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| Is that a new SCOTUS acronym for what you predict the Supreme Court will do with the rehearing? [Honestly, I wouldn't be surprised, you are always very abreast of what goes on up there. I often wonder if you have a spy.]
Is it some code for "apple"?
[This message was edited by R.J. MacReady on 07-24-08 at .] |
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| Looks like the Department of Justice has weighed in. SCOTUSblog |
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| How about "Oh, that's what consensus means." |
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| The Weekly Standard has an interesting article on this issue. I've got to say, I'm just tickled that this story seems to have legs, however small they may be. Here's the link: The Link |
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| Describes the mood or content of the topic posted 05-29-07 Click Here to See the Profile for JB Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post I didn't say it would necessarily be successful, but the poor reasoning and loose langauge will result in a nightmare of litigation by creative defense attorneys. How the majority could miss the obvious consequences of their decision is a mystery...... Pathogen Addiction Recovery Texas |
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| quote: Originally posted by Gretchen: You know, in their decisions on whether limits on partial-term abortion is constitutional, they say that the State's argument that it is a "rarely-used" procedure is without merit and irrelevant. Because of the rare situation in which it is necessary to save a mother's life, it should not be prohibited completely (the law must provide an exception for medical necessity).
My thought is, just because the death penalty is a "rarely used" or recognized law for child molesters, that is an argument without merit and irrelevant to its constitutionality in the rare situation in which it would be a totally appropriate sanction to save a child's life. Just sayin'.
Let's not try to link the abortion issue to the death penalty, now. That could really get political. ; Interesting point, though. |
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| Posts: 527 | Location: Fort Worth, Texas, | Registered: May 23, 2001 |
IP
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| But he added a completely tangential and non-responsive political pitch.
Still, good insight.
[This message was edited by R.J. MacReady on 07-31-08 at .] |
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| I want to share a quote from that linked editorial: quote: Many who applauded the court's original ruling did so not on the basis of the court's (now evidently faulty) trend-spotting rationale but, rather, on the premise that any way of containing the spread of capital punishment -- such as by confining its use to murderers and traitors -- is a good idea.
I think this statement 99.99% correct. The othe .01% are people who say things like: "Don't forget all the good things about violent child rape." |
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| I agree with you. That's an excellent point. |
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