Eric, you're on my ignore list, hoss.
I think more than 6 GOP Senators would say today that election fraud has been 'effectively' proven, and votes/decisions don't matter. Is that the new standard somehow?John Maplethorpe said:Agvet12 said:John Maplethorpe said:
A majority of senators including several Republicans said Trump was guilty on the facts on impeachment, just not worthy of removal.
Sidney's wild fantasies are nothing like that.
Lol at Romney being used as "bi partisan"
He wasn't the only one. 6 Republican senators said the house effectively proved its case.
I had one poster on my ignore list before the election. Now I have about a dozen. Most of them are socks I'm sure. I see that they posted but have no idea what bs they were slinging. Life is better this way.Cassius said:
Eric, you're on my ignore list, hoss.
Hey genius, in Pennsylvania, the SoS decided that since the legislature wouldn't make the changes Dems wanted, they'd go to court to demand the court did it for them. The SoS is appointed by the governor and is part of the executive branch there.eric76 said:In what state did the executive change the wording of the statutes?Cassius said:
executive branch changing state laws = narrow technicality /Maplethorpe
What a dumbass response.
Or do you think that interpretation of the statutes somehow amounts to changing of the law?
TurkeyBaconLeg said:
From what I have heard and read this morning about this Texas case is that it is not going after any fraud claims.
It is strictly going after matters of law and how the states violated the constitution in a couple of ways.
It seems to me that there is a case to be made. Even Ted Cruz said last night that one state suing other states is a way to bring this all together into one case before SCOTUS.
I think SCOTUS hears the case and they will end up agreeing with the plaintiff and send this back to each state legislature for them to determine how the electors are selected.
Why do you think this?HTownAg98 said:TurkeyBaconLeg said:
From what I have heard and read this morning about this Texas case is that it is not going after any fraud claims.
It is strictly going after matters of law and how the states violated the constitution in a couple of ways.
It seems to me that there is a case to be made. Even Ted Cruz said last night that one state suing other states is a way to bring this all together into one case before SCOTUS.
I think SCOTUS hears the case and they will end up agreeing with the plaintiff and send this back to each state legislature for them to determine how the electors are selected.
There's only a minuscule chance the court agrees to hear the case. There's a less than minuscule chance it gets ruled favorably for Texas.
notex said:Hey genius, in Pennsylvania, the SoS decided that since the legislature wouldn't make the changes Dems wanted, they'd go to court to demand the court did it for them. The SoS is appointed by the governor and is part of the executive branch there.eric76 said:In what state did the executive change the wording of the statutes?Cassius said:
executive branch changing state laws = narrow technicality /Maplethorpe
What a dumbass response.
Or do you think that interpretation of the statutes somehow amounts to changing of the law?
Are you really a lawyer?
I love that POV. I hate that someone has to use it, but if the Left wants to stick their nose in, then let's help them get a good smell.aggiehawg said:
Glenn Reynolds of Instapundit has a salient observation.Quote:
If the Supreme Court can revamp state legislative districting in the name of fairness, I see nothing to stop if from supervising state procedures for electing presidents.
Cassius said:
executive branch changing state laws = narrow technicality /Maplethorpe
What a dumbass response.
I also wonder about this. Nearly every attorney on here has stated with a fairly certain tone, that SCOTUS won't here it.Quote:
Why do you think this?
It seems to me that there are a lot of questions of fact to be determined before they can get to the point that they issue any order.TurkeyBaconLeg said:
From what I have heard and read this morning about this Texas case is that it is not going after any fraud claims.
It is strictly going after matters of law and how the states violated the constitution in a couple of ways.
It seems to me that there is a case to be made. Even Ted Cruz said last night that one state suing other states is a way to bring this all together into one case before SCOTUS.
I think SCOTUS hears the case and they will end up agreeing with the plaintiff and send this back to each state legislature for them to determine how the electors are selected.
Cassius said:
Maplethorpe, you're on my ignore list, hoss. The stuff you post is utter, illogical nonsense. I only see it if others quote it. That assertion is just so damn stupid, i could not resist the temptation to quote it.
TurkeyBaconLeg said:Why do you think this?HTownAg98 said:TurkeyBaconLeg said:
From what I have heard and read this morning about this Texas case is that it is not going after any fraud claims.
It is strictly going after matters of law and how the states violated the constitution in a couple of ways.
It seems to me that there is a case to be made. Even Ted Cruz said last night that one state suing other states is a way to bring this all together into one case before SCOTUS.
I think SCOTUS hears the case and they will end up agreeing with the plaintiff and send this back to each state legislature for them to determine how the electors are selected.
There's only a minuscule chance the court agrees to hear the case. There's a less than minuscule chance it gets ruled favorably for Texas.
Then why the pending PA constitutional amendment asking for no-fault absentee voting?eric76 said:The Pennsylvania Constitution does not determine the legal method(s) of voting. Instead, it explicitly recognizes the methods of voting found in the law as being legal. Act 77 which was passed by the legislature and signed into law by the governor added mail-in voting as a legal method of voting. Thus, mail-in voting is recognized by the Pennsylvania Constitution as being legal.BMX Bandit said:Quote:
Number 3 is a huge issue. Kent says the legislatures cannot ignore previous election laws. Paxton says they can.
So if Paxton is right, can PA legislature ignore PA law and allow mail in votes for president?
Unfortunately I think you are right. , I don't think we will get an answer to any of this, but they are definitely fascinating questions
No, for once you are right. Since it has been docketed, there will be some type of written disposition also docketed whether they accept or refuse to hear the case. That could be a per curiam short decision or a longer decision.eric76 said:That shouldn't be surprising. I think that it mainly just means that it is going to receive some attention from the court, but then that shouldn't be surprising. Am I wrong about this?CreakinDeacon said:
BusterAg said:Then why the pending PA constitutional amendment asking for no-fault absentee voting?eric76 said:The Pennsylvania Constitution does not determine the legal method(s) of voting. Instead, it explicitly recognizes the methods of voting found in the law as being legal. Act 77 which was passed by the legislature and signed into law by the governor added mail-in voting as a legal method of voting. Thus, mail-in voting is recognized by the Pennsylvania Constitution as being legal.BMX Bandit said:Quote:
Number 3 is a huge issue. Kent says the legislatures cannot ignore previous election laws. Paxton says they can.
So if Paxton is right, can PA legislature ignore PA law and allow mail in votes for president?
Unfortunately I think you are right. , I don't think we will get an answer to any of this, but they are definitely fascinating questions
What is the difference between no-fault absentee voting and mail-in voting?
This argument is incredibly weak.
Much more likely that SCOTUS finds some other issue with this case than try and bye the argument that Act 77 doesn't violate the PA constitution.
It wouldn't be surprising if SCOTUS wanted out of the case without wasting a lot of time in something that isn't going to change the election.BusterAg said:Then why the pending PA constitutional amendment asking for no-fault absentee voting?eric76 said:The Pennsylvania Constitution does not determine the legal method(s) of voting. Instead, it explicitly recognizes the methods of voting found in the law as being legal. Act 77 which was passed by the legislature and signed into law by the governor added mail-in voting as a legal method of voting. Thus, mail-in voting is recognized by the Pennsylvania Constitution as being legal.BMX Bandit said:Quote:
Number 3 is a huge issue. Kent says the legislatures cannot ignore previous election laws. Paxton says they can.
So if Paxton is right, can PA legislature ignore PA law and allow mail in votes for president?
Unfortunately I think you are right. , I don't think we will get an answer to any of this, but they are definitely fascinating questions
What is the difference between no-fault absentee voting and mail-in voting?
This argument is incredibly weak.
Much more likely that SCOTUS finds some other issue with this case than try and bye the argument that Act 77 doesn't violate the PA constitution.
Good read but I wouldn't START there for why SCOTUS won't take this up. Although that court has original and exclusive jurisdiction over cases between states, it is not mandatory jurisdiction, i.e. the court doesn't HAVE to hear the case. In determining whether to exercise its discretion on hearing cases, the court usually looks to whether the case raises unique issues or could such issues be litigated in another case. Seeing as all of these issues are being litigated in other cases, I find it very difficult to believe that the court will want to hear this case as part of its original jurisdiction.HTownAg98 said:TurkeyBaconLeg said:Why do you think this?HTownAg98 said:TurkeyBaconLeg said:
From what I have heard and read this morning about this Texas case is that it is not going after any fraud claims.
It is strictly going after matters of law and how the states violated the constitution in a couple of ways.
It seems to me that there is a case to be made. Even Ted Cruz said last night that one state suing other states is a way to bring this all together into one case before SCOTUS.
I think SCOTUS hears the case and they will end up agreeing with the plaintiff and send this back to each state legislature for them to determine how the electors are selected.
There's only a minuscule chance the court agrees to hear the case. There's a less than minuscule chance it gets ruled favorably for Texas.
It starts here.
How old are you 10.John Maplethorpe said:ttu_85 said:Nothing failed. just pointing out other avenues. Sorry you are confused. Unlike you I want to work. I have an esp32 application to code. But ill be aroundJohn Maplethorpe said:Quote:
Well there was this busted water pipe in Fulton Co with weird statistic aborrations. a few lines of SQL code and I can throw away all kinds of stuff
Delete from voterec where recID equals whateverIWant
//then walks to the shredder
When one facet of the conspiracy fails simply introduce a larger more implausible conspiracy.
So you admit it couldn't work because of the paper process. You're ballot stuffing hypo would have nothing to do with Dominion.
Since the Supreme Court has original jurisdiction in cases between states, I wouldn't think it would be easy for them to ignore it. But that doesn't mean that they are going to drop everything until everything is settled, either.notex said:
LOL, more free help for poor Eric. FWIW, SCOTUS has generally heard 'sufficiently significant' cases between the states where original jurisdiction properly has existed since the 50's. This is pretty darn significant; I think they will actually hear it.
And no, it's not a matter of fact finding, the facts asserted by Texas are essentially uncontested (notice Pa. SoS didn't contest any in their response). The issue is simply a matter of state court rulings vs. their legislatures/laws, equal protection matters, and what remedy might apply.
For the legal novices here, courts often look to a proper remedy as a careful balancing act, but also seek to make sure precedent is helpful in the future (note; this doesn't apply to Obama judges). The clear abuses (well, the 99 percent of us who are not CCP members/supporters) we have seen need to have some negative ramifications/possible penalties/judicial precedent for state courts to weigh in the future. If SCOTUS is responsible, it certainly is the more peaceable way out of this Chicom imbroglio.
The remedy that is already in the Constitution is the 12th Amendment. I seriously doubted they would entertain that route in the early days after the election.notex said:
LOL, more free help for poor Eric. FWIW, SCOTUS has generally heard 'sufficiently significant' cases between the states where original jurisdiction properly has existed since the 50's. This is pretty darn significant; I think they will actually hear it.
And no, it's not a matter of fact finding, the facts asserted by Texas are essentially uncontested (notice Pa. SoS didn't contest any in their response). The issue is simply a matter of state court rulings vs. their legislatures/laws, equal protection matters, and what remedy might apply.
For the legal novices here, courts often look to a proper remedy as a careful balancing act, but also seek to make sure precedent is helpful in the future (note; this doesn't apply to Obama judges). The clear abuses (well, the 99 percent of us who are not CCP members/supporters) we have seen need to have some negative ramifications/possible penalties/judicial precedent for state courts to weigh in the future. If SCOTUS is responsible, it certainly is the more peaceable way out of this Chicom imbroglio.
Different case. Alito ordered them to respond this morning in the Kelly case.Quote:
I'm surprised that the Secretary of State from Pennsylvania has responded already. I don't see that on the docket.
Cassius said:
Eric, you're on my ignore list, hoss.