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#26 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 22, 2002
Posts: 1,165
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Quote:
Sad world, we live in.
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NFAOA Repeal 922(o)! |
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#27 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 18, 2004
Location: TX
Posts: 116
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All I can say is, "Ugh."
![]() Thomas' quote in Antipitas' post sums it up simply and concisely. Too bad it's from the dissenting side. |
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#28 |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 9, 2004
Posts: 1,519
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I can't imagine how anyone would be surprised by this outcome. If you read Wickard and the subsequent CC cases it should have been crystal clear how this would end. And Rich, with all due respect I don't think Raich will be any more basis for more unbridled federal intervention than had already been put in motion in 1942 with Wickard. I don't like the outcome here one bit, but anyone who was expecting the SCOTUS to eviscerate the constitutional basis on which 63 years of federal legislation and creation of numerous new federal agencies have been premised needs to remove the rose colored glasses. Especially when seen in light of the prior CC jurisprudence and stare decisis.
Antipitas - your concern about the 6 acre/200 bushel exemption in the AAA and the de minimis nature of certain activities seems to me to be a misunderstanding of the issues. The exemption in the AAA is the result of a Congressional choice to regulate interstate commerce in a certain fashion. IF congress has the power to legislate pursuant to the commerce clause, they also have the power to create exemptions in the legislation. In Wickard, however, the fact that a particular activity had a de minimis effect on the overall market was found to be of no consequence to the question of the overall constitutionality of the legislation if the aggregate effect of the de minimis conduct could have an impact on interstate commerce. You seem to be comparing apples to oranges, but maybe I've misunderstood. Additionally, I'm not sure what your point is with the court's reference to Lopez & Morrison, or how you relate it to the above. |
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#29 | |
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Join Date: October 6, 1998
Location: South Florida
Posts: 10,229
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Quote:
Not from a judicial stand point, agreed. BUT, from a Law Enforcement standpoint?......recency matters. There are federal prosecutors all over this country salivating for an opportunity to make a name for themselves. Rich
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#30 |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: June 29, 2000
Location: Rupert, Idaho
Posts: 9,660
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Shaggy, perhaps you did misunderstand my points.
The post I made was in fact notes I was taking as I read the syllabus. Those notes reflect my understanding of what Stevens was saying contrasted with O'Conner's and Thomas' dissent. The usage of a 40 year old dictionary to define economy to consumption (which you will not find in current dictionaries) is cherry picking. And that is what O'Conner meant when she related Wickard to the regulated exceptions which the majority simply side stepped. Of note is how Thomas relates the current opinion with how Lopez and Morrison turned... and how they would turn if ruled today. I did not however, mention those cases, except as reference to what Stevens wrote, by clarification: "Moreover, even in the narrow prism of respondents' creation, they read those cases (Lopez and Morrison) far too broadly" The insertion of the two cases were to clarify "those cases" for those that hadn't yet read the decision. They were in no way meant to imply anything. |
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#32 | |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: June 29, 2000
Location: Rupert, Idaho
Posts: 9,660
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Quote:
No, it doesn't mean that at all. But the manner in which the majority decided today, I would hesitate to use them, if you expected the Court to go against precedent. As for Stewart, with this decision in the bag, it is just a matter of time before they rule that the Commerce Clause rules the day there, also. Stare Decisis, the altar of the Court and the bane of Justice. |
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#33 | ||||
Staff
Join Date: October 13, 2001
Posts: 3,346
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I agree on Stewart, but I think Lopez and Morrison are still good law. Nothing is produced or consumed by carrying a firearm in a school zone, or by raping someone. (my earlier sarcastic comment about rape being production of foetuses notwithstanding) Lopez is a really weak case, because it might be that the only reason the GFSZA was unconstitutional was that Congress didn't specify that the gun had to have travelled in interstate commerce beforehand. Nobody's challenged the new version, have they?
Stewart, OTOH, is concerned with production of machineguns. Since production is economic in nature, and since according to the Court the Constitution allows Congress to regulate economics as long as it has a rational basis for doing so, virtually all of the NFA and FFL scheme is unassailable. Quote:
"It's okay if Congress isn't really regulating intrastate economics, we mean intrastate commerce... no, wait, it's interstate commerce that the Constitution talks about, right? All that's important is whether Congress thinks that it's doing something affecting economics, err, we mean commerce, yeah, commerce." Quote:
Here's Thomas's take, which I happen to agree with, on the commerce definition issue: Quote:
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#34 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: February 9, 2002
Posts: 1,936
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Quote:
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#35 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 9, 2002
Posts: 1,936
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#36 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 27, 2005
Location: North Texas
Posts: 371
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It's just so illogical, you could say on the same basis, that making cookies from scratch in your kitchen can be regulated under the commerce clause because Nestle won't make as much money....insanity!
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#37 | ||
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: June 29, 2000
Location: Rupert, Idaho
Posts: 9,660
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Dolanp, Justice O'Conner made just those observations in her dissent.
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#38 |
Staff
Join Date: October 6, 1998
Location: South Florida
Posts: 10,229
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On reflection, I think one of the Founders' only errors was in the appointment of lifetime Supremes by the Federal Executive. Obviously, the intent was sound: to provide a check which was immune to political or election pressures.
Unfortunately, we now see that this power can be subverted, either thru activist interpretation of the Constitution, ignorance of the document or the mere need for convenience in maintaining an "orderly" society. Perhaps a better model would have been to populate SCOTUS with 10 year termed judges, nominated by each State Governor and selected by lottery. I no longer believe SCOTUS requires the brightest legal minds; it requires only the ability to read history in an impartial and non-passionate manner, recognizing that we are a federation of States, not a centralized monolith. Rich
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#39 |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: June 29, 2000
Location: Rupert, Idaho
Posts: 9,660
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Rich,
I believe it was Jefferson that had some rather scathing remarks about the tyranny of the judiciary, and that after the opinion of Marbury v. Madison, which decision the Supreme Court gave itself the power of Judicial Review. Regardless, it was during the Civil War when Lincoln suspended habeas corpus when he jailed political opponents for writing dissenting editorials about him. When the Court told Lincoln that he had no power to do that and that the publishers must be released, Lincoln told the Court, "It's your ruling, you enforce it!" Or words to that effect, IIRC. The upshot is that the Court has never forgotten this slap in the face, because it truly has no power if the Executive will not enforce its rulings. Current day example: Last Fall the 2nd Circuit Court sustained a writ of habeas corpus by the prisoners on Gitmo . The Government appealed to SCOTUS which denied cert. By law, the Circuit Courts order should have been followed. It wasn't (ahem, they are still there!) and the Courts are not making any more noise about this "little" item..... Hmmmm...[places tin foil hat on head]... Could this current ruling be the tit-for-tat for compliance?... Nah, they would never do something like this... Would they? ![]() ![]() |
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#40 | |
Staff
Join Date: October 13, 2001
Posts: 3,346
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This is even scarier than the court decision:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...700284_pf.html Quote:
The amount of power the government has amassed but is not exercising due to its.. what, benevolence? patience?... is staggering. One truly evil administration and a congressional majority too blind or scared to hold the line, and the few rights we seem to still have would disappear overnight.
__________________
“The egg hatched...” “...the egg hatched... and a hundred baby spiders came out...” (blade runner) “Who are you?” “A friend. I'm here to prevent you from making a mistake.” “You have no idea what I'm doing here, friend.” “In specific terms, no, but I swore an oath to protect the world...” (continuum) “It's a goal you won't understand until later. Your job is to make sure he doesn't achieve the goal.” (bsg) |
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#41 | |
Staff
Join Date: October 6, 1998
Location: South Florida
Posts: 10,229
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Quote:
Answer: "Your legal activity in California is illegal in the United States. But don't worry, we won't enforce it." Rich
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#42 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 27, 2005
Location: North Texas
Posts: 371
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It really is disheartening. I've always thought 'If only a case like this could get to the Supreme Court, they would do the right thing and put an end to this federal policing power...' I guess I was way off base thinking this. Too much policy tied up in the decision.
I wonder, since this court doesn't want to touch the 2A, but will overturn GFSZA, yet won't touch drugs... would a court packed with liberals have allowed the marijuana but then turned around and legalized every federal gun-grabbing attempt? Scary either way, but the tides may turn eventually. |
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#43 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 22, 2002
Posts: 1,165
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The new version of the GFSZA baiscally cut highway funding for states that did not ban students from carrying guns in the school zones. It is still legal to allow, say, licensed adults to carry guns in them or such.
Cutting highway funding for states in case they refuse to do X or Y is not considered a violation of the 10th Amendment by the courts, and in fact states often refuse said funding if they want to do the thing the FedGov doesn't like. For example, note seatbelt laws in NH.
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NFAOA Repeal 922(o)! |
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#44 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 31, 1999
Location: N. Texas
Posts: 5,899
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Again, the Court brings up the feasibly of the Medical Necessity defense. Lord. It first mentioned that in the Oakland Cannibas Buyers Coop case in the '90s, and for some reason everyone pinned their hopes on it. Then Morrison confirmed the viability of Lopez (so we thought), and we ran with the Commerce Clause argument.
Dammit, it's a GOOD argument! She grew it at home, smoked it at home, and never sold nor intended to sell a gram of it, yet because it's possibly a fungible item, the Wickard standard prevails. Nevermind that Filburn actually DID barter some of his ill-grown wheat, that he was in fact a wheat farmer, who did in fact make his livelyhood off of that particular commidity that the Government was trying to prop up the prices of! Frankly, the Fed had a case (a weak one) with Wickard. But the dadgummed Aggragetion Principle ("think of the impact to the economy if EVERYONE did it!") just doesn't frickin' apply when the activity at bar is NOT economic, doesn't involve a person in that economy, and there is no "stream of commerce" (Swift)! I may just work myself into a rant, here. Damn, I'm furious. And I still have to turn in a brief on this crap, from Raich's side, by August. ![]()
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#45 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: October 9, 2004
Posts: 1,519
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Quote:
And again, not that I like it, but I do understand it and think it was a completely foreseeable outcome. |
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#46 |
Moderator Emeritus
Join Date: June 29, 2000
Location: Rupert, Idaho
Posts: 9,660
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Shaggy, as we both know, the Court could just have easily exempted Medical Marijuana use from the bounds of the CSA, as it pertains to the states themselves. Justice Thomas pointed this out, which I posted earlier. The Court was in no way bound to this rather sweeping power grab.
The ruling itself was simple. It was in the majorities dicta that the details become the devil. And this same dicta will be used as the basis for every subsequent usurpation of power by the Congress. The Court has laid out the road map upon which they have told the Congress how to enact law, that the Court will abide by, that will become ever more encompassing. Part of the problem, if not the main problem itself, is the doctrine of Stare Decisis. The Courts hold this to be sacrosanct, when it is not. Precedence is good, only if used for the good. But precedence has long been used to expand a little here, a little there, until we reach what we did yesterday. This is just the most glaring example of judicial activism yet. The Supreme Court, with its power of Judicial Review, is not bound by stare decisis, when such action conflicts with the Constitutional principles of enumerated federal powers as opposed to the powers and authorities of the states. The Court has shown that it no longer plays a part in the system of checks and balances, whether that balance is between the feds and the states or between the federal authorities themselves, or in protecting the rights of the people. As Justice Thomas implied, the Constitution has been rewritten, not by Constitutional means, but by Judical fiat. |
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#47 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 9, 2002
Posts: 1,936
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Madison, in Federalist 14
"In the first place it is to be remembered that the general government is not to be charged with the whole power of making and administering laws. Its jurisdiction is limited to certain enumerated objects, which concern all the members of the republic, but which are not to be attained by the separate provisions of any. The subordinate governments, which can extend their care to all those other subjects which can be separately provided for, will retain their due authority and activity."
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#48 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 9, 2002
Posts: 1,936
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More from Mr. Madison:
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#49 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: March 11, 2005
Location: Michigan
Posts: 348
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Illegal, yet commerce...?
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Forgive me, but if the SCOTUS accepts the notion that the substance is part of larger stream of commerce, it seems that they would have a difficult time squaring a conflict re: Wickard. Wheat was a regulated, legal substance, in the stream of regulated commerce (I have a hard time accepting the ruling from a philosophical perspective but understand how they got there) but commerce in pot is specifically prohibited. Any attempt to introduce it into the stream of commerce is simply not acceptable under current statute, and this exposes a weakness in the government's case. The gov't, in arguing the stream of commerce theory, creates a dichotomy by saying prohibited substances are part of a larger commerce stream. If the substance is to be regulated as commerce, then perhaps they should remove the prohibitions and tax it like they do the rest of the economy. Are the prohibitions against and regulation of fully automatic firearms found in the, say GCA of '68, upheld only under the commerce clause? It seems to me that the stare decisis argument and ruling in this case is intellectually lazy and rife for further controversy, and that it demonstrates the weak legal and logical underpinnings of the prohibition of pot. In fact, it seems to reject the limits on the CC found in Lopez and Morrison. I agree with Clarence Thomas here. As such, I'm determined to make an egg and sausage muffin this morning, no matter how much it may potentially hurt McDonald's, and I will even customize my own Mauser, just so I don't have to give Remington any $ for a new one.
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#50 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 9, 2002
Posts: 1,936
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But if growing a cannabis plant or building a machine gun for yourself are close enough to interstate commerce to be a national concern, and not "objects which, in the ordinary course of affairs, concern the lives, liberties, and properties of the people, and the internal order, improvement, and prosperity of the State," why were both originally regulated under the power to tax, not the commerce clause? And why did alcohol prohibition require an amendment, when clearly the same commerce clause argument used in Raich would apply to moonshiners? |
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