Member
| A new article suggests that Sotomayor is somewhat pro-State in her rulings. |
| Posts: 1116 | Location: Waxahachie | Registered: December 09, 2004 |
IP
|
|
Member
| Every article is looking for what her hidden agenda might be. Maybe she just followed the law, without regard to any other factors! (Yes, I know, but that's my dream.) I think most prosecutors would go both ways (for and against "law enforcement" issues) because we have seen it from the inside. The media's need to put labels on candidates and describe people in caricature-like exaggeration drives me crazy. What we should be looking for is does she have friends in diverse professions and stations in life? Does she surround herself with people that agree with her every word or people who speak the truth? Has she hired someone to change her public personality from who she really is?
Can we really predict what her pet issues are going to be? One can start out in a position of power and just follow the law, but any human with that much authority, over time starts to think that he or she knows better than the rest of the little people and starts to insert an agenda (even if with the best intentions at the beginning). Then, eventually, the agenda is to stay in power because how else can one person do all those good things without the power??? I have seen this happen in the tiny counties in Texas, with local politics, and I've seen it played out in the national media with our national candidates.
Maybe that's an argument for some type of term limits. Or it could go the other way, too, in that if a supreme court justice did have an agenda, and knew there were only 8 years in which to accomplish that agenda, then that would significantly change that justice's picking cases, etc. |
| Posts: 526 | Location: Del Rio, Texas | Registered: April 17, 2006 |
IP
|
|
Member
| Maybe I'm remembering it wrong, but doesn't New York only have jury trials in felony cases? If that's the case, then 20 in five years would make sense, especially if she had to work her way up from misdemeanors. |
| |
Member
| |
| Posts: 293 | Location: San Antonio | Registered: January 27, 2004 |
IP
|
|
Member
| In a story by James Oliphant, the Los Angeles Times reports, "Her experience as an assistant district attorney in New York made her something of a law-and-order judge, experts say, especially when it came to police searches and the use of evidence." Link to the rest of the story.... |
| Posts: 218 | Location: Victoria, Texas | Registered: September 16, 2002 |
IP
|
|