by Arlos » Fri Jun 27, 2008 2:20 pm
I feel the first ruling is absolutely spot-on, actually. It is not a seizing of power by the judicial branch, it is in reality a triumph of the Constitution, in that it was ruled to hold primacy always, and even be applicable for foreign nationals, so long as they are in the care of the US. I've said before, trying to pick and choose who the Constitution does and does not apply to is insanity, and part of an inevitable pattern of chipping away at its coverage. After all, if we decide today it doesn't apply to Group X, why not tomorrow decide it does not apply to Group Y, then Group Z, etc. No, no, a thousand times no. It does, and MUST apply to everyone within the scope of US control equally. Period.
As for the 2nd, I am neither here nor there. As all well know, I am opposed to the death penalty in general, so long as there exists a chance we would be putting to death an innocent person for a crime they did not commit. Given that multiple people have been freed off death row by DNA evidence, this is a very real threat. Not to mention, I think keeping someone locked up for 50 years+ until they die naturally is far more of a dire punishment than death. Death it's over, but years of prison....
For the 3rd, well, as I have said before, I would have preferred if the 2nd amendment never existed, as I think our national obsession with firearms is, on the whole, unhealthy. I also think it would not inflict on anyone's rights if people were forced to pass a firearms safety test before they could keep weapons at home. Own them all you want without passing such a test, just would have to store the guns at a firing range, etc. In any case, I don't think the ruling is ludicrous, and can certainly understand WHY it was made, I just wish the constitutional base for it didn't exist.
-Arlos