1 posted on
07/01/2005 8:40:17 AM PDT by
bigsoxfan
To: bigsoxfan
She's still retiring? I thought she might have changed her mind since the last time this story was posted.
2 posted on
07/01/2005 8:44:12 AM PDT by
Moral Hazard
(...but when push comes to shove, you've got to do what you love, even if it's not a good idea.)
To: bigsoxfan
I guess she feels like she's done enough damage.
3 posted on
07/01/2005 8:47:20 AM PDT by
Brilliant
To: bigsoxfan
We can't say it too often: "Don't let the door hit ya!"
5 posted on
07/01/2005 8:54:09 AM PDT by
Cicero
(Marcus Tullius)
To: bigsoxfan
The one problem is that now more than ever the entire Republican party must come together. The Constitutional option must be put in place now! Those maverick Republicans must be brought in line on this issue of SC replacements. No time left, it must be done now. Those members of the party that will not cooperate, we must make efforts to go to those States and let the Republican voters that they have been betrayed.
6 posted on
07/01/2005 9:00:59 AM PDT by
Logical me
(Oh, well!!!)
To: bigsoxfan
Well when she gets compliments from "Ted Kennedy" you know she's been something other than conservative.
7 posted on
07/01/2005 9:21:42 AM PDT by
dc-zoo
To: bigsoxfan
Some time ago, Justice O'Connor was advised to "Loosen up in the Supreme Court." She loosened so much, she fell down to the Left.
8 posted on
07/01/2005 12:03:09 PM PDT by
GOPologist
(On some days you may feel like a dog; on other days you may feel like a hydrant!)
To: bigsoxfan
Early in her career as Associate Supreme Court Justice, commenting on the 1973 Supreme Court decision "Roe vs. Wade" that legalized abortion, Sandra Day O'Connor said "Roe is on a collision course with itself and medical reality." So how come the "collision" never occured? Has O'Connor changed her views on abortion?
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