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DarkGamer , in Clarence Thomas’s $267,230 R.V. and the Friend Who Financed It
@DarkGamer@kbin.social avatar

This is what corruption looks like. Thomas and Alito are unethical human garbage and don't deserve to be on the highest court.

Ghyste ,

None of the federalist society “judges” deserve to be on the court, but here we are…

DarkGamer ,
@DarkGamer@kbin.social avatar

It's one thing to disagree politically, it's another to take bribes and lie about it or cover it up.

JustZ ,
@JustZ@lemmy.world avatar

Can confirm, they are laughed at in law schools. They clique up. None of the actual smart kids like them. The smartest federalist society members are just smart enough to be dangerous. Mostly religious types. Not very diverse.

afraid_of_zombies ,

They basically believe that the law can only be understood in the original sense that it was written in, yes? Instead of the law being living it is dead.

JustZ ,
@JustZ@lemmy.world avatar

Very basically, yes.

This represents a fundamental misunderstanding of what a dictionary is, a snapshot of a language in time. The meaning of words change over time. “Nice” used to mean stupid in English.

They believe they can divine the intentions of the dead, that they hear the voices of dead people, and can know what they mean.

They also believe that from the writings of a collective, enacted in the form of statutes, they can discern a single, unified intention. This is of course completely ridiculous, but to hear them tell it, they figured out a way to interpret law “objectively,” which is also of course ridiculous.

I’m sure they are nice people.

the_post_of_tom_joad ,

I’m sure they are nice people

I am pleased with what you accomplished today

afraid_of_zombies ,

Thanks. I know very little about this stuff. My understanding is that there is an order to understand the law. Canons of construction, right? So wouldn’t that mean that the intent behind the law can only be invoked if the text as written is open to multiple understanding? If that is the case how can they invoke that if the text can never be ambiguous?

If the text must only be looked at exactly as written you can’t claim it could be ambiguous. If you can’t claim it is ambiguous then you can’t worry about what they really meant to say. Guess I am lost. It seems like they are arguing for a method that if fully applied would mean the method can’t be applied.

What mistake am I making? Also thanks again.

JustZ ,
@JustZ@lemmy.world avatar

You’re looking for logical consistency where there isn’t any. It’s all made up.

There is no one right or wrong way to interpret law. For every canon of statutory construction, there is an equal and opposite canon. My textbook called them thrusts and parries.

Conservatives believe in a plain meaning approach: follow the literal text no matter what because the cold hard text is the best evidence of the legislative intent. If the result is obviously absurd and offensive to justice, too bad, it’s the legislature’s job to fix the statute, not the court’s. Conservatives hate they idea of any power to do affirmative justice resting with the courts, they want it in Congress where their rich benefactors and buy congresspersons.

The problem with that is that legislatures are messy and words are imprecise. The words represent individual understandings and compromises of single members and caucuses, not the whole body. Even when Conservatives say they are following the original text / plain meaning, they are still doing subjective interpretation, just without admitting it.

Purposivism is the idea that statutes should be interpreted and applied by courts with reference to the purpose of the law and common sense.

aidan ,

But a constitution is not a dictionary. It is designed to restrict the current majority, if the majority redefines what the words in the constitution mean it is no restriction.

aidan ,

What about Scalia?

JustZ ,
@JustZ@lemmy.world avatar

What about him?

billbasher ,

Multiple justices lying under oath somehow doesn’t disqualify them. Ridiculous

JustZ ,
@JustZ@lemmy.world avatar

Lifetime appointment.

Anissem , in Clarence Thomas’s $267,230 R.V. and the Friend Who Financed It
@Anissem@lemmy.ml avatar

Politicians are just used car salesmen with great healthcare

Hoomod ,

To be fair, he’s a Supreme Court justice, not just a politician

fulcrummed ,

I think in this case that’s a distinction without a difference.

Anissem , in ‘He’s alone’: Trump arraignment sees no family, no posse, no protests
@Anissem@lemmy.ml avatar

At this point an indictment of Trump in the US has reached the same level as mass shootings and our dying planet. Which indictment, mass shooting or catastrophic environmental disaster are we talking about? I’m numb and have lost track amongst the desperate hopes for change.

noahm ,

Exactly this. An arraignment of a former president has become a non-event. This is ideal for Trump, regardless of how MSNBC tries to spin it.

Ghostalmedia ,
@Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world avatar

This is definitely some of it. Although being in DC probably also helps to tone things down. DC is a pretty blue town outside of the federal buildings.

cipherpunk ,

I can picture a world where Trump’s fervent supporters would descend upon DC and cause at least a little turbulence.

Ghostalmedia ,
@Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world avatar

Impossible. They’d never do that.

paddirn ,

I believe you’re referring to Antifa, Trump supporters would never ever never do anything like that.

Caminsky ,

What i find interesting is that somehow in developing countries justice was slow but eventually it arrived. I can think of places like Peru with Fujimori. Presidents got away for a while but eventually their own justice systems made them pay. I would be surprised if somehow justice didn’t prevail in this situation with Trump.

Anissem , (edited )
@Anissem@lemmy.ml avatar

Justice has to prevail on some level if the US has any hope of protecting its democracy. This was a direct attack on the most fundamental parts of the country.

elbarto777 ,

Its* democracy

ZzyzxRoad ,

if the US has any hope of protecting its democracy.

I don’t think that’s a priority as far as our leaders are concerned. The facade of democracy is just getting in their way now.

Scotty_Trees ,
@Scotty_Trees@lemmy.world avatar

Having 3, possible 4 indictments, some of it very damning, I’m convinced shit will happen. IF nothing happens out of 3 (4*) indictments, then I’d lose pretty much all hope at that point. I am at a point now where I have no yet lost all hope.

Anissem ,
@Anissem@lemmy.ml avatar

At this point I’ll take a slap on the wrist for Trump if he’s barred from running for Presidency. I just want all this to end and for the country to move on.

Scotty_Trees ,
@Scotty_Trees@lemmy.world avatar

I’ve wanted this all to end since 2016, but this steamroller keeps on going. Barring him from holding office anywhere, should be given at a minimum. These indictments are very serious. If you’re a mathematician, then you know by just the numbers, Trump is fucked and he knows it.

Anissem ,
@Anissem@lemmy.ml avatar

I want to believe, I really do. It just feels like we’re stuck in a Twilight Zone episode.

Scotty_Trees ,
@Scotty_Trees@lemmy.world avatar

It’s going to take like 3-4 years between appeals for this all to play out within the courts. He NEEDS the Presidency again to even attempt to fix the courts in his favor. As it stands, right now he is royally fucked. It’s Presidency or bust.

TheLowestStone ,
@TheLowestStone@lemmy.world avatar

I am at a point now where I have no yet lost all hope.

I’ll save you a seat down here at rock bottom.

Scotty_Trees ,
@Scotty_Trees@lemmy.world avatar

Everyone’s bottom is different, no need to save it for me, thanks though!

DarkGamer , in Florida officials tell state schools to teach AP Psychology 'in its entirety'
@DarkGamer@kbin.social avatar

Hey, look at that, an educator standing up for education in Florida. Florida man isn't going to like that.

DigitalTraveler42 ,

Manny Diaz Jr. is a DeSantis lackey, he was handpicked for this position by DeSantis, this is more of a case of them not wanting to lose the state’s advanced placement accreditations.

Also DeSantis may not like it but he’s got a whole bunch of other problems rn.

DarkGamer ,
@DarkGamer@kbin.social avatar

I'm okay with people doing the right things for the wrong reasons.

Oyml77 ,

This Florida man is not unhappy about this at all.

morgan_423 , in Prosecutors ask judge to issue protective order after Trump post appearing to promise revenge
@morgan_423@lemmy.world avatar

This guy. I swear that after he’s passed on, and they’re lowering him into the ground, he’ll somehow, some way, still be commiting felonies from inside the casket.

eran_morad ,

his shitty progeny will be committing crimes for another generation, at least.

QuincyPeck , in ‘He’s alone’: Trump arraignment sees no family, no posse, no protests

Oh no, the consequences of his own actions.

spider ,

Well, the GOP is the party of personal responsibility, right?

monkeytennis , in More Baby Boomers are living alone. One reason why: ‘gray divorce’
@monkeytennis@lemmy.world avatar

Isn’t it amazing, how from a single photo you can deduce that her stand-up is pure dogshit

fisco , in Spyware maker LetMeSpy shuts down after hacker deletes server data
@fisco@lemmy.ml avatar

Ohhh the irony 😅

bernieecclestoned ,

Would be a shame if those paying to spy on others were doxed…

Silverseren , in Florida officials tell state schools to teach AP Psychology 'in its entirety'

So, how long should we expect until Mr. Diaz Jr. finds himself without a job for speaking out against the "will of the state"?

AA5B ,

The problem is he’s probably trying to set up teachers as scapegoats for his survival strategy

CookieJarObserver , in Spyware maker LetMeSpy shuts down after hacker deletes server data
@CookieJarObserver@sh.itjust.works avatar

Lmao

charonn0 , in US judge blocks new Illinois law allowing state to penalize anti-abortion counseling centers
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

This article is frustratingly vague on what the judge actually did. Probably because it’s not nearly as clickbaity. The judge has blocked enforcement of the new law until the lawsuit has been resolved. Given the 1st amendment implications that’s the right call for the judge to make even if the law is ultimately upheld.

FuglyDuck ,
@FuglyDuck@lemmy.world avatar

Let’s preface this with… “I dunno” cuz I’m not from Illinois and don’t know the actual text of the law.

However, if the law is indeed going after deceptive practices in clinics to prevent people from seeking medical care…

That should already be a crime.

Hoomod ,

I’m no lawyer, but I don’t think the first amendment gives you the right to lie to people with no consequences

Drusas ,

Sadly, it mostly does. There are exceptions, and being that this is related to medical care, it may be one of them.

billbasher ,

It grants you the right to lie as long as you aren’t violating an existing law. Regardless of job position or standing

charonn0 ,
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

The first amendment is a limit on government power rather than a grant of individual rights. Consequently, lying is protected speech under most circumstances.

FuglyDuck ,
@FuglyDuck@lemmy.world avatar

“most circumstances” that don’t involve defrauding others for some reason.

For example, if these anti-abortion clinics are pretending to be abortion clinics and then lying about the services they provide- or the nature of those services, which they don’t even provide- to try and convince people not to get abortions…

that is fraud. and it constitutes harm. and absolutely should be treated as such.

another ‘its not actually protected’ that’s relevant is if they’re just telling absolute horror stories about, for example, women who regret having the abortion, or playing up severe complications while insisting they are in fact experts.

both are things anti-abortion clinics have done. I’m not saying these in particular are, but I’m not going to be terribly surprised to find they’re not

charonn0 ,
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

I’m only commenting on how the first amendment should be interpreted when it comes to lying per se.

FuglyDuck ,
@FuglyDuck@lemmy.world avatar

but this isn’t about lying. this is about lying to prevent people who are seeking medical care from obtaining said medical care.

“Oh it’s okay they’re just lying” is an absurdity. they’re committing fraud, probably, and the new law seeks to address this because that this particular fraud is enough a problem that it needed it’s own law.

at least, that’s my outsider’s take on it.

charonn0 ,
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

My comments here are about lying per se and whether they’re protected speech.

FuglyDuck ,
@FuglyDuck@lemmy.world avatar

In the context of fraud.

Shall I be more blunt? You’re full of shit.

Saying in an argument about fraud that dishonesty is protected speech is a bad faith argument. You’re allowed to lie, but you’re not allowed to break the law by misrepresenting and your business in business dealings.

There is a difference and your continued assertion that they’re the same and that the former is even relevant is bullshit. You’re also not allowed to pose as medical professionals and give patently false medical advice.

Regardless of what actions they’re taking, they don’t get to hide behind “free speech” which has never protected people from the consequences of said speech.

charonn0 , (edited )
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

In the context of this conversation thread. To summarize it for you, this conversation thread is about the statement, “but I don’t think the first amendment gives you the right to lie to people with no consequences”. The answer is that generally yes it does.

You are too rude to have a meaningful conversation with, so this will be my last response.

Flaky_Fish69 ,
@Flaky_Fish69@kbin.social avatar

it absolutely doesn't.
Especially when you represent yourself as an expert or medical professional.
what these clinics are doing is medical fraud and malpractice... for the purpose of preventing women from getting lawful access to medical care. It's downright vile... and 50k fines is not enough. There should be jailtime.

quindraco ,

It depends on what these “clinics” entail. For example, if they charge money, existing fraud laws should cover it.

jeffw ,
@jeffw@lemmy.world avatar

Maybe I’m crazy, but I’m not sure what you mean.

It’s common in lawsuits such as this for one party to make a motion to block enforcement of the law pending the results of the case. In extreme cases, the judge may grant such an injunction. This all seems straightforward to me. Frankly, the title pretty much gives away the whole article, which is the opposite of what happens with clickbait.

charonn0 ,
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

In the entire article, there’s only one sentence that even implies the decision isn’t a final ruling.

FlowVoid ,

U.S. District Judge Iain Johnston said Thursday the new law “is painfully and blatantly a violation of the First Amendment.”

That’s not a final ruling, but it absolutely telegraphs the final ruling.

resin85 ,

It’s always frustrating when these cases end up in the hands of Trump-appointed judges. More often than not they’re ruling based on their ideology rather than the law.

FlowVoid ,

I think you are underestimating the significance of the ruling. In cases like this, judges issue temporary injunctions if they believe the law will most likely be found unconstitutional when the lawsuit is resolved. The judge described the law as a “blatant violation of the 1st Amendment”, indicating that he will most likely issue a permanent injunction later.

So it’s only the “right call” if you agree with him. And if it matters to anyone, this judge is a Trump appointee.

charonn0 ,
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

So it’s only the “right call” if you agree with him.

No. It’s perfectly reasonable to at once support women’s rights over their own bodies but also see serious first amendment questions in this sort of law.

A similar law that targeted abortion providers would be similarly problematic. If you don’t see it that way then you aren’t looking at the question from the perspective of the first amendment.

FlowVoid ,

Then you agree with him.

charonn0 ,
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

If the question is whether a preliminary injunction is appropriate, then yes. A preliminary injunction preserves the status quo while the case is decided. Since the the law plausibly infringes the plaintiffs’ first amendment rights, the proper judicial decision is to preserve the status quo. This is the general rule applied to all cases of this nature and should not be construed as evidence of bias by the judge.

Really, my point in commenting has more to do with calling out the AP for sensationalist reporting than with the merits of the case being reported on.

FlowVoid ,

A preliminary injunction is appropriate if the plaintiffs are very likely to succeed. Otherwise you or I could block any new law by endlessly “preserving the status quo” with a stream of lawsuits.

So if you think that the preliminary junction is appropriate, then you must agree with the judge that the law very likely violates the First Amendment.

charonn0 , (edited )
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

On the face of it, it probably does. Whether it actually does will require a careful legal analysis of the law’s intent, scope, and whether there are alternatives that the state could have used.

This does not mean I approve of the plaintiffs’ speech. This does not mean I disapprove. It means that I value the first amendment and understand it, and so do not see a problem in how it’s been applied in this case so far.

I’m discussing technicalities not arguing the merits of their case. If that’s not the sort of discussion you’re interested in then I suggest you find someone else.

FlowVoid , (edited )

I understand the technicalities.

I am simply pointing out that a preliminary injunction is not issued by routine in cases like this. Therefore, it is newsworthy rather than “clickbait”.

Furthermore, it strongly indicates how the case will ultimately be decided. So if you agree with the injunction, then you should agree with the plaintiffs in this case. If you disagree with the plaintiffs, then you have good reason to disagree with the injunction. Therefore, some people are rightfully very concerned about this news.

That is all. I am not interested in arguing the merits, either.

charonn0 ,
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

The article is clickbaity by being vague, not because the subject is not newsworthy.

And a preliminary injunction is routine if strict scrutiny should be applied. I agree that it probably should be applied based on the general characteristics of the law, and yeah the law will probably fall short of that standard and as such it ought to be struck down, but that does not in any way imply that I agree with the plaintiffs speech.

FlowVoid ,

I didn’t say you agreed with the plaintiff’s speech, I said you agreed with the plaintiffs. Namely, that the law should be struck down.

By arguing that the law ought to be struck down, you are arguing the merits despite your protest earlier. In which case, there are plenty of restrictions on commercial speech that are in keeping with the First Amendment. For example, Elon Musk was sanctioned because of his speech regarding Tesla stock.

The First Amendment is not some get-out-of-jail card that allows commercial entities to say whatever they want, particularly if they are being deceptive. And strict scrutiny does not apply to commercial speech. That’s why there is an entire federal agency, the FTC, whose mission includes regulation of commercial speech.

There are even more restrictions on speech when health care is involved. If your doctor posts all your medical records to their blog, the First Amendment won’t protect them. If you sell a home remedy that you claim will cure cancer, the First Amendment won’t protect you. If someone lies about being a doctor and you consent to a physical exam on that basis, the First Amendment won’t protect them.

Maybe you think the First Amendment allows these particular plaintiffs to deceive potential clients about health care. Well, that’s your opinion. But plenty of legal scholars - and historical precedent - argue otherwise.

charonn0 ,
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

By arguing that the law ought to be struck down

I’m saying it probably falls short of the standard and if so it ought to be struck down. If you can’t accept that I’m being sincere when I say that’s my whole fucking point, then I don’t know what else to say.

FlowVoid , (edited )

I don’t doubt your sincerity. But I think your legal analysis is wrong.

The correct standard here is not strict scrutiny, it is intermediate scrutiny. This is a much more permissive standard that applies to all commercial speech. And it allows restrictions on what one can say, in order to prevent deceptive practices like those I described.

The Supreme Court described their approach to commercial speech in 1980 (my emphasis):

At the outset, we must determine whether the expression is protected by the First Amendment. For commercial speech to come within that provision, it at least must concern lawful activity and not be misleading.

The Illinois law bans deceptive speech by certain companies trying to gain clients, and therefore it does not violate the First Amendment.

charonn0 , (edited )
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

Actually, it’s your legal analysis that is wrong. Because your analysis begs the very question that the court is trying to answer: is their speech protected?

FlowVoid , (edited )

The answer is right there in the quote by the Supreme Court. Commercial speech is not protected if it’s misleading. So by definition, a law that bans deceptive speech is constitutional.

In the case of these plaintiffs, maybe their speech is misleading and maybe it isn’t. That’s up to a jury to determine. If it’s misleading, then they are breaking the law. If not, then they are not breaking the law.

But either way, the law stands. When you find someone not guilty of a crime, that doesn’t mean you throw out the law against the crime.

charonn0 ,
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

You’re assuming facts that have yet to be adjudicated.

FlowVoid ,

If the relevant facts are yet to be adjudicated, then there was no basis for an injunction against this law.

charonn0 ,
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

Unless, of course, it were preliminary.

FlowVoid ,

A preliminary injunction must be based on the strong likelihood that the plaintiffs will prevail.

If there are not any relevant facts yet, then there is likewise no basis even for a preliminary injunction.

charonn0 ,
@charonn0@startrek.website avatar

Who said the facts don’t exist?

vertigo3pc , in Florida officials tell state schools to teach AP Psychology 'in its entirety'

DeSantis is gonna have such a big boy tantrum

aceshigh ,
@aceshigh@lemmy.world avatar

great, cus i just stocked up on popcorn. between destantis and trump i’ll gain 5 pounds.

afraid_of_zombies , in Texas AG appeals judge’s order that allows women with complicated pregnancies to get abortions

I can’t imagine how any doctor can and chooses to work under these conditions. I am not in the medical field so maybe it’s not relevant but I have had a few times where I flat out refused to keep working for an employer/project because the constraints made failure unavoidable. Walk away. Come to the North where we are always short of doctors.

jeffw OP ,
@jeffw@lemmy.world avatar

Everyone needs doctors. Rural areas in particular have a dire PCP shortage.

new_acct_who_dis ,

They’re voting against having healthcare for themselves. It’s what they want

PrincessLeiasCat , in Texas AG appeals judge’s order that allows women with complicated pregnancies to get abortions

Because of course he is. Mfer’s under investigation by the FBI yet this is his priority.

baronvonj ,
@baronvonj@lemmy.world avatar

Paxton was suspended from office upon impeachment, pending the Senate trial.

texastribune.org/…/interim-attorney-general-angel…

PrincessLeiasCat ,

Thank you!

corsicanguppy , in Jan. 6 Prosecutors Ask for Protective Order, Citing Threatening Trump Post

The ad is one of Mr. Trump’s most aggressive denigrations of the prosecutors, whom he has consistently denounced.

Doesn’t america have libel laws?

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