Posted on 03/20/2017 2:56:02 PM PDT by TBP
2nd AMENDMENT: "Oh no, we can't have that ja dere hey there. That's a misunderstanding by the Founders. They meant "Bear Arms" on the wall! You can't own a gun me lad!"
Seeings how she wasn’t aborted and all.
She doesn’t seem to have any problem when liberal judges decide to legislate from the bench.
Feinstein=Term Limits!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Go home Granny!!
I have a feeling that if we ever fully find out exactly what has been happening to aborted baby parts, the Establishment may find themselves facing a lynch mob.
Once A Hypocrite Always A Hypocrite!
The Worn Out Old Slut Can't Help It!
Roe v Wade contains restrictions on abortion.
If the Federal government has restrictions on abortion then where then the line can be changed and altered by the Federal government. Once you’ve acquiesced to Federal control (as pro-choice people have done) then you cannot then call it settled law, because laws can, and often do, change.
They lost this battle back in 1973 by actively seeking Federal courts get involved.
Feinstein sets a “super precedent” for the idiocy of a senator.
Say it Feinstein, say that abortion is the cornerstone of liberalism. Go ahead, say the words.
That and global warming are sacraments of teh progressive religion.
This is what they fear the most. Evil, evil people.
I really *hate* those guys...
I think the Dred Scott ruling was in place for just over two decades, not that it matters.
There’s no damn such thing as a ‘super-precedent,’ even if a wretched super-murderess like Feinstein says so.
What a reeking tribute to dead flesh she is.
Did the SCOTUS consider Stare Decisis when taking the decision on same sex marriage? Did Feinstein care about Stare Decisis then??
Wait, I thought Feinstein said the Constitution’s a living document. If it is, then how can any decision be unchangeable?
Dred Scott is a super duper precedent.
It’s not just Super; it’s Super Duper [Not]!
While I agree that the Courts decision in Plessy v. Ferguson was wrong in principle, it was constitutionally technically correct imo, since the states have never amended the Constitution to expressly prohibit segregation.
In other words, the 13th Amendment, or another Reconstruction amendment, arguably should have had an express, anti-segregation clause imo.
Sadly, the fact that Reconstruction amendments didn't expressly prohibit segregation didnt stop state sovereignty-ignoring activist justices from politically amending anti-segregation policy to the Constitution from the bench.
As a side note, are patriots aware of talk that the Civil War was arguably a symbolic contest of power between the federal government, represented by the Union States, versus the states, the states represented by the Confederate States, the 10th Amendment slowly politically fading from the Constitution after the Union States won the Civil War?
Corrections, insights welcome.
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