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The cloaked facades are off, littering the floor, while suck on this evil chuckles are heard in the halls of the Supreme Court.Just saw that ruling. WTF is going on with SCOTUS?
The cloaked facades are off, littering the floor, while suck on this evil chuckles are heard in the halls of the Supreme Court.Just saw that ruling. WTF is going on with SCOTUS?
This is going to be interesting. We'll see if SCOTUS is going to continue on its destructive path
Supreme Court to hear 2 cases with major implications for 2024 — POLITICO
The Court's new term starts in October and includes significant voting cases.apple.news
Well Kavanaugh went to Georgetown Prep which aside from its party rep does have a Jesuit social justice aspect in its overall academic ambience... but I guess the Federalist Society chapter at Yale managed to beat anything like that lean out of Kavanaugh, even if one might think he could come around to the left a little as he matures on the high court. Haven't lost all hope yet, but the thing that bothers me about him on the high court so far is that he seems to pen these fairly moderate riffs now and then but then votes with the conservatives anyway.
I went to a Jesuit law school, and i can assure you than not a single jesuit principle infiltrated by evil little jewish mind.
I went to a Jesuit law school, and i can assure you than not a single jesuit principle infiltrated by evil little jewish mind.
And the irony is that Trump just used a conservative stance as an expediency to gain office but historically played both sides of the aisle, including giving contributions to Hillary Clinton. From Wikipedia:In a single term as president, Trump has successfully changed the direction of the country to radical Conservatism for a generation.
Actually, the only time I ran across a Jesuit there was when my wife, who was the Sobrato residence director, introduced me to them.I went to the same school (engineering, not law) and never detected a whiff of it.
And the irony is that Trump just used a conservative stance as an expediency to gain office but historically played both sides of the aisle, including giving contributions to Hillary Clinton
Actually, the only time I ran across a Jesuit there was when my wife, who was the Sobrato residence director, introduced me to them.
Alabama lawmakers drew a map that continues a policy of dividing the Black Belt among four congressional districts, ignoring the request of Black constituents to be kept together in two districts for better representation as well as significant demographic changes in the region over the last couple of decades.
Because of the division of the Black Belt, the region’s Black voters have an ability to elect their preferred candidates only in the 7th District, a sprawling district with a tenacle stretching to Birmingham that the plaintiffs say is packed with far more Black voters than needed to elect a Black-preferred candidate.
Or just do something as simple as by county.I keep looking at district maps in states accused of gerrymandering, and I think it’s time every state redistricts fairly. Cut the state in half one way, then the other way. Continue doing that until districts contain similar size populations, but enough of these crazy snakey lines.
Sometimes counties are too large to be a single district.Or just do something as simple as by county.
Mike Gillis, head writer for The Onion and author of the brief, told NPR in a phone interview that he hopes the filing won't just help convince the Supreme Court to take on the case, but also show the public why parody matters so much.
"To just get this many people thinking about parody, and the fact that it adds a lot to their lives and that it's something worth defending, was very, very satisfying for me," he says.
There are certain misconceptions Gillis wanted to clear up for the Supreme Court — including why it's so important for parody to be realistic and why labeling it as such upfront wouldn't only be unnecessary, but unhelpful.
But he also sees the brief as an opportunity to defend the role of parody at large. So, NPR asked, why does it matter?
The short answer is that it's an "extremely powerful rhetorical form that can't really be mimicked by a serious, dry statement of criticism." The longer answer goes back thousands of years, to the etymological root of the word, and has to do with how even slightly tweaking a form can open readers' eyes to how "this thing that had this extremely elevated sense of itself is actually not infallible and can be criticized easily."
I keep looking at district maps in states accused of gerrymandering, and I think it’s time every state redistricts fairly. Cut the state in half one way, then the other way. Continue doing that until districts contain similar size populations, but enough of these crazy snakey lines.
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