idhawkman wrote:I wish NO ill will on anyone and truly hope she heals quickly.
RiverDog wrote:
Why do you feel the need to flash your humanitarian credentials? Guilty conscience?
idhawkman wrote:Actually the reason I wanted to post this is because it is very important with the cases in front of the Supreme Court this year. Those cases could also include an immigration issue and presidential order issue on the 14th amendment.
Because of my positions on such issues, I didn't want anyone thinking that I posted it because I was gleeful or anything else. So maybe my conscience does play into it but not because it is true. I often post in game threads and other articles about he Seahawks that I never wish for anyone to be hurt. I would rather beat a team at full strength first of all and second of all I just can't wish for someone to befall injury for any reason whether it is good for my team or not.
So bottom line is, I don't wish her ill but it does have a huge impact on the court if it hampers her abilities in any way. She is 85 years old and 85 year olds don't heal as fast as us younger 50 somethings. I also may have a conscience which seems weird that I would run from having one.
I think Trump will be surprised how the Justices stick to the long history of application of the 14th Amendment.
Aseahawkfan wrote:You think because a Supreme Court Justice is conservative they're going to violate established law to change The 14th Amendment for a president?
You think that isn't tampering with the Constitution?
In actuality it is neither. It is the American system. Its very unfortunate to have you say such a sad statement that many Americans like you share this sentiment shows just how far adrift we've become from the American way.That's about as partisan and unlawful as it gets.
TBD.I don't think Justices will vote along party lines myself. I think Trump will be surprised how the Justices stick to the long history of application of the 14th Amendment.
burrrton wrote:
And FTR, if RBG steps down, I hope Trump replaces her with Garland.
burrrton wrote:Will be interesting to watch, ID.
And rethinking my statement on replacing RBG with Garland, I shouldn't say "hope", but rather "wouldn't mind". Also, as I sit here watching the "magically appearing boxes of ballots" debacle surfacing wherever a Dem lost a close election, and reflecting again on the Kavanaugh embarrassment, I have to admit I also wouldn't mind Trump replacing RBG with Ted Cruz just to watch the Progressive Left lose its sh*t again.
idhawkman wrote:Actually the reason I wanted to post this is because it is very important with the cases in front of the Supreme Court this year. Those cases could also include an immigration issue and presidential order issue on the 14th amendment.
Because of my positions on such issues, I didn't want anyone thinking that I posted it because I was gleeful or anything else. So maybe my conscience does play into it but not because it is true. I often post in game threads and other articles about he Seahawks that I never wish for anyone to be hurt. I would rather beat a team at full strength first of all and second of all I just can't wish for someone to befall injury for any reason whether it is good for my team or not.
So bottom line is, I don't wish her ill but it does have a huge impact on the court if it hampers her abilities in any way. She is 85 years old and 85 year olds don't heal as fast as us younger 50 somethings. I also may have a conscience which seems weird that I would run from having one.
burrrton wrote:I think Trump will be surprised how the Justices stick to the long history of application of the 14th Amendment.
This. It's pretty clear what the 14th means.
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And c'mon, RD- someone who wears their conservative badge as proudly as ID is going to assume everyone will assign the worst intentions to him saying anything about RBG's injury. It's not unreasonable that he might feel inclined to preemptively defend himself.
And FTR, if RBG steps down, I hope Trump replaces her with Garland.
RiverDog wrote:
Then why didn't you just start a thread title like "Upcoming SCOTUS cases" or something? Your thread title seemed really odd, like Ginsberg was on her death bed and that we were supposed to start discussing a potential SCOTUS opening.
I haven't accused you of being insensitive to the plight of others, nor can I recall ASF, burrton, Hawktalk, Cbob, or any of the regulars in this OT section doing so, which is why your defensiveness didn't make sense to me. I have no doubt that you are a decent guy.
Ginsberg is a tough old lady. She's had a bout with cancer, was hospitalized due to an adverse reaction to meds, broke her ribs in 2012, had a stent implanted to relive a blocked artery, yet despite all that, she has yet to miss a SCOTUS argument.
idhawkman wrote:Because I'm me and not you. No further explaination is needed.
Actually you did! When you questioned my guilty conscience you actually did accuse me. Just because it was after I made the disclosure doesn't mean I didn't expect it from you and maybe HawkTalk and possibly Bob.
She is tough, no doubt. But father time never stops ticking and in the end will overcome. My dad turned 85 this year and I've seen him decline from a once very strong warrior who was the top graduate of his Ranger class to a weakened senior citizen that quite frankly scares me to leave him alone now.
idhawkman wrote:
Then why didn't you just start a thread title like "Upcoming SCOTUS cases" or something? Your thread title seemed really odd, like Ginsberg was on her death bed and that we were supposed to start discussing a potential SCOTUS opening.
Because I'm me and not you. No further explaination is needed.
Actually you did! When you questioned my guilty conscience you actually did accuse me. Just because it was after I made the disclosure doesn't mean I didn't expect it from you and maybe HawkTalk and possibly Bob.
She is tough, no doubt. But father time never stops ticking and in the end will overcome. My dad turned 85 this year and I've seen him decline from a once very strong warrior who was the top graduate of his Ranger class to a weakened senior citizen that quite frankly scares me to leave him alone now.
RiverDog wrote:
So given that thread title, what was it that we were supposed to discuss?
Then you must not have read the last sentence from my quote above.
Absouletly true, and I wouldn't want to leave any 85 year old alone for very long. Her age and health would indicate that she's likely not going to serve much longer, but at this point, she's still on the court and I expect her to at least attempt to serve until Trump is out of office in 2021.
idhawkman wrote:If Trump nominates another white male you could already hear the screams from the left about Mysogony, Racism, etc.
RiverDog wrote:I just wish he'd conduct all his business that way.
Aseahawkfan wrote:RD,
I believe IDHawkman is insensitive to the plight of others. I don't think he cares. All he cares about is supporting Trump no matter what he does. I don't see even the slightest questioning of the man from Idhawkman. I see nearly total disregard for Trump's rude, crass, insulting, misogynistic, and generally low class behavior. Trump is a proven adulterer. Like most businessmen he's walked the line on legality with his businesses. He hasn't released his tax returns after haranguing the living crap out of Obama to release his birth certificate. I think IDhawkman seems to think all Trump's behavior is just fine. If that is the case, then how can any of say he is sensitive to the plight of others when he supports so vehemently a president that seems to just not give a flying crap.
At least that's how I see it.
This post no matter how IDhawkman tries to spin it was a subconscious show of his attitude of "not caring about the plight of others." He wants to see another justice appointed by Trump, even if it means Ginsberg dying. He doesn't care. It's all about supporting his conservative agenda by supporting Trump. If that means overlooking the lack of action for murder by an "ally", a Supreme Court judge dying, immigrants being vilified, lies about adultery and payoffs to women to keep silence, and general rude, crass, and low class behavior, so be it.
burrrton wrote:They (Dems, liberals) just spent a month calling a sitting DC circuit court judge (Kavanaugh) a serial gang rapist. It doesn't matter who he nominates- there is no longer any "should I say this", any "do I really believe this", any "is this really fair or even realistic" in their internal dialogue. They're going to scream literally everything regardless.
The R's have played politics with SCOTUS nominations, holding open an appointment until after the election, doing away with the 60% filibuster requirement for confirmation
it's still no excuse for the tarring and feathering of a law abiding citizen based on the flimsy evidence they had on Kavanaugh.
burrrton wrote:The R's have played politics with SCOTUS nominations, holding open an appointment until after the election, doing away with the 60% filibuster requirement for confirmation
It was certainly playing politics, but a couple things to note:
1. Denying consent on a nominee is hardly unprecedented in a Presidential election year, having been advocated in the past in one form or another by Democrats in fact, and after watching the Kavanaugh hearings, Garland should be on his knees thanking McConnell for doing so in the manner he did (unless he thinks, as I tend to, that Rs wouldn't have lowered themselves to the level the Ds did).
2. Nuking the filibuster for Federal judicial appointments was entirely Reid's doing- that little 'it wasn't for SCOTUS nominees' tap dance was CYA claptrap. Everybody watching knew he only said that because he didn't have a SCOTUS nominee to confirm, and regardless, it's insulting to imply those appointments are somehow irrelevant. SCOTUS is ultimately more important, but it's not hard to argue the lower appointments do more to shape society.
it's still no excuse for the tarring and feathering of a law abiding citizen based on the flimsy evidence they had on Kavanaugh.
Agree, of course, but to reiterate, they didn't even have flimsy evidence. They literally had nothing but an uncorroborated, non-falsifiable accusation. Appalling.
Eyewitness testimony given under oath and in front of committee members, even if it is uncorroborated and full of more holes than a screen door, is evidence.
burrrton wrote:Eyewitness testimony given under oath and in front of committee members, even if it is uncorroborated and full of more holes than a screen door, is evidence.
Maybe technically. However, if she could remember every detail of the encounter, but all of her named witnesses said they didn't know what she was talking, *that* would be flimsy.
In this case, though, she couldn't remember a thing about it AND all her named witnesses said they didn't know what she was talking about- that's not the same zip code as flimsy.
RiverDog wrote:I guess it depends on how we define "flimsy." Once again, we're arguing about semantics.
burrrton wrote:I guess it depends on how we define "flimsy." Once again, we're arguing about semantics.
True. I know we don't disagree- I just can't get to "flimsy evidence" when it was literally nothing more than the accusation itself...
IMO that elevates it above just some random accusation.
politicalfootball wrote:SCOTUS is composed of 9 justice's the Congress and the President of the United States can do what they can to override the Supreme court's decision but the SCOTUS has the final word.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Cancer at her age likely means she's done and soon. You just don't recover from cancer well at her age. She's likely hopped up on medications. If she is trying to hang on to block Trump that is pathetic. She's 85. Time to move on.
RiverDog wrote:Ginsberg has been fighting cancer and other health issues for 20 years. The doctors claim that they have removed all of the cancerous tumors. So long as she appears to have her wits about her, I have no problem with her continuing to serve. Even at 85, she's still 5 years short of the oldest serving SCOTUS justice. Having been beaten into submission from my former employment and retiring at age 63, my hat is off to her for possessing the kind of work ethic that has allowed her to continue in such a stressful environment.
RiverDog wrote:
Actually they don't. Congress, with the support of 2/3's of the states, can pass a Constitutional amendment and over ride a SCOTUS decision. SCOTUS can only interpet the Constitution.
But I get your point. Constitutional amendments are very rare, so for all intents and purposes, you are correct.
RiverDog wrote:Ginsberg has been fighting cancer and other health issues for 20 years. The doctors claim that they have removed all of the cancerous tumors. So long as she appears to have her wits about her, I have no problem with her continuing to serve. Even at 85, she's still 5 years short of the oldest serving SCOTUS justice. Having been beaten into submission from my former employment and retiring at age 63, my hat is off to her for possessing the kind of work ethic that has allowed her to continue in such a stressful environment.
Aseahawkfan wrote:What do you mean beaten into submission? Your employer forced you out?
RiverDog wrote:Ginsberg has been fighting cancer and other health issues for 20 years. The doctors claim that they have removed all of the cancerous tumors. So long as she appears to have her wits about her, I have no problem with her continuing to serve. Even at 85, she's still 5 years short of the oldest serving SCOTUS justice. Having been beaten into submission from my former employment and retiring at age 63, my hat is off to her for possessing the kind of work ethic that has allowed her to continue in such a stressful environment.
idhawkman wrote:I'm okay with her serving if she has her wits AND her medical requirements allow her enough time to use those wits. If the treatments infringe on her ability to hear arguments, do the research (mostly done by interns) and write opinions then it is time for her to go. In other words, I don't want a rubber stamp Pro or Con to any issue.
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