:strong: :wink:The Court has too much unchecked power, but I do take great comfort in knowing that we will have a long conservative era where now young children will be able to live out most of their formative years without being subjected to liberal jurisprudence. The Trump legacy is now indelibly marked on a generation. The Republican blockade of Obama's attempt to select a justice is now appearing all the more brilliant and all the more important. — Hanover
What's wrong with discussing loyalty? Isn't loyalty an important quality in your friends, in people you associate with, people you do business with, etc.? — Agustino
Should a Justice worry about the outcome of the decisions when he or she decides, or should he or she just decide based upon the Constitution says? — Hanover
I don't hear you arguing vehemently that the penumbra of the Bills of Rights demands the legality of abortion (The Roe v. Wade reasoning), largely because it's preposterous. You see no problem with slapping down a rule just because you think it's right even though the Constitution says nothing about it? — Hanover
Conflating the Constitution with morality is most assuredly a right-wing position, brought on primarily through the vacuous 'Originalist' interpretation on the Constitution which would shackle this Nation to the 18th century. — Maw
A little of both. The US Constitution is our touchstone. Its the oldest constitution in the world because of the flexibility we allow in interpretation.
If we get rigid about it we'll lose it. — frank
The Constitution protects a person's liberty. Is it preposterous to rule (as the Supreme Court did in Roe vs Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey) that the choice to have an abortion is a liberty, and if so why? It's not as if the Constitution actually provides an exhaustive list of what it means by the term — Michael
A real way for a document to lose meaning is to make it mean whatever you want it to mean. If you're not going to really pay attention to the words, but you're going to just make if do whatever you can't get the legislature to do for you, then the words become meaningless. — Hanover
If the list of liberties did include abortion, why was it illegal in every state upon ratification of the 14th Amendment, which uses the term "liberty" you're relying upon? When the 13th Amendment was ratified, the slaves actually became free. Why didn't abortion stop upon passage of the 14th? Likely because it didn't mean that? — Hanover
And to be clear, the right to liberty that was found in the 14th Amendment isn't some generalized notion of the right to abortion, but it is a complex system of rights divided by trimester, where one has lesser rights to abort each trimester and the state has greater rights to regulate as each 3 month period elapses. That is a bit preposterous. In fact, it sure sounds like judicial legislation. I would suspect that if pre Roe v. Wade we put 100 legal scholars in separate rooms and asked them to determine if there were a Constitutional right to abortion and, if so, to set it out, none would have come up with the reasoning and three trimester system found in Roe v. Wade. — Hanover
I think that's the road we're going down. When a document means anything you want it to mean, it really means nothing at all. I also have trust in the democratic process and don't think we need judges steering our progress based upon what really amounts to matters of their conscience. — Hanover
Hence the due process. Liberties can be restricted if doing so serves some greater good, and the case was made that the closer to viability the more reason there is to restrict this liberty. — Michael
Although your argument here is less a case for abortion not being a liberty and more a case against allowing abortion to be restricted even in the latest stages. — Michael
You seem to be arguing that the trimester system is a type of procedural due process, but it's not — Hanover
My argument is entirely one of whether abortion is a right set out in the Constitution. — Hanover
The road we're going down? If we are in fact on that road, then give me an example. What part of the constitution has become meaningless due to loose interpretation? — frank
So, to answer your question: The 14th Amendment has become meaningless due to loose interpretation. The 14th Amendment states a state may not deprive you of contraception, intermarriage, abortion, sodomy, or gay marriage. You may however be deprived of the right to a jury trial in a civil case, the right to a grand jury, the right to contract to labor however you want, and the right to assisted suicide. There is no formula for deciding where these rights come from, but it's left up to the decision of the Justices.
That hardly sounds like they're following rules or laws, but just sort of deciding. And they don't just make generalized holdings like "you have the right to an abortion." They say, "you have the right to an abortion in the first trimester" and they lay out a very specific rule, as if all of that is a sacred right.
I think the rule is very clear, though, in how unenumerated rights are found. You simply look at the prevailing view of the political left and you declare it right and just and you enshrine it in the Constitution. It then becomes a moral statement decreed by their atheistic god or something and it stands forever immovable. I think it's clear that the Court is just looking to public sentiment when it finds these rights and they change with the political climate. That's not interpretation of a document. That's just what a good politician does. — Hanover
The problem, though, is that the Constitution doesn't define "life", "liberty", "property", or "speech", so how can the Supreme Court determine if a law wrongly infringes on these rights? If the Constitution doesn't tell us what these things are, and if it's wrong to infer anything that isn't explicit in the Constitution, then such rights are effectively meaningless. — Michael
So, to answer your question: The 14th Amendment has become meaningless due to loose interpretation. The 14th Amendment states a state may not deprive you of contraception, intermarriage, abortion, sodomy, or gay marriage. You may however be deprived of the right to a jury trial in a civil case, the right to a grand jury, the right to contract to labor however you want, and the right to assisted suicide. There is no formula for deciding where these rights come from, but it's left up to the decision of the Justices. — Hanover
I think the rule is very clear, though, in how unenumerated rights are found. You simply look at the prevailing view of the political left and you declare it right and just and you enshrine it in the Constitution. — Hanover
Anyway, there are variety ways of interpreting words, one of which is to look at how "liberty" was used in 1866 when it was used, and it most clearly did not refer to abortion or sodomy. — Hanover
You just did a wonderful job of explaining how we currently understand what the 9th and 14th Amendments mean, so obviously they aren't meaningless. If some familiarity with precedents is required to fully understand the law, that's business as usual. — frank
That's not what Jefferson was saying. America inherited its laws from England and part of the common law tradition is that judges interpret the meaning of laws and render binding legal opinions explaining what the laws mean. His point is well taken, that if you write a whole new set of laws, you're going to discard perhaps hundred of years of precedent clarifying the meaning of those laws. This doesn't point to the evolving meaning of words, but actually the opposite, which is that over time the meaning of statutes become more clear and more well defined based upon precedent. Courts reversing themselves and changing the meaning of terms does occur from time to time, but that can be based on all sorts of things and the role of stare decisis is a matter of debate.Thomas Jefferson was asked to rewrite the statues of Virginia after the revolution (it was known that Virginia's law would become the model all the states would follow). Jefferson refused, saying that every word in a law code is the beneficiary of generations of lawyerly wrangling and it would be wrong to curse future lawyers with having to wrangle over a totally new set of words. So Jefferson knew that the meaning of the words continually evolves — frank
Virginia's law still includes the Magna Carta, which most certainly is not interpreted today the way it was in 1215. Would you seriously hold that it should be? — frank
I think this is the wrong way to understand language. You and a slave owner might mean the same thing by “moral” but disagree on which things are moral. So we and the people of 1866 might mean the same thing by “liberty” but disagree on which things are a liberty. The original meaning interpretation of the Constitution requires that we consider what the people who wrote it meant by the term, and presumably it meant what it does now, even if we have a different understanding of which things are covered by that meaning. — Michael
What does "liberty" mean and how is it being used in the various cases I cited? When faced with a novel issue regarding whether something is a substantive right, how do I go about that analysis so that I might expect my conclusion would be consistent with someone else's? If there is not standard to determine what is a substantive right, how can I ever say someone was right or wrong in their conclusion? — Hanover
You'll have to give the cite to where the Virginia Code contains excerpts from the Magna Carta translated from its medieval Latin so I can see exactly what you're talking about.. — Hanover
So it would be appropriate in regard to the way we have worked out the role of the Supreme Court to ask if our judges have been doing a good job of identifying what is beneficial to the American society. I'd say they have pretty good track record. And if they fail, as I said, Congress can rectify that. — frank
I think you're grumbling about some democratic principle. I would say a woman has a right to an abortion. I think you agree, but you think it would be better if the whole society continues to suffer because of the inability of congressmen to amend the constitution. I honestly don't understand that attitude. — frank
You're denying that Virginia's statues contain the Magna Carta? — frank
The only way we can possibly ascertain the meaning of a word used in 1866 is by looking to how it was used. And what we know is that liberty did not include the right to abort, to intermarry, to engage in sodomy, and to marry someone of your same gender. I think it's clear that the word "liberty" means something quite different today than when it was written. You seem to be saying that it means the same today as before, but how do you know that if all indications are that they meant something far different. — Hanover
But let's clarify, what is meant by "liberty," and how would I know if I have a right to cat ownership? My guess is that I don't, largely because it's not a hot-button issue for the left and it doesn't have to do with relationships or sexuality in some way. — Hanover
I mean, really, you derived the right to have sodomy by extrapolating from the other amendments? — Hanover
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