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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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"Ed Huntress" wrote in message news:...
wrote in message oups.com... It's a subtle piece of law but there are no holes in it. That's what drives conservative legal scholars up a wall. All they can do is argue that it mis-weights the competing interests, or argue that the 14th doesn't apply, and that the states can do as they wish. However, if they argue the latter, there goes the ol' 2nd Amendment, among others. Catch-22. g Whoops, I forgot an important conservative argument: that Griswold was decided wrongly, that states do indeed have a right to tell married couples that they're not allowed to use contraception, and that there is no right to privacy. Bork has argued this precisely. Thomas almost certainly would. They would basically say that the Ninth Amendment is meaningless (Bork has almost come out and said this), thus limiting our rights to those expressly stated in the Bill of Rights. Madison feared such an interpretation, as did Jefferson. The originalists would solve the problem by saying, simply, that there are no more federally protected rights than those stated expressly in the first eight Amendments. This would have the result of tossing the question back to the states, which Scalia and many others favor. Scalia probably would apply his considerable talents as a legal juggler and sophist to avoid saying outright that the Ninth is meaningless. He could say, for example, that the Ninth and Tenth Amendments provide for the states the right to decide who has additional rights, and who does not -- and then crossing his fingers that some state won't decide that someone has a right that contradicts the right of someone else, under *federal* law. At least, not during his tenure. d8-) I think that's Catch-23. -- Ed Huntress |
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