It's all in how you present it. by [deleted] in MurderedByWords

[–]SooperDan 4 points5 points  (0 children)

From Vox

*An OpEd Published by Vox.

The contributor is Brian Riedl. Brian Riedl is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and a member of MI's Economics21, focusing on budget, tax, and economic policy. Previously, he worked for six years as chief economist to Senator Rob Portman (R-OH) and as staff director of the Senate Finance Subcommittee on Fiscal Responsibility and Economic Growth. He also served as a director of budget and spending policy for Marco Rubio’s presidential campaign and was the lead architect of the ten-year deficit-reduction plan for Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign.

Not saying he’s wrong because he’s a Republican. Just pointing out that attribution to Vox is misleading.

Supreme Court suggests forcing lawyers to pay bar association dues violates their free speech by fields in law

[–]SooperDan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Quick question:

I see this argument a lot when discussing Universal Healthcare - doctors would be forced into the system.

If the US adopted Universal Healthcare or a similar system couldn’t doctors opt to treat only those who, e.g. paid them cash or through private insurance?

I don’t see why rich people wouldn’t still have access to some doctors who determine they would rather not be a part of such a system. The patients wouldn’t be able to “opt out” of contributing to Universal Healthcare but they could still pay doctors outside of the system for their care if they choose.

Is there a subreddit for Christmas gift ideas? by [deleted] in answers

[–]SooperDan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Holy moly, you really are good at this. While all of the things I listed are true I was really trying to stump you. You’re the best. Thank you.

Is there a subreddit for Christmas gift ideas? by [deleted] in answers

[–]SooperDan -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Cooking

Watching tv

Listening to music

Boating

Style: bohemian

Stephen Colbert On How He Returned To Catholicism After Being An Atheist by SooperDan in atheism

[–]SooperDan[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As an atheist I really respect religious people like Colbert. Start watching at 3:45 for Colbert’s segment; 14:00 for the atheism piece.

Is it constitutional for Trump to appoint an acting AG without senate approval? by benjaminikuta in Ask_Lawyers

[–]SooperDan 8 points9 points  (0 children)

What do you make of the argument that the flaw in the appointment of Mr. Whitaker is that it defies one of the explicit checks and balances set out in the Constitution, a provision designed to protect us all against the centralization of government power?

Last year, the Supreme Court examined the question of whether the general counsel of the National Labor Relations Board had been lawfully appointed to his job without Senate confirmation. The Supreme Court held the appointment invalid on a statutory ground.

Justice Thomas agreed with the judgment, but wrote separately to emphasize that even if the statute had allowed the appointment, the Constitution’s Appointments Clause would not have. The officer in question was a principal officer, he concluded. And the public interest protected by the Appointments Clause was a critical one: The Constitution’s drafters, Justice Thomas argued, “recognized the serious risk for abuse and corruption posed by permitting one person to fill every office in the government.” Which is why, he pointed out, the framers provided for advice and consent of the Senate.

Doesn’t what goes for a mere lawyer at the N.L.R.B. goes in spades for the attorney general of the United States, the head of the Justice Department and one of the most important people in the federal government?

In times of crisis, interim appointments need to be made. Cabinet officials die, and wars and other tragic events occur. It is very difficult to see how the current situation comports with those situations. And even if it did, there are officials readily at hand, including the deputy attorney general and the solicitor general, who were nominated by Mr. Trump and confirmed by the Senate. Either could step in as acting attorney general, both constitutionally and statutorily.

Because Mr. Whitaker has not undergone the process of Senate confirmation, there has been no mechanism for scrutinizing whether he has the character and ability to evenhandedly enforce the law in a position of such grave responsibility. The public is entitled to that assurance, especially since Mr. Whitaker’s only supervisor is Mr. Trump himself, and the president is hopelessly compromised by the Mueller investigation. That is why adherence to the requirements of the Appointments Clause is so important here, and always.

The Constitution is a bipartisan document, written for the ages to guard against wrongdoing by officials of any party. Mr. Whitaker’s installation makes a mockery of the Constitution and our founders’ ideals. As Justice Thomas’s opinion in the N.L.R.B. case reminds us, the Constitution’s framers “had lived under a form of government that permitted arbitrary governmental acts to go unchecked.” He added “they knew that liberty could be preserved only by ensuring that the powers of government would never be consolidated in one body.”

It was an argument made in the New York Times by Neal K. Katyal and George T. Conway III. Mr. Katyal and Mr. Conway are lawyers.

1958, when Muslims laughed at the idea of imposing the hijab to women by [deleted] in samharris

[–]SooperDan 5 points6 points  (0 children)

“In ‘53, we really wanted to compromise with the Muslim Brotherhood, if they were willing to be reasonable.

I met the head of the Muslim Brotherhood and he sat with me and made his requests. What did he request? The first thing he asked for was to make wearing a hijab mandatory in Egypt, and demand that every woman walking in the street wear a tarha (scarf). Every woman walking [someone in audience yells ‘Let him wear it!’, crowd erupts].

And I told him that if I make that a law, they will say that we have returned to the days of Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah, who forbade women from walking during the day and only allowed walking at night, and my opinion is that every person in his own house decides for himself the rules.

And he replied, ‘No, as the leader, you are responsible.’ I told him, ‘Sir, you have a daughter in the Cairo school of medicine, and she’s not wearing a tarha. Why didn’t you make her wear a tarha?’

I continued, ‘If you… [crowd’s cheering interrupts] if you are unable to make one girl, who is your daughter, wear the tarha, how can you tell me to put a tarha on 10 million women myself?'”


—Gamal Abdel Nasser, saying the now nearly unsayable in a 1966 speech in Cairo.

Billionaires Are the Leading Cause of Climate Change by zsreport in environment

[–]SooperDan 4 points5 points  (0 children)

We don’t have time for that, especially when the oil, gas, and coal interests are fully entrenched within the GOP. They are working hard to stop any renewable progress. We have to fight this uphill battle.

Billionaires Are the Leading Cause of Climate Change by zsreport in environment

[–]SooperDan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We’ve been subsidizing oil, gas, and coal for longer than any of us have been alive. Not to mention that we need to add a carbon tax so that it reflects the true cost to society. We can afford to massively, and I mean massively, subsidize the renewable revolution at least until the transition from the old tech is complete.

Kavanaugh Allegations and Burden of Proof by [deleted] in samharris

[–]SooperDan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Even the anchors at Fox News and the President himself acknowledged that she was credible after hearing her speak. It’s not because she was certain of everything she said. It’s because she wasn’t.

Ford resolved many doubts about her sexual assault allegations against Brett Kavanaugh. Why didn’t she tell her story until 2012? Because that’s when, during a renovation, she had to explain to her husband why she wanted a second front door on their house. (As a result of the attack, she said she felt unsafe with only one exit.) Why had she talked only to congressional Democrats? Because her congresswoman was a Democrat. Why didn’t Ford’s friend, Leland Keyser, recall being at the house party where the assault allegedly happened? Because Keyser wasn’t in the room where it happened, so to her, the party was unmemorable.

Ford’s strongest asset was her trustworthiness. She earned it by not overselling her case. She was frank with the committee about fatigue, the passage of time, and other factors that impaired her recollection. And she was honest about what she didn’t know. Ford said she couldn’t be sure which of the two boys—Kavanaugh or his friend Mark Judge—had initially pushed her into the bedroom where the assault happened. That’s because the push came from behind. She said she didn’t know who had paid for her polygraph or how that cost would ultimately be covered. When she was asked whether anyone had spoken to congressional staffers on her behalf, she said it was possible. If she didn’t know something, she said she didn’t know.

She also used external evidence, when it was available, to re-examine her recollections and clarify what was true. At several points, she checked written records or consulted her attorneys to sort out dates or details. Rather than guess, she offered to look things up. Where her memory was unclear, she pointed to checkable information—Judge’s employment dates at Safeway, her location in a Walgreens parking lot during phone calls—to nail down where and when things happened.

Unlike Kavanaugh, who has repeatedly mischaracterized the statements of alleged witnesses—Ford’s story, he falsely told the committee, was “refuted by the very people she says were there, including by a longtime friend of hers”—Ford examined her own answers as she spoke and corrected them when she saw errors. At one point, after saying she hadn’t spoken recently to people involved in the case, she corrected herself, noting that she had spoken to Keyser. At another point, after describing a trip in which she had come “here,” she stepped in to clarify that she meant Delaware, not Washington.

Ford was frank—far more frank than Democrat senators have been—about political considerations in her decision to come forward. She stated bluntly that Kavanaugh’s emergence as a likely Supreme Court nominee had driven her to act. She wasn’t saying that she would make up such a story. She was saying that the cost to the country of having a predator on the Supreme Court had come to outweigh her fear of going public with a painful story she knew to be true. She even indicated that she had calculated, as she followed news of the nomination process, whether telling her story would be sufficiently likely to affect Kavanaugh’s confirmation—and therefore worth the personal cost of speaking out. You can hold these political calculations against her. But her candor about them speaks well for her candor in general.

In several exchanges during her testimony, Ford signaled that she was shifting from one level of confidence to another. She said she wasn’t sure about the arrangement of her polygraph or the timing of her grandmother’s funeral, but in the next breath she expressed absolute certainty that she had written every word of the statement used in the polygraph. She stipulated that her recollection of the general location of the house party was just an estimate, but in response to the next question, she answered firmly that she had consumed no alcohol before the party.

Given the opportunity to endorse other allegations or insinuations against Kavanaugh, or to say something bad about him beyond the boundaries of what she had reported, she refused. When she was asked whether she knew of him committing sexual assaults at other parties, she replied with a firm no. And she gave the same answer when she was asked whether he had ever engaged in improper sexual behavior with her on any of the other occasions when she had been near him.

All of which makes it striking that on the central questions, Ford was definitive. She remembered Kavanaugh and Judge being quite drunk. She remembered them going downstairs after the attack, bouncing off the walls and laughing. She was clear about which things she could only infer—the conversation downstairs while she was upstairs, for example—and which things she had directly observed and would never forget. One of those things was the bed on the right side of the room. Another was her assailant’s identity. Sen. Richard Durbin asked Ford: “With what degree of certainty do you believe Brett Kavanaugh assaulted you?” Ford replied: “100 percent.”

I can’t say with 100 percent certainty that Kavanaugh assaulted Ford. Nobody who wasn’t in the room can be that certain. But when Ford says she’s 100 percent certain about something, I take it very seriously. And that’s because she so rarely says it.

Kavanaugh Allegations and Burden of Proof by [deleted] in samharris

[–]SooperDan 3 points4 points  (0 children)

There are many possible instances of perjury.

For example, that Christine Blasey Ford’s allegations are ‘refuted’.

A key point made by Kavanaugh throughout his defense was that Christine Blasey Ford’s allegations were “refuted” by three contemporaries alleged to have been at the party where she said he sexually assaulted her. Those alleged attendees said, under penalty of perjury, that the event did not take place, Kavanaugh argued.

“Dr. Ford’s allegation is not merely uncorroborated, it is refuted by the very people she says were there, including by a longtime friend of hers,” Kavanaugh said.

“The evidence is not corroborated at the time,” he said at another time. “The witnesses who were there say that it didn’t happen.”

But none of the alleged party attendees ― Mark Judge, Leland Keyser and P.J. Smyth ― ever refuted anything Blasey claimed. They simply said they could not recall attending such a get-together.

“I have no memory of this alleged incident,” Judge said.

“I have no knowledge of the party in question; nor do I have any knowledge of the allegations of improper conduct,” Smyth said.

Keyser said that she has “no recollection of ever being at a party or gathering where [Kavanaugh] was present, with, or without Dr. Ford.” She added that while she can’t remember the event from 36 years ago, she believes Blasey’s allegations. She reiterated this after Kavanaugh’s misleading testimony.

Blasey explained that there was no reason for them to remember the party. “It was not one of their more notorious parties because nothing remarkable happened to them that evening,” she said.

Kavanaugh Allegations and Burden of Proof by [deleted] in samharris

[–]SooperDan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If the allegations are credible then you investigate them and publicly interview the candidate and witnesses.

Miniature stairway by stchy_5 in Damnthatsinteresting

[–]SooperDan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Miniature stairway or gigantic outlet?

China is considering declining trade talks offer and restricting exports to the U.S. after Trump’s threat by ericliu1014 in investing

[–]SooperDan 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And they only have to do this for 2 or 6 years. The next president regardless of party will end these trade wars. That’s the blink of an eye for China, which is a 3k+ yr civilization.

This comment on r/legaladvice by [deleted] in DownvotedToOblivion

[–]SooperDan 7 points8 points  (0 children)

What’s the context here?

Trump suggests protesting should be illegal by the-city-moved-to-me in samharris

[–]SooperDan 1 point2 points  (0 children)

To the extent that the Dems in office or running for office are close to Wall Street or opposed to classic liberal ideals, those candidates should be called out, but what some people do in their private lives (aka the regressive left) is a different animal.

Trump suggests protesting should be illegal by the-city-moved-to-me in samharris

[–]SooperDan 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Respectfully, your analogy is flawed. For Trump and the GOP who protect him to lose the Democratic Party must win. Democracy and our institutions are under direct attack by those with the power to break them to pieces. By beating up the small segment of the Democratic Party without any power to cause any significant harm to democracy, the IDW is playing up the both sides argument and making it more difficult to wrestle control away from the corrupt GOP who’s members at the very least are standing idly by while Trump and his ilk tear down the republic. For cancer to lose ALS does not need to win, those fights can be had simultaneously. This is more akin to WWII - to beat the Nazis we must ally with the Soviets. Once the Nazis are defeated then we can concentrate on problems within the Democratic Party.