Let the melting commence.
![Laughing :lol:](./images/smilies/icon_lol.gif)
Moderator: Jesus H Christ
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
Moving Sale wrote:I really are a fucking POS.
Softball Bat wrote: I am the dumbest motherfucker ever to post on the board.
Moving Sale wrote:I really are a fucking POS.
Softball Bat wrote: I am the dumbest motherfucker ever to post on the board.
trev wrote:It's a great day to be gay!
Moving Sale wrote:I really are a fucking POS.
Softball Bat wrote: I am the dumbest motherfucker ever to post on the board.
But is it really discrimination, Jsc?Jsc810 wrote:Only the most willfully ignorant are failing to see the end result here. Scalia predicted this in his dissent in Lawrence. Discrimination against homosexuals is wrong, whether it is in the context of marriage, adoptions, employment, or whatever else.
Only 50 shekels? What a steal!rapist must pay victim's father 50 shekels of silver for property loss
Pedo in Seattle wrote:Own It, Thumpers
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
It's a states rights issue in the first place of which 34 of them have ruled against same sex marriage. The Fed has no business issuing marriage decrees or ruling on the legality thereof.Diego in Seattle wrote:It's just a matter of time before other states are held to the same standard as the feds.
While that's an equitable proposal, it ain't going to happen. You think conservatives are going to be willing to give up their privileges? Not in this lifetime.schmick wrote:Why not just have the government not recognize marriage at all? If a couple, be they straight, gay or trans-species, wants to be recognized as a legal couple, they will need to have a civil union. Then if they want to be married in the eye of their sky fairy, they will need to find a church willing to provide them with the marriage service.
That way we will be able to determine once and for all if the gays want the "marriage" thing so they can have equal rights under the law. Or, if they still push for marriage after there is no legal benefit to it, it is because they want to stick their disgusting lifestyle in everyone else's face.
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
I think we'll see statist v constitutionalist more frequently than right v left or republican v democrat.Jsc810 wrote: And what a screwed up vote, how often do you see Scalia and Thomas on opposing sides? Roberts, Scalia, Ginsburg, Breuer, and Kagan on one side, with Kennedy, Thomas, Alito, and Sotomayor on the other.
Screw_Michigan wrote: ↑Fri Apr 05, 2019 4:39 pmUnlike you tards, I actually have functioning tastebuds and a refined pallet.
See the DOMA case to see just one.schmick wrote:You think liberals are going to give up their privileges in this lifetime?Diego in Seattle wrote:While that's an equitable proposal, it ain't going to happen. You think conservatives are going to be willing to give up their privileges? Not in this lifetime.schmick wrote:Why not just have the government not recognize marriage at all? If a couple, be they straight, gay or trans-species, wants to be recognized as a legal couple, they will need to have a civil union. Then if they want to be married in the eye of their sky fairy, they will need to find a church willing to provide them with the marriage service.
That way we will be able to determine once and for all if the gays want the "marriage" thing so they can have equal rights under the law. Or, if they still push for marriage after there is no legal benefit to it, it is because they want to stick their disgusting lifestyle in everyone else's face.
And what privileges would the conservatives have to give up?
9/27/22“Left Seater” wrote:So charges are around the corner?
Jsc810 wrote:Yes, Prop 8 was not rendered on the merits, at least at the SCOTUS. And what a screwed up vote, how often do you see Scalia and Thomas on opposing sides? Roberts, Scalia, Ginsburg, Breuer, and Kagan on one side, with Kennedy, Thomas, Alito, and Sotomayor on the other.
But make no mistake. Prop 8 is unconstitutional, as held by the trial court. The SCOTUS didn't like this case procedurally? Fine, get ready for similar suits all over the country.
Only the most willfully ignorant are failing to see the end result here. Scalia predicted this in his dissent in Lawrence. Discrimination against homosexuals is wrong, whether it is in the context of marriage, adoptions, employment, or whatever else.
JPGettysburg wrote: ↑Fri Jul 19, 2024 8:57 pm In prison, full moon nights have a kind of brutal sodomy that can't fully be described with mere words.
Integrity has never been Obama's strong suit.Carson wrote:13 months ago he was still a candidate for re-election.
mvscal wrote:The only precious metals in a SHTF scenario are lead and brass.
No, he doesn't. Fuck off, you lying sack of shit.Jsc810 wrote:Today, the cases hold that women are "persons" under the 14th Amendment. Scalia disagrees with that.
Screw_Michigan wrote: ↑Fri Apr 05, 2019 4:39 pmUnlike you tards, I actually have functioning tastebuds and a refined pallet.
Screw_Michigan wrote: ↑Fri Apr 05, 2019 4:39 pmUnlike you tards, I actually have functioning tastebuds and a refined pallet.
Gonna have to call bullshit on that one.Papa Willie wrote:So are most liberals.
Why?Jsc810 wrote:You will acknowledge, for the non-lawyers here, that Scalia's theory of constitutional interpretation is not in the majority of legal thinking today, won't you? He has his theory, but most lawyers and judges reject it, right?
You were fine until you got here. And maybe you've just tapped into why half this country is at odds with the other.Jsc810 wrote: Or in other words, our Constitution is what these folks say it is, nothing more and nothing less.
Since when are constitutionalists not statists :?mvscal wrote:
I think we'll see statist v constitutionalist more frequently than right v left or republican v democrat.
New lines are being drawn.
Scalia sounds interesting, he's jumbled between the methodology of an historian and a lawyer. A bunch of a priori principles existing without any kind of temporal, spatial, social or political context. A reductionist notion of liberty because he's too lazy to reach for genuine understanding of things.Originalism suggests that the Constitution has a static meaning
Dr_Phibes wrote:
Since when are constitutionalists not statists :?
So our constitution really doesn't mean what it says, and any strict interpretation of it is construed as unimaginative and castigated as laziness? Ponderous. You'd make a fine American Congressman, Phibes.Dr_Phibes wrote:A reductionist notion of liberty because he's too lazy to reach for genuine understanding of things.
That's one conclusion. Another one might be that there is a large, ill-disposed constituency in this country that hates the document as written, and will use any means necessary to obfuscate its meaning and circumvent its intent.Dr_Phibes wrote:But the vary fact that your debating it now and can't come to a reasonable, concrete conclusion, tells me that there's vagueness in the consitution.
Dr_Phibes wrote:While it should be a formal science, it's social in that it deals with people and attitudes which are ever shifting. For something to remain static, it should be more like a mathematical formula. People are not so precise.
mvscal, paraphrasing Scalia wrote:(Scalia's) entire point is that times change and opinions change. The law doesn't change. If you don't like the current laws, you repeal them or you amend them. What you do NOT do, is pretend that they mean something now that they clearly didn't when they were written.
Screw_Michigan wrote: ↑Fri Apr 05, 2019 4:39 pmUnlike you tards, I actually have functioning tastebuds and a refined pallet.