The guy is a closet liberal, an Ivy League mafia member and will do great harm to the Constitution in the end. Rare fail by DJT
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
To celebrate the anniversary, we’ve got a full week of planned of exclusive giveaways, special live streams, limited-edition merch, and more surprises along the way. Keep an eye out!
View threadWhy are you here?I've never wanted ArmyJerry to be more right.
I think that's the fucked up deal. He probably wouldn't retire unless he was replaced with another spineless piece of crap that blows with the wind.The guy is a closet liberal, an Ivy League mafia member and will do great harm to the Constitution in the end. Rare fail by DJT
Did He stomp his feet and cry? Did He shout down the Dems? Avi you are not a serious person. You just want someone to go full apeshit on you. So you can show how racist and ignorant we are. Yet you think we are the ones with pitiful lives on posting on the net. Get a mirror girl.Y'all don't get to complain about rules of decorum after the shit Mitch pulled, saying the last 1/4 of a president's term doesn't count for appointments.
Y'all don't get to complain about rules of decorum after the shit Mitch pulled, saying the last 1/4 of a president's term doesn't count for appointments.
Y'all don't get to complain about rules of decorum after the shit Mitch pulled, saying the last 1/4 of a president's term doesn't count for appointments.
Biden said the president mid-summer should either wait until the election OR appoint a moderate more acceptable to the Senate. Merrick Garland, a moderate, was nominated in the beginning of spring, not midsummer, which makes it well within Biden's advice.
Why throw out something that could easily be disproven?
Biden said the president mid-summer should either wait until the election OR appoint a moderate more acceptable to the Senate. Merrick Garland, a moderate, was nominated in the beginning of spring, not midsummer, which makes it well within Biden's advice.
Why throw out something that could easily be disproven?
“Can our Supreme Court nomination and confirmation processes, so racked by discord and bitterness, be repaired in a Presidential election year? History teaches us that this is extremely unlikely. Some of our Nation’s most bitter and heated confirmation fights have come in Presidential election years. The bruising confirmation fight over Roger Taney’s nomination in 1836; the Senate’s refusal to confirm four nominations by President Tyler in 1844; the single vote rejections of nominees Badger and Black by lameduck Presidents Fillmore and Buchanan, in the mid-19th century; and the narrow approvals of Justices Lamar and Fuller in 1888 are just some examples of these fights in the 19th century.” - Joe Biden
There's a big difference between a Presidential election, and a mid-term election.Y'all don't get to complain about rules of decorum after the shit Mitch pulled, saying the last 1/4 of a president's term doesn't count for appointments.
Still waiting for Avi to decide if he is going to give a straightforward answer and either defend or condemn the Communist Democrats for turning the hearing into a mob rule event by "inviting" all their nutjob supporters to yell out interruptions and heckles... then try to tell us that's the way the Senate does things.
It seems Avi is doing a bit of side stepping. How about we get a straight answer to that first. Then we can get on to the separate issue of which senate rules everybody is following in appointments & votes (Actual rules, not just we are not in power so it would be nice if you let us block you from getting anything done).
Relative to our two "Dudley Dorights" on this thread, I have a solution to the SCOTUS situation.
How about this ? The present (Majority) Conservatives extend a gesture of good faith and let the Liberals nominate a SCOTUS candidate of thier choosing. Anyone they would like and the Conservatives pledge to not obstruct confirmation in any way. In fact, with such a gesture of good faith, the confirmation vote should be unanimous.
In return, when the the Liberals return to power, they promise to extend the same courtesy to Conservatives when it is time to replace another SC Justice, most likely being RBG.
See how easy that is ? Simple. No fighting, no bickering, no shin kicking. Only bi-directional goodwill toward each other. Coombayah, if you will !
Relative to our two "Dudley Dorights" on this thread, I have a solution to the SCOTUS situation.
How about this ? The present (Majority) Conservatives extend a gesture of good faith and let the Liberals nominate a SCOTUS candidate of their choosing. Anyone they would like and the Conservatives pledge to not obstruct confirmation in any way. In fact, with such a gesture of good faith, the confirmation vote should be unanimous.
In return, when the the Liberals return to power, they promise to extend the same courtesy to Conservatives when it is time to replace another SC Justice, most likely being RBG.
See how easy that is ? Simple. No fighting, no bickering, no shin kicking. Only bi-directional goodwill toward each other. Coombayah, if you will !
/QUOTE]
You funny man![]()
Relative to our two "Dudley Dorights" on this thread, I have a solution to the SCOTUS situation.
How about this ? The present (Majority) Conservatives extend a gesture of good faith and let the Liberals nominate a SCOTUS candidate of their choosing. Anyone they would like and the Conservatives pledge to not obstruct confirmation in any way. In fact, with such a gesture of good faith, the confirmation vote should be unanimous.
In return, when the the Liberals return to power, they promise to extend the same courtesy to Conservatives when it is time to replace another SC Justice, most likely being RBG.
See how easy that is ? Simple. No fighting, no bickering, no shin kicking. Only bi-directional goodwill toward each other. Coombayah, if you will !
You're an idiot and can't even see the contradiction in your own statement.Yes, he's an originalist and it's a ridiculous notion from a legal standpoint, completely at odds of how the people who wrote the thing ran the government while they were alive.
I tell you, Harry Reid's underhanded changing of the Senate rules is coming back to haunt the Dems...in spades..
Your "Living Constitution" is a farce, and is a direct leftist attack on the rule of law for all Americans. It is a direct threat to the Republic by domestic enemies; among which I count you. Just attack already. You bore me.Yes, he's an originalist and it's a ridiculous notion from a legal standpoint, completely at odds of how the people who wrote the thing ran the government while they were alive.
I don't think that's right. Jefferson didn't "WANT" political parties. He just assumed we would have them whether they were good or not, and that somehow prohibiting them would be antithetical to liberty. He thought the actual virtue was in keeping free association, be it politics, labor, or whatever, beyond the purview of government and regulation...just like speech or freedom to worship.George Washington was against political parties...he thought they were divisive and the congress would become beholden to the party not the people. So Prophetic. Jefferson wanted parties. Jefferson was smart but a coward.
Article III, and it says ZERO and has ZERO to do with trying to fit society into The Bill or Rights or vice versa. That is sooooo much bullshit!!!!The people who constructed the government agreed on very little, but part of what they agreed on was that the Supreme Court was necessary to determine whether new situations and changes to society fit into the Bill of Rights. strict originalism is the opposite of that. The judges appointed at the founding of the supreme court weren't even strict originalists.
You're a retard , crack a book . The Founders saw that a court system to ensure that laws were both congruent with the Constitution and for the benefit of the People .The people who constructed the government agreed on very little, but part of what they agreed on was that the Supreme Court was necessary to determine whether new situations and changes to society fit into the Bill of Rights. strict originalism is the opposite of that. The judges appointed at the founding of the supreme court weren't even strict originalists.
The people who constructed the government agreed on very little, but part of what they agreed on was that the Supreme Court was necessary to determine whether new situations and changes to society fit into the Bill of Rights. strict originalism is the opposite of that. The judges appointed at the founding of the supreme court weren't even strict originalists.
As in Rollins in Florida?I would really like to know where your degree in Poly-Sci is from. Where you went to academy, and who taught you this tripe you spit as if you knew what you were talking about. You're not stupid. Someone did this to you. Someone has taught you a bunch of bullshit. It is so far twisted from the truth it's ridiculous. My guess is Rollins.
Great idea!. You find it on the shelf next to the magic beans or on the buried treasure map aisle?
The core purpose of government is to create a stable framework for society to operate within. The whole idea of executive, legislative and judicial branches with checks and balances is to keep any one branch from fucking things up completely. Executive branch is an elected president who is elected to provide some direction for the entire government and make temporary executive orders for disaster relief and declaring war. Legislative is a battlefield where representatives of the states make law. Judicial is where appointed judges enforce the Constitution. That's enforce, not re-interpret.The people who constructed the government agreed on very little, but part of what they agreed on was that the Supreme Court was necessary to determine whether new situations and changes to society fit into the Bill of Rights. strict originalism is the opposite of that. The judges appointed at the founding of the supreme court weren't even strict originalists.
Y'all don't get to complain about rules of decorum after the shit Mitch pulled, saying the last 1/4 of a president's term doesn't count for appointments.
The people who constructed the government agreed on very little, but part of what they agreed on was that the Supreme Court was necessary to determine whether new situations and changes to society fit into the Bill of Rights. strict originalism is the opposite of that. The judges appointed at the founding of the supreme court weren't even strict originalists.
This shit really started with Ted Kennedy and Robert Bork. The previous 200 years these nominations were not contentious, and they've only even had hearings about them for the last 50 years. Before that it was only if the President nominated some criminal it would be a problem.
It all stems from Progressive use of the court to circumvent the popular will of the people and their elected representatives.
Lest you think any of this is new, the Democrats have ALLWAYS been in favor of activist judges. Read the dissenting opinion from the Dred Scott Case. It points to Democrat activist judges (outcome based regardless of what the law says) back to antebellum times.
http://www.hrcr.org/docs/US_Constitution/dscott4.html
History doesn't exactly repeat itself, but it sure does rhyme!
This shit really started with Ted Kennedy and Robert Bork. The previous 200 years these nominations were not contentious, and they've only even had hearings about them for the last 50 years. Before that it was only if the President nominated some criminal it would be a problem.
It all stems from Progressive use of the court to circumvent the popular will of the people and their elected representatives.
Lest you think any of this is new, the Democrats have ALLWAYS been in favor of activist judges. Read the dissenting opinion from the Dred Scott Case. It points to Democrat activist judges (outcome based regardless of what the law says) back to antebellum times.
http://www.hrcr.org/docs/US_Constitution/dscott4.html
History doesn't exactly repeat itself, but it sure does rhyme!