Why not an Asian trans-gender woman — Harry Hindu
Abstract: What does it mean to assert that judges should decide cases according to justice and not according to the law? Is there something incoherent in the question itself? That question will serve as our springboard in examining what is—or should be—the connection between justice and law.
Legal and political theorists since the time of Plato have wrestled with the problem of whether justice is
part of law or is simply a moral judgment about law. Nearly every writer on the subject has either concluded that justice is only a judgment about law or has offered no reason to support a conclusion that justice is somehow part of law. — god must be atheist
So if nearly every writer said the same thing as I did ( — god must be atheist
News flash: that's not how this process is designed to work (certainly it hasn't in two and a third centuries). ↪ — 180 Proof
The only thing "racist and sexist" is the 95% white male quota for SCOTUS. — 180 Proof
Besides, a black woman professional is far more likely than not to be "more qualified" than her white male peers because she has had to be (even expected to be) every step of the way throughout her career due to systemic discrimination against her on account of both gender and race. — 180 Proof
That's true in some situations; in others, it isn't. Race and gender do not matter when you are hiring a hundred teachers; just got the best you can. The best person to be Pope, however, will be a Catholic male. — Bitter Crank
If you want someone sensitive to the issues inherent in cases concerning race and gender, a black woman would be the best person. — Bitter Crank
Only in 1984. Hopefully we will never come to that, but it appears that is where we are headed.Hypocrisy is our collective default state. — Bitter Crank
Fair points made on the trans- options, but ....We could have an Asian trans-gender person; we could have an indigenous gay person, we could have a pissed off incel of whatever extraction. One barrier to having these types is that the supremes are usually selected from the cohort of experienced federal judges. There are not many Asian trans-gender, gay indigenous, pissed off Incel judges to start with, even fewer who are experienced. Maybe n=zero in that category.
Hence, have patience.
But were I appointing judges, I would not start with a transgendered person. The status of "transgender" is too unsettled at this point. — Bitter Crank
I was specifically asking why, if there were available Asian trans-women as viable options, why a black woman is the best person as someone that is sensitive to the issues inherent in cases concerning race or gender. You made it sound as if black women hold some special vantage point on the matter. But if you're saying that blacks are the only minority that we a viable pool to choose from then that makes more sense.If you want someone sensitive to the issues inherent in cases concerning race and gender, a black woman would be the best person. — Bitter Crank
Not necessarily. It isn’t like a male can’t be sympathetic to the plights faced by females. There were also white activists during the Civil Rights weren’t there? This type of thinking implies that there are qualities that can only be possessed by people of a specific gender/race, which is just another form of race (or sex) essentialism, correct? — Pinprick
I was specifically asking why, if there were available Asian trans-women as viable options, why a black woman is the best person as someone that is sensitive to the issues inherent in cases concerning race or gender. You made it sound as if black women hold some special vantage point on the matter. But if you're saying that blacks are the only minority that we a viable pool to choose from then that makes more sense. — Harry Hindu
the Grundnorm in Kelsen's system is based on justice. — Tobias
Assuming you're not disingenuous, your replies suggest you do not understand my post perhaps due to a lack of sufficient historical background on the issues of class race & sex/gender exclusion still at work in America. You're, of course, entitled your uninformed opinion, 'prick, which doesn't change the facts of the matter .The past is never dead. It's not even past.
~William Faulkner — 180 Proof
That can't be. The Grundnorm is the norm that all other norms, rules and law, derive from. By definition it cannot be based on something else. — Benkei
I was reading discworld novels when studying Kelsen and I thought the "turtles all the way down" was an apt metaphor for his Grundnorm. He never defined it and I thought it was a cop out to try to avoid saying something like, it's based on divine law, it's natural law etc. I didn't particularly like him. I liked Hart better. — Benkei
I'm confronted with the Brno legal positivist school in my daily work actually. Kelsen lives on in Slovakia which for practical purposes totally sucks. — Benkei
Why are you confronted with the Brno legal positivist school? Not that I have an inkling of what they think in Brno, but it sounds cool. I am interested, please tell me more! — Tobias
Assuming you're not disingenuous, your replies suggest you do not understand my post perhaps due to a sufficient lack of historical background on the issues of class race & sex/gender exclusion still at work in America. — 180 Proof
As it stands now, I fail to see your reason for denying this is racist. — Pinprick
Obtuse:
"annoyingly insensitive or slow to understand."
"he wondered if the doctor was being deliberately obtuse"
Similar:
stupid
dull
slow-witted
slow
dull-witted
unintelligent
witless
(and more)
Is that what you maintain--the nomination is based on the belief the black race is superior to the white race? — Ciceronianus
Your blunt, literalist interpretation of the word 'racist' makes it impossible for you to see any effort to ameliorate past racial discrimination as anything but more racism. — Bitter Crank
No. I’m maintaining that excluding all races and genders except black female from consideration for a position is racial (and gender) discrimination, which I equate with racism/sexism. Am I mistaken in equating the two? — Pinprick
I suppose the irony of that remark is lost on you.You said that Biden excluding other races/genders from consideration only harms the “95% white male quota.” I take this to not count as actual harm. — Pinprick
Of course not, since no one is "entitled" to that job by "birth right". Besides, for at least the last century there have been many "other qualified people of different races/genders" than Straight White Christian Men not even considered for appointment to the high court; this historical "quota" has not materially harmed the 'qualified others' but, in fact, has in many ways materially harmed the American people in general and American jurisprudence in particular with the SCOTUS' experientially narrow and predominantly classist decisions.But, if there are other qualified people for this position of different races/genders are they not harmed by not being considered?
Again, this reference should not be seen as an argument to support my case. It is, instead, for you to consider that your socially ingrained adoration of law is viewed by many philosophers, including from Plato's time on, as a false, misplaced adoration. — god must be atheist
The Grundnorm first, indeed it is a sovereign act of law creation, the only one there is in the Kelsenian system. It is designed to end the ' turtles all the way down' one gets when following the steps of the legality of rules. It ends somewhere and it ends for Kelsen in a sovereign act of law creation. — Tobias
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