http://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/...h-Sotomayors-role-in-CT-free-speech-case.html
Really fine judicial work there!
Really fine judicial work there!
http://www.nbcconnecticut.com/news/...h-Sotomayors-role-in-CT-free-speech-case.html
Really fine judicial work there!
Are you so hopelessly up the donkey's butt you cannot see for yourself? Or are you simply too lazy to read for yourself? Going to defend any and all actions of your masters without even knowing what it is you defend?Perhaps you could elaborate as to why you feel the judge misapplied the law.
In short, they won't overrule the school admin because they don't think any rights have been violated.“As the Supreme Court cautioned years ago, “[t]he system of public education that has evolved in this Nation relies necessarily upon the discretion and judgment of school administrators and school board members,” and we are not authorized to intervene absent “violations of specific constitutional guarantees.”
Are you so hopelessly up the donkey's butt you cannot see for yourself? Or are you simply too lazy to read for yourself? Going to defend any and all actions of your masters without even knowing what it is you defend?
The case:
Student is barred from participation in student government, specifically running for senior class secretary, because she posted a blog on a non-school related site calling the administrators "douche bags" because they canceled a "battle of the bands" event. They, of course, sue the school district for violating 1st Amendment rights.
The Judgment:
In short, they won't overrule the school admin because they don't think any rights have been violated.
Sotomayer's decision:
"that the student’s off-campus blog remarks created a “foreseeable risk of substantial disruption” at the student’s high school and that the teenager was not entitled to a preliminary injunction reversing a disciplinary action against her"
So punishing a student for saying something they do not like about the administrators in an outside blog is NOT a “violation of specific constitutional guarantees.”? Since when is it OK to punish free speech unless there is deliberate harm? Where is the demonstrable harm to another person in the student's name calling? Name calling risks "substantial disruption"? What a load of shit. We going to outlaw name calling of public officials now? Going to start jailing people that call Obama an asshole?
The decision is fucked, the school's administrators are fucked, and the whole piece of shit liberal movement that would have that kind of justice sit on our highest court is fucked.
Here's a link to the opinion:
http://www.citmedialaw.org/sites/ci...008-05-29-Doninger Second Circuit Opinion.pdf
First, I'd like to point out that Sotomayor did not author the opinion although she was on the panel.
Second, I'd like to point out that the opinion was a not a decision on the merits of the underlying claims but rather was a opinion addressing an appeal of a decision denying a preliminary injunction. That is, the student wanted the court to give her everything she wanted at the outset of the case well before trial. It is extraordinary relief that the courts seldom award.
Third, unless you can explain to me how this decision runs contrary to Supreme Court precedent you have can have no real beef with the decision. Maybe you think the Supreme Court precedent concerning student First Amendment rights is completely fucked (as I do) but that job of circuit court judges is to follow the law as decided by the Supreme Court, not to disregard the decisions of the SCOTUS she doesn't like.
Here's a link to the opinion:
http://www.citmedialaw.org/sites/ci...008-05-29-Doninger Second Circuit Opinion.pdf
First, I'd like to point out that Sotomayor did not author the opinion although she was on the panel.
Second, I'd like to point out that the opinion was a not a decision on the merits of the underlying claims but rather was a opinion addressing an appeal of a decision denying a preliminary injunction. That is, the student wanted the court to give her everything she wanted at the outset of the case well before trial. It is extraordinary relief that the courts seldom award.
Third, unless you can explain to me how this decision runs contrary to Supreme Court precedent you have can have no real beef with the decision. Maybe you think the Supreme Court precedent concerning student First Amendment rights is completely fucked (as I do) but that job of circuit court judges is to follow the law as decided by the Supreme Court, not to disregard the decisions of the SCOTUS she doesn't like.
even I like her that should be enough for anyone lol
all conservatives should just stand down on this one. Obama did a good job with this pick I am forced to admit
even I like her that should be enough for anyone lol
all conservatives should just stand down on this one. Obama did a good job with this pick I am forced to admit
Here's a link to the opinion:
http://www.citmedialaw.org/sites/ci...008-05-29-Doninger Second Circuit Opinion.pdf
First, I'd like to point out that Sotomayor did not author the opinion although she was on the panel.
Second, I'd like to point out that the opinion was a not a decision on the merits of the underlying claims but rather was a opinion addressing an appeal of a decision denying a preliminary injunction. That is, the student wanted the court to give her everything she wanted at the outset of the case well before trial. It is extraordinary relief that the courts seldom award.
Third, unless you can explain to me how this decision runs contrary to Supreme Court precedent you have can have no real beef with the decision. Maybe you think the Supreme Court precedent concerning student First Amendment rights is completely fucked (as I do) but that job of circuit court judges is to follow the law as decided by the Supreme Court, not to disregard the decisions of the SCOTUS she doesn't like.
I've looked at all her main cases and I don't see many examples of judicial activism. She doesn't seem to be a left wing nut to me, and conservatives could have got a lot worse. It's all about picking your battles, this isn't the one dudes.
If she is on the panel and votes with the panel, it basically says she agrees. Justices are also known to vote with a panel, yet add an exception statement, or vote against the majority and write a dissenting opinion. Since she voted with the panel and added no other statement, she agreed with the decision and the opinion.Here's a link to the opinion:
http://www.citmedialaw.org/sites/ci...008-05-29-Doninger Second Circuit Opinion.pdf
First, I'd like to point out that Sotomayor did not author the opinion although she was on the panel.
Second, I'd like to point out that the opinion was a not a decision on the merits of the underlying claims but rather was a opinion addressing an appeal of a decision denying a preliminary injunction. That is, the student wanted the court to give her everything she wanted at the outset of the case well before trial. It is extraordinary relief that the courts seldom award.
Third, unless you can explain to me how this decision runs contrary to Supreme Court precedent you have can have no real beef with the decision. Maybe you think the Supreme Court precedent concerning student First Amendment rights is completely fucked (as I do) but that job of circuit court judges is to follow the law as decided by the Supreme Court, not to disregard the decisions of the SCOTUS she doesn't like.
Sotomayor is Catholic and may be pro-life.![]()
What specifically about her rulings make her a "good pick"? 60% of her rulings were overturned.
True dat, but conservatives could get much worse. Here there is some hope and (the possibility of) change.Liberal Catholics have the habit of behaving only as the former.
http://washingtontimes.com/news/2009/may/29/pro-life-catholic-leader-roots-for-obama-nominee/…Judge Sotomayor's record on abortion-related cases is thin and tangential. She ruled on the right of pro-life protesters to sue on charges of police brutality and on a challenge to the "Mexico City policy," which prevented U.S. government funds from going to aid organizations that counsel for or provide abortions.
…
But pro-choice groups are uncertain about Judge Sotomayor, and this week they called on senators to ask her directly how she would rule on Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that established a constitutional right to an abortion.
In the protester case, she said the pro-lifers had a right to have their police-brutality claims adjudicated by a jury rather than be summarily dismissed.
In the 2002 Mexico City policy case, Judge Sotomayor rejected claims from the Center for Reproductive Rights and its attorneys, based on both appeals court and Supreme Court precedent.
Although the decision didn't deal with the fundamental constitutional issue of abortion rights, she said in the Mexico City case that the "Supreme Court has made clear that the government is free to favor the anti-abortion position over the pro-choice position, and can do so with public funds."
...
Beyond abortion, Mr. Donohue said, he saw in Judge Sotomayor's record a history of backing religious liberty claims.
"She said it was wrong to prohibit a menorah on public ground; I like that. …
Source?