« ALEA Home | Email msg. | Reply to msg. | Post new | Board info. Previous | Home | Next

Re: Will Americans continue to revere SCOTUS?

By: Cactus Flower in ALEA | Recommend this post (0)
Sat, 25 Jun 22 10:08 AM | 38 view(s)
Boardmark this board | The Trust Matrix
Msg. 46228 of 54959
(This msg. is a reply to 46227 by Cactus Flower)

Jump:
Jump to board:
Jump to msg. #

In this way, if it wasn't that SCOTUS was run by religious dogmatists with their own objectives, forcing parliament to legislate would make sense.

Decisions about abortion rules really ought to fall to an agreement of the President and Congress, the representatives of the American people.

Time to make mid-term votes matter. You want to do this via statute.

It's also time to tear up the filibuster rules in the senate. And to add two more seats to SCOTUS to undo McConnell's cheating.


- - - - -
View Replies (1) »



» You can also:
- - - - -
The above is a reply to the following message:
Will Americans continue to revere SCOTUS?
By: Cactus Flower
in ALEA
Sat, 25 Jun 22 9:53 AM
Msg. 46227 of 54959

Now that it has become a religious council whose role is to restrain the US citizenry using Catholic/ Evangelical dogma, will a majority of Americans continue to treat it as capable of resolving the issues of freedom which the US faces?

This all feels a little bit like Dredd Scott, when SCOTUS disastrously failed to deliver a useful verdict over slavery. And so the issue went towards violence.

The trouble with the achingly slow politics in the US, whose processes are defined by the US Constitution and the arcane rules of the senate, is that it cannot itself resolve thorny issues of this type. And so it pushes final decision-making towards an undemocratic entity. SCOTUS ought to know that it doesn't have the standing to make political decisions. But apparently, it does not.

So you have a kind of failed traffic system in which political decisions are sent to the wrong place and the wrong body is forced to decide matters which ought to be decided democratically. Roe itself should not have been the thing that decided abortion rights in the US. That was the job of politicians.

Why was the status quo on abortion decided by case law? Why was it not already on the statute books? Because the way the constitution operates through congress means ideas cannot easily evolve there.

The issue isn't only abortion. It's the way US politics works.


« ALEA Home | Email msg. | Reply to msg. | Post new | Board info. Previous | Home | Next