Posted on 12/10/2003 7:09:03 AM PST by July 4th
Reports that main portions of McCain-Feingold are now being upheld! People currently wading through a decision of over 300 pages.
Okie dokie. So you disagree that CFR is constitutional. Please explain by what authority unde the constitution you have to overturn this law.
Again, lots of folks on this thread who are screaming "unconstitutional" at the top of their lungs don't have a clue what the word means. Hint: It isn't what you say it means.
Senator KerryKetchup has already asked the Federal Election Commission to block this possibilty.
Not at issue. We were discussing final and exclusive constitutional review: what Mr, Justice Scalia refers to as the last word on what the Constitution means. You claim that Mr. Justice Scalia is wrong, and leap to the conclusion that judicial Power is equivalent to final and exclusive constitutional review. You have yet to prove either point.
;>)
Final say? Thats BS, -- 'we the people' have final say.
That hardly proves Mr. Justice Scalia wrong in fact, the last line makes MY point, not yours.
;>)
Sorry sport. You asked me to cite the article, section, and clause of the Constitution that delegates to the court judical power.
Wrong I never asked you to cite the article, section, and clause of the Constitution that delegates to the court judical power. But your attempt to swap horses in mid-stream is quite entertaining.!
;>)
Now you want to play word games about who's making circular arguments. -- You are, imo.
LOL! Weve been discussing the last word on what the Constitution means. Mr. Madison and Mr. Jefferson suggested that the last word on what the Constitution means resided with the individual States, not the federal judiciary. Now, it may be news to you, but a State is not a federal court. Your attempt to equate final and exclusive constitutional review with judicial power is nothing but a word game, and (given your complete lack of substantiation) resembles a circular argument.
;>)
There is no such thing as "the power of exclusive and final constitutional review"..
Then why do you claim it resides with we the people? How can -- 'we the people' have final say if a final say regarding the meaning of the Constitution doesnt exist?
Weird game you play.
;>)
WIJG: You claim that 'the Constitution of the United States says that the Supreme Court shall be the last word on what the Constitution means,' and that it delegates to 'the Supreme Court the authority to disregard statutes enacted by the congress of the United States on the ground that in its view they do not comport with the Constitution.'
tp: No, I did not. You lie.
Mr. Justice Scalia stated:
The Constitution of the United States nowhere says that the Supreme Court shall be the last word on what the Constitution means. Or that the Supreme Court shall have the authority to disregard statutes enacted by the congress of the United States on the ground that in its view they do not comport with the Constitution. It doesn't say that anywhere. We made it up."
You REPEATEDLY claimed he was wrong. Tell us:
Does the Constitution of the United States say that the Supreme Court shall be the last word on what the Constitution means? If not, then Mr. Justice Scalia was right, not wrong as you claimed.
Does the Constitution say that the Supreme Court shall have the authority to disregard statutes enacted by the congress of the United States on the ground that in its view they do not comport with the Constitution? If not, then Mr. Justice Scalia was right, not wrong as you claimed.
Perhaps youve changed your mind...
WIJG: Sorry to disappoint you, but Mr. Justice Marshall's 'opinion' is not equivalent to the United States Constitution...
tp: Never said it was. Do you enjoy making up such tales?
Tales? Now youre hurting my feelings! Lets take a look at my post, and your response:
WIJG: I invite you to cite the article, section, and clause of the Constitution that delegates to the court the final say in constitutional interpretation. Thomas Jefferson couldn't find it, James Madison couldn't find it - and I doubt Thomas Paine could have found it, either. Have at it...
tp: (Thomas Jefferson couldn't find it, James Madison couldn't find it - and I doubt Thomas Paine could have found it, either. Have at it.. ) Funny, it was easy to find. I suspect you're hyping the situation. Why is that? <
Here's a bit of what Marshall said in 1803
I asked you to cite the article, section, and clause of the Constitution that delegates to the court the final say in constitutional interpretation, noting that Thomas Jefferson couldn't find it, [and] James Madison couldn't find it. You responded with a bit of what Marshall said in 1803. How nice - you certainly appear to be equating a bit of what Marshall said with the article, section, and clause of the Constitution that delegates to the court the final say in constitutional interpretation.
You really should study my posts, if you intend to dispute them.
;>)
WIJG: I have repeatedly disputed your suggestion that the Constitution delegates the power of exclusive and final constitutional review to the court.
tp: That is not my view. You're getting daffy.
Apparently you have changed your mind you now appear to be claiming that you agree with Mr. Justice Scalia. Congratulations...
I suggest you write to some law review, outlining ~your~ 'logic' refuting Marshalls. -- Be sure to include lots of LOL's & smiley
Darn I was hoping you could point out any 'holes' in my reasoning (I wouldnt want to submit a flawed argument to some law review, now would I? ;>). Obviously you couldnt find any.
(LOL! Here, tp, have another smiley... ;>)
It is up to every state to determine its own criminal law.
But said criminal laws must comply with our BORs individual protections.
So if North Carolina, New York, and Nevada reach different decisions on the subject, that is permitted by the US Constitution.
Simply not true according to the plain words of the 14th.
I know that answer will displease some people, perhaps even both of you. But I always start any discussion of political basics with the plain language -- or lack of language -- of the Constitution on that subject. John / Billybob 1,605
The USSC let stand a peculiar 'criminal law' about assault weapons in CA last week, Billy. -- Do you support CA's 'right' to prohibit such weapons?
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Spiff wrote:
The 14th Amendment has been misinterpreted. This misinterpretation flies in the face of the original intent of the Founding Fathers and is the root cause of the FedGov's involvement in just about every aspect of our lives. You want to stuff the unfettered government genie back in its bottle? Amend or repeal the 14th.
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Spiff wrote: The 14th Amendment has been misinterpreted.
How so? Its language is clear. States cannot infringe on our individual libertes.
This misinterpretation flies in the face of the original intent of the Founding Fathers and is the root cause of the FedGov's involvement in just about every aspect of our lives. You want to stuff the unfettered government genie back in its bottle? Amend or repeal the 14th.
The USSC let stand a peculiar 'criminal law' about assault weapons in CA last week, Spiff. -- Do you support CA's 'right' to prohibit such weapons?
John / Billybob
I do no support the infringement of an individual's right to keep and bear arms, whether that infringement is committed by the FedGov or the state of California. However, as long as California has a Republican form of government and the California constitution permits it, and barring the traditional misinterpretation of the 14th, the California state legislature can prohibit weapons and the U.S. Constitution allows it and the 10th Amendment affirms this fact. The BOR clearly placed its limits upon the FedGov (as in, "Congress shall make no law...) as the Constitution was defining the FedGov, the several States pre-existing. Until the 14th began to be misinterpreted we had a federal form of government. Since then it has almost entirely metamorphed into a national government. Sad.
The Supreme Court has never properly recognized or honestly enforced the 2nd Amendment, but it is still there. And in line with my general views on constitutional subjects, when the Constitution has spoken it is the business of all Americans -- including the Justices on the Supreme Court -- to enforce it. If they cannot do that, then it is their business to resign from the Court.
I hope that answers your question.
John / Billybob
As long as they don't mention that Congressman GunGrabber or Senator Senile doesn't support it. Sure the NRA and affiliates will still be able to put out to their membership the cannidate ratings (which BTW, also seem biased towared incumbents), but that will only reach a small fraction of the membership who read that part of the magazine or website, which in turn is a small fraction of the electorate. Meanwhile AOLTIMEWARNERCNN can say pretty much whatever they want, obscuring a canidates anti second amendment record, or trumpeting it, as seems appropriate to get them elected.
John / Billybob
The irony in this story is that it hurts neither the RNC nor the DNC but the Constitution Party, Greens, and others (apparently of your mind) who can't otherwise get an invitation to the big dance.
Either play by the new rules or get beat. That about sums it up.
I do no support the infringement of an individual's right to keep and bear arms, whether that infringement is committed by the FedGov or the state of California. However, as long as California has a Republican form of government and the California constitution permits it, and barring the traditional misinterpretation of the 14th, the California state legislature can prohibit weapons and the U.S. Constitution allows it and the 10th Amendment affirms this fact.
Thank you. You've just joined a couple of dozen very confused FReekers who claim to support our RKBA's while admitting that states & localities can prohibit guns.
The BOR clearly placed its limits upon the FedGov (as in, "Congress shall make no law...) as the Constitution was defining the FedGov, the several States pre-existing.
A US citizen had a RKBA's in a territory, but lost his right if a new state so decreed? You sure?
Until the 14th began to be misinterpreted we had a federal form of government. Since then it has almost entirely metamorphed into a national government. Sad.
Yep, I find such reasoning more that sad.
But the other step is also essential. Create a new group, say "Citizens for Free Speech about Politicians." Incorporate that group, so there is zero question that the CFR law would forbid THAT group from broadcasting an ad about its political opinions. (The candidate would be a willing, deliberate part of that group.)
With both conditions met, run the ad and dare the authorities to come after all 1,000 people. Odds are, they would come after the candidate only. Heck, that's like going on point. Somebody's got to do it, or the unit doesn't go anywhere or accomplish anything.
Does that answer your question?
Congressman Billybob
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