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The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

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Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

I heard some more background on the 17-yr old CT teen with cancer. Doctor A diagnosed her and recommended chemo. The mother asked for a copy of her daughter's medical records and said she wanted to get a second opinion before agreeing to follow through on Doctor A's prescription. Doctor A then called DFS and asked for the daughter to be removed from parental care.

If true, this detail sheds a whole different, unsavory light on the whole picture.

Yeah, that's not so good...
 
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

I heard some more background on the 17-yr old CT teen with cancer. Doctor A diagnosed her and recommended chemo. The mother asked for a copy of her daughter's medical records and said she wanted to get a second opinion before agreeing to follow through on Doctor A's prescription. Doctor A then called DFS and asked for the daughter to be removed from parental care.

If true, this detail sheds a whole different, unsavory light on the whole picture.

Yeah, the clip they showed on the news here had one of the justices reading her decision, saying what compelled her was that the 17-year old said under oath that she would accept treatment and then ran away from home. That's an angle I hadn't heard before. I honestly don't know how I feel about this. In theory, I agree with the defense lawyer who asked "Does the right magically come into being when you wake up on your 18th birthday?" but I have my doubts in this case. Not everyone matures at the same rate and is ready to make decisions at 18 while others are ready when they 15 or 16. That's why I have a problem with arbitrarily setting an age.
 
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

I heard some more background on the 17-yr old CT teen with cancer. Doctor A diagnosed her and recommended chemo. The mother asked for a copy of her daughter's medical records and said she wanted to get a second opinion before agreeing to follow through on Doctor A's prescription. Doctor A then called DFS and asked for the daughter to be removed from parental care.

If true, this detail sheds a whole different, unsavory light on the whole picture.

cite?
 
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

Yeah, the clip they showed on the news here had one of the justices reading her decision, saying what compelled her was that the 17-year old said under oath that she would accept treatment and then ran away from home. That's an angle I hadn't heard before. I honestly don't know how I feel about this. In theory, I agree with the defense lawyer who asked "Does the right magically come into being when you wake up on your 18th birthday?" but I have my doubts in this case. Not everyone matures at the same rate and is ready to make decisions at 18 while others are ready when they 15 or 16. That's why I have a problem with arbitrarily setting an age.

It should come down to whether she is competent to make the decision. If she is not impaired, is reasonably educated and knows the risks of her choices who are we to tell her what to do?
 
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

It should come down to whether she is competent to make the decision. If she is not impaired, is reasonably educated and knows the risks of her choices who are we to tell her what to do?
I'm agreeing with Handyman. I feel a small shudder.
 
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

It should come down to whether she is competent to make the decision. If she is not impaired, is reasonably educated and knows the risks of her choices who are we to tell her what to do?

Exactly. Her age shouldn't enter into the equation.
 
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

I heard some more background on the 17-yr old CT teen with cancer. Doctor A diagnosed her and recommended chemo. The mother asked for a copy of her daughter's medical records and said she wanted to get a second opinion before agreeing to follow through on Doctor A's prescription. Doctor A then called DFS and asked for the daughter to be removed from parental care.

If true, this detail sheds a whole different, unsavory light on the whole picture.

Did you hear that from your cousin's nephew's ex-wife?
 
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

And here it is, boys and girls. Cert has officially been granted on the 6th Circuit gay marriage cases. 2 questions were granted:
1) Does the Fourteenth Amendment require a state to license a marriage between two people of the same sex? (90 minutes of oral argument)
2) Does the Fourteenth Amendment require a state to recognize a marriage between two people of the same sex when their marriage was lawfully licensed and performed out-of-state? (60 minutes of oral argument)

They'll be argued at the end of April, with the opinion most likely coming in late June.

I'm predicting either 5-4 or 6-3 in favor of equality, depending on how bad Roberts thinks it'll look in the history books if he votes against it. Either way Kennedy writes the majority opinion, solidifying his place in gay rights history.
 
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Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

And here it is, boys and girls. Cert has officially been granted on the 6th Circuit gay marriage cases. 2 questions were granted:
1) Does the Fourteenth Amendment require a state to license a marriage between two people of the same sex? (90 minutes of oral argument)
2) Does the Fourteenth Amendment require a state to recognize a marriage between two people of the same sex when their marriage was lawfully licensed and performed out-of-state? (60 minutes of oral argument)

They'll be argued at the end of April, with the opinion most likely coming in late June.

I'm predicting either 5-4 or 6-3 in favor of equality, depending on how bad Roberts thinks it'll look in the history books if he votes against it. Either way Kennedy writes the majority opinion, solidifying his place in gay rights history.
Just curious - what if, as they should have done in Roe, leave it up to the States?
 
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

Just curious - what if, as they should have done in Roe, leave it up to the States?

Then gay marriage eventually becomes legal nationwide in piecemeal fashion anyway once the Boomers die off in sufficient numbers. It just will take an extra 50 years for about 15 states (mainly in the deep south) to get with it.

But don't mistake my answering your question as validating its premise. Because your assumptions are not correct.
 
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Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

I'm predicting either 5-4 or 6-3 in favor of equality, depending on how bad Roberts thinks it'll look in the history books if he votes against it. Either way Kennedy writes the majority opinion, solidifying his place in gay rights history.

I wonder if Roberts will concur to get the right to write the majority opinion, and then water it down with all sorts of funny business?

But I guess if he was planning to do that he'd just have denied cert.

Since he's got another 20 years as CJ, and we all know that as with desegregation this is never going to move backwards, he probably just wants it off the docket once and for all.

The other interesting question is just how delusional Scalia is. Will he write the equivalent of a Taney Dred Scott in dissent, completely overshadowing the rest of his career with the label "that homophobic azzwipe"?
 
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

Only takes four votes to grant cert, so even if he voted against it the liberal wing could've granted it by themselves.

I learned something today on USCHO! :)
 
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

Maybe we can finally move on as a nation this June.

Someone on face the nation suggested 6-3 with Roberts in the majority.
 
Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VI - Roberts rules disorder

I'm predicting either 5-4 or 6-3 in favor of equality, depending on how bad Roberts thinks it'll look in the history books if he votes against it. Either way Kennedy writes the majority opinion, solidifying his place in gay rights history.
Because, of course, Roberts would never actually vote for it because he happens to think that's what the law requires, right?
 
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