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| Reminiscing | Re-shaping the future As most of you know, our Chief Justice of the Supreme Court passed away on Saturday. By Monday, our President had already announced a replacement. With the impending retirement of Justice O'Connor, what impact could the two new appointments have on future generations in this country? And on the world? This is not meant to be turned into a Bush-bashing thread. Discussion should be aimed at how each President has the opportunity to influence the country for years to come. Please also include your thoughts on opposite parties halting the confirmation process, and what this means to the Court. Try to keep things in perspective, and think about what your own party would do before deciding to bash the opposing party. Enjoy! ---------------- "Lucky in love, well maybe so. there's still a lot of things you'll never know... like why each time the sky begins to snow - you cry..." - Dan Fogelberg | |
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| Resident Slayer | Re: Re-shaping the future If you're a liberal, there's nothing to worry about, since liberal appointees stay so (Brennan, Marshall), and middle of the roader's go left (Warren, Blackmun, O'Connor, Kennedy, Souter). The conservatives have to go way to the right (Scalia, Thomas) to find someone who will stay conservative. There has alread been an article in the SF Chronicle about Roberts potential to move to the left. Here's a great link on who's been on the court. There is always the potential for "Borking" of nominees and both sides try it, so claims that the other side is being unfair ("he deserves a *fair* up or down vote") are ludicrous. In fact however, unless you're an extremist, you'll probably see that the democrat presidents have chosen less controversial middle-of-the-road nominees, but in fact turn downs over the last few decades have been even and rare: Johnson had two turndowns and 2 successes, Nixon had 2 turndowns and 4 successes and Reagan had only Bork to go with his 4 successes. All this vetting seems to have a useful purpose which is to force the court to middle positions, much to the chagrin of extremists at each political pole. I personally think that's a good thing! It has also seemed to me that personal positions on specific cases and issues are far less important that the strong polarization that has occurred between three distinct views of the constitution:
It will be interesting to see the war that breaks out when the court overturns Roe. You ain't seen nothin' yet.... Cheers, Buffy ---------------- "If you do not agree with anything I say, I'll not only retract it, but deny under oath that I ever said it!" __________________________________________________ ______________-- Tom Lehrer "The shrinks diagnosed me a sociopath with paranoid delusions. But they’re just out to get me cause I threatened to kill them." Forum Administrator Hypography Science Forums - Science for Boys and Girls! Its not for nothing that we hang out here. | |
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| Creating | Re: Re-shaping the future Four of nine Justices are on the skids: Rehnquist is dead, O'Connor resigned, Ginsburg is an elderly half-dead cancer survivor; Stevens will be 88 by 2008. Bush the Lesser could appoint four Conservative Christ-besotted replacements. This would return America to those godly days of AD 476-1054. The Founding Fathers demanded separation of Church and State given universal European abuse. We have returned to government as faith-based initiative alternately burning witches, extorting alms, and on its knees supplicating a god that does not exist. Test of faith. Benjamin Franklin donated to all Philadelpha churches and synagogues. He attended none of them. ---------------- Uncle Al http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/ (Toxic URL! Unsafe for children and most mammals) http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/lajos.htm#a2 | |
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| Questioning | Re: Re-shaping the future Quote:
Those who do not learn from history... apparently get plenty of air time on any major network. ---------------- Needles in haystacks are less of a problem if you have an electromagnet the size of a Volvo. | ||
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| Resident Slayer | Re: Re-shaping the future Quote:
Great link! Everyone should read that page! Live-Free-or-Die, Buffy ---------------- "If you do not agree with anything I say, I'll not only retract it, but deny under oath that I ever said it!" __________________________________________________ ______________-- Tom Lehrer "The shrinks diagnosed me a sociopath with paranoid delusions. But they’re just out to get me cause I threatened to kill them." Forum Administrator Hypography Science Forums - Science for Boys and Girls! Its not for nothing that we hang out here. | ||
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| Creating | Re: Re-shaping the future Politics, economics and supreme court justices go through cycles. We get liberal for a while until that goes too far, then we get conservative until that goes too far. Both sides have their good points and negative consequences. One-sided thinking can not express the whole truth, just the opinion and choices of one side. As far as separation of church and state I would like to add a strange twist for debate. Back in the time of Rome, rational thinkers worshipped the goddest Rationalis, ie., the goddess of reason. I am not 100% sure of the spelling. If our goverment is based on reason it would violate separation of church and state because it would be worshipping Rationalis. That is why polititions are usually very one-sided (not being reasonable). If somebody decided to resurrect Rationalis religion worship, (it was a valid religion during the time of Buddism, Christianity, Judism, etc,) than the government could not fund anything based on reason because it would violate separation of church and state. I bring this odd angle up only because we have gotten too petty about Church and State and need to be less insecure about the superficial trimmings of faith. Last edited by HydrogenBond; 09-06-2005 at 05:22 PM. | |
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| Still Learning | Re: Re-shaping the future Ditto that nemo. I posted more regarding the seperation. I'd respond to UncleAl's rant, but I tire quickly of chasing the hit-and-runs. You can't talk to someone who's not listening. Regarding the judges, blocking confirmation is childish and counter-productive, no matter which side is guilty of it. The checks-and-balances designed into the system are 1) the Senate vote, 2) the filibuster's non-stop debate (when used properly) to make any issues known, and 3) the fact that the court contains members of both parties. The obstacles to the design are 1) underhanded stall tactics (the system is slow and impotent enough already) such as filibuster abuse, and 2) the fact that the court doesn't follow the law anymore but makes it, circa 1803, usurping the purpose of the elected legislators, and the whole political process where the people are involved. We now have a dictatorship of nine, hence all the fuss over these glorified-lawyers. ---------------- “Welcome to the desert of the real.” -- Morpheus | |
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| Questioning | Re: Re-shaping the future Quote:
My personal views on the subject of the Constitution are that the 10th Amendment is not a hoax, and that the Constitution is a living document - if the issue is worth changing the Constitution, then do so; otherwise measure it with the Constitution as it stands now. If the Constitution does not address your implied right to worship your God, stand on your head or eat a bologna sandwich on Thursday, then it is not unconstitutional Thanks, by the way, I like that site too. ---------------- Needles in haystacks are less of a problem if you have an electromagnet the size of a Volvo. Last edited by nemo; 09-06-2005 at 07:00 PM. Reason: numbers over one digit confuse me | ||
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| Resident Slayer | Re: Re-shaping the future Quote:
In a private school, you really only have to listen to the parents, in a public school, all of a sudden any crackpot religion off the street can demand equal time. Now in "middle America" this isn't much of a problem *because* of the fact that the interpretation of the establishment clause has leaned toward prohibition, but this is one of those "beware of the law of unintended consequences" situations. Its a fact that Scientology is salivating over this possible future, and they already have an education division that until recently had the outsourcing contract in the San Francisco school district for drug and alcohol education until the link was discovered and they were terminated. Even the pro-religion-in-school crowd has caught this trend, and recently you've been able to see more and more of the "we're a (Judeo-) Christian nation, so we'll tolerate the Jews and if you really twist our arms, limited Muslim beliefs, but the rest are all cults and can reasonably be limited" which is about as far from what the First amendment says as you can get. But it certainly is a can of worms. Moreover, most of the things that these folks want to push does go straight to establishment: prayers at sponsored or official events (e.g. football games), and even "non-denominational" prayer can get you in trouble unless you go through contortions that even the pro-religion folks have problems with like "we thank God or the Gods" (hey some folks have polytheistic religions, you gonna discriminate against them? By the way, pointing out that yes, the pledge is on dangerous ground...it assumes monotheism). I personally don't have a problem with kids praying (hey, they all do before finals!) on their own, or moments of silence or whatever, but I will point out that school is a horrible place for those who are not in the "in" crowd, and if you're the only Jewish kid in a high school where the coach invokes Christ whenever possible, you'd better be ten times better than anyone else if you want to make the team, or not be hazed mercilessly. I've seen that sort of cruelty ruin people for life because the administration couldn't see what was wrong with it. If you've been reading the news, this sort of thing just blew up at the Air Force Academy, and its really ugly. The question you really have to ask is, at what point does letting the majority religion have "proportional representation" create an atmosphere where being a minority is an excuse for exclusion and even abuse even when the "actual" abuse is not "sanctioned," only an environment which brings it out. Cheers, Buffy ---------------- "If you do not agree with anything I say, I'll not only retract it, but deny under oath that I ever said it!" __________________________________________________ ______________-- Tom Lehrer "The shrinks diagnosed me a sociopath with paranoid delusions. But they’re just out to get me cause I threatened to kill them." Forum Administrator Hypography Science Forums - Science for Boys and Girls! Its not for nothing that we hang out here. | ||
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| Questioning | Re: Re-shaping the future Quote:
Abuse is bad. Tolerance is good. The road goes both ways. ---------------- Needles in haystacks are less of a problem if you have an electromagnet the size of a Volvo. | ||
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