Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier
I think we do "get" it. You and I actually are saying exactly the same thing in different words, from a logical point of view. (A --> B and ~B --> ~A are logically equivalent).
As I said earlier, the rulings are more political than judicial. The rest of your post proves that point: a contorted series (not your contortions, the Court's contortions ) of steps to try to find an ex post facto justification for an outcome that had already been decided in advance.
(discrimination = bad, helping people recover from harmful effects of prior discrimination = good. and I agree with this concept).
"A compelling government interest" = a strong political reason = "We can override the plain language of the Constitution to interpret it to mean something other than what it appears to say, provided the reason is 'compelling' enough."
Now, I'm old-fashioned in my vocabulary and grammar, and perhaps "political" in today's meaning no longer means what I'm using the word to say. A different word might be better in today's climate.
Originally posted by Fighting Sioux 23
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As I said earlier, the rulings are more political than judicial. The rest of your post proves that point: a contorted series (not your contortions, the Court's contortions ) of steps to try to find an ex post facto justification for an outcome that had already been decided in advance.
(discrimination = bad, helping people recover from harmful effects of prior discrimination = good. and I agree with this concept).
"A compelling government interest" = a strong political reason = "We can override the plain language of the Constitution to interpret it to mean something other than what it appears to say, provided the reason is 'compelling' enough."
Now, I'm old-fashioned in my vocabulary and grammar, and perhaps "political" in today's meaning no longer means what I'm using the word to say. A different word might be better in today's climate.
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