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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 12:21 am 
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frostingspoon

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i am not good looking enough for the television judiciary - plus you have to be able to explain 250 years of case law and theory in 5 seconds...not easy to do if you have a brain.

on the above - what I was saying is just one way that the so called "right to privacy" has been described - right to control your own body, autonomy from government interference, etc... just a general term for all the fundamental rights as a group.

it gives me a headache

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 12:35 am 
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rparis74 Wrote:
what about defense of others? defense of property?

most areas of law are gray areas where interests are balanced and something like justice is done.

if this wasn't the case there would be no need for judges or lawyers so just stop or I am screwed.


When the law becomes ambiguous, you end up with every transgressor trotting out some justification for why the law should not apply to them. If your excuse is good enough, you can ignore the law.

Your "killing" example should be straightforward...

"Did you kill the other person?"

"Yes"

"Was it an act of war?"

"No"

"Was your life threatened?"

"No"

"Was the life of another person threatened?"

"No"

"Guilty"

The law should prescribe when it's allowable to kill another. Those circumstances had damned well better be well-defined so as to leave no doubt or ambiguity.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 12:40 am 
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if you become president and institute the Hammurabi code I am moving to canada.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 12:43 am 
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rparis74 Wrote:
if you become president and institute the Hammurabi code I am moving to canada.


Ha! Annexing Canada is the first thing I'd do in office.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 10:03 am 
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Billzebub Wrote:
rparis74 Wrote:
trying to make everything black and white in the law (and in many other places) is usually a losing proposition


I couldn't disagree with you more. The law is the one place where things should, nay, must be black and white. Laws are not subjective. Actions are either legal or they're not.


The only way laws will ever be completely "black or white" would be if lawmakers were to consider each and every possible factual circumstance imaginable relevant to each law and then decide which side of the law each circumstance came down upon.

Real life itself is far too "grey."


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 10:37 am 
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Billzebub Wrote:
rparis74 Wrote:
Billzebub Wrote:
rparis74 Wrote:
trying to make everything black and white in the law (and in many other places) is usually a losing proposition


I couldn't disagree with you more. The law is the one place where things should, nay, must be black and white. Laws are not subjective. Actions are either legal or they're not.


really? so killing someone should always be a crime?


Absent self-defense or act of war, yes.

Billz, you're against capital punishment, or does that fall under the country defending itself?

Even with Billz's scenario, "self-defense" would still need to be defined and (dis)proven with each case. The subjectivity still exists just not within the laws themselves.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 10:51 am 
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Alls I'm sayin' is that the law should be unambiguous. The law should clearly define what actions are legal and what actions are not. A person should not have to wonder if their actions are against the law.

I don't think capital punishment holds--I'm talking about the general citizenry. Were a person to capitally punish someone (i.e. kill them in response for a transgression, that person would, IMO, be guilty of murder).

Yes, the circumstances will have to be proven in court. We will still need juries and judges. The burden falls upon the actor to state their case why their actions are allowed under a clear law.

I see no value or attractiveness in vaguery in the law. If you make your living interpreting the law, bending it to you or your client's will, then yes, vaguery is good. However, you must recognize that to serve this interest, you have weakened the law.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 10:55 am 
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Rodney,

Let's say that you are right about the right to control your own body. But then doesn't the argument boil down to when does life begin or am I missing something?


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 11:02 am 
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back to the selection:

i would be against this guy for a handful of reasons, but the biggest:

he has only been a judge for 2.4 years. i dont think he has the track record to be given a lifetime apointment to the hightest court in the united states.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 11:05 am 
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oldbulee Wrote:
Rodney,

Let's say that you are right about the right to control your own body. But then doesn't the argument boil down to when does life begin or am I missing something?


i say it comes to down when does the rights of a bundle of cells mature enough to overcome the right of someone to control their own body.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 11:05 am 
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frostingspoon
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it wouldn't be anything new, scottycash: http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/14/polit ... cotus.html

Quote:
Of the 108 people who have served on the Supreme Court, only 48 - fewer than half - were drawn from the ranks of sitting judges. And while judges do make up the biggest single biographical category, there have also been 25 practicing lawyers, 9 attorneys general or deputy attorneys general, 7 holders of other cabinet positions, 6 senators, 2 members of the House of Representatives, 3 governors, 2 solicitors general and 2 law professors.

In short, Supreme Court justices throughout history have reflected a range of experience, not only in the legal profession but also in the public life of the country. And there has been a growing feeling in some quarters that that is a tradition worth reviving.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 11:11 am 
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this isn't about jesus, is it?

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 11:12 am 
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rparis74 Wrote:
oldbulee Wrote:
Rodney,

Let's say that you are right about the right to control your own body. But then doesn't the argument boil down to when does life begin or am I missing something?


i say it comes to down when does the rights of a bundle of cells mature enough to overcome the right of someone to control their own body.


fair enough.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 11:45 am 
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rparis74 Wrote:
oldbulee Wrote:
Rodney,

Let's say that you are right about the right to control your own body. But then doesn't the argument boil down to when does life begin or am I missing something?


i say it comes to down when does the rights of a bundle of cells mature enough to overcome the right of someone to control their own body.


If we take this statement as the determining factor, and if you also have the previously mentioned fundamental right to control your children, then does that mean we could abort up until the age of 12 or 14?

Please let it be so! I'm gonna go grab my hatchet!

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 12:10 pm 
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Elvis Fu Wrote:
rparis74 Wrote:
oldbulee Wrote:
Rodney,

Let's say that you are right about the right to control your own body. But then doesn't the argument boil down to when does life begin or am I missing something?


i say it comes to down when does the rights of a bundle of cells mature enough to overcome the right of someone to control their own body.


If we take this statement as the determining factor, and if you also have the previously mentioned fundamental right to control your children, then does that mean we could abort up until the age of 12 or 14?

Please let it be so! I'm gonna go grab my hatchet!


Yes, but you can't do it by buckling them into the car and rolling it off the pier.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 12:17 pm 
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frostingspoon

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Elvis Fu Wrote:
rparis74 Wrote:
oldbulee Wrote:
Rodney,

Let's say that you are right about the right to control your own body. But then doesn't the argument boil down to when does life begin or am I missing something?


i say it comes to down when does the rights of a bundle of cells mature enough to overcome the right of someone to control their own body.


If we take this statement as the determining factor, and if you also have the previously mentioned fundamental right to control your children, then does that mean we could abort up until the age of 12 or 14?

Please let it be so! I'm gonna go grab my hatchet!


sorry man - everyone (maybe not) agrees kids are people so that's murder...in most cases.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 12:18 pm 
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frostingspoon
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Not bait, but a joke, sir.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 12:21 pm 
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frostingspoon

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i know - i was kidding too. i roll kids into the Willamette quite regularly.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 12:26 pm 
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Haha. Just making sure.

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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 12:37 pm 
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Billzebub Wrote:
Alls I'm sayin' is that the law should be unambiguous. The law should clearly define what actions are legal and what actions are not. A person should not have to wonder if their actions are against the law.

I don't think capital punishment holds--I'm talking about the general citizenry. Were a person to capitally punish someone (i.e. kill them in response for a transgression, that person would, IMO, be guilty of murder).

Yes, the circumstances will have to be proven in court. We will still need juries and judges. The burden falls upon the actor to state their case why their actions are allowed under a clear law.


Hold up a sec. Maybe you didn't think this all the way through, but we have a notion of "innocent until proven guilty" in criminal court. The burden is on the state to prove one's actions were in violation of the law. If one had to affirmatively prove his actions were allowed under a law, that would be pretty scary.

Billzebub Wrote:
I see no value or attractiveness in vaguery in the law. If you make your living interpreting the law, bending it to you or your client's will, then yes, vaguery is good. However, you must recognize that to serve this interest, you have weakened the law.


I'm not advocating vaguery in the law. I'm saying it would be nearly impossible to have air tight laws that would not need to be interpeted in some way by judges.

There is a balance though. Perhaps what you're really getting at is Congressional vaguery or complete silence on certain issues so they can protect themselves from voter backlash. They pass the buck to the courts and let them figure it out.

On the whole I think most laws, especially laws like the Model Penal Codes that have been adopted, are pretty good at being specific. But in reality, no matter how specific a law you have, there is a need for some degree of interpretation.

I think complete specificity is nearly impossible, but purposeful silence or vaguery by legislators is definitley not a good thing.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 1:03 pm 
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Nacho Wrote:
Billzebub Wrote:
Alls I'm sayin' is that the law should be unambiguous. The law should clearly define what actions are legal and what actions are not. A person should not have to wonder if their actions are against the law.

I don't think capital punishment holds--I'm talking about the general citizenry. Were a person to capitally punish someone (i.e. kill them in response for a transgression, that person would, IMO, be guilty of murder).

Yes, the circumstances will have to be proven in court. We will still need juries and judges. The burden falls upon the actor to state their case why their actions are allowed under a clear law.


Hold up a sec. Maybe you didn't think this all the way through, but we have a notion of "innocent until proven guilty" in criminal court. The burden is on the state to prove one's actions were in violation of the law. If one had to affirmatively prove his actions were allowed under a law, that would be pretty scary.


Whoooah, my supposition in my example is that it has been established that the action in question was uncontestedly committed. e.g. "Yes I killed said person, but said killing was legal because..." The burden of proof lies with the prosecution, but the defendant is obligated to explain why their actions are allowed under the law.

In a case where defendant denies commiting the act, the burden lies wholly upon the prosecution to prove otherwise.


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PostPosted: Wed Jul 20, 2005 1:06 pm 
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Nacho Wrote:
But in reality, no matter how specific a law you have, there is a need for some degree of interpretation.

I think complete specificity is nearly impossible, but purposeful silence or vaguery by legislators is definitley not a good thing.


I think we're on the same page, and I may have mis-interprated RParis' original post...I think specificity should be the goal. Is perfect specificity ever attainable? Probably not, but it should be the goal nonetheless.


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