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2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome)

Moderators: j4remi, HerSports85, NoLayupRule, GONYK, Jeff Van Gully, dakomish23, Deeeez Knicks, mpharris36

Who are you voting for?

Donald Trump
29
28%
Joe Biden
63
60%
Howie Hawkins
4
4%
Jo Jorgensen
3
3%
Kanye West
6
6%
 
Total votes: 105

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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1441 » by BallSacBounce » Sun Sep 20, 2020 4:05 am

HarthorneWingo wrote:
aq_ua wrote:I have a question regarding the concept of originalism and its application in judicial review. I get that it’s similar to biblical interpretation of the literal vs. interpreted, and that originalism leaves much less scope for judicial review than allowing for a reading of the language in alignment with the current prevailing circumstances of the world.

I also understand that originalism also means the ninth amendment has no relevance or legal basis (and of course begs the question of why then does the ninth amendment exist).

I also understand a valid argument it makes is that constitutional amendments are the appropriate venue for reinterpreting the language of the constitution and not the individual biases of judges.

However, as with so many things, this introduces partisan politics into an institution that is supposed to be apolitical, if there is still such a thing.

Is there a more robust and defensible explanation of originalism that makes it more acceptable? I bring this up of course because the nominees for the open seat all seem to come from that school of thought.


There is some reason to believe that originalism has its bases found in the purposes of the document. "Living constitutionalism" is the counter theory to interpreting it. This has been The Great Debate in the law for a long time.

If you're interesting in reading more, as I am, I found a recent (2019) law review article on the topic from Northwestern Law School. I'm going to read it tomorrow.

https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1376&context=nulr

Originalism is that the Constitution should be interpreted as it was understood and intended to be understood at the time.

If it's deemed to be lacking in some respects update it with current legislation not the whims of 9 judges. Let the people vote on it.
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1442 » by BallSacBounce » Sun Sep 20, 2020 4:07 am

HarthorneWingo wrote:
Stannis wrote:

The Maine and Alaska senator says they might vote against the nominee.

Mitt Romney also might vote against it.

If Kelly wins AZ, he can actually be sworn in by November 30th. So that could help, but I think Mitch can do something to stop that.

Truth be told, I think Trump will put a moderate conservative in there. It won't be anyone too extreme.

I see this going through the senate pretty quickly.


The stakes just got exponentially higher. Maybe getting this SCOTUS nominee will placate the republican voters into staying home on 11/3.

Kavanaugh slander got us crazy and this battle will be 10x worse. Not a chance. Fired up beyond belief.
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1443 » by robillionaire » Sun Sep 20, 2020 4:41 am

BallSacBounce wrote:
robillionaire wrote:
BallSacBounce wrote:Awesome, thanks for the levity. :D

He lost me at the f word. Common run of the mill leftist term for anyone on the right. It's not based on anything factual, I'm sure. He may be a lier, I wouldn't know don't know anything about him. He's certainly a propagandist. So what. Such a dirty word for trying to persuade it flavors the content of the video not a bit. But a fascist? C'mon man, do better.


Nah. I will call it like it is. You are fascists and I don’t care if you like it or not that’s my analysis. This is fascism and I reject it and will loudly proclaim it every day. You do better. Stop being a white nationalist.

It’s hilarious the right will slander Biden and officer Kamala calling these corporate dems a radical Trojan horse for communism and a threat to “western civilization” all day long but when you correctly identify the opposition as white nationalists and fascists people want to get offended about it

Well I'm a small government Libertarian more than anything. That makes me one of the least fascist in here and I'm certainly not a white supremacist but you do you! When all you have is name calling everything looks like it should have a label.

Democrats are the most fascist without a doubt. They want to regulate everything at the federal level. **** that ****. And Obama was the King of the Executive Order. Even after he said he didn't have the authority to do anything about dreamers (he was right) he did it anyway by emperor decree. And they lose on anything and they're ready to go full autocrat. RBG is gone pack the courts!


You call me out for "name calling" because I call a fascist a fascist and then follow that up with "democrats are the most fascist without a doubt" so clearly you see no issue with making the accusation, and it's not name calling it's identifying an ideology just because someone gets offended doesn't make it name calling.

I'm not a democrat and I don't like Obama either but since you bring it up it's actually a lie that he used a disproportionate amount of executive orders compared to other presidents. In fact, trump has signed 183 executive orders so far which is a rate of 49.6 per year, obama in 8 years signed 276 which was 34.6 per year. and Bush signed 291 which was 36.4 per year. so out of the last 3 pres. obama signed less per year than GOP presidents. So there's your emperor decree.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_federal_executive_orders

also it's not name calling when you have receipts on the guy

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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1444 » by BallSacBounce » Sun Sep 20, 2020 5:00 am

robillionaire wrote:
BallSacBounce wrote:
robillionaire wrote:
Nah. I will call it like it is. You are fascists and I don’t care if you like it or not that’s my analysis. This is fascism and I reject it and will loudly proclaim it every day. You do better. Stop being a white nationalist.

It’s hilarious the right will slander Biden and officer Kamala calling these corporate dems a radical Trojan horse for communism and a threat to “western civilization” all day long but when you correctly identify the opposition as white nationalists and fascists people want to get offended about it

Well I'm a small government Libertarian more than anything. That makes me one of the least fascist in here and I'm certainly not a white supremacist but you do you! When all you have is name calling everything looks like it should have a label.

Democrats are the most fascist without a doubt. They want to regulate everything at the federal level. **** that ****. And Obama was the King of the Executive Order. Even after he said he didn't have the authority to do anything about dreamers (he was right) he did it anyway by emperor decree. And they lose on anything and they're ready to go full autocrat. RBG is gone pack the courts!


You call me out for "name calling" because I call a fascist a fascist and then follow that up with "democrats are the most fascist without a doubt" so clearly you see no issue with making the accusation, and it's not name calling it's identifying an ideology just because someone gets offended doesn't make it name calling.

I'm not a democrat and I don't like Obama either but since you bring it up it's actually a lie that he used a disproportionate amount of executive orders compared to other presidents. In fact, trump has signed 183 executive orders so far which is a rate of 49.6 per year, obama in 8 years signed 276 which was 34.6 per year. and Bush signed 291 which was 36.4 per year. so out of the last 3 pres. obama signed less per year than GOP presidents. So there's your emperor decree.

also it's not name calling when you have receipts on the guy

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Well Ian is a little pig. I said I don't know the guy, just found the video. That doesn't justify you name calling me, personally. And I'm saying Democrats as a group, not you personally. Get the difference? I was just poking fun at you for not having any justification at all for saying it about me, personally. And you still haven't shown any justification for it.

Good point on the EO's though. Crazy part about that is historically the numbers aren't particularly high. From Teddy Roosevelt to Harry Truman they gave out no less than 116 per year and FDR topped them all averaging 307 per year. For 12 years!
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1445 » by aq_ua » Sun Sep 20, 2020 5:02 am

BallSacBounce wrote:
HarthorneWingo wrote:
aq_ua wrote:I have a question regarding the concept of originalism and its application in judicial review. I get that it’s similar to biblical interpretation of the literal vs. interpreted, and that originalism leaves much less scope for judicial review than allowing for a reading of the language in alignment with the current prevailing circumstances of the world.

I also understand that originalism also means the ninth amendment has no relevance or legal basis (and of course begs the question of why then does the ninth amendment exist).

I also understand a valid argument it makes is that constitutional amendments are the appropriate venue for reinterpreting the language of the constitution and not the individual biases of judges.

However, as with so many things, this introduces partisan politics into an institution that is supposed to be apolitical, if there is still such a thing.

Is there a more robust and defensible explanation of originalism that makes it more acceptable? I bring this up of course because the nominees for the open seat all seem to come from that school of thought.


There is some reason to believe that originalism has its bases found in the purposes of the document. "Living constitutionalism" is the counter theory to interpreting it. This has been The Great Debate in the law for a long time.

If you're interesting in reading more, as I am, I found a recent (2019) law review article on the topic from Northwestern Law School. I'm going to read it tomorrow.

https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1376&context=nulr

Originalism is that the Constitution should be interpreted as it was understood and intended to be understood at the time.

If it's deemed to be lacking in some respects update it with current legislation not the whims of 9 judges. Let the people vote on it.

I’m still only in the early part of the document that Wingo posted, but it seems there’s even debate about what each side of the debate represents as the argument and the definition of the terms. Let’s revisit after we’ve digested this.
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1446 » by HarthorneWingo » Sun Sep 20, 2020 5:19 am

BallSacBounce wrote:
HarthorneWingo wrote:
aq_ua wrote:I have a question regarding the concept of originalism and its application in judicial review. I get that it’s similar to biblical interpretation of the literal vs. interpreted, and that originalism leaves much less scope for judicial review than allowing for a reading of the language in alignment with the current prevailing circumstances of the world.

I also understand that originalism also means the ninth amendment has no relevance or legal basis (and of course begs the question of why then does the ninth amendment exist).

I also understand a valid argument it makes is that constitutional amendments are the appropriate venue for reinterpreting the language of the constitution and not the individual biases of judges.

However, as with so many things, this introduces partisan politics into an institution that is supposed to be apolitical, if there is still such a thing.

Is there a more robust and defensible explanation of originalism that makes it more acceptable? I bring this up of course because the nominees for the open seat all seem to come from that school of thought.


There is some reason to believe that originalism has its bases found in the purposes of the document. "Living constitutionalism" is the counter theory to interpreting it. This has been The Great Debate in the law for a long time.

If you're interesting in reading more, as I am, I found a recent (2019) law review article on the topic from Northwestern Law School. I'm going to read it tomorrow.

https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1376&context=nulr

Originalism is that the Constitution should be interpreted as it was understood and intended to be understood at the time.

If it's deemed to be lacking in some respects update it with current legislation not the whims of 9 judges. Let the people vote on it.


You need 2/3 majority to amend the constitution. We can't even come together on legislation on bath tissue. :lol:

I believe it was Thomas Jefferson (?) who wrote that the Constitution should be amended every 20 years to keep it fresh. But there's not way we're able to get that done in this climate. The right wing is way too religious. Are you religious BallSac? Are you an Evangelical?
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1447 » by HarthorneWingo » Sun Sep 20, 2020 5:40 am

This is disastrous. The big businesses are going to swoop in like vultures and devour these small and medium sized businesses.

https://www.cnbc.com/2020/09/16/yelp-data-shows-60percent-of-business-closures-due-to-the-coronavirus-pandemic-are-now-permanent.html

Yelp data shows 60% of business closures due to the coronavirus pandemic are now permanent
PUBLISHED WED, SEP 16 20208:32 AM EDTUPDATED WED, SEP 16 20203:33 PM EDT
Anjali Sundaram

KEY POINTS

-Yelp on Wednesday released its latest Economic Impact Report, revealing business closures across the U.S. are increasing as a result of the coronavirus.

-As of Aug, 31, 163,735 businesses have indicated on Yelp that they have closed, a 23% increase since mid-July.

-According to Yelp data, permanent closures have reached 97,966, representing 60% of closed businesses that won’t be reopening.
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1448 » by Rasho Brezec » Sun Sep 20, 2020 6:45 am

BallSacBounce wrote:
Read on Twitter


That's institutional discrimination.
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1449 » by BallSacBounce » Sun Sep 20, 2020 10:12 am

aq_ua wrote:
BallSacBounce wrote:
HarthorneWingo wrote:
There is some reason to believe that originalism has its bases found in the purposes of the document. "Living constitutionalism" is the counter theory to interpreting it. This has been The Great Debate in the law for a long time.

If you're interesting in reading more, as I am, I found a recent (2019) law review article on the topic from Northwestern Law School. I'm going to read it tomorrow.

https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1376&context=nulr

Originalism is that the Constitution should be interpreted as it was understood and intended to be understood at the time.

If it's deemed to be lacking in some respects update it with current legislation not the whims of 9 judges. Let the people vote on it.

I’m still only in the early part of the document that Wingo posted, but it seems there’s even debate about what each side of the debate represents as the argument and the definition of the terms. Let’s revisit after we’ve digested this.

Sounds like fun. I'll be back later today.
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1450 » by BallSacBounce » Sun Sep 20, 2020 10:19 am

Rasho Brezec wrote:
BallSacBounce wrote:
Read on Twitter


That's institutional discrimination.

Could very well be. But it could as well be down to best pick demographics for Logoa, Anti-Abortion for Barrett. Barrett has been a favorite of the Right for a long time. Logoa gets the Cuban American vote in Florida energized as ****. She was a pro bono lawyer for Elian Gonzalez. Florida will be lit.
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1451 » by BallSacBounce » Sun Sep 20, 2020 10:34 am

HarthorneWingo wrote:
BallSacBounce wrote:
HarthorneWingo wrote:
There is some reason to believe that originalism has its bases found in the purposes of the document. "Living constitutionalism" is the counter theory to interpreting it. This has been The Great Debate in the law for a long time.

If you're interesting in reading more, as I am, I found a recent (2019) law review article on the topic from Northwestern Law School. I'm going to read it tomorrow.

https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1376&context=nulr

Originalism is that the Constitution should be interpreted as it was understood and intended to be understood at the time.

If it's deemed to be lacking in some respects update it with current legislation not the whims of 9 judges. Let the people vote on it.


You need 2/3 majority to amend the constitution. We can't even come together on legislation on bath tissue. :lol:

I believe it was Thomas Jefferson (?) who wrote that the Constitution should be amended every 20 years to keep it fresh. But there's not way we're able to get that done in this climate. The right wing is way too religious. Are you religious BallSac? Are you an Evangelical?

Not religious at all but don't crap on people who are. I don't crap on anybody. Do whatever you want just don't hurt anyone else. Some on the right are religious, not all. Much more so than on the left though.

Something has to change with all the hyper partisanship. Social Media has exacerbated the rift. No idea how to fix it as we all are in the middle of information silos. We seek out and are fed the information that we are predisposed to. All of us do that. That's why you feel like you are in an alien world when you go to Breitbart and I feel the same at Huffpost. Those sites (and all others) get subscribers that are pretty much only in a certain niche. Articles outside of their niche and narrative don't get published. So everyone bounces out of the stuff they don't like and settles into their comfort zone.

That's why it's more important than ever to listen to each other. No one is getting the full picture from whatever source they choose. I like to go to RealClearPolitics sometimes where they provide points of view from both sides on hot issues. It's interesting to read what the aliens have to say even if I don't agree with them.
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1452 » by Pointgod » Sun Sep 20, 2020 6:53 pm

BallSacBounce wrote:
Pointgod wrote:I don’t know what it says about a person who supports a man like this but I’ll stop now because I’ll say some real ****. Even if it was it was a little respected scumbag reporter that works for Fox News, no one should be celebrating the abuse of the press. It’s literal facism.

Read on Twitter


Read on Twitter


Read on Twitter

Well now at least we're getting to the crux of the problem. You believe the bull that was tweeted and the twitterverse echo chamber amplified it so it becomes reality. It's still not true no matter how often you read a tweet saying the same thing.

Same thing happened with the Charlottesville Hoax. This is an MSM problem they really now how to push those buttons and get people going who don't do their own research and look into things. They take some words out of context and splice them together. Voila! Outrage! Fascist! Twitter Explodes!!!

LMAO?

The tweets were by...
Wajahat Ali: NY Times
Ayman Mohyeldin: MSNBC
Ali Velshi: MSNBC/CNN

We look at them as paid supporters of the old guard. The former trusted sources. The gatekeepers that keep you off balance so you don't find out the truth. Why do they do that? Economics. The people at the top have a vested interest in keeping us divided. Truth is imports from China, illegal immigration and H1B visas were hollowing out this country's economic base. All are supported by Global Corporate Interests. The middle class was getting destroyed. Nobody cared till Trump.

So here is what they did, I'll transcribe it for you. What Trump actually said was:
"I remember this guy Velshi, he got hit on the knee, by a can of teargas. And he went down. He didn't, he was down. My knee my knee. Nobody cared these guys didn't care, they moved him aside. And they just walked right through it was like, it was the most beautiful thing. No because after we take all that crap for weeks and weeks they would take this crap and then you finally see men get up there and go right through didn't, wasn't it really a beautiful sight. For law and order, law and order."


Obviously the "beautiful thing" and "beautiful sight" he's referring to is the police taking control after putting up with so much ****.

Wajahat Ali/NYTimes Tweet: Here is Trump praising and encouraging violence against journalist @AliVelshi. I'm resharing this again. He called it a "beautiful sight." These are the actions of a fascist.


Ayman Mohyeldin/MSNBC Tweet: In all of my years covering wars and authoritarian leaders around the world and even with their disdain for a free media, I have never heard one of those leaders call the shooting, targeting and/or injury of a reporter “a beautiful thing” the way Trump has spoken about @AliVelshi


Ali Velshi: MSNBC/CNN Tweet: The President of the United States cheering the targeting of a journalist by authorities...
In response to David Gura ALSO MSNBC Tweet: "He got hit on the knee with a canister of tear gas," President Trump says, of @AliVelshi, who was actually hit by a rubber bullet. "Wasn't it really a beautiful sight? It's called law and order."


Getting hit on the knee with a can of tear gas and calling the police taking control are two SEPARATE things. But the MSM conflated them by splicing them together in the tweet. That's not the way Trump said it and it's not the way he meant it.

He said "they just walked through and it was a beautiful thing.' He was praising the police taking control. He also had the crowd have a bit of a laugh at Velshi's expense. That's not at all praising violence or encouraging it against Velshi or calling what happened to Velshi a beautiful thing. But cue up the outrage! Hey, Trump is an uncouth ass no question about it but that does not a fascist make.

Same thing happened with the Charlottesville Hoax and you have Joe Biden and Kamala Harris gaslighting you on it as well so I'm quite sure you've swallowed it hook, line and sinker.

Joe Biden, Kamala Harris Cite Debunked Charlottesville ‘Fine People Hoax’
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2020/08/12/joe-biden-kamala-harris-cite-debunked-charlottesville-fine-people-hoax/

Joe Biden cited the Charlottesville “fine people hoax” — again — on Wednesday in his remarks introducing his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA), in Wilmington, Delaware.

Biden repeated his debunked claim that Trump called neo-Nazis in Charlottesville in August 2017 “very fine people”:

It is also the third anniversary of that terrible day in Charlottesville — remember? Remember what it felt like to see those neo-Nazis — close your eyes — and those Klansmen and white supremacists coming out of fields, carrying lighted torches, faced contorted, bulging veins, pouring into the streets of [an] historic American city spewing the same antisemitic bile we heard in Hitler’s Germany in the 1930s. Remember how it felt to see a violent clash ensue between those celebrating hate and those standing against it? It was a wake-up call for all of us as a country. For me, it was a call to action. My father used to say, “silence is complicity” — not original to him, but he believed it. At that moment, I knew I could not stand by and let Donald Trump, a man who went on to say when asked about what he thought, he said, “there were very fine people on both sides. “Very fine people on both sides.” No president of the United States of America has ever said anything like that.


Except that's not what he said and clearly not what he meant. Again the MSM and Biden spliced together two separate thoughts to get something vile.

Here are the facts.

President Trump repeatedly condemned the neo-Nazis in Charlottesville in August 2017 — “totally.”

Moreover, the neo-Nazis were not the only violent group in Charlottesville. The “clash” was not with those “standing against” hate peacefully, but with violent, black-clad Antifa extremists.

As to “very fine people,” Trump had been referring to peaceful protests both for and against the removal of a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee.

He completely condemned the extremists — as the timeline and transcript confirm:

Aug. 12, 2017: Trump condemned “violence “on many sides” in Charlottesville, after neo-Nazi and Antifa clashes
Aug. 14, 2017: Trump condemned “neo-Nazis, white supremacists, and other hate groups” in White House statement
Aug. 15, 2017: Trump condemned neo-Nazis “totally,” praised non-violent protesters “on both sides” of statue debate


Here is the transcript of what he actually said:

Image

Biden launched his campaign with the Charlottesville hoax, and persisted in doing so, even after Breitbart News confronted him last August with the fact that he was misquoting the president. His words on that occasion, like his words on Wednesday, repeated his campaign launch speech almost verbatim — a script from which he refuses to depart.

Harris also used the Charlottesville “fine people hoax” repeatedly in the course of her short-lived presidential campaign.

As Breitbart News noted last year:

In a CNN town hall in January, Harris told Jake Tapper: “We have seen when Charlottesville and a woman was killed, that we’ve had a president who basically said, well, there were equal sides to this.” Tapper, who later acknowledged that Trump had not, in fact, called white supremacists and neo-Nazis “very fine people,” did not correct her. Harris repeated the claim in June, claiming on Twitter that Trump had “called neo-Nazis ‘fine people.’


You’re telling me not to believe what I see and hear with my own eyes and ears? There’s no reason to bring up Velshi getting hit with a rubber bullet except to be a dick. What did Velshi do to deserve that? That’s an abuse of power by the government, journalists are clearly marked during the protests so laughing and cheering on someone getting attacked by the police is promoting Facism. Only complete **** cheer or try to defend this garbage.
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1453 » by BallSacBounce » Sun Sep 20, 2020 8:36 pm

aq_ua wrote:
BallSacBounce wrote:
HarthorneWingo wrote:
There is some reason to believe that originalism has its bases found in the purposes of the document. "Living constitutionalism" is the counter theory to interpreting it. This has been The Great Debate in the law for a long time.

If you're interesting in reading more, as I am, I found a recent (2019) law review article on the topic from Northwestern Law School. I'm going to read it tomorrow.

https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1376&context=nulr

Originalism is that the Constitution should be interpreted as it was understood and intended to be understood at the time.

If it's deemed to be lacking in some respects update it with current legislation not the whims of 9 judges. Let the people vote on it.

I’m still only in the early part of the document that Wingo posted, but it seems there’s even debate about what each side of the debate represents as the argument and the definition of the terms. Let’s revisit after we’ve digested this.

Wingo really **** us with this homework. Deep dive into what people call "originalism" and living constitutionalism."

He makes an excellent point early on about properly defining terms and shifting definitions. We all speak past each other often in political debates as a result.

I find this very interesting:

It seems
likely that there is a gap between originalist constitutional theory as
articulated by legal scholars and the use of the word “originalism” by
politicians and pundits. The gap between judges and scholars may be
narrower, but it is significant.39 If the label “originalism” is applied to the
actual decisional practice of self-identified judicial originalists, the content
of the theory is likely to diverge from the versions of originalism advocated
by legal scholars. An example of this divergence is seen in the context of
precedent, where judicial originalists are likely to place greater emphasis on
precedent, and constitutional theorists are likely to place more emphasis on
the original meaning of the constitutional text.

The relationship between the realms of originalist discourse are
complex. Many of the invocations of the word “originalism” in political
discourse are mere rhetorical flourishes, without any theoretical content at
all, but some politicians have a sophisticated understanding of contemporary
originalist constitutional theory—as illustrated by Senator Mike Lee’s
questioning of then-Judge Brett Kavanaugh during confirmation hearings.40
Some of the uses of “originalism” display very little awareness of originalist
scholarship, but some judicial originalists, for example, Justice Scalia,
Associate Chief Justice Thomas Lee of the Utah Supreme Court, and Judge
Amy Coney Barrett of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh
Circuit, display a sophisticated command of originalist theory and participate
in scholarly debates.

The terminological and conceptual discussion in this Essay is aimed
primarily at scholarly discourse and to those aspects of judicial practice and
political discourse that interact with the academic debates. It should go
without saying that (at least in the short run) the proposals offered here are
unlikely to affect the use of the word “originalism” in rough-and-tumble
politics or judicial opinions authored by judges who are mostly (or even
completely) unfamiliar with the academic debates.

I loved Scalia. So I guess I come down on the academic originalism as interpreted by him and another one he brings up and relevant to the right now Amy Coney Barrett. I love the reasonings Clarence Thomas has written as well. I'd love to know what key ways if any he differs from Scalia in how he reads the constitution. Maybe Wingo can weigh in.

I like this passage, I want the applications of originalism to be ideologically neutral, and I believe that originalism does or
should at least lead to a mix of liberal, progressive, conservative, and libertarian results. I want politics out.
That's what legislatures are for.

For example, in Bradwell v. Illinois,97 the Supreme Court upheld Myra
Bradwell’s exclusion from the Illinois bar on the basis of gender. I have
argued that Bradwell v. Illinois was inconsistent with the original public
meaning of the Privileges or Immunities Clause because the right to pursue
a lawful occupation is one of the basic rights protected by the Clause.
However, Bradwell could have been understood as consistent with the
Clause by Justices who believed that women were intellectually incapable of
functioning as competent lawyers. The opposite result would be required
given true beliefs about women’s intellectual capacities.98 Fixed original
public meaning can give rise to different outcomes given changing beliefs
about facts. The Constraint Principle does not require constitutional actors
to adhere to false factual beliefs held by the drafters, Framers, ratifiers, or
the public.

Consider the following proposal for theorizing this intuitive reaction,
using Bernard Williams’s notion of a “thick moral concept”100 in which
descriptive and evaluative content are entwined. Similarly, it is possible that
some critics of originalism believe that originalism is a thick ideological
concept. The idea would be that the concept originalism combines
ideological and descriptive-theoretical elements. To put it more plainly,
originalism necessarily involves right-wing ideology—if it is not
conservative, it is not originalism. Similarly, one might think that living
constitutionalism is inherently liberal or progressive.

Many originalists disagree with this understanding of “originalism” as
that term operates in the realm of scholarly discourse. Quite obviously,
political progressives who are also originalists do not believe that their own
views are conceptually incoherent. Moreover, my impression is that most
conservatives and libertarian originalists believe that originalism is
ideologically neutral, and that originalism leads to a mix of liberal,
progressive, conservative, and libertarian results.

For example, the original
public meaning of the Privileges or Immunities Clause may support gender
equality rights (as discussed above).101 Originalism is arguably inconsistent
with sovereign immunity doctrines that are viewed as conservative.102
Moreover, the doctrine of birthright citizenship is supported by the original
public meaning of the Citizenship Clause of Section One of the Fourteenth
Amendment.103 And originalism likely leads to conservative results as well:
for example, the original meaning of the Commerce Clause likely leads to a
restrictive understanding of national legislative power.10


Well put conclusion:
CONCLUSION
Words and concepts matter, and not because conceptual clarity is more
important than normative substance. In fact, quite the opposite is true. Words
and concepts matter because conceptual clarity brings normative substance
to the fore. The most important normative issues in the great debate arise
from the originalist case for the Constraint Principle and the living
constitutionalist arguments for its rejection. These issues are many and
varied, in large part because there are so many different forms of living
constitutionalism. Making progress on the important questions of political
morality raised by the great debate between originalism and living
constitutionalism is difficult, even if we clearly understand the conceptual
structure of the debate. But if the meaning of “originalism” and “living
constitutionalism” is unstable or obscure, it seems likely that progress will
be all but impossible.


So, readers of this board, where do you fall in the following list and why?

I'm a public meaning originalist. The constitution should be interpreted by the meaning it had at the time. If you want to change the constitution there is a built-in method for that with certain standards and it involves the legislature not judges willy nilly style
re-imagining things as they go along. That's just chaos and ultimately the destruction of our republic if the meaning of the core of our laws change with the wind.

TABLE 3: THE CONCEPTUAL LANDSCAPE
Originalism
Public Meaning
Intentionalism
Original Methods
Original Law

Hybrid Theories
Living Originalism
Constitutional Compromise
Original Law Originalism

Living Constitutionalism
Constitutional Pluralism
Common Law Constitutionalism
Moral Readings
Super-Legislature
Popular Constitutionalism
Extranational Constitutionalism
Multiple Meanings
Thayerian Deference
Constitutional Antitheory
Constitutional Rejectionism


Great stuff Wingo!
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1454 » by BallSacBounce » Sun Sep 20, 2020 8:40 pm

Pointgod wrote:
BallSacBounce wrote:
Pointgod wrote:I don’t know what it says about a person who supports a man like this but I’ll stop now because I’ll say some real ****. Even if it was it was a little respected scumbag reporter that works for Fox News, no one should be celebrating the abuse of the press. It’s literal facism.

Read on Twitter


Read on Twitter


Read on Twitter

Well now at least we're getting to the crux of the problem. You believe the bull that was tweeted and the twitterverse echo chamber amplified it so it becomes reality. It's still not true no matter how often you read a tweet saying the same thing.

Same thing happened with the Charlottesville Hoax. This is an MSM problem they really now how to push those buttons and get people going who don't do their own research and look into things. They take some words out of context and splice them together. Voila! Outrage! Fascist! Twitter Explodes!!!

LMAO?

The tweets were by...
Wajahat Ali: NY Times
Ayman Mohyeldin: MSNBC
Ali Velshi: MSNBC/CNN

We look at them as paid supporters of the old guard. The former trusted sources. The gatekeepers that keep you off balance so you don't find out the truth. Why do they do that? Economics. The people at the top have a vested interest in keeping us divided. Truth is imports from China, illegal immigration and H1B visas were hollowing out this country's economic base. All are supported by Global Corporate Interests. The middle class was getting destroyed. Nobody cared till Trump.

So here is what they did, I'll transcribe it for you. What Trump actually said was:
"I remember this guy Velshi, he got hit on the knee, by a can of teargas. And he went down. He didn't, he was down. My knee my knee. Nobody cared these guys didn't care, they moved him aside. And they just walked right through it was like, it was the most beautiful thing. No because after we take all that crap for weeks and weeks they would take this crap and then you finally see men get up there and go right through didn't, wasn't it really a beautiful sight. For law and order, law and order."


Obviously the "beautiful thing" and "beautiful sight" he's referring to is the police taking control after putting up with so much ****.

Wajahat Ali/NYTimes Tweet: Here is Trump praising and encouraging violence against journalist @AliVelshi. I'm resharing this again. He called it a "beautiful sight." These are the actions of a fascist.


Ayman Mohyeldin/MSNBC Tweet: In all of my years covering wars and authoritarian leaders around the world and even with their disdain for a free media, I have never heard one of those leaders call the shooting, targeting and/or injury of a reporter “a beautiful thing” the way Trump has spoken about @AliVelshi


Ali Velshi: MSNBC/CNN Tweet: The President of the United States cheering the targeting of a journalist by authorities...
In response to David Gura ALSO MSNBC Tweet: "He got hit on the knee with a canister of tear gas," President Trump says, of @AliVelshi, who was actually hit by a rubber bullet. "Wasn't it really a beautiful sight? It's called law and order."


Getting hit on the knee with a can of tear gas and calling the police taking control are two SEPARATE things. But the MSM conflated them by splicing them together in the tweet. That's not the way Trump said it and it's not the way he meant it.

He said "they just walked through and it was a beautiful thing.' He was praising the police taking control. He also had the crowd have a bit of a laugh at Velshi's expense. That's not at all praising violence or encouraging it against Velshi or calling what happened to Velshi a beautiful thing. But cue up the outrage! Hey, Trump is an uncouth ass no question about it but that does not a fascist make.

Same thing happened with the Charlottesville Hoax and you have Joe Biden and Kamala Harris gaslighting you on it as well so I'm quite sure you've swallowed it hook, line and sinker.

Joe Biden, Kamala Harris Cite Debunked Charlottesville ‘Fine People Hoax’
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2020/08/12/joe-biden-kamala-harris-cite-debunked-charlottesville-fine-people-hoax/

Joe Biden cited the Charlottesville “fine people hoax” — again — on Wednesday in his remarks introducing his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA), in Wilmington, Delaware.

Biden repeated his debunked claim that Trump called neo-Nazis in Charlottesville in August 2017 “very fine people”:

It is also the third anniversary of that terrible day in Charlottesville — remember? Remember what it felt like to see those neo-Nazis — close your eyes — and those Klansmen and white supremacists coming out of fields, carrying lighted torches, faced contorted, bulging veins, pouring into the streets of [an] historic American city spewing the same antisemitic bile we heard in Hitler’s Germany in the 1930s. Remember how it felt to see a violent clash ensue between those celebrating hate and those standing against it? It was a wake-up call for all of us as a country. For me, it was a call to action. My father used to say, “silence is complicity” — not original to him, but he believed it. At that moment, I knew I could not stand by and let Donald Trump, a man who went on to say when asked about what he thought, he said, “there were very fine people on both sides. “Very fine people on both sides.” No president of the United States of America has ever said anything like that.


Except that's not what he said and clearly not what he meant. Again the MSM and Biden spliced together two separate thoughts to get something vile.

Here are the facts.

President Trump repeatedly condemned the neo-Nazis in Charlottesville in August 2017 — “totally.”

Moreover, the neo-Nazis were not the only violent group in Charlottesville. The “clash” was not with those “standing against” hate peacefully, but with violent, black-clad Antifa extremists.

As to “very fine people,” Trump had been referring to peaceful protests both for and against the removal of a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee.

He completely condemned the extremists — as the timeline and transcript confirm:

Aug. 12, 2017: Trump condemned “violence “on many sides” in Charlottesville, after neo-Nazi and Antifa clashes
Aug. 14, 2017: Trump condemned “neo-Nazis, white supremacists, and other hate groups” in White House statement
Aug. 15, 2017: Trump condemned neo-Nazis “totally,” praised non-violent protesters “on both sides” of statue debate


Here is the transcript of what he actually said:

Image

Biden launched his campaign with the Charlottesville hoax, and persisted in doing so, even after Breitbart News confronted him last August with the fact that he was misquoting the president. His words on that occasion, like his words on Wednesday, repeated his campaign launch speech almost verbatim — a script from which he refuses to depart.

Harris also used the Charlottesville “fine people hoax” repeatedly in the course of her short-lived presidential campaign.

As Breitbart News noted last year:

In a CNN town hall in January, Harris told Jake Tapper: “We have seen when Charlottesville and a woman was killed, that we’ve had a president who basically said, well, there were equal sides to this.” Tapper, who later acknowledged that Trump had not, in fact, called white supremacists and neo-Nazis “very fine people,” did not correct her. Harris repeated the claim in June, claiming on Twitter that Trump had “called neo-Nazis ‘fine people.’


You’re telling me not to believe what I see and hear with my own eyes and ears? There’s no reason to bring up Velshi getting hit with a rubber bullet except to be a dick. What did Velshi do to deserve that? That’s an abuse of power by the government, journalists are clearly marked during the protests so laughing and cheering on someone getting attacked by the police is promoting Facism. Only complete **** cheer or try to defend this garbage.

If that's what you saw and heard then your eyes and ears are defective. I just demonstrated how so. Laid it all out. If you disagree then show me how I am wrong. If you can't or don't I'll just chalk up your inability to do so and your response of simply repeating the accusation to cognitive dissonance. Carry on.
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1455 » by BallSacBounce » Sun Sep 20, 2020 9:04 pm

Michael Moore brings up a great point.

Michael Moore Sound The Alarm On Joe Biden's Total Lack Of A Campaign In Michigan
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1456 » by Fury » Sun Sep 20, 2020 9:07 pm

BallSacBounce wrote:
HarthorneWingo wrote:
Stannis wrote:The Maine and Alaska senator says they might vote against the nominee.

Mitt Romney also might vote against it.

If Kelly wins AZ, he can actually be sworn in by November 30th. So that could help, but I think Mitch can do something to stop that.

Truth be told, I think Trump will put a moderate conservative in there. It won't be anyone too extreme.

I see this going through the senate pretty quickly.


The stakes just got exponentially higher. Maybe getting this SCOTUS nominee will placate the republican voters into staying home on 11/3.

Kavanaugh slander got us crazy and this battle will be 10x worse. Not a chance. Fired up beyond belief.


Lol
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1457 » by Fury » Sun Sep 20, 2020 9:09 pm

BallSacBounce wrote:
Pointgod wrote:
BallSacBounce wrote:Well now at least we're getting to the crux of the problem. You believe the bull that was tweeted and the twitterverse echo chamber amplified it so it becomes reality. It's still not true no matter how often you read a tweet saying the same thing.

Same thing happened with the Charlottesville Hoax. This is an MSM problem they really now how to push those buttons and get people going who don't do their own research and look into things. They take some words out of context and splice them together. Voila! Outrage! Fascist! Twitter Explodes!!!

LMAO?

The tweets were by...
Wajahat Ali: NY Times
Ayman Mohyeldin: MSNBC
Ali Velshi: MSNBC/CNN

We look at them as paid supporters of the old guard. The former trusted sources. The gatekeepers that keep you off balance so you don't find out the truth. Why do they do that? Economics. The people at the top have a vested interest in keeping us divided. Truth is imports from China, illegal immigration and H1B visas were hollowing out this country's economic base. All are supported by Global Corporate Interests. The middle class was getting destroyed. Nobody cared till Trump.

So here is what they did, I'll transcribe it for you. What Trump actually said was:


Obviously the "beautiful thing" and "beautiful sight" he's referring to is the police taking control after putting up with so much ****.







Getting hit on the knee with a can of tear gas and calling the police taking control are two SEPARATE things. But the MSM conflated them by splicing them together in the tweet. That's not the way Trump said it and it's not the way he meant it.

He said "they just walked through and it was a beautiful thing.' He was praising the police taking control. He also had the crowd have a bit of a laugh at Velshi's expense. That's not at all praising violence or encouraging it against Velshi or calling what happened to Velshi a beautiful thing. But cue up the outrage! Hey, Trump is an uncouth ass no question about it but that does not a fascist make.

Same thing happened with the Charlottesville Hoax and you have Joe Biden and Kamala Harris gaslighting you on it as well so I'm quite sure you've swallowed it hook, line and sinker.

Joe Biden, Kamala Harris Cite Debunked Charlottesville ‘Fine People Hoax’
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2020/08/12/joe-biden-kamala-harris-cite-debunked-charlottesville-fine-people-hoax/

Joe Biden cited the Charlottesville “fine people hoax” — again — on Wednesday in his remarks introducing his running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris (D-CA), in Wilmington, Delaware.

Biden repeated his debunked claim that Trump called neo-Nazis in Charlottesville in August 2017 “very fine people”:



Except that's not what he said and clearly not what he meant. Again the MSM and Biden spliced together two separate thoughts to get something vile.



Here is the transcript of what he actually said:

Image



You’re telling me not to believe what I see and hear with my own eyes and ears? There’s no reason to bring up Velshi getting hit with a rubber bullet except to be a dick. What did Velshi do to deserve that? That’s an abuse of power by the government, journalists are clearly marked during the protests so laughing and cheering on someone getting attacked by the police is promoting Facism. Only complete **** cheer or try to defend this garbage.

If that's what you saw and heard then your eyes and ears are defective. I just demonstrated how so. Laid it all out. If you disagree then show me how I am wrong. If you can't or don't I'll just chalk up your inability to do so and your response of simply repeating the accusation to cognitive dissonance. Carry on.


Tally up the number of times Trump has disavowed neo-nazis/white supremacists compared to the number of times he’s gone after Antifa

Don’t bull us with this nonsense
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1458 » by HarthorneWingo » Sun Sep 20, 2020 10:31 pm

We need to divide this country into three
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1459 » by robillionaire » Sun Sep 20, 2020 11:24 pm

HarthorneWingo wrote:The need to divide this country into three


i support it
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Re: 2020 Presidential Election (All Serious POVs Welcome) 

Post#1460 » by Phish Tank » Sun Sep 20, 2020 11:40 pm

HarthorneWingo wrote:We need to divide this country into three


The Mid-Atlantic to Northeast - from Arlington up to Maine should be one country. We'll have a hard time with the PBA but gotta abolish all of them... may need to go to war against them too.
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