SuperMatt
Site Master
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2020
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Should Dred Scot not been overturned because we had hundreds of years of history doing it the other way? Legally?
Bad decisions need to be fixed regardless of the passage of time.
I said REPEATEDLY that using “historical firearms laws” as a justification for overturning a 100-year old firearms law doesn’t make any fucking sense. I am saying that his REASONING is flawed. None of your responses have even tried to rebut that, just insisting that somehow the ruling is bad, because... well you just think it’s bad. No other reason given. If Thomas gave some other reasoning, then let’s discuss that. But the “history” reasoning is bullshit, pure and simple. I was glad to see that when I read the Breyer dissent, he came to the same conclusion, but much more eloquently said than I.
And do you really want to be “that guy” who conflates gun permit laws to slavery? A state limiting your ability to carry assault weapons with you everywhere you go is JUST LIKE being a slave!
SCOTUS said that if you are going to provide tuition assistance, you can't discriminate. They are not forced (your word) to do anything. Just if they are going to do it, they can't discriminate between type of schools. Maine is free to stop the tuition assistance program any time they please.
Let’s look at this practically: they are only “forced” to pay to religious schools IF they give money to any private schools at all. Which leaves a choice - end all private school funding or you MUST give money to religious schools.
This de facto forces Maine to pay the religious schools. Why? In the opinion itself, you can see that Maine's constitution requires them to provide public education. It also states that many areas of the state do NOT have public schools, so the only feasible solution was to give money for kids to attend private schools. Even if Maine wanted to end all funding of private schools immediately, their state constitution would not allow it because even if they wanted to build public schools to accommodate those kids, it would take time and money... so at least until they could accomplish that, they literally ARE forced to pay money to religious schools, at least as a stopgap until they can build more schools... which could be many years. So, yes, they are being FORCED to pay by the coming together of their state constitution and this SCOTUS ruling.