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Alito The Judicial Activist

Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito has captured the hearts of the right
wing. President Bush introduced him to the American people as a man who
has "a deep understanding of the proper role of judges in our society
[and] that judges are to interpret the laws, not to impose their
preferences or priorities on the people." Sen. Bill Frist (R-TN) said
on Fox News that Alito has "shown judicial restraint in the past," and
the Heritage Foundation's Ed Meese noted that this nominee has "shown
careful and consistent fidelity to the Constitution and laws as
written." But the right wing's spin won't hold up for long. Lawrence
Lustberg, a New Jersey criminal defense lawyer who has known Alito
since 1981, described him as "an activist conservatist judge. He's very
prosecutorial from the bench. He has looked to be creative in his
conservatism." Legal scholar Jeffrey Rosen asserted that Alito has been
a "conservative activist" whose "lack of deference to Congress is
unsettling." Alito's past decisions show that as a Supreme Court
justice, he will not hesitate to actively overstep judicial boundaries
to further right-wing ideology, just like Supreme Court Justices
Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia have done.

ALITO TOOK CONGRESS'S COMMERCE POWER, GAVE PUBLIC MACHINE GUNS: In
1996, Judge Alito was the sole dissenter on the Third Circuit Court of
Appeals in U.S. v. Rybar where his colleagues upheld Congress's right
to ban fully automatic machine guns. Alito argued that Congress had no
power under the Commerce Clause to enact such a law. But he did not
stop there. He further demanded that "Congress be required to make
findings showing a link between the regulation and its effect on
interstate commerce, or that Congress or the president document such a
link with empirical evidence." The majority sharply disagreed with
Alito: "We know of no authority to support such a demand on Congress"
and the requirement would essentially require the federal government to
"play Show and Tell with the federal courts." Alito is willing to
overstep the separation of powers and actively limit Congress's
interstate commerce power, which is at "the heart of a vast number of
civil rights laws, discrimination laws and worker protections."

ALITO STRUCK DOWN FAMILY MEDICAL LEAVE ACT: The Family Medical Leave
Act (FMLA) "guarantees most workers up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave to
care for a loved one." In the 2000 case Chittister v. Department of
Community and Economic Development, Alito used his judicial position to
"prevent the federal government from enforcing civil rights
protections." Alito held that Congress overstepped its authority under
the Fourteenth Amendment and therefore had no power to require
employers to comply with the FMLA. But the only one who overstepped
authority was Alito. In 2003, the late Chief Justice William Rehnquist
led the majority that overturned Alito's reasoning. "The Supreme Court
decided that even its own path down the road of limiting Congress's
power would not go so far," said Goodwin Liu, a law professor at the
University of California, Berkeley.

ALITO WEAKENED EXISTING ANTITRUST AND DISCRIMINATION LAWS: Alito has
shown a willingness to push the boundaries of the law for the benefit
of corporate interests. In the 2001 case, LePage's v. 3M Corp. Alito
sided with the 3M Corp, arguing that its bundling techniques did not
violate the Sherman Antitrust Act. Judge Sloviter, the sole dissenter
on the 3-person panel, argued that Alito's decision would "weaken
Section 2 of the Sherman Act to the point of impotence," in addition to
weakening marketplace competition. (The Third Court eventually heard
the case en banc and sided with Sloviter, in a 7-3 decision.) In Bray
v. Marriott Hotels (1996), Marriott sought to deny the plaintiff, an
African-American woman, the right to present her case of racial
discrimination. Alito sided with Marriott, while the majority siding
with Bray criticized Alito for overstepping his judicial role and
"acting as a factfinder [and] taking it upon himself to interpret the
meaning of the deposition testimony of one of the defendants." "Title
VII would be eviscerated if our analysis were to halt where the dissent
suggests," wrote the majority. Alito's willingness to change
legislation at all levels of government show "that there's a real
chance that he will, like Justice Scalia, choose to make law rather
than interpret law," said Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY).

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NOYB
 
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Default OT Alito a Judicial Activist

Ho hum.
The man will be confirmed because there's not a thing the Democratic
minority can do to stop it.


wrote in message
oups.com...
Alito The Judicial Activist

Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito has captured the hearts of the right
wing. President Bush introduced him to the American people as a man who
has "a deep understanding of the proper role of judges in our society
[and] that judges are to interpret the laws, not to impose their
preferences or priorities on the people." Sen. Bill Frist (R-TN) said
on Fox News that Alito has "shown judicial restraint in the past," and
the Heritage Foundation's Ed Meese noted that this nominee has "shown
careful and consistent fidelity to the Constitution and laws as
written." But the right wing's spin won't hold up for long. Lawrence
Lustberg, a New Jersey criminal defense lawyer who has known Alito
since 1981, described him as "an activist conservatist judge. He's very
prosecutorial from the bench. He has looked to be creative in his
conservatism." Legal scholar Jeffrey Rosen asserted that Alito has been
a "conservative activist" whose "lack of deference to Congress is
unsettling." Alito's past decisions show that as a Supreme Court
justice, he will not hesitate to actively overstep judicial boundaries
to further right-wing ideology, just like Supreme Court Justices
Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia have done.

ALITO TOOK CONGRESS'S COMMERCE POWER, GAVE PUBLIC MACHINE GUNS: In
1996, Judge Alito was the sole dissenter on the Third Circuit Court of
Appeals in U.S. v. Rybar where his colleagues upheld Congress's right
to ban fully automatic machine guns. Alito argued that Congress had no
power under the Commerce Clause to enact such a law. But he did not
stop there. He further demanded that "Congress be required to make
findings showing a link between the regulation and its effect on
interstate commerce, or that Congress or the president document such a
link with empirical evidence." The majority sharply disagreed with
Alito: "We know of no authority to support such a demand on Congress"
and the requirement would essentially require the federal government to
"play Show and Tell with the federal courts." Alito is willing to
overstep the separation of powers and actively limit Congress's
interstate commerce power, which is at "the heart of a vast number of
civil rights laws, discrimination laws and worker protections."

ALITO STRUCK DOWN FAMILY MEDICAL LEAVE ACT: The Family Medical Leave
Act (FMLA) "guarantees most workers up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave to
care for a loved one." In the 2000 case Chittister v. Department of
Community and Economic Development, Alito used his judicial position to
"prevent the federal government from enforcing civil rights
protections." Alito held that Congress overstepped its authority under
the Fourteenth Amendment and therefore had no power to require
employers to comply with the FMLA. But the only one who overstepped
authority was Alito. In 2003, the late Chief Justice William Rehnquist
led the majority that overturned Alito's reasoning. "The Supreme Court
decided that even its own path down the road of limiting Congress's
power would not go so far," said Goodwin Liu, a law professor at the
University of California, Berkeley.

ALITO WEAKENED EXISTING ANTITRUST AND DISCRIMINATION LAWS: Alito has
shown a willingness to push the boundaries of the law for the benefit
of corporate interests. In the 2001 case, LePage's v. 3M Corp. Alito
sided with the 3M Corp, arguing that its bundling techniques did not
violate the Sherman Antitrust Act. Judge Sloviter, the sole dissenter
on the 3-person panel, argued that Alito's decision would "weaken
Section 2 of the Sherman Act to the point of impotence," in addition to
weakening marketplace competition. (The Third Court eventually heard
the case en banc and sided with Sloviter, in a 7-3 decision.) In Bray
v. Marriott Hotels (1996), Marriott sought to deny the plaintiff, an
African-American woman, the right to present her case of racial
discrimination. Alito sided with Marriott, while the majority siding
with Bray criticized Alito for overstepping his judicial role and
"acting as a factfinder [and] taking it upon himself to interpret the
meaning of the deposition testimony of one of the defendants." "Title
VII would be eviscerated if our analysis were to halt where the dissent
suggests," wrote the majority. Alito's willingness to change
legislation at all levels of government show "that there's a real
chance that he will, like Justice Scalia, choose to make law rather
than interpret law," said Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY).



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Default OT Alito a Judicial Activist


Harry Krause wrote:
wrote:
Alito The Judicial Activist

Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito has captured the hearts of the right
wing. President Bush introduced him to the American people as a man who
has "a deep understanding of the proper role of judges in our society
[and] that judges are to interpret the laws, not to impose their
preferences or priorities on the people." Sen. Bill Frist (R-TN) said
on Fox News that Alito has "shown judicial restraint in the past," and
the Heritage Foundation's Ed Meese noted that this nominee has "shown
careful and consistent fidelity to the Constitution and laws as
written." But the right wing's spin won't hold up for long. Lawrence
Lustberg, a New Jersey criminal defense lawyer who has known Alito
since 1981, described him as "an activist conservatist judge. He's very
prosecutorial from the bench. He has looked to be creative in his
conservatism." Legal scholar Jeffrey Rosen asserted that Alito has been
a "conservative activist" whose "lack of deference to Congress is
unsettling." Alito's past decisions show that as a Supreme Court
justice, he will not hesitate to actively overstep judicial boundaries
to further right-wing ideology, just like Supreme Court Justices
Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia have done.

ALITO TOOK CONGRESS'S COMMERCE POWER, GAVE PUBLIC MACHINE GUNS: In
1996, Judge Alito was the sole dissenter on the Third Circuit Court of
Appeals in U.S. v. Rybar where his colleagues upheld Congress's right
to ban fully automatic machine guns. Alito argued that Congress had no
power under the Commerce Clause to enact such a law. But he did not
stop there. He further demanded that "Congress be required to make
findings showing a link between the regulation and its effect on
interstate commerce, or that Congress or the president document such a
link with empirical evidence." The majority sharply disagreed with
Alito: "We know of no authority to support such a demand on Congress"
and the requirement would essentially require the federal government to
"play Show and Tell with the federal courts." Alito is willing to
overstep the separation of powers and actively limit Congress's
interstate commerce power, which is at "the heart of a vast number of
civil rights laws, discrimination laws and worker protections."

ALITO STRUCK DOWN FAMILY MEDICAL LEAVE ACT: The Family Medical Leave
Act (FMLA) "guarantees most workers up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave to
care for a loved one." In the 2000 case Chittister v. Department of
Community and Economic Development, Alito used his judicial position to
"prevent the federal government from enforcing civil rights
protections." Alito held that Congress overstepped its authority under
the Fourteenth Amendment and therefore had no power to require
employers to comply with the FMLA. But the only one who overstepped
authority was Alito. In 2003, the late Chief Justice William Rehnquist
led the majority that overturned Alito's reasoning. "The Supreme Court
decided that even its own path down the road of limiting Congress's
power would not go so far," said Goodwin Liu, a law professor at the
University of California, Berkeley.

ALITO WEAKENED EXISTING ANTITRUST AND DISCRIMINATION LAWS: Alito has
shown a willingness to push the boundaries of the law for the benefit
of corporate interests. In the 2001 case, LePage's v. 3M Corp. Alito
sided with the 3M Corp, arguing that its bundling techniques did not
violate the Sherman Antitrust Act. Judge Sloviter, the sole dissenter
on the 3-person panel, argued that Alito's decision would "weaken
Section 2 of the Sherman Act to the point of impotence," in addition to
weakening marketplace competition. (The Third Court eventually heard
the case en banc and sided with Sloviter, in a 7-3 decision.) In Bray
v. Marriott Hotels (1996), Marriott sought to deny the plaintiff, an
African-American woman, the right to present her case of racial
discrimination. Alito sided with Marriott, while the majority siding
with Bray criticized Alito for overstepping his judicial role and
"acting as a factfinder [and] taking it upon himself to interpret the
meaning of the deposition testimony of one of the defendants." "Title
VII would be eviscerated if our analysis were to halt where the dissent
suggests," wrote the majority. Alito's willingness to change
legislation at all levels of government show "that there's a real
chance that he will, like Justice Scalia, choose to make law rather
than interpret law," said Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY).



My problem with this guy is that he is out of the mainstream. I think
all judges should be more or less apolitical, and middle of the road. By
naming a well-known right-winger, Bush is continuing the politicization
of American politics. In the long run, this is simply not the way to go.

But the guy is a qualified judge.


He's qualified, yes. But, politics doesn't have a place in the Supreme
Court.

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NOYB
 
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Default OT Alito a Judicial Activist


"Harry Krause" wrote in message
...

Bush is continuing the politicization of American politics.


Huh?


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Bob
 
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Default OT Alito a Judicial Activist

On Tue, 01 Nov 2005 17:43:53 GMT, "NOYB" wrote:

Ho hum.
The man will be confirmed because there's not a thing the Democratic
minority can do to stop it.


more proof of the fact that the american middle class is virulently
anti-middle class.

---------------------------
to see who "wf3h" is, go to "qrz.com"
and enter 'wf3h' in the field
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Skipper
 
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Default OT Alito a Judicial Activist

Harry Krause wrote:

My problem with this guy is that he is out of the mainstream.


Ah yes, the Looney Left's new talking point. They're trying to convince
us that the radicals who hijacked the once great Democratic party are
now the "mainstream." You'da thunk that long string of election losses
woulda learned 'em. Looney left is...Looney Left.

--
Skipper
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NOYB
 
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Default OT Alito a Judicial Activist


"Bob" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 01 Nov 2005 17:43:53 GMT, "NOYB" wrote:

Ho hum.
The man will be confirmed because there's not a thing the Democratic
minority can do to stop it.


more proof of the fact that the american middle class is virulently
anti-middle class.


That's right! I *am* middle class. Now if I could only convince the
lawmakers in Congress and the folks at the IRS that I am *indeed* middle
class...



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P Fritz
 
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Default OT Alito a Judicial Activist


"NOYB" wrote in message
ink.net...

"Bob" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 01 Nov 2005 17:43:53 GMT, "NOYB" wrote:

Ho hum.
The man will be confirmed because there's not a thing the Democratic
minority can do to stop it.


more proof of the fact that the american middle class is virulently
anti-middle class.


That's right! I *am* middle class. Now if I could only convince the
lawmakers in Congress and the folks at the IRS that I am *indeed* middle
class...


Smart people in the middle class aspire to be in the upper class
someday.....which is why they oppose tax and other policies that would
inhibit their goals. Morons (i.e. liebrals) wish for everyone to sink to
their level.








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John H.
 
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Default OT Alito a Judicial Activist

On Tue, 01 Nov 2005 17:44:55 GMT, "NOYB" wrote:


"Harry Krause" wrote in message
...

Bush is continuing the politicization of American politics.


Huh?


Thanks! I needed a laugh today.

--
John H.
On the 'PocoLoco' out of Deale, MD
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