Don2 (Don1 Revised)
Contributor
But originalists don't seem to use "well-regulated" to mean anything at all.
But originalists don't seem to use "well-regulated" to mean anything at all.
But originalists don't seem to use "well-regulated" to mean anything at all.
But originalists don't seem to use "well-regulated" to mean anything at all.
An originalist would recognize the purpose of the Bill of Rights was to restrict the power of the new national government; not take away individual rights to the aggrandizement of that national government.
But originalists don't seem to use "well-regulated" to mean anything at all.
Why do you think they don't?
Trausti said:An originalist would recognize the purpose of the Bill of Rights was to restrict the power of the new national government; not take away individual rights to the aggrandizement of that national government.
For example, some right-wingers scream about militias without the obvious "well-regulated" portion which has the effect of making the prefatory clause irrelevant...since anyone can claim, "hey yeah, I'm in a militia." Even someone as pompous a right-wing originalist as Scalia still falls into the same trap in Heller merely calling on definitions of "militia" sans "well-regulated" in references contemperaneous with the amendment.
Trausti said:An originalist would recognize the purpose of the Bill of Rights was to restrict the power of the new national government; not take away individual rights to the aggrandizement of that national government.
A competent textual analyst would observe that the prefatory clause provides justification for the operational clause and that further, if the analyst is an originalist, they must concede that the militia in question is intended to be a well-regulated one.
For example, some right-wingers scream about militias without the obvious "well-regulated" portion which has the effect of making the prefatory clause irrelevant...since anyone can claim, "hey yeah, I'm in a militia." Even someone as pompous a right-wing originalist as Scalia still falls into the same trap in Heller merely calling on definitions of "militia" sans "well-regulated" in references contemperaneous with the amendment.
Trausti said:An originalist would recognize the purpose of the Bill of Rights was to restrict the power of the new national government; not take away individual rights to the aggrandizement of that national government.
A competent textual analyst would observe that the prefatory clause provides justification for the operational clause and that further, if the analyst is an originalist, they must concede that the militia in question is intended to be a well-regulated one.
The Bill of Rights speaks of Congress, the States, and the People. If the drafters had wanted to limit the bearing of arms to Congress or the States, they could have done so.
The Bill of Rights speaks of Congress, the States, and the People. If the drafters had wanted to limit the bearing of arms to Congress or the States, they could have done so.
Non sequitur strawman.
Ok, so a witch has different compressibility than a person.
Why does it need to be a duck to reveal this??
No, no, no, you miss the point.Read it again.
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I understood. You're right about e=mc^2, you actually do weigh more with a duck pressed against you. I can see the energy being different for a witch than for a person (but how? The energy is going to be related only to the pressure the duck puts on them. Given the same pressure you'll add just as much to a steel plate as a bag of feathers), but I don't see why it matters that it's a duck doing the pressing. Would you not get the same result if you used a goose? Or perhaps a chicken?
If you read the Federalist papers (#29, I think was about militias and the 2nd amendment), as an originalist should/would do, then most of the gun fondlers arguments for owning weapons fall apart.The 2nd amendment covered arms, not just muskets (In Mexico, it is illegal for their citizens to own swords). Arms are whatever weapons there are available - today, arms include semi-automatic weapons.
The Second Amendment is fucked then and requires some serious revision. Unless you believe convicted felons should be allowed to own nerve gas. By your logic that's a-ok.
Don2: "Trausti, you're argument is so terrible, that I will give you a special award."
Trausti: "I am getting a special award. I am so cool!"
Observer: "He didn't say you were cool."
Trausti: "Regardless of his reasons, I am getting a special award."
Does anyone know of an example when one of these so-called originalists followed their judicial logic to a conclusion that conflicted with their conservative viewpoint?
Does anyone know of an example when one of these so-called originalists followed their judicial logic to a conclusion that conflicted with their conservative viewpoint?
I think a better, more illustrative question would be if all of the so called originalists agree when a ruling goes against their general party viewpoint. There might be a few, but much less. The examples above are good cases where one (maybe two) originalists actually are consistent, but as Poli notes, the others were in strong disagreement.Does anyone know of an example when one of these so-called originalists followed their judicial logic to a conclusion that conflicted with their conservative viewpoint?
Don2: "Trausti, you're argument is so terrible, that I will give you a special award."
Trausti: "I am getting a special award. I am so cool!"
Observer: "He didn't say you were cool."
Trausti: "Regardless of his reasons, I am getting a special award."