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Re: Breyer: Conservative Justices Are Looking to Buck Precedent

By: Cactus Flower in ALEA | Recommend this post (0)
Tue, 14 May 19 6:23 AM | 29 view(s)
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Msg. 30042 of 54959
(This msg. is a reply to 30038 by clo)

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This is the whole Republican judicial project. It's politics, not impartial adjudication.

If you contrive to produce laws only the fundamental Christian minority want by cunning tricks, what you end up with is law the majority don't respect.

Again, these are reasons why America isn't going to work in the long run. I fear that in time the Republican judge swamp will end up producing a violent response. This one on the liberal side. The American constitution doesn't resolve its major problems well. Occasionally, folks will decide the issues are material and that they wish to secede.

It's like being asked to live in a country run by Mullahs. Different religion. Same dogmatic approach.




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Breyer: Conservative Justices Are Looking to Buck Precedent
By: clo
in ALEA
Tue, 14 May 19 12:33 AM
Msg. 30038 of 54959

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Breyer: Conservative Justices Are Looking to Buck Precedent

Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer on Monday issued a dire warning about conservative justices’ increased willingness to buck established precedent, in an opinion widely interpreted as referencing the landmark abortion case Roe v. Wade.

Dissenting in Franchise Tax Board of California v. Hyatt, a decision that overturned a 1979 decision on state sovereignty, Breyer wrote that “it is one thing to overrule a case when it ‘def[ies] practical workability,’” or when a ruling is no longer significant, citing the 1992 abortion case Planned Parenthood v. Casey. “It is far more dangerous to overrule a decision only because five Members of a later court come to agree with earlier dissenters on a difficult legal question.” Breyer added that he believes the court “surrendered to the temptation” to overrule a decision that they didn’t like, despite the fact that it “caused no serious practical problems in the four years since we decided it.”

He concluded that “Today’s decision can only cause one to wonder which cases the court will overrule next.”

The comment has widely been seen as alluding to Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 ruling that enshrined a woman’s right to an abortion. Now that five conservative justices sit on the bench, many leaders of conservative states have pledged to bring down Roe.

Read it at Talking Points Memo


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