Arlos wrote:Untrue, Xao. If you want the law passed that badly, get it passed as a constitutional amendment. Then it is completely immune to judicial review. Oh, I'm sorry, you have to go through a lot more rigorous process to get such an amendment passed over and above a normal law? Tough shit. Jim Crowe laws, for example, were unconstitutional, and were struck down. If you had your way, that never would have happened, because those laws WERE the will of the majority at the time, and thus, in your skewed worldview, absolutely correct and proper.
You excell at creating worldviews for people that disagree with you. Unfortunately, what you've constructed doesn't have the vaguest correlation to mine. It's easy to make claims that are impossible to substantiate, such as speculating about laws that would "never" have been overturned. Fortunately it's relatively easy to disprove this particular claim, with two words: Executive action.
Sorry, bullshit. The founding fathers WERE worried about the Tyranny of the majority, I've shown that convincingly.
That's nice. Sadly it has no bearing on this particular conversation. Regardless of how the founding fathers percieved your hobby horse of the week, they didn't plan for, implement, or condone judicial review. Sorry.
Judicial Review is the ONLY means we have in this country of preventing it. Judicial Review is a GOOD thing. Again, if you feel THAT strongly about a law that was ruled as running counter to the Constitution, get it passed as a constitutional amendment. That's always an option, and no court could stop you.
Bullshit. Judicial review is hardly the panacea for every social injustice, and runs directly counter to the system of checks and balances laid out in the Constitution. Nor is it the only way to effectively alter legislation. The Constitutional amendment argument is ludicrous, and I have to believe that you understand that. The funny thing is, if an executive or legislative official attempted a power grab of this magnitude, they'd be hung from the nearest tree. Because most people have only the vaguest grasp of conlaw, they're willing to accept it based simply on its historical precedence without any real understanding of it's absolute vacuum of legal support.