OK.I don't really see the OP as ascribing evil motives to them.
Just ignorance.
In my opinion.
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OK.I don't really see the OP as ascribing evil motives to them.
Just ignorance.
In my opinion.
Because they don't want to be "free" to do those things, they think nobody else should be, either. Freedom, on the right, is a weird beasty.So why do they have a history of opposing gay marriage, cannabis legalization, flag burning, gambling, sex work, and adult entertainment?
I disagree. There's the (upcoming) argument about "court packing," which some think the Democrats might try -- but it was the absolute mendacity of Mitch McConnell who was "court packing" at the end of Obama's 2nd term (10 months left, not enough time to get Merrick Garland on the court), and at the end of Trump's first term (40 days was a perfectly adequate amount of time to get Amy Coney Barrett in there).
Everybody can pretend all they like that this was not blatant hypocrisy, but it is, and it is nothing but.
Hell is emptier because McConnell is still in the Senate.
The Supreme Court's job, as set out in the Constitution, is to ultimately decide if a law is Constitutional or not. They do not get to decide willy nilly which laws they will review. They have to work their way up the courts and still be unresolved when they hit the Supremes. There have been illegal and immoral laws in the past and the court has gotten rid of them. There have also been controversial laws that they confirmed. And sometimes the Supreme Court even really screws the pooch. Dred Scott anyone?Which to me is why it shouldn't be in the hands of the court system.
SCOTUS ought to make decision based on the constitution. Let the law be determine by elected representatives.
Then it will always be 100% political, and majorities will suppress minorities forever more. I find that to be pretty much the worst of all possible ends.Which to me is why it shouldn't be in the hands of the court system.
SCOTUS ought to make decision based on the constitution. Let the law be determine by elected representatives.
Then it will always be 100% political, and majorities will suppress minorities forever more. I find that to be pretty much the worst of all possible ends.
But you must admit that having some protections for minority rights has got to be better than none at all. I remember being a kid in school, and the phrase "majority rules!" was the worst kind of oppression a kid who was different could face.I understand but to me it is always 100% political.
I don't believe in a universal morality to based laws on so politics is the necessity.
Decisions in the Supreme Court are not based on morality, usually, they are based upon an interpretation of the US Constitution. That is how they came to a 7-2 decision that Scott was still a slave. Morality alone would have freed him in the lower courts. They went by what the US Constitution said at that time.I understand but to me it is always 100% political.
I don't believe in a universal morality to based laws on so politics is the necessity.
The Supreme Court's job, as set out in the Constitution, is to ultimately decide if a law is Constitutional or not. They do not get to decide willy nilly which laws they will review. They have to work their way up the courts and still be unresolved when they hit the Supremes. There have been illegal and immoral laws in the past and the court has gotten rid of them. There have also been controversial laws that they confirmed. And sometimes the Supreme Court even really screws the pooch. Dred Scott anyone?
Decisions in the Supreme Court are not based on morality, usually, they are based upon an interpretation of the US Constitution. That is how they came to a 7-2 decision that Scott was still a slave. Morality alone would have freed him in the lower courts. They went by what the US Constitution said at that time.
But what the US Constitution, what Magna Carta, what the Code of Hammurabi all said was said in words -- and words a human construct to convey human ideas, and can be used in so many ways.Decisions in the Supreme Court are not based on morality, usually, they are based upon an interpretation of the US Constitution. That is how they came to a 7-2 decision that Scott was still a slave. Morality alone would have freed him in the lower courts. They went by what the US Constitution said at that time.
But you must admit that having some protections for minority rights has got to be better than none at all. I remember being a kid in school, and the phrase "majority rules!" was the worst kind of oppression a kid who was different could face.
Just correcting. The Supreme Court does not make moral rulings. Deciding the abortion issue would not be a moral decision for them. One can argue for it based on morals but ultimately the Supreme Court looks at laws, the Constitution and its Amendments to get to its decisions.Ok, I don't really know if you are arguing or agreeing. At least I don't see an argument here.
And the Supreme Court is the final arbiter when disagreements have arisen about laws and policies.From my understanding, that is the basis of the Constitution. To specify the scope and limit of federal powers.
To lay out the scope and limits of any and all powers that can be applied to the individual, yes. But my point was that language -- like all things human -- changes over time, and to therefore bind yourself to a constitutional (or scriptural) text limits the ability of a society to move on, and learn from its experiences over time.From my understanding, that is the basis of the Constitution. To specify the scope and limit of federal powers.
What do you think their motives are? to be nice and caring people, or control freaks who have problems being tolerant and respecting other's freedoms?I disagree with them to.
But I don’t see them with the evil motives so often ascribed to them.
Lol, that's a Crock. The right wants more freedom, not less.
BTW a baby being free to be born is a basic human right.
These days right wing politics is not separated from Christian extremism. So politics on the right will tend to follow the whims of evangelicals and their laundry list of demands.I understand but to me it is always 100% political.
I don't believe in a universal morality to based laws on so politics is the necessity.
There are slippery slopes everywhere. We first have to consider policies at their word.Let's suppose, for the sake of argument, that in late June the decision of SCOTUS on abortion is delivered, and it is substantially the same as the leaked document penned by Justice Alito. (Presumably including the arguments based on 400 year old jurists who just happened to believe in witches empowering evil spirits in the world). What will they aim for next?
I believe that the religious right thinks itself "on a roll," and that if you are not a heterosexual, cis-gender God-fearer, they are coming for you. So far as I can tell, they have never been shy about making this intention perfectly clear, even though many weren't paying attention.
Thinks like same-sex marriage, the right to make love to the consenting individual of your choice, the right not to have to "join us in prayer," and many more, I believe, will all soon be under threat, because the Religious Right is now smelling blood, and it is hugely energizing for them.