United States Supreme Court Watch


Those sons of bitches did it.

Major white pill moment for me. Perhaps not all is lost
I highly recommend reading the Majority opinion by Roberts. He's constantly dragging the dissenters and basically calling them racists the whole time. It's a joy to read, sorta like a Ben Shapiro Destroys video.
 
I highly recommend reading the Majority opinion by Roberts. He's constantly dragging the dissenters and basically calling them racists the whole time. It's a joy to read, sorta like a Ben Shapiro Destroys video.
Oh that sounds awesome, can't wait till I get more than a few seconds to pop in to go read it
 
We have a 2 box day, so expect 3-4 opinions, and another opinion day (likely tomorrow).

Alito has 2 opinions. The first is Abitron Austria. v. Hetronic International, holding that parts of the Lanham Act (trademark/copyright stuff) do not have extraterritoriality.

The second is Groff v Dejoy, holding that "undue burden" isn't just any non-trivial cost, but instead is a substantial cost.

The third and final is the Harvard and UNC admissions cases. Roberts writes that affirmative action admission is race based discrimination that violates the constitution when done by the government (i.e. UNC), and since the Civil Rights Act extends that to cover private entities, Harvard violates the Civil Rights act.
The message to African American and Latino students who want to go into college: Study harder and stop relying on quotas.

I wonder if HBCUs will take advantage of this turmoil?
 
I highly recommend reading the Majority opinion by Roberts. He's constantly dragging the dissenters and basically calling them racists the whole time. It's a joy to read, sorta like a Ben Shapiro Destroys video.
The slow dismantling of the Civil Rights Movement's legacy is underway. I like to see the reaction of those on Twitter who are triggered and pearl-clutching.
 
The slow dismantling of the Civil Rights Movement's legacy is underway. I like to see the reaction of those on Twitter who are triggered and pearl-clutching.
That you think this is dismantling the Civil Rights Movement's legacy is part of the problem. No, this furthers it. Colorblind law is how the Civil Rights movement was won. Explicitly referred to in Harlan's dissent in Plessy, and prominent in Loving and Bolling and others.
 
That you think this is dismantling the Civil Rights Movement's legacy is part of the problem. No, this furthers it. Colorblind law is how the Civil Rights movement was won. Explicitly referred to in Harlan's dissent in Plessy, and prominent in Loving and Bolling and others.
Yup, this is a big and positive step TOWARD civil rights.

This is fixing the only real example of systemic racism in this country.
 
Lel.

Anyway, another reminder that tomorrow at 10 AM the Student Loan cases and 303 Creative (Bake the Cake 2.0) are going to be decided in the final cases of the term.

Going by opinion counting and a few other guesses, my guess is Gorsuch writes 303 Creative. He's likely going to be in the majority, he has the same number of cases as most in the majority (that's 6), so cases are pretty evenly spread out other than Kavanaugh who's got 7. In addition, he's the only one who hasn't written an opinion for the December session, which is when 303 Creative was heard. In addition, given that he wrote Bostock which said a lot about discrimination against gays, him writing 303 Creative makes sense to me.

And I'd guess that Alito writes the student loan cases solely because he's only got 5 opinions.
 
Lel.

Anyway, another reminder that tomorrow at 10 AM the Student Loan cases and 303 Creative (Bake the Cake 2.0) are going to be decided in the final cases of the term.

Going by opinion counting and a few other guesses, my guess is Gorsuch writes 303 Creative. He's likely going to be in the majority, he has the same number of cases as most in the majority (that's 6), so cases are pretty evenly spread out other than Kavanaugh who's got 7. In addition, he's the only one who hasn't written an opinion for the December session, which is when 303 Creative was heard. In addition, given that he wrote Bostock which said a lot about discrimination against gays, him writing 303 Creative makes sense to me.

And I'd guess that Alito writes the student loan cases solely because he's only got 5 opinions.
I'm not sure Gorsuch will be the one writing it, simply because of his past association with the area 303 Creative comes from; having a Justice, who used to preside over the area the case came from, be the one to write the court opinion might look a little to...conflict of interest-like for some people.

I think Gorsuch may let Alito or Thomas write the formal opinion for that case.
 
I'm not sure Gorsuch will be the one writing it, simply because of his past association with the area 303 Creative comes from; having a Justice, who used to preside over the area the case came from, be the one to write the court opinion might look a little to...conflict of interest-like for some people.

I think Gorsuch may let Alito or Thomas write the formal opinion for that case.
Eh, I don't know that they care about that at all, unless they heard the case personally at a lower level. I know for a fact Kavanaugh takes the lead in some Administrative law stuff out of the DC circuit despite that being his former bench.
 
I highly recommend reading the Majority opinion by Roberts. He's constantly dragging the dissenters and basically calling them racists the whole time. It's a joy to read, sorta like a Ben Shapiro Destroys video.
Lol. Lmao, even. Part of Ketanji Jackson Brown's dissent, full of SJW talking points as can be expected from Biden's diversity hire on the top court:

FN3EKlS.png


(Emphasis placed where it was by whichever coping, seething and dilating prog first posted this on Twitter)

Relevant part of Thomas' rebuttal to the above:

Clarence Thomas said:
Accordingly, JUSTICE JACKSON's race-infused world view falls flat at each step. Individuals are the sum of their unique experiences, challenges, and accomplishments. What matters is not the barriers they face, but how they choose to confront them. And their race is not to blame for everything—good or bad—that happens in their lives. A contrary, myopic world view based on individuals' skin color to the total exclusion of their personal choices is nothing short of racial determinism.

JUSTICE JACKSON then builds from her faulty premise to call for action, arguing that courts should defer to "experts" and allow institutions to discriminate on the basis of race. Make no mistake: Her dissent is not a vanguard of the in-nocent and helpless. It is instead a call to empower privileged elites, who will "tell us [what] is required to level the playing field" among castes and classifications that they alone can divine. Post, at 26; see also post, at 5–7 (GORSUCH, J., concurring) (explaining the arbitrariness of these classifications). Then, after siloing us all into racial castes and pitting those castes against each other, the dissent somehow believes that we will be able—at some undefined point—to "march forward together" into some utopian vision. Post, at 26 (opinion of JACKSON, J.). Social movements that invoke these sorts of rallying cries, historically, have ended disastrously.

Unsurprisingly, this tried-and-failed system defies both law and reason. Start with the obvious: If social reorganization in the name of equality may be justified by the mere fact of statistical disparities among racial groups, then that reorganization must continue until these disparities are fully eliminated, regardless of the reasons for the disparities and the cost of their elimination. If blacks fail a test at higher rates than their white counterparts (regardless of whether the reason for the disparity has anything at all to do with race), the only solution will be race-focused measures. If those measures were to result in blacks failing at yet higher rates, the only solution would be to double down. In fact, there would seem to be no logical limit to what the government may do to level the racial playing field—outright wealth transfers, quota systems, and racial preferences would all seem permissible. In such a system, it would not matter how many innocents suffer race-based injuries; all that would matter is reaching the race-based goal.

Worse, the classifications that JUSTICE JACKSON draws are themselves race-based stereotypes. She focuses on two hypothetical applicants, John and James, competing for admission to UNC. John is a white, seventh-generation legacy at the school, while James is black and would be the first in his family to attend UNC. Post, at 3. JUSTICE JACKSON argues that race-conscious admission programs are necessary to adequately compare the two applicants.

As an initial matter, it is not clear why James's race is the only factor that could encourage UNC to admit him; his status as a first-generation college applicant seems to contextualize his application. But, setting that aside, why is it that John should be judged based on the actions of his great great-great-grandparents? And what would JUSTICE JACKSON say to John when deeming him not as worthy of admission: Some statistically significant number of white people had advantages in college admissions seven generations ago, and you have inherited their incurable sin?

Tl;dr he fucking nuked her from orbit and basically politely called her a racist dumbass. Hey quick question, if affirmative action is unconstitutional, does that also mean Brown's presence on the Supreme Court is also unconstitutional? :ROFLMAO:
 
That you think this is dismantling the Civil Rights Movement's legacy is part of the problem. No, this furthers it. Colorblind law is how the Civil Rights movement was won. Explicitly referred to in Harlan's dissent in Plessy, and prominent in Loving and Bolling and others.
We'll see because right now, folks on Social Media are pearl-clutching as we speak.
Speaking of statements: Former US First Lady Michelle Obama posted on Twitter about the US Supreme Court's controversial decision gutting affirmative action in colleges and universities.


Response from Dinesh D'Souza:


Statement from former President
Donald Trump on the US Supreme Court gutting affirmative action in colleges and universities nationwide.


Statement from President
Joe Biden on today's major ruling which will likely have huge long-term ramifications.
 
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Irs algorithm or whatever runs it must be busted or not capable of doing that.
Nah, doing individual posts in chain, instead of as one post, inflates their post count and allows for more 'juiciness' to be added to each post.

Their sig really does show what they want, and that is to make any topic 'juicier' by inflating post counts, as well as adding off-topic or barely related content to discussions in hopes of hijacking threads, and generally being a spam-troll who loves to see their number of unread alerts just keep climbing higher and higher.
 

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