Deus Ex Machina
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Network News use HuffingtonPost as a source for its stories.timmytheman123 said:Lol people actually visit the HuffingtonPost website and expect accurate news to be reported?
Network News use HuffingtonPost as a source for its stories.timmytheman123 said:Lol people actually visit the HuffingtonPost website and expect accurate news to be reported?
delirium said:People are actually believe Huffington Post news article? Man, that site makes Fox News look tame. They latch onto every anti-McCain/pro-Obama and spin it so much that it Fox News' head spin.
theviolenthero said:I'm sure Obama appreciates all the love he's getting over at the Huffingtonpost. :lol
WICKSOL: When was the last time you pumped your own gas and how much did it cost?
MCCAIN: Oh, I dont remember. Now theres Secret Service protection. But Ive done it for many, many years. I dont recall and frankly, I dont see how it matters.
Ive had hundreds and hundreds of town hall meetings, many as short a time ago as yesterday. I communicate with the people and they communicate with me very effectively.
There really isn't anything at all about lethal injection that can be described as "precise," particularly not the drugs in use (which are rare because, y'know, it's illegal to euthanize animals with them.)Only because the drugs they administer in executions are so expensive and uncommon (precisely because of their rarity and use).
Obama drove himself in his own car to campaign events in the 2004 senate race but I don't think he has been "allowed" to drive himself anymore since then.maximum360 said:I hope McCain keeps this up. Next time, please with audio.
icarus-daedelus said:edit: damn, you guys really think Ginsburg and Breyer are liberals? :lol
I wonder how you'd categorize actual libs like Brennan and Marshall, seriously, who btw held the position that the death penalty was unconstitutional
So the court from the 30s through the 60s was...?JayDubya said:Fucking YES.
Right, right, you know best.Anyone holding that position hasn't read the constitution. ;P
icarus-daedelus said:Right, right, you know best.
With due process of the law it can still contradict certain other parts of the BoR (you know which one) but of course the more ambiguous passages were frozen in time at the time of their writing even though women are now a protected class and segregation is illegal.JayDubya said:a) Treason is outlined as a capital offense in Article III.
b) 5th Amendment; "nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law"
So what about with due process of law?
icarus-daedelus said:With due process of the law it can still contradict certain other parts of the BoR (you know which one) but of course the more ambiguous passages were frozen in time at the time of their writing even though women are now a protected class and segregation is illegal.![]()
"Cruel and unusual" is ambiguous, I'd think.JayDubya said:What ambiguous passages? And damn right they're frozen, because that was how the piece of paper was ratified. The states didn't agree to or sign some other version of the piece of paper or the version you want to go back in a time machine and get them to sign.
William H. Rehnquist said:I realize that it is an unpopular and unhumanitarian position, for which I have been excoriated by 'liberal' colleagues but I think Plessy v. Ferguson was right and should be reaffirmed.
You know more about the consitution than George Washington? Because our founding father claimed there are ambiguous passages open for interpretation and that the constitution should be viewed loosely and not bind down the country as the times change. A man who knows a bit more about the constitution than you was a loose constructionist and a federalist which by definition of that time was:JayDubya said:What ambiguous passages? And damn right they're frozen, because that was how the piece of paper was ratified. The states didn't agree to or sign some other version of the piece of paper or the version you want to go back in a time machine and get them to sign.
While that is a bit of a judgment call, certainly the methods commonly employed to execute criminals before and after the ratification of that document were not considered cruel, nor unusual, nor unconstitutional, nor would any method of execution be unconstitutional by virtue of it being execution, when the crime of treason, as outlined in that same document, is punishable by death.icarus-daedelus said:"Cruel and unusual" is ambiguous, I'd think.
edit: Agree with your conservative brothers, Jay!
Right, and you haven't answered my questions. Was Plessy v. Ferguson (aka "separate but equal is constitutional") rightly decided, and Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka therefore wrong, since segregation did occur at the time of the 14th amendment and afterward? Are women a protected class under the Equal Protection clause, even though they were certainly not meant to be considered such by the framers of said amendment?JayDubya said:Well, Rehnquist is pretty awesome.
My point wasnt focused on modern party connections. It was just a simple little example, not at all the point I was focusing on.JayDubya said:Cheebs, the classic Federalists are well in the middle between the modern Democratic party and that same party at the time of its founding, Jefferson and Madison's Anti-Federalist Democratic-Republican Party. Honestly, most the G.O.P.'s dominant sentiment is more Federalist than not, and even a classic Federalist, even Hamilton himself, wouldn't agree with how far things have gone beyond the pale of Anti-Federalism vs. Federalism.
At this point, advocating for "Federalism" is an appeal to having some basic state authority or recognizing that the 10th amendment even existed, which is a bit of a taboo, I think.
Edit: oh well continue.And my point? YOU AREN'T CORRECT ABOUT THE FOUNDING FATHERS INTENTIONS! No one is! Many people who helped craft the consitution wanted to stick by it, many saw it as a document to interpret loosely and be a guideline only.
icarus-daedelus said:'Kay, so you're a "faint-hearted" originalist, who doesn't want to acknowledge that discrimination towards women and segregation of races is perfectly Constitutional based on your ideology. That's cool.
Cheebs said:Just like today, which is why when strict constructionists claim they want to go with how the founding fathers meant for us to see the consitution they are just spewing nonsense.
They didnt want to subvert it. That is quite a loaded term to throw around. Washington held the same view of it as the traditional federalist. Your bias is making you see it that way. It isn't as clear cut as you want it to be, many leaders saw it as something you don't take literally. Others see it as something you follow to the letter. There is no right or wrong, both views are correct because the people who signed it never agreed to which interpretation was the correct one. And from DAY ONE when it was signed they started arguing about how to read it.JayDubya said:Funny, I don't seem to recall making appeals to Hamilton very often, do I? But federalist and anti-federalist alike signed the document, mostly written by Madison, and while I'm aware that some federalists (Adams, perhaps?) were interested in subverting it pretty much from day one, it still stands as the law of the land.
Branduil said:The main reason people want liberal judges appointed to the supreme court is that it's so much easier to "interpret" the constitution that way than it is to go through the lengthy amendment process where people actually have to agree to change it. Meanwhile a Supreme can just go "PENUMBRA! ABORTION FOR EVERYONE!" and we can't do a thing.
he deserves it after his actions over the last few weeks.theviolenthero said:So i go over to huffingtonpost and what do i see as the 3 biggest stories of the week?
Obama Undercuts His Brand
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/06/28/obama-undercuts-his-brand_n_109758.html
Serenity Lost: Obama And The Netroots
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/06/25/serenity-lost-obama-and-t_n_109098.html
Tension In Unity: Clinton Donors Give Obama Cold Shoulder
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/06/27/tension-in-unity-clinton_n_109569.html
I'm sure Obama appreciates all the love he's getting over at the Huffingtonpost. :lol
Separate but equal was established as a constitutional legal principle by the case Plessy v. Ferguson, which upheld a LA law requiring separate railcars for blacks and whites. Honest originalists would have to admit that, since segregation was legal and an accepted social principle at the time of the 14th and afterwards, Brown v. Board of Education was wrong and Plessy v. Ferguson was right (which was the original opinion of Rehnquist when he was an obscure law clerk, before he started backpedaling when he was nominated for CJ 'cause that opinion had thankfully become unpopular and absurd). One would also have to accept that the practice of states discriminating against women in the laws (outside of voting discrimination being expressly prohibited by 19A) was, again, perfectly legal, because the framers of the 14th would have (and did) accept it.JayDubya said:However, the text of the first section is fairly plain and with the 19th in place as well to modify section 2, with women certainly not being non-citizens or non-persons (and that distinction being used to obnoxious effect in certain other horrible cases), I'm left wondering what you're arguing about.
Yes because branding the other side as subverting the consitution when your side has no claim over what you should do with the consitution is just plain WONDERFUL.JayDubya said:<3 Branduil. *tags out for breakfast*
Cheebs said:You can hold your view but when you make remarks about the other side at the time wanting to subvert it like they were doing something against what was right is just being blindsided.
What about Washington? He was a loose constructionist as well and not a fan of states rights.JayDubya said:If you look into Adams more closely, I think you'll find that my remark ("some," with a specific citing of a name) was not inaccurate.
Branduil said:The main reason people want liberal judges appointed to the supreme court is that it's so much easier to "interpret" the constitution that way than it is to go through the lengthy amendment process where people actually have to agree to change it. Meanwhile a Supreme can just go "PENUMBRA! ABORTION FOR EVERYONE!" and we can't do a thing.
Branduil sees liberals as disgusting vile human beings based on his post history, it is no shock.Mumei said:That's a bit low. Sort of like, "The main reason people want conservative judges appointed to the Supreme Court is that it is so much more difficult to force them to treat minorities as anything better than shit when things must go through a lengthy amendment process," is a bit low.
So in other words, dude: "The states didn't agree to or sign some other version of the piece of paper or the version you want to go back in a time machine and get them to sign."JayDubya said:However, the text of the first section is fairly plain and with the 19th in place as well to modify section 2 (males and voting), with women certainly not being non-citizens or non-persons (and that distinction being used to obnoxious effect in certain other horrible cases), I'm left wondering what you're arguing about.
This Week With George Stephanopoulos
Battle of the proxies today is Tim Pawlenty versus Rahm Emmanuel. I feel bad for Pawlenty because Emmanuel is TERRIFYING. If Bill Kristol had said DC need guns to protect themselves against Rahm Emmanuel, I would have been, like: PREACH ON BROTHER. Emmanuel immediately calls McCain an Olympic gold medalist flip-flopper and cuts off GS with a sharp gesture. Rahm is all up on Pawlenty, staring him down and grabbing his arm. He's a personal space invader!
Stephanopoulos brings up the Fortune magazine article on Obama and NAFTA where Nina Easton did a lot of prevaricating, pretending that some of Obama's positions on the matter were sudden, post-primary shifts. GS has bought into Easton's take on the matter. Disappointing but not surprising.
Emmanuel is all but performing Alec Baldwin's "always be closing" monologue from Glengarry Glen Ross, waging a war of interruptions and constantly bringing conversations to rhetorical conclusions, forcing Pawlenty to have to rebroach the topic, which makes him look weak. He rattles off a litany of statistics, and I'm watching Pawlenty gulp air, listening to it. GS finally has to intercede, and get Emmanuel to let Pawlenty speak. Rahm agrees, but keeps on interrupting. The conversation finally ends, and Emmanuel gives Pawlenty the sort of "attaboy" pat on the back that says, "Yeah, I just feasted on your testicles, so, you're going to feel some sharp pains while sitting down for the next couple of days."
Next up is Ralph Nader. And really. Will he ever live down that "talks white" remark? GS has got Nader dead to rights on this host of issues, noting that Obama has discussed and acted on the specific issues that Nader brought up. GS is right to do so: Here's Obama on lead-abatement. Here's Obama on predatory lending. Here's Obama on asbestos. That leaves Nader to quote from a pair of public advocates that no one's ever heard of and bring up a different set of issues than he did before.
GS asks why Nader trains all his fire on Obama when McCain is even less amenable to issues that matter to Nader (if there truly are issues anymore that matter to Nader beyond Nader himself). Nader says he's ready to badmouth McCain if someone wants to ask him to do so. My. He certainly makes this whole "third-party" thing look like a monument to courage.
Cheebs said:What about Washington? He was a loose constructionist as well and not a fan of states rights.
My reason for not liking leaving things up to the states is not out of some consitutional theory or view. It is because the states fuck everything up when they have different sides on big issues. We need consistency in laws or it ends up in chaos. Look at how messed up gay marriage is. It's a big mess in figuring out which states can have it, the states supreme courts stepping in. It's a mess. Either ban it outright, or allow it outright.
And slavery as well. Having certain states free and certain slave caused so much tension it eventually lead to war (yes I know slavery wasnt the cause of the war, but the divide between the states was initially created by the separation and I know the fed. government is to blame as well in this separation.)
thekad said:That post made absolutely no sense, Gaborn.
I didn't think so either.thekad said:That post made absolutely no sense, Gaborn.
Yeah, it's great that 48 states deny gays the right to marriage, isn't it?Gaborn said:Personally I don't mind the way things are.
icarus-daedelus said:Yeah, it's great that 48 states deny gays the right to marriage, isn't it?
It's called a domino effect. The Gay marriage movement is gaining momentum, and while the chances of all states accepting gay marriage is very slim, I agree with Gaborn that pushing State marriage at a state level while waiting for someone who isn't homophobic to be president and do the right thing.icarus-daedelus said:Yeah, it's great that 48 states deny gays the right to marriage, isn't it?
avatar299 said:It's called a domino effect. The Gay marriage movement is gaining momentum, and while the chances of all states accepting gay marriage is very slim, I agree with Gaborn that pushing State marriage at a state level while waiting for someone who isn't homophobic to be president and do the right thing.
DeJa Vu
I notice they randomly take days off now, its odd.GhaleonEB said:
They have a call center in Iowa. The day off in early June was due to that. Iowa had massive flash flooding two days ago, might have hit their center again.Cheebs said:I notice they randomly take days off now, its odd.
At least his remaining consistently above McCain.GhaleonEB said: