Hes right as a (in)famous radio talk show host likes to say, Words mean things, and ideas have consequences. We hear lots of arguments and counter-arguments about slippery slopes. I think its a bad metaphor. We havent crossed onto a muddy downhill grade we could fall down, which implies risk; we have broken a dam, which implies disaster. Its not a question of if were not careful, decision A might lead to decision B. Its much simpler and much worse than that. We have blown the dam that used to hold back the flood of wickedness. The downstream villages are swept away sequentially, and no amount of care or nuance will protect the next town from falling victim to the flood.
God promised he would never again destroy the world by flood. He never said hed keep us from taking a shot at it ourselves.
To: miketheprof
I was jabbering to someone at FR about the Lawrence case. First of all, it should have never made it to the Supreme Court. The police were going on an anonymous tip who probably had something against the two dudes having sex, and the police were over zealous in enforcing a law that no one one bothers to enforce even though it might still be on the book (sodomy, unless it is in connection with another crime such as rape, assault, etc).
When you are speaking of Supreme Court decisons, you're not speaking of a simple judgement of the facts (as in lower courts)--it involves all kinds of theories, trains of thought, rationales, doctrines etc etc etc etc. So the slippery slope comment by Santorum was on the money. I thought Scalia made a similar comment in his dissent.
2 posted on
08/03/2006 9:03:39 AM PDT by
brooklyn dave
(CUB A LIBRE! can't wait--Ding Dong Fidel is Dead!)
To: miketheprof
Yup, he's a genuine conservative who's right, so he'll take all kinds of flak from so-called conservatives on certain political FoRums.
3 posted on
08/03/2006 9:02:51 PM PDT by
TradicalRC
("...this present Constitution, which will be valid henceforth, now, and forever..."-Pope St. Pius V)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson