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Judge Ginsburg on Egypt's constitution
She may have a point, but it is still quite disconcerting to hear this from a sitting SCOTUS judge...
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Since you asked...
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Prairie dwellers trying to convince visitors those mole hills are mountains.
Richard :munchin |
Written word
It's just not the Written Word - it's how you implement it.
We used to have a SC that looked at the Written Word. Now we have some that look to other's written word for inspiration. |
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Having not read either the Canadian or South African constitution I am left with the question, are the kebabs in Egypt better than the ones I had in Turkey...
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Reminds me of someone else recently complaining about those pesky founding fathers and their ideas:rolleyes: |
IMHO, the reason that Ginsburg doesn't think that the US constitution protects individual rights to the extent she deems necessary is that she undervalues the Bill of Rights (which has been made a part of the Constitution via the Amendment process), especially the 10th Amendment. The Constitution lays out the specific powers of the government. The Bill of Rights prohibits the Federal government from infringing upon specific personal liberties. The 10th Amendment then holds that any power not specifically given to the federal government is reserved to the states or the people.
Constitutional law scholars don't like to talk about the 10th amendment, probably because there is not a lot of case law discussing this Amendment. When I read this Amendment, it seems to hold that the federal government has only the powers specifically granted to it. Big-government types don't like this idea. You can be the judge: "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people." |
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:cool: Was perusing some selected Federalist Papers last night & ran across Hamilton's written during the argument over whether there ought to be a separately enumerated Bill of Rights (largely advocated by those who were stuck on the benchmarks of previous such listings found in history). Concern as articulated in there by Hamilton was that, once enumerated separately (counter to the simply elegant concept of "if it ain't listed as a power of the Guv EVERYTHING else is reserved to the Folks and hands-off to the G") it would become fodder to be manipulated and generally mucked with in some way. How'd that work out? |
She is a liberal progressive that feels that the constitution should have given the gov't the right to redistribute wealth according to the axiom "from those according to ability to those according to need".
Heard that phrase somewhere before. :munchin Both Canada and South Africa have that type of progressive think in their writings. What ever happened to the thought, "Ask not what your country can do for you, rather what you can do for your country."? Just wondering, and it is not a mountain out of a mole hill, it is a clear progressive thought process that she uses in here decision making on the SCOTUS. |
Anybody see the interview or just read the opinion piece? :confused:
I seriously doubt Justice Ginsburg was saying to ignore the US Constitution as the writer implies, but that somebody like Egypt or Libya or Sudan or whoever should not use it as their sole template but also consider those newer constitutional documents which are more finite in their enumerated powers and freedoms, which were influenced so strongly by the US Constitution, which are written in modern language and more reflective of generally accepted modern cultural norms, and which, for the most part, have come about after WW2 and under our influence. IOW - IMO...meh... Richard :munchin |
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Yeah, she said it - and watching the clip I had a couple more WTF did she just say moments. |
Funny quote from another source:
"Hell, why not let them use our Constitution, the current administration isn't using it." |
“Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”
-John Adams |
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