patches70 wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:
The Soviets, and every other government in the history of humanity.
That's not true, but keep telling yourself that and you'll always get the government you deserve.
Counterexample, please?
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patches70 wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:
The Soviets, and every other government in the history of humanity.
That's not true, but keep telling yourself that and you'll always get the government you deserve.
patches70 wrote:Woodruff wrote:I find it interesting that you haven't pointed out where the Constitution needs to be overhauled and updated for today's age.
Most likely, the only thing he'd actually strike from the Constitution is the 2nd amendment.
AndyDufresne wrote:Supreme Court Rules Human Genes May Not Be Patented
ooge wrote:I am surprised they manage to even get Clarence Thomas to vote for this,he rarely likes to be in agreement with logical rulings or constitutional ones either for that matter.
AndyDufresne wrote:Justices Block Law Requiring Voters to Prove Citizenship
NY Times Reporting:
SCOTUS Blog reporting:
Full (.pdf) Supreme Court Decision
Usual suspects, please line up and tell us what it means: TGD, Metsfanmax, BBS, Haggis, Woodruff, PS, Lootifer, NS, et al.
--Andy
Metsfanmax wrote:I concur with the SCOTUS blog comment that the appropriate way to get a federal law to be changed is to ask the federal government to change it, and not to pass a blatantly invalid law to force an expensive legal battle that ends up doing nothing but creating further partisan divide.
Finally, the Court held that in the future, Arizona can ask the federal Election Assistance Commission, which creates the federal form, to include a requirement of additional proof of citizenship in the form, and to bring different legal challenges if the EAC refuses to do so.
ooge wrote:It will be interesting to see were Clarence Thomas decides on DOMA.This ruling he chose to decide with the state of Arizona over federal law.will he decide with the states in the case of DOMA or federal law?
Night Strike wrote:ooge wrote:It will be interesting to see were Clarence Thomas decides on DOMA.This ruling he chose to decide with the state of Arizona over federal law.will he decide with the states in the case of DOMA or federal law?
Actually, DOMA IS a states' rights law. It allows for each state to decide how to define marriage while protecting the rights of other states to decide differently. It also sets forth the federal definition of marriage.
Woodruff wrote:Night Strike wrote:ooge wrote:It will be interesting to see were Clarence Thomas decides on DOMA.This ruling he chose to decide with the state of Arizona over federal law.will he decide with the states in the case of DOMA or federal law?
Actually, DOMA IS a states' rights law. It allows for each state to decide how to define marriage while protecting the rights of other states to decide differently. It also sets forth the federal definition of marriage.
How can it be a states' rights law if it also sets out the definition Federally? It seems to me that for this to be completely a states' rights issue, the Federal government should have no hand in it at all.
Night Strike wrote:ooge wrote:It will be interesting to see were Clarence Thomas decides on DOMA.This ruling he chose to decide with the state of Arizona over federal law.will he decide with the states in the case of DOMA or federal law?
Actually, DOMA IS a states' rights law. It allows for each state to decide how to define marriage while protecting the rights of other states to decide differently. It also sets forth the federal definition of marriage.
ooge wrote:Night Strike wrote:ooge wrote:It will be interesting to see were Clarence Thomas decides on DOMA.This ruling he chose to decide with the state of Arizona over federal law.will he decide with the states in the case of DOMA or federal law?
Actually, DOMA IS a states' rights law. It allows for each state to decide how to define marriage while protecting the rights of other states to decide differently. It also sets forth the federal definition of marriage.
how is the voting ruling different from states rights? I guess what I am trying to do is set up Clarence Thomas to give a partisan ruling on DOMA. if he is consistent he should vote against DOMA. I think.
Night Strike wrote:Woodruff wrote:Night Strike wrote:ooge wrote:It will be interesting to see were Clarence Thomas decides on DOMA.This ruling he chose to decide with the state of Arizona over federal law.will he decide with the states in the case of DOMA or federal law?
Actually, DOMA IS a states' rights law. It allows for each state to decide how to define marriage while protecting the rights of other states to decide differently. It also sets forth the federal definition of marriage.
How can it be a states' rights law if it also sets out the definition Federally? It seems to me that for this to be completely a states' rights issue, the Federal government should have no hand in it at all.
Because the federal government has its own tax system, which means it has to have its own definitions to define who qualifies under what provision. There can't be a piecemeal approach to who is defined as what based on where you live under federal law because that would be a violation of the 14th amendment. Under DOMA, the federal government has its definitions and then allows states to set their own definitions for policies only within that state.
And that's fine if we're going to get the federal government out of all marriage definitions.....however that's going to require a much simpler tax code, otherwise there will be violations of the 14th amendment.
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