scream4ever
JUB Addict
- Joined
 - Jun 21, 2007
 
- Posts
 - 2,323
 
- Reaction score
 - 32
 
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 - 48
 
Today's the big day everyone! I promise to post pics as soon as possible.
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
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I think 6 - 3 is possible, with Roberts fearing that in a future land where gays aren't the "new N people", and he's remembered as Justice Jim Crow, might vote to overturn. Alito I hold out as a remote possibility. The Italian-American gasbag's dissent might prove tepidly entertaining.
I think 6 - 3 is possible, with Roberts fearing that in a future land where gays aren't the "new N people", and he's remembered as Justice Jim Crow, might vote to overturn. Alito I hold out as a remote possibility. The Italian-American gasbag's dissent might prove tepidly entertaining.
Any chance it could be unanimous?
Any chance it could be unanimous?
I think 6 - 3 is possible, with Roberts fearing that in a future land where gays aren't the "new N people", and he's remembered as Justice Jim Crow, might vote to overturn. Alito I hold out as a remote possibility. The Italian-American gasbag's dissent might prove tepidly entertaining.
Any chance it could be unanimous?
I don't know the answer, but has there ever been a unanimous SCOTUS decision?Any chance it could be unanimous?
I don't know the answer, but has there ever been a unanimous SCOTUS decision?![]()
The Court's momentous swings to the right (Dred Scott, Plessy v. Ferguson, Korematsu v. United States, Citizens United, etc.) are remembered as unfortunate historical mistakes.
A 5-4 decision in Obergefell is ambiguous. Anti-gay bigots will point out - correctly - that their view would be the law of the land, but for a single person within the makeup of the Supreme Court. They will point out that a future court might therefore possibly overturn gay marriage in the USA. They will continue to insist that the matter is not settled and that the issue of gay marriage must be re-considered by future courts.
I figure that Anthony Kennedy is No. 5; John Roberts is No. 6; Samuel Alito is No. 7; Antonin Scalia is No. 8; Clarence Thomas is No. 9.
Those feeling that the decision will be either the narrowest (a 5-to-4 outcome) or that it will be a more comfortable majority (a 6-to-3 result) are aware enough of the Republicans on the U.S. Supreme Court.
It's that I think those Republican justices know that Corporate America (whom they support; and Corporate America supports a number of them) are also wanting the decision, anyway, for marriage equality. So, either they give some more cover (5 to 4; or 6 to 3)—or they can really squash the homophobes and their desperation (which is why a unanimous decision would be wonderfully delicious).
Any decision which passes with the support of Scalia and Thomas is by definition a swing to the right, for that is the only criterion for their decision-making. There isn't one principle between the two of them.
