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Sotomayor nomination
Obama picks Sotomayor for Supreme Court
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Media is annoying with this. Of course judges with different backgrounds are going to come up with different solutions and viewpoints. The justice system was designed NOT to be objective.
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Were you around for the Thomas nomination? I forget how old you are.
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http://www.themisintl.com/graphics/themis3.jpg Quote:
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Every person has grown up in different environments and has a different outlook on life meaning they can relate and understand different situations better then others. Having diverse viewpoints is important to create a well rounded view on a topic, instead of specific one that will most likely happen if one demographic group dominates the Supreme Court. Quote:
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You are equating subjectivity to fairness. Subjectivity is objectivity compromised by bias - any bias - the bias of an ignorant, rich white guy (9 ignorant, rich white guys passed the civil rights act, by the way) ruling on the plight of migrant farm workers or the bias of a Latino woman who may be called upon to rule on an anti-trust case. I agree that no one on the court is free from bias. I do not agree that subjectivity is a goal of the judicial system. The judicial system strives for the unattainable goal of being free of bias and subjectivity. Its up to the prosecutor and the defense attorney to make the judges aware of and sympathetic to the unique circumstances of each case. Its up to the judges to apply the law without regard to their personal agendas and beliefs. If the judges are the ones supplying the subjectivity then neither side needs a lawyer. |
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This is not a great analogy but take this example. Lets say someone wrote a book two hundred years ago arguing why every law should be followed, including slavery. If this book is read today, it could equally be interpreted that slavery is legitimate and illegitimate depending on whether you follow the message of the book that every law should be followed (slavery is illegal today and therefore illegitimate) or follow the direct quotations of the book that slavery benefits society and law (slavery should be legitimate). It is up the lawyers to present both sides and up to the judge to determine which side is "correct". That is what I mean about interpretation being subjective. A law or moral code cannot absolutely apply to every situation and therefore it is up to the judge to determine where it should and should not apply. It will not and can not be fair. Quote:
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My problem isn't Sotomayer. Its the ridiculous reasons being offered for her nomination. For all I know she'll be a fantastic judge - or a lousy one - who knows. The idea that a judge should be nominated because she is presumed to be subjective is nuts. Why don't we nominate an Islamic judge - they would surely bring a unique subjectivity to the court. Why not a Russian judge - or a Chinese judge - or an African judge; not an African American - an actual African. On second thought, let's nominate a judge who represents the fastest growing segment of the voting public and cash in our chips in November. Then let's pretend that's not why we nominated her. Since it was pre-ordained that we were going to get a female Latino judge shoved down our throat regardless of her qualifications, I'm actually kind of relieved that they seem to have found one who, by sheer coincidence, seems pretty qualified. |
To answer your question, yes, the reasoning is bullshit. Of course Obama picked her because of political reasons but that does not make the diversity argument obsolete. If someone is going to be picked on political reasons, I would rather see different logical viewpoints represented instead of the same privileged ones.
But you did not answer my question. What should the selection be based on? There are more than enough qualified people to become Supreme Court Justices so the selection has to be based on an aspect other than qualifications. What makes the section of Sotomayor any different then Bush's conservative picks? I am guessing a bullshit reasoning can be found for just about every pick. I haven't followed this real closely but what I also want to know is why is Sotomayor's appointment so controversial when I have never heard anything from any other appointees in the past? Edit - This is just another example of political slander. Obama is attempting to deceive people with the reasoning for his picks because of politics and Sotomayor is being attacked for poltical reasons by attempting to make her seem racist and sexist by taking quotes out of context to make a non-absolute statement seem absolute. |
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thats a whole nother story. Here too |
Her nomination interrupted my stories. I don't like her.
Ignore me, i'm bored at work. |
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Complaining? heck that was simple discussion - nah, not at all. I don't think so anyway. Maybe Rushbo will say something stupid (how typical) and rile up a few radicals on either or both sides - thats about it though.
All in all she seems like an equal replacement ideologically speaking. It will keep the court about where it was. Its not like a die-hard conservative is leaving and a hardcore liberal is replacing them - ya know? |
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She votes with republicans 95% of the time, according to what I heard last night on the news. Granted it is a NY court, still... She is a moderate, not a liberal. I wish he had selected someone more liberal, because the court is swayed far more to the right than the left. It needs to balance out. Hopefully she will turn out to be like Souter. You never can tell though. About Thomas, there was a huge controversy there because he was accused of sexual harrassment, and I'm still not convinced he was completely innocent. |
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