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Roberts's Rules (pretty much explains his decision...)
The Atlantic ^ | January, 2007 | JEFFREY ROSEN

Posted on 07/01/2012 4:55:52 PM PDT by nerdgirl

Some of the least successful chief justices, Roberts suggested, had faltered because they misunderstood the job, approaching it as law professors rather than as leaders of a collegial Court. Harlan Fiske Stone, a former dean of Columbia Law School, was a case in point. Stone “was a failure as chief, because of his misperception of what a chief justice is supposed to be,” Roberts said, gesturing to the justices’ private conference room through an open door of his office. “It’s his desk out there that is separate from the conference table, and he … sat at his desk, and the others were at the table, and he almost called on them and critiqued their performances. They hated that.” Roberts laughed. “As a result, he was a failure as a chief justice.”

In Roberts’s view, the most successful chief justices help their colleagues speak with one voice. Unanimous, or nearly unanimous, decisions are hard to overturn and contribute to the stability of the law and the continuity of the Court; by contrast, closely divided, 5–4 decisions make it harder for the public to respect the Court as an impartial institution that transcends partisan politics.

(Excerpt) Read more at theatlantic.com ...


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: duplicate; healthcare; johnroberts; obamacare; obamacaredecision; roberts; scotus
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To: Paladin2

You’re welcome, I think for me this ends my “need to know”, and I’ll just have to settle into my discontent and my desire to HELP CHANGE THE COURSE! In my case, that means throwing a few bucks at Romney (literally a few, lol) - and getting involved in whatever local stuff I can to help promote the defeat of Obamacare. Alaskans are pretty conservative, but we did elect that idiot Begich to the Senate...


21 posted on 07/01/2012 5:34:49 PM PDT by nerdgirl
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To: nerdgirl

Since his appointment every opinion delivered by Roberts has been in support of the Federal Government and the granting of additional power to the feds.
He is, was and will contiue to be a government lawyer, why is everyone surprized?


22 posted on 07/01/2012 5:37:43 PM PDT by MrBambaLaMamba (This Message Contains Privileged Attorney-Client Communications)
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To: nerdgirl

Maybe we would get more common sense out of the court if they had to live outside the beltway, each six months in a different state.

Wake up, guys! You’re living in Cloud Land.


23 posted on 07/01/2012 5:37:43 PM PDT by Liberty Wins (Newt --named after Isaac Newton?)
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To: nerdgirl

If this is true, then Roberts doesn’t understand the proper function of procedural acts relative to those of substance.

This is a moral failure as well as an intellectual one.


24 posted on 07/01/2012 5:43:26 PM PDT by reasonisfaith (Why do you seek the living among the dead? (Luke 24:5))
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To: uncbob

Seems he came to believe that the political legitimacy of the Court was being called into question. Maybe if he had been sequestered from all news this wouldn’t have happened!

The question is, should the Supreme Court Justice really be gauging things like that, and factoring it into his decision? You can certainly argue NO, but “fair” lawyer types like my husband would argue “why not?”

And keep in mind we are both pretty much libertarians in this house, yet we don’t agree on this.


25 posted on 07/01/2012 5:43:39 PM PDT by nerdgirl
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To: reasonisfaith

As an anglo Catholic myself, I had hoped his faith would guide him more.


26 posted on 07/01/2012 5:44:57 PM PDT by nerdgirl
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To: nerdgirl
I think now I have some idea why he did it.

And that is, what?
27 posted on 07/01/2012 5:49:20 PM PDT by JSteff ((((It was ALL about SCOTUS. Most forget about that and HAVE DOOMED us for a generation or more.))))
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To: nerdgirl
by contrast, closely divided, 5–4 decisions make it harder for the public to respect the Court as an impartial institution that transcends partisan politics.
Unless they're decided in favor of the Progressives.
28 posted on 07/01/2012 5:55:35 PM PDT by Bratch
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To: nerdgirl

Roberts is traitor to freedom and the constitution. Bush really F##ked up!
There is no way the government should come between me and my relationship with my Doctor.


29 posted on 07/01/2012 5:57:48 PM PDT by Kryn-Man (Self-righteous, gun-totin', military-lovin', redneck)
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To: nerdgirl
Having now studied the Roberts opinion, I will say this:

He correctly applied existing precedent where it existed. He fudged on the one issue where there was no precedent—and failed to discuss that at all, actually. On that, see below.

Existing precedent is wrong. Very wrong, in several different ways. But most fundamentally and importantly, it's wrong with respect to the original intent of the requirement that indirect taxes must be "uniform."

That requirement was originally intended to make the requirement of the principle of the rule of law that the laws must apply to everyone equally apply very explicitly to indirect taxes. And the dodge now used to get around that—writing different rules into the civil and criminal laws and non-uniform rates or duties into tax laws, so that "the same" law applies different rules to people in different situations—is invalid on its face. Doing that makes the uniformity and "apply equally to all" principles effectively powerless and meaningless.

Roberts didn't say what type of tax Congress had unintentionally passed. What he did say is that it wasn't a direct tax that had to be apportioned among the States. That only leaves two possibilities: excise tax or income tax, since the tax clearly is not an impost or duty.

So pleadings that might work would be the following:

  1. It can't Constitutionally be an excise tax, because those can only be imposed on events that occur, not on ones that don't, based on the late 18th century definition of excise. I have found no case law that contradicts that definition, and Roberts cited none.
  2. An income tax, by definition, has to be imposed on income. Not having bought something is not reasonably classifiable as income.
  3. If it's not a new income tax, but a modification to the existing one, then what combination of tax credits and deductions would produce the same tax owed in all cases? How complex do the changes to the income tax code (that produce the same tax owed in all cases) have to be before the level of ridiculousness embodied in the assumption that this is what Congress intended becomes so high that it "shocks the conscience" and so requires that the Roberts' decision must be reversed? (assuming the rules don't turn out to be simple--I haven't looked at that yet)

30 posted on 07/01/2012 6:02:59 PM PDT by sourcery (If true=false, then there would be no constraints on what is possible. Hence, the world exists.)
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To: nerdgirl
So Robert's mentor is Barney. Figures...


31 posted on 07/01/2012 6:03:04 PM PDT by spunkets
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To: nerdgirl

Wow....what a great and insightful article....

Thanks for posting it....

-——Marshall’s example had taught him, Roberts said, that personal trust in the chief justice’s lack of an ideological agenda was very important, and Marshall’s ability to win this kind of trust inspired him. “If I’m sitting there telling people, ‘We should decide the case on this basis,’ and if [other justices] think, ‘That’s just Roberts trying to push some agenda again,’ they’re not likely to listen very often,” he observed. -——

At least now I understand why he threw American under the Obama bus....his personal legacy


32 posted on 07/01/2012 6:06:37 PM PDT by Popman (When you elect a clown: expect a circus...)
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To: nerdgirl

Being optimistic, I am beginning to think he was planting a poison pill by declaring it a tax, as many respected talking heads speculate. Brit Hume went so far as to assert he made nobamacare killable now by a simple majority under reconsiliation, which makes it damned important for us to go with Mitt and get both majorities in November.

If he changed his vote, it could have been to get the libs to give him their position on Commerce Clause (no longer could call it a mandate to buy and the unfettered ability of States to Opt Out, in trade for the poison pill word “TAX” in an election year.


33 posted on 07/01/2012 6:07:07 PM PDT by X-spurt (It is truly time for ON YOUR FEET or on your knees)
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To: nerdgirl
In Roberts’s view, the most successful chief justices help their colleagues speak with one voice.

In the patriot's view, the most successful chief justices help uphold the integrity of the United States Constitution and limit its interpretation strictly to the original intent of its Framers.

34 posted on 07/01/2012 6:07:35 PM PDT by Colonel_Flagg (Conservatism is not a matter of convenience.)
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To: nerdgirl

Roberts is, and always has been, too full of himself.


35 posted on 07/01/2012 6:11:23 PM PDT by citizen (It's no longer Obamacare. It's Robertscare now. He wanted it, he bought it, he owns it.)
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To: Paladin2
In particular, Roberts declared, he would make it his priority, as Marshall did, to discourage his colleagues from issuing separate opinions . . . .

Roberts' maintains that his chief task as chief justice is to heard the cats and then he goes and writes a separate opinion which makes the most consequential Supreme Court decision in 40 years come out 1-4-4.

I'll tell ya, this case just get curiouser and curiouser.

36 posted on 07/01/2012 6:11:43 PM PDT by vbmoneyspender
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To: X-spurt

God...I want to BANG my head off the wall reading this stuff. Roberts screwd us, ok, period....for all the reasons everyone has stated over & over again.


37 posted on 07/01/2012 6:12:46 PM PDT by LongWayHome
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To: MrBambaLaMamba
Since his appointment every opinion delivered by Roberts has been in support of the Federal Government and the granting of additional power to the feds.

How did the Citizens United and Heller decisions grant more power to the feds?

38 posted on 07/01/2012 6:17:16 PM PDT by vbmoneyspender
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To: nerdgirl
by contrast, closely divided, 5–4 decisions make it harder for the public to respect the Court as an impartial institution that transcends partisan politics.

The decision WAS 5-4. If Roberts had ruled the other way it would have still been a 5-4 decision. What are these people smoking?

39 posted on 07/01/2012 6:23:03 PM PDT by plain talk
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To: uncbob

One story I saw stated that the Obamabots got some info that indicated that Roberts cut some corners when he adopted his children from somewhere in South America. That and other threats was all it took for him to bend over and grab his ankles!


40 posted on 07/01/2012 6:23:43 PM PDT by Tucker39 ( Psa 68:19Blessed be the Lord, who daily loadeth us with benefits; even the God of our salvation.KJV)
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