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  • #46
    Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

    Originally posted by Fighting Sioux 23 View Post
    I don't quite understand how it is so difficult to get.
    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.
    Last edited by FreshFish; 04-25-2014, 02:13 PM.
    "Hope is a good thing; maybe the best of things."

    "Beer is a sign that God loves us and wants us to be happy." -- Benjamin Franklin

    "Being Irish, he had an abiding sense of tragedy, which sustained him through temporary periods of joy." -- W. B. Yeats

    "People generally are most impatient with those flaws in others about which they are most ashamed of in themselves." - folk wisdom

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    • #47
      Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

      Originally posted by busterman62 View Post
      Asking for a photo ID in order to vote is racist? Care to elaborate for us a little Rev Al?
      I normally agree, at least to some extent, with Priceless, but I don't see how a photo ID law is racist. The photo ID laws are motivated almost entirely for political reasons. One side wishes to harm the other because the other's voting base would suffer disproportionately from a photo ID law. I don't really see it being racist, even though statistics would likely show that one race is more affected by the laws than another. However, there is no disparate impact under the EPC.

      That being said, I don't agree with photo ID laws because they disenfranchise a group that has the least power to speak up for themselves. The only photo ID law that I would be okay with would look something like this:
      1) Free photo identification for election (doesn't have to be a free driver's license, just something that's free for whoever has to get it);
      2) The requirements to get an ID are no more difficult than the requirements to register to vote in that state;
      3) Advanced notice (6 months...maybe more) given to every eligible voter as to how to obtain one of the free photo IDs if they need it; AND
      4) At the first election following the move to photo IDs, a booth where a voter could get this free photo identification at every polling place in order to vote in that election.
      North Dakota
      National Champions: 1959, 1963, 1980, 1982, 1987, 1997, 2000, 2016

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      • #48
        Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

        Originally posted by Fighting Sioux 23 View Post
        I don't agree with photo ID laws because they disenfranchise a group that has the least power to speak up for themselves.
        Dead people have the least power to speak up for themselves, and they are the voters most likely to be affected by photo ID laws.....



        Seriously, when you have elections in which more votes are cast in a precinct than there are registered voters living in said precinct, how do you fight voter fraud?



        I would suggest that the widespread desire for photo ID laws among many people has less to do with "disenfranchising" a group and more to do with fighting voter fraud, but then much of that depends upon where you live and what you've been through. Most of the conditions in your list (except the last one) are already stock, standard language in the current generation of voter ID laws.
        "Hope is a good thing; maybe the best of things."

        "Beer is a sign that God loves us and wants us to be happy." -- Benjamin Franklin

        "Being Irish, he had an abiding sense of tragedy, which sustained him through temporary periods of joy." -- W. B. Yeats

        "People generally are most impatient with those flaws in others about which they are most ashamed of in themselves." - folk wisdom

        Comment


        • #49
          Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

          Originally posted by FreshFish View Post
          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.
          Except it was you who emphatically stated that affirmative action was "clearly in black and white inconsistent with the 14th Amendment." It is obviously not. You have your opinions, of course, as do we all, but you simply do not know what you are talking about on the subject of constitutional law.

          Comment


          • #50
            Originally posted by busterman62 View Post
            Asking for a photo ID in order to vote is racist? Care to elaborate for us a little Rev Al?
            It's not just photo ID. It's doing away with early-voting, shortening the hours, putting polling machines in predominantly white voting districts while those that are predominantly black have few machines and longer lines.

            Study after study have found that there is no actual fraud at the polls on election day. (see below) I know that there are people who are inclined to think as Justice Roberts does that racism in this country has been obliterated so we don't need the Civil Rights Act anymore, but let's ask the Atlanta Braves if racism still exists. (see below) I know these people hate to connect the dots and see the patterns, even if it is slapping them in the face. That doesn't mean everyone hears no evil and sees no evil. And my grandparents and parents instilled in me the belief that when you see evil and hear evil, you speak up about it. I will take the lessons my forebears taught me as much more valuable than the lesson taught to our "gentleman" friend below.


            Brennan Center for Justice
            http://www.brennancenter.org/issues/voter-fraud

            Republican’s Study Fails to Find Significant Evidence of Voter Fraud
            http://www.ringoffireradio.com/2013/12/republicans-study-fails-to-find-significant-evidence-of-voter-fraud/

            Here's a piece from those Socialists over at Forbes.
            http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnwasik/2012/11/06/voter-fraud-a-massive-anti-democratic-deception/

            I knew something wrong was afoot when my wife reported that a 90-year-old woman had to be turned away from voting early at our local polling place. Her crime: She didn’t have a driver’s license. Why would she? She wasn’t able to drive anymore.

            As the embarrassed election judge fumbled for a solution as the woman sobbed — this was the first election she missed in her life (and might be her last) — it struck me at how regressive this whole idea of voter policing has become.

            Believe me, I know plenty about voting fraud. I’m from Chicago, where countless voters were registered in graveyards and perhaps aided in the election of John F. Kennedy in 1960 thanks to Richard J. Daley’s political machine. He managed to put a lot of zombies in polling places — even more than were in political office at the time.

            But large-scale voter fraud is virtually non-existent today. Yet the efforts to root it out recall the horrid Jim Crow era. The former “party of Lincoln” has been most active in this fraudulent crusade. It’s mostly prevented people of color and older folks from voting. Could it be that they’d largely vote for Democrats?
            Nah.


            Atlanta Braves office receives racist hate mail directed toward Hank Aaron
            http://tracking.si.com/2014/04/15/hank-aaron-atlanta-braves-racist-mail/
            “Hank Aaron is a scumbag piece of (expletive) (racial slur)” a man named Edward says in an e-mail to the Braves front office and obtained by USA TODAY Sports.
            Edward invokes the epithet five times in four sentences, closing with, “My old man instilled in my mind from a young age, the only good (racial slur) is a dead (racial slur).”
            This isn't from 40 years ago when Hammerin' Hank was chasing Babe Ruth, this is a couple weeks ago.


            But no. Racism no longer exists in this country. Let's party!

            (I can't embed links on this thing, so I've put the links at the bottom. I feel like I'm back in college.)

            Comment


            • #51
              Originally posted by dxmnkd316 View Post
              Well, the whole Clive Bundy thing doesn't really help your argument right now....
              CB provides a balance to Al Sharpton.
              CCT '77 & '78
              4 kids
              5 grandsons (BCA 7/09, CJA 5/14, JDL 8/14, JFL 6/16, PJL 7/18)
              1 granddaughter (EML 4/18)

              ”Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both.”
              - Benjamin Franklin

              Banned from the St. Lawrence University Facebook page - March 2016 (But I got better).

              I want to live forever. So far, so good.

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              • #52
                Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

                Originally posted by Priceless View Post

                Atlanta Braves office receives racist hate mail directed toward Hank Aaron
                http://tracking.si.com/2014/04/15/ha...s-racist-mail/


                This isn't from 40 years ago when Hammerin' Hank was chasing Babe Ruth, this is a couple weeks ago.
                I'm sorry - my memory just isn't what it used to be. Can you remind me which part of the Constitution or the law requires a massive governmental intrusion to ensure that no private citizen insults another verbally or in writing?
                If you don't change the world today, how can it be any better tomorrow?

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                • #53
                  Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

                  Originally posted by LynahFan View Post
                  I'm sorry - my memory just isn't what it used to be. Can you remind me which part of the Constitution or the law requires a massive governmental intrusion to ensure that no private citizen insults another verbally or in writing?
                  I believe he was just using the Braves example as an illustration that racism is still alive and well.

                  Or are you suggesting otherwise?
                  North Dakota
                  National Champions: 1959, 1963, 1980, 1982, 1987, 1997, 2000, 2016

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                  • #54
                    Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

                    Originally posted by LynahFan View Post
                    I'm sorry - my memory just isn't what it used to be. Can you remind me which part of the Constitution or the law requires a massive governmental intrusion to ensure that no private citizen insults another verbally or in writing?
                    Originally posted by Fighting Sioux 23 View Post
                    I believe he was just using the Braves example as an illustration that racism is still alive and well.

                    Or are you suggesting otherwise?
                    Lynah was just pointing out that there was a massive governmental intrusion behind SI's getting the story out.

                    Comment


                    • #55
                      Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

                      Originally posted by Fighting Sioux 23 View Post
                      I believe he was just using the Braves example as an illustration that racism is still alive and well.

                      Or are you suggesting otherwise?
                      Not at all - having grown up in TN and lived in TX, I'm acutely aware that racism is alive and well. And, quite frankly, I'm not sure that the rural areas in VT and CA where I lived were any better. And just yesterday on the street here in Redondo Beach while waiting for the cops to show up after witnessing a car accident, I heard numerous jokes that the person at fault was "driving while Asian."

                      My point is that the government does NOT have a compelling interest in making sure that people think and speak "properly." The fact that some people think racist thoughts and speak racist statements cannot be used as justification for laws that requires "strict scrutiny." Only active, actual discrimination rises to that standard. Would someone seriously make the statement that so long as there remains one person making racist jokes in the entire country, we really need to leave affirmative action in place? If not, then bringing up anecdotes of racist speech is completely irrelevant to a discussion on affirmative action.
                      If you don't change the world today, how can it be any better tomorrow?

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                      • #56
                        Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

                        Originally posted by LynahFan View Post
                        Not at all - having grown up in TN and lived in TX, I'm acutely aware that racism is alive and well. And, quite frankly, I'm not sure that the rural areas in VT and CA where I lived were any better. And just yesterday on the street here in Redondo Beach while waiting for the cops to show up after witnessing a car accident, I heard numerous jokes that the person at fault was "driving while Asian."
                        Unfortunately, everywhere I've ever been in this country (been to every state except Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana, and Arkansas) I've seen examples of racism. Everywhere.

                        Originally posted by LynahFan
                        My point is that the government does NOT have a compelling interest in making sure that people think and speak "properly."
                        I completely agree. The government should never try and compel thoughts and only in rare instances speech. I'm not sure what this has to do with voter ID laws though.

                        Originally posted by LynahFan
                        The fact that some people think racist thoughts and speak racist statements cannot be used as justification for laws that requires "strict scrutiny."
                        I'm not sure anyone is trying to use the Braves' quote as justification for anything other than to counter the idea that there is no racism in the country. At least, that is how I interpreted it.

                        Originally posted by LynahFan
                        Only active, actual discrimination rises to that standard. Would someone seriously make the statement that so long as there remains one person making racist jokes in the entire country, we really need to leave affirmative action in place? If not, then bringing up anecdotes of racist speech is completely irrelevant to a discussion on affirmative action.
                        Agreed...although I don't think anyone was trying to make that argument. The way I interpreted it was as a counter to the idea that racism is no longer a big issue. Perhaps I'm wrong.

                        Also, the discussion was on Voter ID laws (at least, I thought it was)...not Affirmative Action.
                        North Dakota
                        National Champions: 1959, 1963, 1980, 1982, 1987, 1997, 2000, 2016

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                        • #57
                          Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

                          Originally posted by Fighting Sioux 23 View Post
                          Also, the discussion was on Voter ID laws (at least, I thought it was)...not Affirmative Action.
                          Well, I see several other references to AA in this thread besides mine, so I thought it was all part of a larger discussion on race. If you like, I'll explicitly state that I also don't think the existence of anecdotal racism proves that voter ID laws are racist, and that anecdotal racism also has no relevance to a discussion of voter ID laws.
                          If you don't change the world today, how can it be any better tomorrow?

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                          • #58
                            Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

                            Originally posted by LynahFan View Post
                            Well, I see several other references to AA in this thread besides mine, so I thought it was all part of a larger discussion on race. If you like, I'll explicitly state that I also don't think the existence of anecdotal racism proves that voter ID laws are racist, and that anecdotal racism also has no relevance to a discussion of voter ID laws.
                            But I'm pretty sure anecdotal racism is evidence of racism. Fishy said "I seriously doubt there is much "racial" prejudice these days." I'm 99% certain Priceless was responding to that particular line of thinking with his comments.

                            Comment


                            • #59
                              Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

                              I think that saying that requiring photo ID in order to vote is racist is a bit of a stretch, but on the other hand, if you think about the people who literally cannot afford the cost of going to the DMV (or wherever) and paying the fee for a photo ID, do you suppose that they reflect the same ethnic makeup as society as a whole? I suspect they lean toward further toward the minority. The suggestion that a photo ID for voting purposes should be both free and easy to get (including people not needing to travel across the city to get one) is a good one. While voter fraud sucks, so does the inability to exercise one's most fundamental right due to the lack of money.
                              Originally posted by unofan View Post
                              But I'm pretty sure anecdotal racism is evidence of racism. Fishy said "I seriously doubt there is much "racial" prejudice these days." I'm 99% certain Priceless was responding to that particular line of thinking with his comments.
                              Apparently, LynahFan has a REALLY hard time grasping this.

                              Comment


                              • #60
                                Re: The Power of SCOTUS V: The Final Frontier

                                Originally posted by unofan View Post
                                But I'm pretty sure anecdotal racism is evidence of racism. Fishy said "I seriously doubt there is much "racial" prejudice these days." I'm 99% certain Priceless was responding to that particular line of thinking with his comments.

                                FF's bizarre post when he said that was #29. Priceless's post that I was responding to was #50, where he only quoted busterman62 regarding voter ID laws. Priceless had already previously responded to FreshFish in #44, when he quoted FreshFish's post #36, NOT #29. It's not clear to me why you would think that Priceless was going all the way back to address #29, when he hadn't done so in #44 and didn't quote FreshFish in #50.
                                If you don't change the world today, how can it be any better tomorrow?

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