MOUNTAINH33L
Esteemed Member
- Messages
- 579
Banning transgender troops has nothing to do with military readiness. It's all about cruelty. These ghouls relish inflicting pain on transgender people any way they can. MAGA Christianity.
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Also, anything trans is a News win for MAGA and the GOP (supposedly fair-minded, freedom-loving, civil rights-supporting “moderates” and “Independents” lose their shit whenever trans are mentioned).Banning transgender troops has nothing to do with military readiness. It's all about cruelty. These ghouls relish inflicting pain on transgender people any way they can. MAGA Christianity.
Honestly it is a very unfortunate arc we are on The POTUS has made several really unconstitutional edicts On the other hand National "policy " should not be determined "daily" by individual Federal judges. It is a lose -lose type of scenario. Obviously SCOTUS will slow walk any review of crappy edicts........Live Updates: Supreme Court to Hear Case on Birthright Citizenship and Judicial Power
The Supreme Court could use the case to limit nationwide injunctions and reshape how federal courts handle challenges to President Trump’s policies.
Stupid litigation strategy by DOJ, but I guess they have a loser hand. The justices are clearly angered by the prospect of the administration losing every case, but never appealing to the Supreme Court -- relying instead on a lack of universal injunction to continue to litigate the same claims over and over. In an extreme case, you could imagine the government requiring every district in the US to issue an injunction. What a colossal waste of judicial resources.The SCOTUS seems pretty open to continuing national-wide relief by district courts in certain cases — some discussion of avoiding a practical implementation issue of having a stream of regional decisions flood the courts and SCOTUS being flooded with appeal of circuit court decisions on nation-wide stays.
I actually thought they were surprisingly eager to get to the merits (so they could slap down the EO) given the question before them was only the UI issue. Was it Gorsuch who asked the NJ SG how the Court could reach the merits quickly?None of the Justices seem all that interested in the underlying merits
1. My guess is that all the liberals voted not only to hear the case but to set it for full argument. The liberal position is: Yes, nationwide injunctions for constitutional violations, especially severe ones, and no nationwide injunctions for the Fifth Circuit bullshit.I actually thought they were surprisingly eager to get to the merits (so they could slap down the EO) given the question before them was only the UI issue. Was it Gorsuch who asked the NJ SG how the Court could reach the merits quickly?
I don't know where they'll draw the line, but, boy was this an awful choice of cases to challenge UIs. Wherever the line is, I think this UI will fall on the acceptable side of it.
Maybe. I was able to half-listen to the arguments. My impression (which admittedly may be erroneous) was that several justices were eager to address the merits and none offered any defense of the EO. I took it as more than a hypothetical of 'how will we ever hear an issue if you lose and lose and lose and never appeal?' Gorsuch's question, I believe, was directed to the NJ SG and he responded in part by saying the Court could order supplemental briefing on the issue tomorrow if it wanted. It seemed to me the NJ SG also understood Gorsuch to be asking about the case at hand. And it would make sense as Gorsuch appears to be anti-UI and pro-plain text of the 14th.1. My guess is that all the liberals voted not only to hear the case but to set it for full argument. The liberal position is: Yes, nationwide injunctions for constitutional violations, especially severe ones, and no nationwide injunctions for the Fifth Circuit bullshit.
And this case gives them their best chance at getting it. The court was going to be revisiting UIs very shortly anyway. This was a gift to Sotomayor (sort of ironically, since she is also clearly offended by the underlying policy as well she should be).
2. My understanding of Gorsuch's comment wasn't that he was talking about ruling in this case, and more to the general point. Kagan had pointed out that the administration has lost everywhere and hasn't appealed on the merits, indicating a litigation strategy of "make them sue everywhere to vindicate their rights." (note I don't listen to arguments and the transcript isn't out so I'm relying on media reports and inference). Then I think ACB asked if the administration would follow appeals court rulings -- presumably, the idea being that if a judge in, say, SDNY issues a nationwide injunction and then the Second Circuit upholds, the injunction should be valid all across the Second Circuit. The SG pushed back on that, saying that the Supreme Court orders were law of the land.
And hence Gorsuch's question: OK, you prefer us to weigh in rather than lower courts. Fine, how does the case even get here if you lose everywhere but don't appeal.
Or you might be correct and have interpreted correctly. I would have to wait to the see the transcript.Again, I may be wrong and could have misheard or misinterpreted.
I listened to a portion of the hearing and honestly I thought a lot of the other Justices, including conservatives, seemed to acknowledge that a class action process would either be insufficient for matters requiring quick resolution or would effectively become the same basic process as district courts issuing nationwide stays. But we’ll see what happens.As usual, Kav gives the most shallow reasoning available. "Do it as a class action" is not a solution to the problem. It's not remotely a solution to the problem. And his argument was, "nationwide injunctions are basically the same as class actions" which he apparently thinks is an argument in favor of class actions. It is not. If you think nationwide injunctions are dangerous, and class actions are the same, then class actions are dangerous and you're back at step 1.
I've never seen a justice more willing to paper over obvious deficiencies in their arguments with euphemistic labels. Thomas and Alito are open about their ratfuckery. Kav has a need to appeal reasonable to liberals (his family, maybe?), while doing unreasonable things. Does he think we're stupid? Maybe he does.
Anyway, the class action solution here is no solution and it would be 100% the wrong remedy.
Yeah, but they expressed technical concerns during the plaintiffs' arguments. Even if they are the same thing, they prefer to do it by the rules. Which is comical for someone like Kav to say, but he did.I listened to a portion of the hearing and honestly I thought a lot of the other Justices, including conservatives, seemed to acknowledge that a class action process would either be insufficient for matters requiring quick resolution or would effectively become the same basic process as district courts issuing nationwide stays. But we’ll see what happens.
If it goes as you think-is the underlying question about injunctions? Or do you just think they will say the Exec Order is "not allowable " but not rule on the issue of a given Court's power to put injunctions on such things?Yeah, but they expressed technical concerns during the plaintiffs' arguments. Even if they are the same thing, they prefer to do it by the rules. Which is comical for someone like Kav to say, but he did.
I don't think the government wins this case. The Justices were completely tuned out during Sauer's rebuttal; I can't remember any time where there wasn't any question asked to the party during rebuttal. Of course, most parties don't begin their rebuttal saying something that has been said 20 times previously and that the court had already told him to can.
I don't think they go to the class action vehicle either.
I predict they ask for merits briefing on the underlying question and rule quickly on that, thus mooting this universal injunction issue and they will look elsewhere for a better vehicle. This ain't it.