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by skhunted
718 days ago
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The court is clearly going in the direction of activism in the sense of abandoning major precedents that have been around for many decades. Abortion, fair share union dues, Chevron, Citizens United, gutting the Voting Rights Act (thousands of polling stations have been shut down in recent years), and this week effectively legalizing bribery of government officials. The combination of these and other precedents is ushering in a new era of intensifying regulatory capture and with the people effectively losing power. The label for what this is called is irrelevant. It’s the consequences of this that matter and the lower courts see where this court is heading and they will rule accordingly. These decisions have been extremely in terms of detriment to the country. This court will not be looked upon favorably in the future. |
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A case ultimately rooted in the legal theory or “emanations from penumbras” in the Constitution.
> fair share union dues
Forcing government employees to pay dues to a private organization they disagree with politically.
> Chevron
Overturning an earlier case that had ruled in favor of an oil company.
> Citizens United
Held that making a political movie about Hilary Clinton was free speech.
> gutting the Voting Rights Act
Finding that Congress couldn’t impose different voting rights requirements on different states based on a 40 year old formula.
> this week effectively legalizing bribery of government officials
Overturned a conviction for accepting bribes in connection with an official act, where the jury was instructed that it was irrelevant whether the defendant had corrupt intent at the time of the official act.
I don’t know what historians will say about the current Supreme Court. But historians (and journalists) are feelers (in the Meyers Briggs sense), not thinkers. They think in terms of human stories and impacts on people, rather than logical systems. Who cares what feelers think about legal precedents?