Posted on 01/20/2012 7:34:46 AM PST by Happy Valley Dude
Edited on 01/20/2012 7:39:53 AM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
WASHINGTON (AP)
(Excerpt) Read more at google.com ...
Then, in the absence of any proof of "disenfranchising" minorities, the constitutionally-draw state legislature maps should be used.
This is getting maddening.
There is a mountain of voter registration cards (including mine since I recently moved) which can’t proceed because the county clerk’s office doesn’t know what U.S. representative district I will be in. That’s the practical problem here is that any solution is going to require some lag time for the voter ID cards to go out.
"In the absence of any legal flaw in this respect in the state's plan, the district court had no basis to modify that plan," the justices said, talking about state House districts in north and east Texas.
(bold mine for emphasis)
I believe that Constitutionally, they should only count as 3/5 of a person.
Justice Thomas had a concurring opinion. Here's the opening paragraph of that...
The Court proceeds from the premise that court-drawn interim plans are necessary in part because Texas newly enacted redistricting plans are unenforceable for lack of preclearance under §5 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Ante, at 13. In my view, Texas failure to timely obtain §5 preclearance of its new plans is no obstacle to their implementation, because, as I have previously explained, §5 is unconstitutional. See Northwest Austin Municipal Util. Dist. No. One v. Holder, 557 U. S. 193, 212 (2009) (THOMAS, J., concurring in judgment in part and dissent- ing in part). ...
Didn’t think about the voter registration problem.
“Are laws different for minorities than they are for whites? Is the Constitution worded differently for minorities than for whites?”
You are bold and brave to ask such questions, even in this forum.
But they are questions that _must_ be asked — and then _answered_ — if our nation is to go forward as The Founders intended, or to sink into a sea of “diversity”...
Then, in the absence of any proof of “disenfranchising” minorities, the constitutionally-draw state legislature maps should be used.
To a degree that is what this court ruling alluded to. Not that they should use the state legislature drawn maps exclusive, but that the court ignored them in total.
lol...that makes about 3 of us here
most freepers ape the Beck-Rush-Hannity line of praise for the first 1960s race initiatives like they are the Torah of modern politics
sad
I believe that Louisiana has filed a lawsuit saying that Texas has too many districts because of the illegal count. They believe that Texas took one of theirs.
I think that if you take in the Katrina people, then you get their congressional district.
I can’t believe that they’re targeting Texas to run this jive-[unladylike words] past the people. Keep fighting their rampant lawlessness, Texans!
The SCOTUS publicly spanked the leftist judges who re-wrote the Texas legislature’s district alignments.
And the decision was 9-0 (techniclly, 8-1, but Thomas went farther than the majority in slapping down the lower court).
bttt
Excellent book!
“Assuming its not settled by April, I want Texas to have a say in the nomination.”
The way this primary is shaping up, by rights,now (because of getting our primary dates moved to later date) Texas should be able to have a winner-take-all instead of proportional representation, in which case, think of the ramifications of having 155 delegates up for grabs if this becomes a competitive raceall the way through to the national convention!
Just in case you missed this ping.
“lol...that makes about 3 of us here”
Make that 4...
Rush made a good point. The elites of D.C. do not see "much" wrong with our Country. They truly don't think things are that bad.
Bush will never be affected by the evils of Obama. It speaks volumes that he doesn't speak out.
Bush either is being threatened if he does speak out; doesn't really care enough to speak out, or he doesn't think Obama's policies are are as destructive as we believe.
Remember, both Bushes pursued policies that greatly increased the power of the State over the individual. They are Statists at heart. Statist view the State as an inherent instrument of good.
Our Founders rightfully had real hostility towards a powerful central government. Our Founders cherished Liberty. Our Founders knew that government would attract men of evil ambitions and lustful of power.
Paramount in their implementation of our Constitution was the belief that government must severely limited in power. They put in numerous firewalls that held the Statists at bay for well over a hundred years.
Our Founders would be amazed our Republic as lasted this long without needing the "reset" of a revolution.
It can be surmised from various writings that many of our Founders expected ever so often that the people would rise up and put the "fear of the people" in those politicians of mischievous ends. It would have been good if every decade of so, most of Washington was tarred, feathered, and run out of town.
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