I think you are thinking of the states not being allowed back into the Union for a time.IIRC, the Democratic Party was banned in the South during Reconstruction.
Google it.
The Democratic party itself wasn't banned.
I think you are thinking of the states not being allowed back into the Union for a time.IIRC, the Democratic Party was banned in the South during Reconstruction.
Google it.
Let me explain where you went wrong, as you appear to be challenged.Let me explain to you what I wrote there, as you appear to be challenged.
The Feds appoint Federal court judges. The state appoints state court judges. So you could argue that a left-leaning state like WA would appoint a left-leaning judge.
But it was a federal court and Reagan appointment. Of a conservative justice.
Hopefully that assists you.
You chose your silly hat, now wear it proudly.I've told you this before.
Given your track record of being wildly wrong more often than chance when it comes to partisan aspects of the judicial system, I use you as a rule of thumb.
If you strongly take a position on a piece of judicial reasoning that has strong partisan aspects, then as a first approximation, I play the percentages and assume the opposite is true.
Is that a magic trick that always works? Of course not.
It's not foolproof.
But it is a very good quick rule of thumb for when I don't feel like reading the actual filings and works as a starting point that is on solid ground.
Which is not as effective as putting your hand-picked judges on the Supreme Court to rubber stamp your cases.All this shows is that Democrats are at least smart enough to know where to find the judges who will rubber stamp their legal causes.
Law is politics.Which is not as effective as putting your hand-picked judges on the Supreme Court to rubber stamp your cases.
I do.You chose your silly hat, now wear it proudly.
It is not.Which is not as effective as putting your hand-picked judges on the Supreme Court to rubber stamp your cases.
Not many people will admit this.Law is politics.
Is that not a sign of the decline of the American Empire?Not many people will admit this.Law is politics.
Law has always been politics, so it can't be a measure of decline.Is that not a sign of the decline of the American Empire?
Not really.Is that not a sign of the decline of the American Empire?
I think we have to agree to disagree on this point.Not really.
Law has always been politics.
The question is how much and how blatant.
That the Supreme Court is unabashedly corrupt and partisan right now is not great, but if you are a believer in American Empire, a corrupt judiciary isn't necessarily a sign of decline.
After all, if it obeys the Emperor, then things are still good in the Imperial mindset.
Next? LOL!What is next? Using the Department of Justice to attack political adversaries?
What he said doesn't make any sense in any event. Just the usual suggestion that the Dems mysteriously found a way to end run the sort of legal system that other - more decent and proper-thinking - Americans would put in place.His response makes perfect sense.
The switch in what the parties represent - especially concerning race - over the centuries is well known.
He still needs to explain "the loophole" of course.
His ruling - of course - could simply be the correct ruling on a very simple and obvious legal question rather than an evil plot to subvert America, as you suggest.Let me explain where you went wrong, as you appear to be challenged.
Judge John Coughenour was appointed by the Reagan administration in 1981 having mostly worked as a law professor at the University of Washington (not exactly a hotbed of conservatism) prior to his appointment. He only practised law for 4 years following his call to the bar. In my experience 19 out of 20 law professors lean left. His private practice was in Seattle. The court he sits on holds hearings in Seattle and Tacoma. He's sitting in one of the most liberal districts in America. He's supported a number of other legal positions posited by the left such as finding a violent predator law to be unconstitutional, and has opposed mandatory minimum sentencing. He's not known for any noteworthy conservative rulings.
Yes, Liberal judges can be found in Seattle. The Dems knew that. Why do you question their wisdom, when they were correct?
Oh, the "loophole" thing is nonsense, I agree.What he said doesn't make any sense in any event. Just the usual suggestion that the Dems mysteriously found a way to end run the sort of legal system that other - more decent and proper-thinking - Americans would put in place.
Just because something is celebrated in myth doesn't mean it was ever real.I think we have to agree to disagree on this point.
The American Empire has from it's creation celebrated the separation between the executive branch and the Judicial branch. A breakdown of this principle is a sign of decline.
That's been going on for years.What is next? Using the Department of Justice to attack political adversaries?
I can't imagine that the post bellum southern dems gave much of a shit about anything other than lynching blacks and re building their plantations in the 1860's.Oh, the "loophole" thing is nonsense, I agree.
I was just commenting on the bit about the Democrats in the South at the time.
It was totally irrelevant to anything, but it was a real fact.
I figure I should reward them on the rare cases they appear.