Re: The Power of the SCOTUS Part VII - The Bedrock of the Republic!
A 25 day delay to get you license is an attempt at Jim Crow type stuff. But its a very lame attempt to dissuade gay marriage. That's an extremely short planning window for any wedding.
That's the hypocritical nature of the south. They are total patriots...but many have an affinity to the flag of America's worst enemy in our history. They say they are Americans...but many hate the US government. When they are finally pinned down, they say it comes down to the Constitution and following the lead of the founding fathers...but then they do their best to subvert it when they disagree with policy (which is often).
That's why the SCOTUS needs to have a robust rejection process and find ways (or create them) to discourage any cases that are trying to overturn previous ones. I know that's not easy...but it must be attempted.
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/roy-moore-court-order-gay-marriage-alabama
What could happen to a state's SC justice if he goes against a SCOTUS ruling? Can he be removed from the bench? Disbarred? (IIRC, you don't need to be a lawyer to be on the SCOTUS.) Could only the citizens of Alabama punish him? If so, what's to stop other justices from doing the same thing without worry of punishment?
A 25 day delay to get you license is an attempt at Jim Crow type stuff. But its a very lame attempt to dissuade gay marriage. That's an extremely short planning window for any wedding.
Lincoln has a point that it is up to every government official to act "constitutionally," and there may very well be things that come up in one's day-to-day job where the SCOTUS has not issued any relevant opinions and things are ambiguous. It would then be that person's duty to determine the meaning of the Constitution as best he can and act accordingly. If the other parties involved disagree, they can take it to the courts, all the way up to SCOTUS if necessary, to decide. Once the SCOTUS has ruled on a topic, however, that *is* the end - until there's another countermanding opinion (e.g. Plessy and then Brown) OR a Constitutional amendment.
Lincoln's "every official for himself" doctrine worked out nicely for him in the prosecution of the Civil War, but that neither makes it right nor useful in today's political structure. Might does not make right - and neither does charisma.
That's the hypocritical nature of the south. They are total patriots...but many have an affinity to the flag of America's worst enemy in our history. They say they are Americans...but many hate the US government. When they are finally pinned down, they say it comes down to the Constitution and following the lead of the founding fathers...but then they do their best to subvert it when they disagree with policy (which is often).
Of course there is one more recourse - to bring another suit to the courts to give them a chance to reconsider. Naturally, something would have had to change for the courts to grant cert - the national political/moral mood, some subtlety that makes your new case slightly different from the old one, etc. If you just keep bringing the same suit and expecting different results...
That's why the SCOTUS needs to have a robust rejection process and find ways (or create them) to discourage any cases that are trying to overturn previous ones. I know that's not easy...but it must be attempted.