare needs of the American people,” Kavanaugh wrote.

The court “has consistently recognized that federal courts are generally not the proper forum for resolving claims that the Executive Branch should make more arrests or bring more prosecutions,” he wrote.

Kavanaugh added a proviso, writing that even though the court found Texas and Louisiana lack standing, “we do not suggest that federal courts may never entertain cases involving the Executive Branch’s alleged failure to make more arrests or bring more prosecutions.”

The Supreme Court reversed the decision of Judge Tipton.

Justice Gorsuch wrote an opinion concurring in the judgment of the court but with a different analysis of the standing issue than was stated in the majority opinion.

The opinion was joined by Thomas and Barrett.

Barrett also wrote her own concurring opinion, which Gorsuch joined.

“I agree with the Court that the States lack standing to challenge the Federal Government’s Guidelines for the enforcement of immigration law,” Barrett wrote.

“But I reach that conclusion for a different reason: The States failed to show that the District Court could order effective relief. … And because redressability is an essential element of Article III standing, the District Court did not have jurisdiction.”

The Dissenting Opinion
In his dissenting opinion, Justice Alito wrote that he would have held that Texas has standing.

The majority opinion inappropriately favors the president over Congress, he said.

“And it renders States already laboring under the effects of massive illegal immigration even more helpless,” the justice wrote.

To deny Texas standing “to challenge a federal policy that inflicts substantial harm on the State and its residents by releasing illegal aliens with criminal convictions for serious crimes” the court “brushes aside” precedent.

In so doing, the court also “refuses to apply our established test for standing, disregards factual findings made by the District Court after a trial, and holds that the only limit on the power of a President to disobey a law like the important provision at issue is Congress’s power to employ the weapons of inter-branch warfare—withholding funds, impeachment, and removal, etc.,” Alito wrote.

“I would not blaze this unfortunate trail. I would simply apply settled law, which leads ineluctably to the conclusion that Texas has standing,” he wrote.

« Last Edit: June 24, 2023, 08:07:51 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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May I glitch, but I am not seeing the actual name of the case , , ,

ccp

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ruling against racial discrimination by SCOTUS
« Reply #1808 on: June 29, 2023, 09:24:41 AM »
Justice Thomas :

n concurring with the majority, Justice Clarence Thomas wrote that under the 14th Amendment, "the color of a person’s skin is irrelevant to that individual’s equal status as a citizen of this nation.”

Justice Brown (I thought she recused herself - but she can still write a dissenting opinion ?)
:
In a dissenting opinion, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote that deeming race irrelevant in law does not make it irrelevant in reality.

"And having so detached itself from this country’s actual past and present experiences, the court has now been lured into interfering with the crucial work that UNC and other institutions of higher learning are do- ing to solve America’s real-world problems."

WHICH ONE IS MORE LOGICAL with regards to the Constitution?

ccp

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the "rev":

https://www.breitbart.com/clips/2023/06/29/sharpton-on-scotus-affirmative-action-decision-sticking-a-dagger-in-our-back/

Hey Rev:
I got some news for you ->
it isn't race
it is socioeconomics


The Dems :
start the ballot harvesting

get them to sign up while this is hot !

 :roll:    :wink:


G M

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the "rev":

https://www.breitbart.com/clips/2023/06/29/sharpton-on-scotus-affirmative-action-decision-sticking-a-dagger-in-our-back/

Hey Rev:
I got some news for you ->
it isn't race
it is socioeconomics


The Dems :
start the ballot harvesting

get them to sign up while this is hot !

 :roll:    :wink:

Ultimately, it is about race. Intelligence and group behavior matters.

But we are not allowed to even think such things for even a moment.

DougMacG

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"Hey Rev:
I got some news for you ->
it isn't race
it is socioeconomics :-D "

Isn't that the truth.  Plenty of whites and others are in the welfare state socioeconomic trap and plenty of blacks have sprung free from that trap - so (to them) STOP CALLING IT RACE.

Even if you haven't sprung free from it yet, the best path to prosperity is the (disappearing) free enterprise system.  Why wouldn't you use it.

The focus on race for victimhood is self defeating.  Maybe your race or neighborhood makes it harder.  Lots of things make it harder.  Do your best.  You are lucky to live in a time and place where you can escape poverty in one generation, or even faster.

If you can't get into a top college based on grades and test scores, I recommend MIT OCW "open courseware". The top tech school in the world has every course in the last 20 years posted for free online and every public library has free internet. Same with ACT prep courses etc.  Sharpen your brain and apply again.  Community college etc, go to the place that fits your level and potential.  Learn electricity or plumbing or car repair so well people can't afford to NOT hire you. Get off your @ss.   )

Lower standards for what liberals think are lower races never was the answer.
« Last Edit: June 29, 2023, 03:53:33 PM by DougMacG »

G M

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"Hey Rev:
I got some news for you ->
it isn't race
it is socioeconomics :-D "


Isn't that the truth.  Plenty of whites and others are in the welfare state socioeconomic trap and plenty of blacks have sprung free from that trap - so (to them) STOP CALLING IT RACE.

Even if you haven't sprung free from it yet, the best path to prosperity is the (disappearing) free enterprise system.  Why wouldn't you use it.

The focus on race for victimhood is self defeating.  Maybe your race or neighborhood makes it harder.  Lots of things make it harder.  Do your best.  You are lucky to live in a time and place where you can escape poverty in one generation, and even faster.

It's not self-defeating, it's a major industry. It's the path to money and power in the FUSA.



G M

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When leftists accidentally say what we all know out loud
« Reply #1813 on: June 29, 2023, 06:30:28 PM »
https://twitter.com/ericareport/status/1674453321078415362


Erica Marsh
@ericareport
Today's Supreme Court decision is a direct attack on Black people. No Black person will be able to succeed in a merit-based system which is exactly why affirmative-action based programs were needed. Today's decision is a TRAVESTY!!!
9:22 AM · Jun 29, 2023
·
8.7M
 Views

G M

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"Hey Rev:
I got some news for you ->
it isn't race
it is socioeconomics :-D "


Isn't that the truth.  Plenty of whites and others are in the welfare state socioeconomic trap and plenty of blacks have sprung free from that trap - so (to them) STOP CALLING IT RACE.

Even if you haven't sprung free from it yet, the best path to prosperity is the (disappearing) free enterprise system.  Why wouldn't you use it.

The focus on race for victimhood is self defeating.  Maybe your race or neighborhood makes it harder.  Lots of things make it harder.  Do your best.  You are lucky to live in a time and place where you can escape poverty in one generation, and even faster.

It's not self-defeating, it's a major industry. It's the path to money and power in the FUSA.

https://thefederalist.com/2023/06/29/of-course-ketanji-brown-jackson-supports-affirmative-action-its-the-only-reason-shes-a-supreme-court-justice/

G M

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Mind the gap
« Reply #1815 on: June 29, 2023, 09:10:27 PM »
the "rev":

https://www.breitbart.com/clips/2023/06/29/sharpton-on-scotus-affirmative-action-decision-sticking-a-dagger-in-our-back/

Hey Rev:
I got some news for you ->
it isn't race
it is socioeconomics


The Dems :
start the ballot harvesting

get them to sign up while this is hot !

 :roll:    :wink:

Ultimately, it is about race. Intelligence and group behavior matters.

But we are not allowed to even think such things for even a moment.

https://www.takimag.com/article/mind-the-gap/


Crafty_Dog

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"Hey Rev:
I got some news for you ->
it isn't race
it is socioeconomics :-D "

"Isn't that the truth.  Plenty of whites and others are in the welfare state socioeconomic trap and plenty of blacks have sprung free from that trap - so (to them) STOP CALLING IT RACE.

"Even if you haven't sprung free from it yet, the best path to prosperity is the (disappearing) free enterprise system.  Why wouldn't you use it.

"The focus on race for victimhood is self defeating.  Maybe your race or neighborhood makes it harder.  Lots of things make it harder.  Do your best.  You are lucky to live in a time and place where you can escape poverty in one generation, or even faster.

"If you can't get into a top college based on grades and test scores, I recommend MIT OCW "open courseware". The top tech school in the world has every course in the last 20 years posted for free online and every public library has free internet. Same with ACT prep courses etc.  Sharpen your brain and apply again.  Community college etc, go to the place that fits your level and potential.  Learn electricity or plumbing or car repair so well people can't afford to NOT hire you. Get off your @ss."

MARC:  I did not know that about the MIT OCW.  Great to know and a great point for political conversations.

"Lower standards for what liberals think are lower races never was the answer."

THIS!!!!!!!!

Crafty_Dog

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Fair Admissions vs. Harvard: Thomas's concurrence
« Reply #1817 on: June 30, 2023, 07:22:44 AM »


https://www.nationalreview.com/2023/06/a-victory-for-clarence-thomas/

A Victory for Clarence Thomas
By CHARLES C. W. COOKE
June 29, 2023 3:25 PM

At long last, Thomas has been able to make his case against affirmative action as part of a successful majority.

One of the many reasons that I have treated with reflexive contempt the insinuation that Justice Clarence Thomas is in some meaningful sense “corrupt” is that nobody has ever been able to explain to me to my satisfaction what tangible product that corruption is supposed to have yielded. Where, I have asked, is the evidence of inconsistency? In which of Thomas’s opinions can I detect the caprice? What suspicious shift in jurisprudential assumptions has hinted that something is off? I have never received an answer. For better or for worse, Thomas is always Thomas. Come hell or high water, condemnation or praise, momentum or inertia, his approach remains immediately recognizable. He is dismissive of error, unmoved by precedent, and deaf to political guile. There is one of him, and there will not be another any time soon. Day in, day out, he does his thing, and, if you don’t like it, he doesn’t care. He is an ideal candidate for the Supreme Court.

All of these qualities are on display throughout Thomas’s concurrence in Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College, a case in which the Supreme Court has held, 6–3, that “Harvard’s and UNC’s admissions programs violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment,” and, more broadly, that affirmative action is unconstitutional. I will confess that, as a historical matter, I do not know whether Thomas’s long-held interpretation of the 14th Amendment as a bluntly “colorblind” measure is correct. I do know, however, that Thomas believes quite sincerely that he is right, and that he has believed it for years. Had he so wished, Thomas could have signed onto John Roberts’s opinion and left it there. That, I daresay, is what a mere “movement” pawn would have done. Instead, Thomas felt moved to “write separately to offer an originalist defense of the colorblind Constitution” to which only he, among his colleagues, put his name.

In Thomas’s telling, the original public meaning of the 14th Amendment was that of a tool “affirming that equality and racial discrimination cannot coexist.” “I do not contend,” Thomas concedes, “that all of the individuals who put forth and ratified the Fourteenth Amendment universally believed this to be true.” Nevertheless, he believes that enough of them did that, since it passed in 1868, “all forms of discrimination based on race—including so-called affirmative action” have been “prohibited under the Constitution.” Alas, at various points in American history, this has been massaged, subverted, or even completely ignored. Indeed, the backsliding began pretty quickly. Despite the flurry of legislation passed by the so-called radical Republicans — first, the Freedmen’s Bureau Act, then the 1866 Civil Rights Act, and eventually the 14th Amendment — “the promise of the second founding took time to materialize,” and, “seeking to perpetuate a segregationist system in the wake of the Fourteenth Amendment’s ratification, proponents urged a ‘separate but equal’ regime” that, to disastrous effect, “met with initial success.” “The great failure of this country was slavery and its progeny,” Thomas writes, “and, the tragic failure of this Court was its misinterpretation of the Reconstruction Amendments” — a misinterpretation that began as early as the mid 1870s. The latter failure, he laments, “stood in sharp contrast to the Court’s earlier embrace of the Fourteenth Amendment’s equality ideal,” which, though unrealized, was most poignantly outlined by Justice Harlan in his lonely dissent in Plessy v. Ferguson.

In Thomas’s view, this mistake has continued, in one form or another, to the present day, including in the courts’ tolerance of ostensibly benign racial discrimination within America’s government-run and government-funded colleges. Some people, Thomas notes, seem to believe that affirmative action is substantially different from earlier forms of injustice, because, in practice, the “[14th] Amendment forbids only laws that hurt, but not help, blacks.” But, he avers, “such a theory lacks any basis in the original meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment,” which declared that “the color of a person’s skin is irrelevant to that individual’s equal status as a citizen of this Nation” and that “to treat him differently on the basis of such a legally irrelevant trait is therefore a deviation from the equality principle and a constitutional injury.” If we are to stay faithful to the law, Thomas submits, “we cannot be guided by those who would desire less in our Constitution, or by those who would desire more.” That those who would opt out are elite colleges instead of segregationists is irrelevant. “Universities’ self-proclaimed righteousness does not afford them license to discriminate on the basis of race,” he affirms. “In fact, it is error for a court to defer to the views of an alleged discriminator while assessing claims of racial discrimination.”

Fleshing out this idea, Thomas takes direct aim at the dissent of the newest justice, Ketanji Brown Jackson, whose focus on “the legacy of slavery and the nature of inherited wealth,” and desire “to label all blacks as victims” he considers not just constitutionally irrelevant but culturally malign. Per Thomas, such thinking “locks blacks into a seemingly perpetual inferior caste” and “is an insult to individual achievement and cancerous to young minds seeking to push through barriers, rather than consign themselves to permanent victimhood.” In essence, Thomas’s approach echoes a line written by Chief Justice Roberts in 2007: “The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race is to stop discriminating on the basis of race.”

That, at long last, Thomas has been able to make his case as part of a successful majority must thrill him to the core. Whether it will catch on more broadly now that the underlying controversy has been resolved remains to be seen.

ccp

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"Whether it will catch on more broadly now that the underlying controversy has been resolved remains to be seen."

well the legal constitutional issue is solved

though already the shysters are pointing out the last part of dissent is "vague"

ok to put race as a topic in one's essay so they will shyster around it

the LEFT will not be stopped

but I enjoyed all the smug snarky looks from the commentators last night

particularly Allison Camerata 's angry expression ( she is usually smiley )
on CNN last night while she was reading messages throughout her interviews to come back with rapid fire leftist messages sent to her every minute or so.

ccp

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libs stick together like glue usually
« Reply #1819 on: June 30, 2023, 09:28:53 AM »
kagans dissent to ruling the stops student debt cancellation from President who does not have the authority

for those with infinite patience and time on their hands:

https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/4075758-read-kagan-dissent-biden-nebraska-student-loan-case/

I am curious what twisted logic she uses to justify political judicial activism on the Court - Constitution  is in the way

ccp

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activists on SCOTUS attacking legitimacy of the Court itself
« Reply #1820 on: June 30, 2023, 12:57:09 PM »
Chief Justice Roberts responds:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/roberts-takes-aim-liberal-justices-160428322.html

Constitution

--- > libs ----> suCottnitn

We can work it however the shysters want for the DNC voting block

Crafty_Dog

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AMcC: Barrett helps restore C'l order.
« Reply #1821 on: July 01, 2023, 10:53:18 AM »
Some quality legal analysis here from Deep State Andy!

============================================
Justice Barrett Helps Restore Constitutional Order
By ANDREW C. MCCARTHY
July 1, 2023 6:30 AM

The justice's concurrence in the student-loan case clarifies the major-questions doctrine and offers a significant rebuttal of Kagan’s dissent.

Among the most significant opinions issued in this week’s final Supreme Court rulings is Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s concurrence in the Court’s invalidation of Biden’s student-loan cancellation (Biden v. Nebraska). As a committed textualist, Justice Barrett rightly perceived the imperative of elaborating on the so-called major-questions doctrine, explaining what it does and does not permit in statutory interpretation.

The student-loan decision manifests that the Court’s conservative majority feels the tension between its avowed statutory textualism and its invocation of a doctrine that is claimed to endorse departures from text — or, at least, from the best interpretation of text. Justice Elena Kagan’s searing criticism of the major-questions doctrine as a “get-out-of-text-free card” clearly left a mark.

Justice Kagan, of course, is an administrative-state devotee who acknowledges that the Court has been forever (we hope) changed by the late, great Justice Antonin Scalia’s insistence that nothing in statutory interpretation takes precedence over the words Congress uses in its statutes — a sea change from the 20th-century era of judicial imperialism, when judges presumed a power freely to rewrite laws. Still, Kagan, the Court’s most formidable progressive, is a bureaucratic maximalist: If, read in a vacuum, the text of a statute can plausibly be construed as a delegation by Congress of enormous power to an administrative agency, then the textualist must vindicate that delegation, even if it defies history, common sense, and our Constitution’s vesting in Congress of all legislative power — i.e., the authority to enact major policy.

“But a vacuum is no home for a textualist,” Barrett counters.

Mindful of Kagan’s critique, the Court’s six-justice majority did two important things in the student-loan case.

First, Chief Justice John Roberts’s majority opinion did not rely on the major-questions doctrine to reach the result. Instead, applying an ordinary textual analysis, Roberts concluded that, in the Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students (HEROES) Act of 2003, Congress had not delegated to the secretary of education the power to massively cancel student-loan debt.

The HEROES Act, which was enacted in the post-9/11 War on Terror era, predominantly for the benefit of military personnel, authorized the Education Department to forgive the student loans of narrow categories of borrowers (e.g., those who’d been killed, become permanently disabled, or gone bankrupt). The act empowers the DOE to “waive or modify” loans as the “Secretary deems necessary in connection with a war or other military operation or national emergency” (emphasis added).

Based on this text, President Biden deemed the Covid-19 pandemic a national emergency. He thus directed the secretary to cancel nearly half a trillion dollars in student-loan debt for millions of students. Not students who had served in the military, but virtually any students whose “hardship” is that they don’t want to repay money they borrowed for education they received (education that places them in higher potential-earnings strata even if it is not, in many instances, as valuable as they’d hoped).

Had the Court opted to decide the case based on the major-questions doctrine, it could easily have concluded that, in enacting a wartime relief provision tailored to a particular category of Americans (e.g., military personnel) who bore the hellacious costs of wartime operations, Congress was obviously not conferring on the education secretary the power to wreak economic havoc based on a medical emergency nearly two decades later — one that, though real, was nothing like a war, and whose victims were nothing like wartime casualties. Indeed, contrary to the HEROES Act, there is no real causal link in Biden’s boondoggle between the disaster cited and harms addressed. Instead, college students are a voting bloc of importance to Democrats, so progressives were scheming long before Covid to reward them with debt forgiveness and deviously used the pandemic as a pretext to do so.

But Roberts did not base the Court’s ruling on the major-questions doctrine. He based it on straightforward statutory construction. The Biden administration’s interpretation of the words “modify” and “waive” was untenable; the ordinary meaning of the words enable modest adjustments, not a wholesale transformation, of financial arrangements. Biden’s agency was not merely “waiving” loans; he was rewriting the Education Act.

The Court relied on the major-questions doctrine not to decide the case but to offer additional support for its decision. In particular, it used the doctrine to refute the Biden administration’s claim that it was Congress’s purpose, in the HEROES Act, to grant the education secretary sweeping discretion to address “unforeseen emergencies.” Relying on its decision last year in West Virginia v. EPA, and in light of the history and scope of the HEROES Act and the “economic and political significance” of a $430 billion loan cancellation, the Court concluded that it had great reason to doubt that Congress meant to confer such extraordinary authority on the Education Department.

All well and good. Nevertheless, the majority’s reasoning obviously invited Kagan to reassert her indictment of the major-questions doctrine. As expected, she zeroed in on the rule apparently derived from it that Congress must posit a “clear statement” of authority granted to an administrative agency. The majority’s claim to rely on routine statutory interpretation, she contends, is a smoke screen since, as she sees it, the words “modify,” “waiver,” and “national emergency” can plausibly be read to do exactly what the Biden administration has done. Ergo, Roberts is deciding the case based on the major-questions doctrine without saying so. She depicts the majority as textualists who recoil from text if they don’t like the policy outcome.

That brings us to the majority’s second gambit: Justice Barrett’s defense of the major-questions doctrine as applied textualism.

Barrett’s concurrence is a significant rebuttal to Kagan. Much as her mentor, Justice Scalia, rejected the label “strict constructionist,” Barrett emphasizes that a textualist is not a literalist. The major-questions doctrine, she explains, is not a license to flee from text. To the contrary, it stresses “the importance of context” (emphasis in original), providing “a tool for discerning — not departing from — the text’s most natural interpretation.”

Barrett’s contention is powerful because she takes Kagan’s critique as a serious challenge that calls for a serious answer. Canons of construction have been developed through centuries of Anglo-American jurisprudence. Consequently, they are reasonably seen as a component of the judicial power that is vested in the Supreme Court by the Constitution, as well as in the lower federal courts that Congress has established. But that’s not the end of the story. Some canons of construction can have the effect of nullifying congressional statutes — a constitutional problem.

For example, courts follow a canon of constitutional avoidance, which instructs that, if possible, judges should construe statutes in a manner that circumvents any question of constitutionality. This can crash into textualism, which admonishes that the best interpretation of a statute is the ordinary meaning of its text as understood at the time of enactment. That is, under the constitutional-avoidance canon, a judge will give a statute a less plausible meaning — though still one within the ballpark of what the text allows — if doing so is necessary to avoid a meaning that would call the statute’s constitutionality into question. That sounds sensible, but it is constitutionally fraught: By this avoidance doctrine, the Court elevates a judicial interest in dodging controversy over Congress’s undeniable Article I power to write the laws.

Barrett concedes that these canons, described as “strong-form,” can pose “a lot of trouble” for “the honest textualist” (as Scalia put it). Even though deeply rooted, they arguably exceed the judicial power. In light of that concern, Barrett rightly believes that courts should avoid the creation of new strong-form canons. Nevertheless, she concludes that the major-questions doctrine is essentially a rule of context-driven common sense — one that “is neither new nor a strong-form canon.” The doctrine doesn’t change the words that Congress has used, much less instruct courts to give the words an interpretation that is less plausible than their ordinary meaning. Indeed, it does the opposite: It derives the best interpretation of the words based on the circumstances of their enactment — based on their context.

Many things inform context, though those things can never rationalize slipping the tether of text. Statutory provisions are usually components of broader enactments that, literally and historically, can inform what the provisions mean (e.g., it should matter that the HEROES Act was obviously meant to benefit soldiers in wartime). Sometimes, a statute employs a term of art borrowed from other legal sources; such a term is understood to “bring the old soil with it.” Some laws are written into well-developed fields and are thus understood to be infused by that field’s assumptions (e.g., criminal statutes are presumed to require proof of criminal intent even if their terms are imprecise on this point). Similarly, Barrett says, the role of common sense in informing context “goes without saying.”

She gives us some examples. If a grocer tells his clerk to “go to the orchard and buy apples for the store,” that is plainly not as unqualified a directive as it sounds. If the clerk knows that the grocer keeps the shelves stocked with about 200 apples but takes the liberty of buying 1,000, then the clerk has overstepped — the purchase is so far beyond what the agent knew was customary that we must assume the principal would have said, “Get a thousand apples,” if that’s what the principal wanted.

Barrett also conjures up a hypothetical parent who hires a babysitter to watch her young children for the weekend. As she leaves, the mother hands the sitter a credit card and says, “Make sure the kids have fun.” Is it reasonable to believe that such an instruction authorized the sitter to “take the kids on a road trip to an amusement park where they spend two days on rollercoasters and one night in a hotel”? Of course not. A trip to the movies or an ice-cream parlor would make sense, sure. But “if a parent were willing to greenlight a trip that big, we would expect much more clarity than a general instruction to ‘make sure the kids have fun.’”

Think of this hypothetical instruction as a statute. It’s not that Congress didn’t use the words, “Make sure the kids have fun.” It’s that the judicial task is to construe what those words meant. That is not sensibly done in isolation, as if the task were merely to look up fun in the dictionary. Context is vital. The dictionary meaning of the text’s words is significant, of course, but that must be taken in conjunction with the all-important circumstances in which the words were uttered.

The administrative state’s turbochargers reject such limitations. If the word “waiver” can be understood in a literal, maximalist way to erase half a trillion dollars, then the secretary of education has that power, with no input from the branch of government vested with the Constitution’s power to tax, spend, and manage debt. In Justice Kagan’s construct, the only question is why the sitter only spent two days at the amusement park. After all, fun is fun, right?

But that’s not rational.

A court may not resort to the major-questions doctrine to rewrite or supplant text. The point of the doctrine is to bring rationality to text by accounting for context. That invariably includes recognizing the place of administrative agencies in our constitutional order. Barrett is not claiming that Congress may not delegate significant authority to bureaucrats. She is maintaining, however, that in our system, Congress is given the power to write laws: a power of such major consequence that the president must sign those enactments before they become law. By contrast, the agencies Congress has created are trusted only with the day-to-day administration of those laws, cabined by what the laws’ textual terms were understood to mean when enacted.

It is the task of the Court to interpret that meaning. When multiple interpretations are plausible, the best one is not necessarily found in the dictionary but in the circumstances that gave rise to the statute.

By Justice Kagan’s lights, the administrative state is a progressive overhaul of our constitutional framework, in which unelected, unaccountable bureaucrats stretch text to — and beyond — the breaking point on the theory that good governance is rule by experts.

The Court’s majority is bent on restoring constitutional order. As Justice Barrett demonstrates, the major-questions doctrine is not, pace Kagan, an artifice by which the Court departs from congressional text to impose its own policy preferences. It is a commonsense tool by which the Court gives contextually accurate meaning to the text Congress enacted.

ccp

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AM
does mentions Kagan as the most "formidable " lib

I notice he does not bother to mention the [unprofessional]
"let the eat cake" interpretation from Justice KBJ.

 :wink:

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Re: AMcC: Barrett helps restore C'l order.
« Reply #1823 on: July 01, 2023, 09:26:20 PM »
Why won't he discuss Ray Epps and Jayden X? Has he not heard of them? How is that possible?


Some quality legal analysis here from Deep State Andy!

============================================
Justice Barrett Helps Restore Constitutional Order
By ANDREW C. MCCARTHY
July 1, 2023 6:30 AM

The justice's concurrence in the student-loan case clarifies the major-questions doctrine and offers a significant rebuttal of Kagan’s dissent.

Among the most significant opinions issued in this week’s final Supreme Court rulings is Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s concurrence in the Court’s invalidation of Biden’s student-loan cancellation (Biden v. Nebraska). As a committed textualist, Justice Barrett rightly perceived the imperative of elaborating on the so-called major-questions doctrine, explaining what it does and does not permit in statutory interpretation.

The student-loan decision manifests that the Court’s conservative majority feels the tension between its avowed statutory textualism and its invocation of a doctrine that is claimed to endorse departures from text — or, at least, from the best interpretation of text. Justice Elena Kagan’s searing criticism of the major-questions doctrine as a “get-out-of-text-free card” clearly left a mark.

Justice Kagan, of course, is an administrative-state devotee who acknowledges that the Court has been forever (we hope) changed by the late, great Justice Antonin Scalia’s insistence that nothing in statutory interpretation takes precedence over the words Congress uses in its statutes — a sea change from the 20th-century era of judicial imperialism, when judges presumed a power freely to rewrite laws. Still, Kagan, the Court’s most formidable progressive, is a bureaucratic maximalist: If, read in a vacuum, the text of a statute can plausibly be construed as a delegation by Congress of enormous power to an administrative agency, then the textualist must vindicate that delegation, even if it defies history, common sense, and our Constitution’s vesting in Congress of all legislative power — i.e., the authority to enact major policy.

“But a vacuum is no home for a textualist,” Barrett counters.

Mindful of Kagan’s critique, the Court’s six-justice majority did two important things in the student-loan case.

First, Chief Justice John Roberts’s majority opinion did not rely on the major-questions doctrine to reach the result. Instead, applying an ordinary textual analysis, Roberts concluded that, in the Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students (HEROES) Act of 2003, Congress had not delegated to the secretary of education the power to massively cancel student-loan debt.

The HEROES Act, which was enacted in the post-9/11 War on Terror era, predominantly for the benefit of military personnel, authorized the Education Department to forgive the student loans of narrow categories of borrowers (e.g., those who’d been killed, become permanently disabled, or gone bankrupt). The act empowers the DOE to “waive or modify” loans as the “Secretary deems necessary in connection with a war or other military operation or national emergency” (emphasis added).

Based on this text, President Biden deemed the Covid-19 pandemic a national emergency. He thus directed the secretary to cancel nearly half a trillion dollars in student-loan debt for millions of students. Not students who had served in the military, but virtually any students whose “hardship” is that they don’t want to repay money they borrowed for education they received (education that places them in higher potential-earnings strata even if it is not, in many instances, as valuable as they’d hoped).

Had the Court opted to decide the case based on the major-questions doctrine, it could easily have concluded that, in enacting a wartime relief provision tailored to a particular category of Americans (e.g., military personnel) who bore the hellacious costs of wartime operations, Congress was obviously not conferring on the education secretary the power to wreak economic havoc based on a medical emergency nearly two decades later — one that, though real, was nothing like a war, and whose victims were nothing like wartime casualties. Indeed, contrary to the HEROES Act, there is no real causal link in Biden’s boondoggle between the disaster cited and harms addressed. Instead, college students are a voting bloc of importance to Democrats, so progressives were scheming long before Covid to reward them with debt forgiveness and deviously used the pandemic as a pretext to do so.

But Roberts did not base the Court’s ruling on the major-questions doctrine. He based it on straightforward statutory construction. The Biden administration’s interpretation of the words “modify” and “waive” was untenable; the ordinary meaning of the words enable modest adjustments, not a wholesale transformation, of financial arrangements. Biden’s agency was not merely “waiving” loans; he was rewriting the Education Act.

The Court relied on the major-questions doctrine not to decide the case but to offer additional support for its decision. In particular, it used the doctrine to refute the Biden administration’s claim that it was Congress’s purpose, in the HEROES Act, to grant the education secretary sweeping discretion to address “unforeseen emergencies.” Relying on its decision last year in West Virginia v. EPA, and in light of the history and scope of the HEROES Act and the “economic and political significance” of a $430 billion loan cancellation, the Court concluded that it had great reason to doubt that Congress meant to confer such extraordinary authority on the Education Department.

All well and good. Nevertheless, the majority’s reasoning obviously invited Kagan to reassert her indictment of the major-questions doctrine. As expected, she zeroed in on the rule apparently derived from it that Congress must posit a “clear statement” of authority granted to an administrative agency. The majority’s claim to rely on routine statutory interpretation, she contends, is a smoke screen since, as she sees it, the words “modify,” “waiver,” and “national emergency” can plausibly be read to do exactly what the Biden administration has done. Ergo, Roberts is deciding the case based on the major-questions doctrine without saying so. She depicts the majority as textualists who recoil from text if they don’t like the policy outcome.

That brings us to the majority’s second gambit: Justice Barrett’s defense of the major-questions doctrine as applied textualism.

Barrett’s concurrence is a significant rebuttal to Kagan. Much as her mentor, Justice Scalia, rejected the label “strict constructionist,” Barrett emphasizes that a textualist is not a literalist. The major-questions doctrine, she explains, is not a license to flee from text. To the contrary, it stresses “the importance of context” (emphasis in original), providing “a tool for discerning — not departing from — the text’s most natural interpretation.”

Barrett’s contention is powerful because she takes Kagan’s critique as a serious challenge that calls for a serious answer. Canons of construction have been developed through centuries of Anglo-American jurisprudence. Consequently, they are reasonably seen as a component of the judicial power that is vested in the Supreme Court by the Constitution, as well as in the lower federal courts that Congress has established. But that’s not the end of the story. Some canons of construction can have the effect of nullifying congressional statutes — a constitutional problem.

For example, courts follow a canon of constitutional avoidance, which instructs that, if possible, judges should construe statutes in a manner that circumvents any question of constitutionality. This can crash into textualism, which admonishes that the best interpretation of a statute is the ordinary meaning of its text as understood at the time of enactment. That is, under the constitutional-avoidance canon, a judge will give a statute a less plausible meaning — though still one within the ballpark of what the text allows — if doing so is necessary to avoid a meaning that would call the statute’s constitutionality into question. That sounds sensible, but it is constitutionally fraught: By this avoidance doctrine, the Court elevates a judicial interest in dodging controversy over Congress’s undeniable Article I power to write the laws.

Barrett concedes that these canons, described as “strong-form,” can pose “a lot of trouble” for “the honest textualist” (as Scalia put it). Even though deeply rooted, they arguably exceed the judicial power. In light of that concern, Barrett rightly believes that courts should avoid the creation of new strong-form canons. Nevertheless, she concludes that the major-questions doctrine is essentially a rule of context-driven common sense — one that “is neither new nor a strong-form canon.” The doctrine doesn’t change the words that Congress has used, much less instruct courts to give the words an interpretation that is less plausible than their ordinary meaning. Indeed, it does the opposite: It derives the best interpretation of the words based on the circumstances of their enactment — based on their context.

Many things inform context, though those things can never rationalize slipping the tether of text. Statutory provisions are usually components of broader enactments that, literally and historically, can inform what the provisions mean (e.g., it should matter that the HEROES Act was obviously meant to benefit soldiers in wartime). Sometimes, a statute employs a term of art borrowed from other legal sources; such a term is understood to “bring the old soil with it.” Some laws are written into well-developed fields and are thus understood to be infused by that field’s assumptions (e.g., criminal statutes are presumed to require proof of criminal intent even if their terms are imprecise on this point). Similarly, Barrett says, the role of common sense in informing context “goes without saying.”

She gives us some examples. If a grocer tells his clerk to “go to the orchard and buy apples for the store,” that is plainly not as unqualified a directive as it sounds. If the clerk knows that the grocer keeps the shelves stocked with about 200 apples but takes the liberty of buying 1,000, then the clerk has overstepped — the purchase is so far beyond what the agent knew was customary that we must assume the principal would have said, “Get a thousand apples,” if that’s what the principal wanted.

Barrett also conjures up a hypothetical parent who hires a babysitter to watch her young children for the weekend. As she leaves, the mother hands the sitter a credit card and says, “Make sure the kids have fun.” Is it reasonable to believe that such an instruction authorized the sitter to “take the kids on a road trip to an amusement park where they spend two days on rollercoasters and one night in a hotel”? Of course not. A trip to the movies or an ice-cream parlor would make sense, sure. But “if a parent were willing to greenlight a trip that big, we would expect much more clarity than a general instruction to ‘make sure the kids have fun.’”

Think of this hypothetical instruction as a statute. It’s not that Congress didn’t use the words, “Make sure the kids have fun.” It’s that the judicial task is to construe what those words meant. That is not sensibly done in isolation, as if the task were merely to look up fun in the dictionary. Context is vital. The dictionary meaning of the text’s words is significant, of course, but that must be taken in conjunction with the all-important circumstances in which the words were uttered.

The administrative state’s turbochargers reject such limitations. If the word “waiver” can be understood in a literal, maximalist way to erase half a trillion dollars, then the secretary of education has that power, with no input from the branch of government vested with the Constitution’s power to tax, spend, and manage debt. In Justice Kagan’s construct, the only question is why the sitter only spent two days at the amusement park. After all, fun is fun, right?

But that’s not rational.

A court may not resort to the major-questions doctrine to rewrite or supplant text. The point of the doctrine is to bring rationality to text by accounting for context. That invariably includes recognizing the place of administrative agencies in our constitutional order. Barrett is not claiming that Congress may not delegate significant authority to bureaucrats. She is maintaining, however, that in our system, Congress is given the power to write laws: a power of such major consequence that the president must sign those enactments before they become law. By contrast, the agencies Congress has created are trusted only with the day-to-day administration of those laws, cabined by what the laws’ textual terms were understood to mean when enacted.

It is the task of the Court to interpret that meaning. When multiple interpretations are plausible, the best one is not necessarily found in the dictionary but in the circumstances that gave rise to the statute.

By Justice Kagan’s lights, the administrative state is a progressive overhaul of our constitutional framework, in which unelected, unaccountable bureaucrats stretch text to — and beyond — the breaking point on the theory that good governance is rule by experts.

The Court’s majority is bent on restoring constitutional order. As Justice Barrett demonstrates, the major-questions doctrine is not, pace Kagan, an artifice by which the Court departs from congressional text to impose its own policy preferences. It is a commonsense tool by which the Court gives contextually accurate meaning to the text Congress enacted.

Crafty_Dog

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"Why won't he discuss Ray Epps and Jayden X? Has he not heard of them? How is that possible?"

Well as far as this article goes, neither of them have anything to do with it.

Concept for your consideration:

That it is possible to be wrong in one thing, and right in others.

G M

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"Why won't he discuss Ray Epps and Jayden X? Has he not heard of them? How is that possible?"

Well as far as this article goes, neither of them have anything to do with it.

Concept for your consideration:

That it is possible to be wrong in one thing, and right in others.

So the essential question is, why won't he discuss them? We can reasonably assume he is aware of them.

He wants people like you to still believe that the American Republic still exists.

You are being strung along, as they fortify their position.



ccp

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Jewish
Harvard JD degree
worked at DOJ civil division during Carter term

Russian name
prob 2 or 3rd generation commie

but he is just soooo righteous.  :roll:

His views here
right out of DNC playbook:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Erwin_Chemerinsky

For sure already working to undermine the latest SCOTUS decisions
 
:x

ccp

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Prof. Jonathan Turley
« Reply #1829 on: July 03, 2023, 10:44:19 AM »
https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/4076993-constitutional-cruelty-how-democrats-now-oppose-a-democratic-process-on-student-loans/

"In all of his study of the ancient Greek and Roman states and contemporary politics, Madison never encountered the likes of Schumer and his colleagues. "

"What is left, to paraphrase Schumer, is a cruel joke. But the ultimate joke is on the American people"


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ccp

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well another example of affirmative action back firing

reminds me of Kamala

if she was so smart and a  nerd , and presumable she is, she could have gone to other colleges

maybe not Harvard

so where is the racism?

many smart hard working students by the tens of millions do not get into Harvard.....


G M

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Presumably, she is?

 :roll:

Let's see their SAT scores.

Whoops, those are SECRET, just like Obama's college transcripts.



well another example of affirmative action back firing

reminds me of Kamala

if she was so smart and a  nerd , and presumable she is, she could have gone to other colleges

maybe not Harvard

so where is the racism?

many smart hard working students by the tens of millions do not get into Harvard.....

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ccp

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shyster Larry Lib et al. with new legal maneuvers to game the system
« Reply #1835 on: July 13, 2023, 01:34:51 PM »
https://dailycaller.com/2023/07/13/dems-attempt-ram-through-new-constitutional-amendment-creative-legal-maneuver/

we are not a nation of laws

we are a nation of those who manipulate and maneuver around laws

we are a nation of shysters

Crafty_Dog

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I remember challenging Porfessor RBG on this.  :evil: :evil: :evil:

ccp

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"I remember challenging Porfessor RBG on this."

how did it go?


Crafty_Dog

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She acknowledged my point about the time limits being part of establishing a broad consensus across the country at the same time.

She pooh poohed my challenge on bathrooms etc by saying that such concerns could be met with "traditional notions of privacy."   :roll:

ccp

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you can boast you argued in front of THE SUPREME COURT (justice)

ccp

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https://thehill.com/opinion/judiciary/4110525-tyranny-of-the-minority-liberal-law-profs-urge-biden-to-defy-the-courts-and-the-public/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Tushnet

"One of the more controversial figures in constitutional theory, he is identified with the critical legal studies movement and once stated in an article that, were he asked to decide actual cases as a judge, he would seek to reach results that would "advance the cause of socialism".[21] Tushnet is a main proponent of the idea that judicial review should be strongly limited and that the Constitution should be returned "to the people."

I wish these lib Jews would have left their socialism in Europe..........


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WSJ: The psuedo scandal with Alito
« Reply #1842 on: August 02, 2023, 01:17:32 PM »
Our Samuel Alito Scoop Is No Scandal
Ruth Marcus thinks she smells a rat. The truth is that partisanship has dulled her nose for news.
By
James Taranto
Follow
Aug. 1, 2023 12:53 pm ET




589

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Listen

(4 min)


image
Justice Samuel Alito at the Supreme Court in Washington, April 23, 2021. PHOTO: POOL/REUTERS
Jealous journalists are trying to make a scandal out of a scoop. Last week on these pages David Rivkin and I published our second Weekend Interview with Justice Samuel Alito. Like the first one, in April, it both made news and drove the conformist press corps to hysterics.

Along with the usual heckling, Justice Alito’s detractors zeroed in on a sentence toward the end of the piece. “So one of the lawyers in a major Supreme Court tax case . . . just sat with a sitting justice for four hours?” ProPublica’s Jesse Eisinger, who oversees the site’s tediously antagonistic coverage of the justices, tweeted Friday. Yes, that’s true, and Mr. Eisinger knew it because the article disclosed it. Mr. Rivkin—an appellate lawyer with a sideline as a prolific freelance writer—represents the appellants in Moore v. U.S., which the court has agreed to hear in the 2023-24 term.

In a column published Sunday, the Washington Post’s Ruth Marcus went further. She observed correctly that “justices are going to have preexisting relationships with lawyers who appear before them—that’s inevitable.” But she also asserted that “it’s not a good look when one litigant has special access to a justice.”

In fact, litigants Charles and Kathleen Moore have no “special access” to Justice Alito, and Ms. Marcus’s accusation is scurrilous. It would have been an act of serious professional misconduct for Mr. Rivkin and Justice Alito to discuss the Moores’ case, and it never came up in the interview. Mr. Rivkin and I didn’t ask about pending cases at all, save for a glancing reference to Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, in which the court will reconsider Chevron v. NRDC (1984). Justice Alito responded only with a general observation about precedent.

The article mentioned Moore in a paragraph listing some of the major cases on the court’s fall docket, which I wrote while preparing the article three weeks after our July meeting with Justice Alito. We cited Mr. Rivkin’s involvement in the interest of full disclosure—which shows how easily disclosure can become a mug’s game. Mr. Rivkin was transparent with our readers about his pending business before the court. The thanks he gets is that Mr. Eisinger, Ms. Marcus and others are acting as if he has something to hide.

Ms. Marcus’s column also reveals the vacuousness of partisan demands for “ethical” standards. In presuming to judge Justice Alito’s conduct, she appeals to no principle or standard, only her own olfactory senses. She admits there’s nothing wrong when justices have “relationships” with members of the Supreme Court Bar—but then proclaims that this relationship doesn’t “smell right” to her. She professes that “I’m all for justices speaking and writing publicly” but she deems it “unseemly and unsettling” that Justice Alito would do so for the Journal rather than the many outlets that are openly hostile to him.

Last week Ms. Marcus participated in an online Post symposium of “left-leaning columnists” about Joe Biden’s 2024 campaign. “From my point of view,” she wrote, “the risk to the Supreme Court alone is enough to justify doing whatever it takes to maximize the chance of a Democrat being elected (which means: Biden, Biden, Biden).”

That isn’t a rat that Ruth Marcus smells. It’s her own stinking partisanship.

Mr. Taranto is the Journal’s editorial features editor.


ccp

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shysters go after Just. Thomas

but ignore Joe Biden

OTOH perhaps there is some ethical questions as to Just. Thomas accepting massive gifts

in return for fundraising

through his office

as Justice

or if there were any conflicts before the Court

Crafty_Dog

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38 trips sounds like a lot, but the small print says this is over 30 years?

Definitely a campaign going on to take down the conservative justices and to bring SCOTUS under Congressional control.  I would be very much on the alert for deceptive, disingenuous horsesh*t.