MinnesotaNorthStar
Minding the gap
The Indiana Tollway is hot garbage. I'll happily agree with you there.
It's not just the Tollway...roads all over the state, especially Indianapolis, are a mess.
The Indiana Tollway is hot garbage. I'll happily agree with you there.
The North Carolina House, not to be outdone, got in just before the buzzer for a third installment in today's "What Would a Dick Do?"
Sure, but it would not stop the Feds from prosecuting for a civil rights violation (right to life) in the event of some hot Texan-on-Texan violence.
Can the state decriminalize what everybody would consider a criminal act as long as the state isn't doing the action and it isn't discriminatory?
Can Texas pass a law that decriminalizes murder, for example, as long as they don't pin it to a suspect classification? I'll take my answer off the air.
Sure. States control about 90% of criminal law. They could simply remove all murder laws from the criminal code.
Would it be a violation of a person's Constitutional right to be alive?
I'm actually serious. How does that work?
Remember, the Constitution (generally) only applies to government actions. .
Moving murder into the common law, wouldn't that specific state lose the defined punishments already proscribed from those laws, and the varying degrees of murder?Remember, the Constitution (generally) only applies to government actions. So Texas cannot deprive you of life without due process (but it could with due process). But it's silent about whether a private citizen could do the same.
If they simply removed murder from the criminal code, you could argue that the common law prohibition on murder brought over from England would still apply in its place. If they not only removed it but added an affirmative statement that homicide is no longer prohibited as a criminal offense? I don't think there's anything stopping them from doing so.
Moving murder into the common law, wouldn't that specific state lose the defined punishments already proscribed from those laws, and the varying degrees of murder?
Presumably the government of Texas also can't pass a law saying a restaurant is allowed to bar a customer and give no reason, or the racists would just happen to bar every black "for no reason."
My question is, can the government of Texas pass a law saying a private person can kill another private person and give no reason? Is life as much of a protected civil right as eating at a frickin' restaurant?
I posted this in the abortion thread but I'll post the updated mess here:
Alaska lawmaker asserts rural women get pregnant so they can get free travel for abortions.
This dbag is now refusing to apologize and retract his false, racist statement, blames the media, and now faces censure by the Legislature. Also if you guessed if he was from Wasilla and cast the lone no votes on measures honoring African-American soldiers who built the Alaska Highway and the first Alaska Native Speaker of the House you'd be correct.
Well, he'd only be their second village idiot.
But, for Engler’s fellow Republican Rick Brattin, discriminating against the LGBTQ community isn’t just a legal matter—it’s a universally held religious truism. Because, Brattin explained, “When you look at the tenets of religion, of the Bible, of the Qu’ran, of other religions, there is a distinction between homosexuality and just being a human being.”
This is hardly Brattin’s first brush with ultra-conservative infamy. In 2014, he introduced legislation that would have required women to get the father of their unborn child’s written permission to have an abortion—except in cases of “legitimate rape.”