The democratic check on the Supreme Court is very limited and onerous, requiring Constitutional amendment. If that were your attitude, you wouldn't care who sits on the Court, considering we can just undo it with an amendment. — Hanover
This is the crux of the entire debate: What is the appropriate role of the Court and how does it affect our democracy? If we are being ruled by 5 justices, we're not an effective democracy. The role of Congress is to consider matters of policy. — Hanover
No. I asked for the cite to it because I couldn't find the specific statute you were alluding to. I trust your statement, but I'd like to see it for academic sake. It'd be interesting to see how their courts have dealt with such ancient references. — Hanover
That's like saying that because historical people referred to the mentally ill as being possessed by demons then the meaning of the phrase "possessed by demons" at that time meant "mentally ill". But of course that's wrong. It meant what it means now. They were just wrong to refer to the mentally ill as being possessed by demons — Michael
And historical people didn't refer to slavery as being immoral. Does it then follow that the meaning of the word "immoral" has changed, and that slavery isn't immoral as they meant by the word? Or is it that the meaning is the same, and they were just wrong to not refer to slavery as immoral? — Michael
What is the principle you adhere to that I can use to determine what is a liberty though? Is cat ownership a liberty and why or why not?No, I'm deriving it from the facts that a) liberty is a right and b) sodomy is a liberty. — Michael
What is the principle you adhere to that I can use to determine what is a liberty though? Is cat ownership a liberty and why or why not? — Hanover
... my objection is very clear that 5 people don't need to be philosopher kings telling 100s of millions of Americans what is right and wrong. That's what the ballot box is for. — Hanover
As to interpretation of the Constitution, I've always felt the "original intent" approach to be a kind of insult to the framers--as if they were too stupid to comprehend that the future might bring profound changes to the United States and its society which could make other factors relevant in the interpretation of the Constitution. — Ciceronianus the White
In a line of decisions going as far back as 1891, the Supreme Court recognized a right of privacy and bodily integrity, applying it to activities related to marriage, procreation, family relationships, and child rearing and education. Only in 1965 In Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), the Supreme Court ruled that a state's ban on the use of contraceptives violated the right to marital privacy. The court extended that understanding to unmarried persons in 1972. — Wikipedia
Worse than that. "Original intent" is inaccessible. In documents by committee more obviously so. Scalia's insistence on it, and in general conservative's referencing and relying on it, is simply a crime of ignorance — tim wood
A thoughtcrime is an Orwellian neologism used to describe an illegal thought. The term was popularized in the dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell, first published in 1949, wherein thoughtcrime is the criminal act of holding unspoken beliefs or doubts that oppose or question Ingsoc, the ruling party. In the book, the government attempts to control not only the speech and actions, but also the thoughts of its subjects.
Worse than that. "Original intent" is inaccessible. In documents by committee more obviously so. Scalia's insistence on it, and in general conservative's referencing and relying on it, is simply a crime of ignorance. — tim wood
Cats are property, so your right to holding them is protected like all other property. — Benkei
Fair point. I was not aware of the distinction. But is it a distinction that makes a difference, either in understanding or effect? Poster child issue for the question is the 2d amendment - and no, that's not the topic, here. Scalia relied on original whatever-you-want-to-call-it. But was that the right thing to do? First of all, they used words. They understood what they meant by them. We don't, in the sense that we have to guess. And that need to guess is fatal to any claim of understanding. All you have got is maybe a good guess. I watched interviews with Scalia wherein he spoke about original whatever as if it were determinable. It was a lie, and I have to assume he was easily intelligent and well-informed enough to know it. He could easily said his understanding was a guess, and whether correct or not, it still had to go through the filter of present circumstance. He could have said this, but he didn't.They don't (or at least Scalia didn't) rely on original intent. They rely on original meaning. — Michael
We need to place the Constitution in historical perspective to understand intent. — wellwisher
The tradition in the USA is a strong emphasis on 1 and 3 but there's no good argument as to why this should be the case. — Benkei
As to interpretation. As far as I'm aware there's the following possibilities to interpret laws.
1. Grammatical interpretation
2. Law systematic interpretation
3. Legislative historic intent interpretation
4. Historical interpretation (broader than the above, taking social circumstances into account as well)
5. Teleological interpretation
6. Anticipatory interpretation — Benkei
I watched interviews with Scalia wherein he spoke about original whatever as if it were determinable. It was a lie, and I have to assume he was easily intelligent and well-informed enough to know it. He could easily said his understanding was a guess, and whether correct or not, it still had to go through the filter of present circumstance. He could have said this, but he didn't. — tim wood
Though this be madness, yet there is method in ’t. — Hamlet
Here's our issue. If Scalia tells me what the Constitution meant at the time it was written, I know he's either misspeaking or operating under false colours for some reason - ignorance, stupidity, lying. And that sounds harsh, but the arena where Scalia was working has rigorous standards. And any claim of rhetorical shorthand is disingenuous at charitable best.since it relied on what the constitution meant at the time it was written. — FreeEmotion
Who would have thought that "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed" would be considered ambiguous? — Ciceronianus the White
In McDonald v. Chicago (2010), the Court clarified its earlier decisions that limited the amendment's impact to a restriction on the federal government, expressly holding that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment incorporates the Second Amendment against state and local governments.[19] In Caetano v. Massachusetts (2016), the Supreme Court reiterated its earlier rulings that "the Second Amendment extends, prima facie, to all instruments that constitute bearable arms, even those that were not in existence at the time of the founding" and that its protection is not limited to "only those weapons useful in warfare".[20]
How do I find out what the above part of the Constitution, the 'right to bear arms' meant at the time of writing?
Is it
a) impossible to know what it actually meant or even
c) impossible to know what it most likely meant by studying the history and culture of the time? — FreeEmotion
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