The Supreme Court is back in session, and they will be hearing more landmark cases with heavy-handed influence in our country's political and cultural tumults. They invalidated marriage laws around the country in order to appease some distorted ideal of equality.
Now liberals fear that they may expand individual liberty and protect life.
The Supreme Court has every necessity to uphold and defend the Constitution, not upend and redefine it.
The next set of rulings may fall into the latter category, if there is time and wisdom abounding.
Now liberals fear that they may expand individual liberty and protect life.
The Supreme Court has every necessity to uphold and defend the Constitution, not upend and redefine it.
The next set of rulings may fall into the latter category, if there is time and wisdom abounding.
After legalizing same-sex marriage and upholding provisions of President Obama’s legacy healthcare program for a second time, the Supreme Court justices return to work Monday in a new term that will put liberals on the defense.
The Supreme Court of the United States has hit an all time low.
They have undermined the rule of law, and thumbed their noses at natural right a number of times. On contentious social issues, the Court has caved to public pressure, rather than respecting the rule of law and the supremacy of the US Constitution.
Bobby Jindal was spot on - perhaps it's time to abolish the Supreme Court.
Yet such frustration with the current rulings -- does that mean conservatives are hypocrites to celebrate future decisions which will undermine the liberal-statist agenda?
Not at all.
If the five conservative justices prevail in the year ahead,
they could deal a severe blow to labor unions, rein in abortion rights under
Roe vs. Wade, restrict college affirmative-action programs and shift political
power away from Democratic-controlled election districts by redefining who gets
counted as an eligible voter.
All of these things are good! Labor unions routinely violate an individual worker's First Amendment rights when they force them to join and then pay dues into their political funding arms. This unlawful taking and spending must stop.
Because of this unjust revenue stream, the California Teachers Association all but owns Sacramento and the Democratic majority.
Predicting the outcomes is always tricky because of the
close ideological split on the high court. In the last term, for example,
Justice Anthony M. Kennedy and Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. voted with the
the liberals in several major cases.
But the conservatives are poised to make major changes in
the law if they can hold the majority.
Here are the five most politically charged issues facing the
court this term.
Union fees: Can school teachers and other public employees
in California, Illinois and about 20 states be required to pay union fees, even
if they do not support it?
Justice Samuel Alito has raised free-speech questions about
this arrangement, at least for public employees. He says the 1st Amendment
forbids the government from forcing people to support causes or groups they
oppose. Spurred by Alito, the court agreed to hear an appeal filed on behalf of
Rebecca Friedrichs, an Orange County teacher, who objects to supporting the
California Teachers Assn. She says the full dues amount to about $1,000 a year,
and non-members like her have to pay about $650.
Go Rebecca!
Go Rebecca!
In recent years, Republican governors in Wisconsin and
Michigan have won repeals of laws that required all workers to support their
unions. If the court rules for Friedrichs, its decision could strike down those
remaining laws in other states.
Yes!
Election districts: Should states use Census data to draw
election districts or switch to counting only the adult citizens who are
eligible to vote?
The case of Evenwel vs. Abbott is this term’s most important
election-law dispute because it could shift political clout within states and
cities.
The Constitution says seats in Congress should be divided up
based on “counting the whole number of persons in each state.” But the court in
the 1960s said states must draw equal-sized districts based on the principle of
“one person, one vote.”
The "one person, one vote" metric is false. Not every person can vote! Not ever person is registered to vote, and even with Governor Brown's latest signature to enact automatic registration, young people, those who do not have driver's licenses, and even felons are not allowed to vote!
The "one person, one vote" metric is false. Not every person can vote! Not ever person is registered to vote, and even with Governor Brown's latest signature to enact automatic registration, young people, those who do not have driver's licenses, and even felons are not allowed to vote!
The new challenge argues the states may count only citizens
who can vote. If the court agrees, “it would amount to a redistricting
revolution. Just about every districting plan in America would be
unconstitutional and would have to be redrawn,” said Nicholas Stephanopolous, a
University of Chicago law professor.
So be it.
Lawyers for Los Angeles, Chicago and other big cities urged
the court to keep the current system of counting all people. “With 15 million
residents, Los Angeles County and Cook County are the two largest counties in
the United States, comprising about 5% of the U.S. population, more than the
total population of the 13 smallest states,” they told the court.
Those cities are also teeming with illegal aliens, exploited by the Democratic political class. The last time this kind of unrepresentative apportionment took place, occurred with slave states demanding that their slaves would count as 3/5 of a person. Such compromising allowed Southern slavocracy interests to maintain an undue hold on the federal political process for decades.
Those cities are also teeming with illegal aliens, exploited by the Democratic political class. The last time this kind of unrepresentative apportionment took place, occurred with slave states demanding that their slaves would count as 3/5 of a person. Such compromising allowed Southern slavocracy interests to maintain an undue hold on the federal political process for decades.
They said these cities stand to lose the most if the court
changes the system for drawing districts because many of their residents are
immigrants and non-citizens who are not able to vote. If large cities lose some
of their representation and political power shifts to rural areas, it would put
“strains on the already-limited local resources in the very places they are
most urgently needed.”
No it won't. It will restore true representative republican democracy to our country.
Affirmative action: May a state university give a preference
to qualified black and Latino applicants, or does such a “race conscious”
admissions policy violate the equal-protection right of a white applicant?
Two years ago, the court faced that question in the case of
Fisher vs. University of Texas. In a surprise, the justices did not decide the
case, but instead told a lower court to take another, skeptical look at the
university’s claim it needed a “race-conscious admissions” policy. Thanks to
the state’s so-called “Top Ten” law, more than one-fourth of the freshmen at
the Austin campus were Latino or black. They were admitted after having earned
the top grades in their high school class.
But the lower court again upheld the Texas policy of
admitting some students based on their race, and the justices voted to hear the
case again. The outcome now appears to depend entirely on Kennedy. His four
more conservative colleagues reject the use of race by schools and public
agencies. If Kennedy joins them, they could rule narrowly against the Texas
policy or more broadly against the use of affirmative action in admissions.
Abortion: How far may states go in regulating abortion
clinics?
Texas, Mississippi and other states want to impose strict
new regulations on abortion clinics that will have the effect of closing down
most or all of them. They include requirements that clinic doctors have
admitting privileges at a local hospital and their buildings meet the standards
of an outpatient surgical center.
Lower courts are split over whether these regulations can be
upheld as efforts to protect the health of women. Abortion-rights advocates say
the regulations are “shams” designed to shut down the clinics and deny women
access to abortion.
Defending life is priority for every government interest in our country.
Defending life is priority for every government interest in our country.
Religious liberties: Are religious colleges and nonprofits
exempt from contraceptives mandates under the Affordable Care Act?
Dozens of religious colleges and Catholic nonprofit groups
refuse to cooperate in any way with the Obama administration’s regulation that
says female employees must be offered birth control drugs at no cost as part of
their health insurance. The administration says that while these religious
groups need not pay for this coverage, they must notify the government in
writing of their decision to opt out. That would trigger their insurance
provider to step in and offer the coverage.
Individual liberty is sacrosanct. No college, no individual should have to submit their natural rights to government dictates. Ever.
Individual liberty is sacrosanct. No college, no individual should have to submit their natural rights to government dictates. Ever.
Unswayed, Catholic leaders say even the notification action
makes them "complicit” in supplying “abortion-inducing drugs” and thereby
violates their religious beliefs.
The court is considering several appeals, including one from
the Catholic Archdiocese in Washington, and it’s likely to decide on hearing
one of the cases to decide the issue.
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