Tuesday, January 20, 2015

"Justice Ginsburg explains everything you need to know about religious liberty in two sentences" (Ian Millhiser)

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Plus: Justice Nino daydreams about mandatory polygamy


"Unlike the exemption this Court approved in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., accommodating petitioner's religious belief in this case would not detrimentally affect others who do not share petitioner's belief. On that understanding, I join the Court's opinion."
-- Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, ruling
with a unanimous Court today in
Holt v. Hobbs

by Ken

The case itself, this Holt v. Hobbs, turned out to be so simple constitutionally that not only was the Supreme Court's verdict unanimous, but even dim bulb "Sammy the Hammer" Alito actually got it well enough to explain it almost right in the Court's ruling.

The "almost right" refers to the distinction Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg understood was necessary to set forth, which she did in the two sentences quoted above, the two sentences in question in Ian Millhiser's ThinkProgress post "Justice Ginsburg explains everything you need to know about religious liberty in two sentences."

The one tricky thing about the case was that it called on the Roberts Court to apply the religious liberties it has become so protective of to a non-Christian. And this court, in common with the far-right-wing ideology it now champions, while pretending to be great believers in "freedom," in fact generally supports only the precise kinds of freedom for the precise kinds of people it believes are right -- meaning, usually, Right. However, in this case even the easily fooled Sammy the Hammer wasn't fooled.

The case concerns a Muslim inmate in an Arkansas maximum-security prison, one "Gregory Houston Holt AKA Abdul Maalik Muhammad," who claims that preventing him from growing even the half-inch beard he's willing to settle for violates his religious requirement to have a beard, without the legal justification in terms of actual harm required by the federal Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act. And Justice Alito agrees in his ruling that Arkansas prison officials haven't met the test of RLUIPA, to provide credible examples of how allowing the limited beard imposes a security burden on the prison.
IN THE ORAL ARGUMENTS --

The justices devoted a fair amount of questioning to the half-inch-beard standard, understandably wondering if there is an enforceable standard. Justice Ginsburg began by raising the utterly reasonable question: "If this prisoner wanted to have a full beard, would RLUIPA require that the prison administration allow him to do that?" Again, it's a fair question, even though, as the petitioner's advocate pointed out, 40 other state prison bureaus allow beards without any restriction of length, and it would seem under RLUIPA that it's the prison's burden to establish the dangers of the requested beard. But Justice Scalia, pointing out rightly that the actual Islamic requirement would be for a full beard, not a half-inch one, pursued his questioning with the analogy of a hypothetical religion that requires polygamy, and whether that requirement would be satisfied by allowing just two wives.
Now, let's assume in the religion that requires polygamy. I mean, could ­­-- could I say to the prison, well, you know, okay, I won't have three wives; just let me have two wives. I mean, you're still violating your religion, it seems to me, if he allows his beard to be clipped to one ­­ one inch, isn't he?
Again, there's a legitimate issue thrashing around in this thicket, but it's couched in such a whacked-out form as to raise two obvious questions: [1] Would Justice Scalia conjure such a bizarre analogy in discussing possible limitations of a Christian religious requirement? [2] What the hell is wrong with that man?

ANYWAY, JUSTICE SAMMY DID SEEM TO GRASP . . .

. . . in his opinion that the Arkansas prison folks had failed to make the kind of need-based case justifying a religious infringement which would be required under RLUIPA, and that's pretty much the end of the story.

Except that, as Ian notes, it's not quite the end of the story. At least it wasn't for Justice Ginsburg. Ian explains (links onsite):
Though Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg joins Alito’s opinion, she also penned a two sentence concurring opinion explaining why Tuesday’s decision is a proper application of an individual’s religious freedoms — and why she believes that the Court’s birth control decision in Hobby Lobby was erroneous. “Unlike the exemption this Court approved in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc.,” Ginsburg explains, “accommodating petitioner’s religious belief in this case would not detrimentally affect others who do not share petitioner’s belief. On that understanding, I join the Court’s opinion.”

Prior to Hobby Lobby, the Court’s precedents honored a careful balance between religious liberty and the legal rights of others. People of faith have robust rights to honor their beliefs and act on their conscience, but they couldn’t interfere with someone else’s legal rights. Indeed, Hobby Lobby’s claim that they could defy a federal rule requiring them to include birth control in their employee health plan was especially weak because Hobby Lobby is a for-profit business. As the Court held in United States v. Lee, “[w]hen followers of a particular sect enter into commercial activity as a matter of choice, the limits they accept on their own conduct as a matter of conscience and faith are not to be superimposed on the statutory schemes which are binding on others in that activity.”

Unlike Hobby Lobby, Muhammad sought a concession to his faith that has no impact on anyone other than himself. As Alito’s opinion in Holt lays out, the prison’s concerns about the consequences of allowing him to grow a beard were unwarranted. And no one else will have to do anything with their facial hair (or, for that matter, lose access to important medical care), because Muhammad will be allowed to grow a beard.
Score a good catch for Ian, I would say, and a good catch for Justice Ginsburg.
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Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Crackpot Utopia: The Year in Republican Crazy, Part 6

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• And now a word about South Carolina
• Pat Robertson and his magic asteroid
• I'll have a pack of Twizzlers and an IUD to go, please



Eight-year-old South Carolinian Olivia McConnell (see No. 1, Exhibit B) thinks she's so-o-o smart just 'cause she's smarter than the whole of her state's GOP. Okay, she's only eight, so she doesn't realize that this isn't all that remarkable a feat.

Crackpot Utopia: A dream world as envisioned by republicans; a manifestation or expression of the deranged, warped alternate universe inhabited by republicans, at least in their minds. See also: Bachmannism, Boehneresque.

by Noah

1. And now a word about South Carolina!

There are a lotta nuts out there. Sometimes they band together and form whole states. When it came to all of that secession talk after the 2012 presidential election, South Carolina worked hard to not be outdone by fellow nut states Texas, Mississippi, and Alaska. Hell, they've even elected Lindsey Graham as one of their U.S. senators, more than once! And let's not forget that, at Fort Sumter, they started the Civil War, which for them has never ended.

But, putting all of that aside, let's just look at two exhibits from South Carolina from this past year. Keep in mind that some republicans will say defensively that the true crazies are in some sort of vast minority within their party. Always ask yourself, who puts the crazies in power?

Exhibit A: Meet Todd Kincannon


Um, "LEGAL CORRESPONANT"?
Is this some kind of secret code?

In the midst of the preelection media scare campaign on the subject of Ebola, Todd Kincannon, former executive director of the SC GOP, went even more full-blown-wacko than any of the usual suspects from FOX, CNN, or the talk radio asylum. Here's Kincannon on Twitter, vying for his Crazyspeak of ohe Year trophy:
People with Ebola in the U.S. need to be put down humanely immediately.
Well, at least he said "humanely." I suppose that does separate him from a lot of his republican brethren, who wouldn't care about being humane. But then he added:
The protocol for a positive Ebola test should be immediate execution and sanitation of the whole area. That will save lives.
  Kincannon, who claims to be "pro-life," also managed to blame the spread of Ebola on the people of Africa, who, in his deranged crackpot republican mind, have been "eating each other." Well, you know how they are.

(By the way, did you notice how the subject of an impending Ebola pandemic -- Obama's fault, again -- disappeared completely from the so-called liberal media the day after Election Day?)

Kincannon doesn't just get all repug over Ebola. If you click on the provided Daily Kos link, you'll find some choice four- and five-letter words to describe one of his party's favorite targets for hate and demonization, Nancy Pelosi. He also has some special republican wisdom on the vagina of Texas Democratic gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis. I could go on about that, but I covered the Republican Party's ever-continuing War on Women in Part 4.

Exhibit B: The SC GOP and the fossils

We all know how republicans feel about nasty things like females, education, and dreaded (dare I say it?) science. But in third-grader Olivia McConnell the South Carolina republican party was set up as the paradigm for utter derangement by one inquisitive eight-year-old who obviously has more smarts than almost her whole state put together. Here's what happened when the budding paleontologist butted heads with her state's paleo-republicans.

Olivia, who loves hunting for fossils everywhere she goes, found out that one of the very first fossils found in America, an ancient mammoth, was unearthed right in her own home state of South Carolina. At the same time, she found out that her state was one of only seven states in our whole country that had no designated state fossil. So Olivia set out to rectify the situation by writing a nice letter to SC Gov. Nikki Haley and other state lawmakers, including her state representative, Robert Ridgeway, and her state senator, Kevin Johnson, both Democrats. Said Olivia:
I wanted it to be the state fossil because I didn't want that history to be lost, and our state not to get credit for it.
Both Ridgeway and Johnson loved the idea. What could go wrong?

Enter the republicans, the party of obstructionism and total kookery. The proposal actually passed the state's House by a huge margin, a bipartisan margin, but then, when it went to the state Senate, republican senators, led by Kevin Bryant -- a creationist who has compared President Obama to Osama bin Laden, voted to block a rape crisis center, and called climate change a hoax -- insisted that any proposal designating the mammoth as the state fossil not only must include a reference to said mammoth's creator, aka God, but also must mention that the mammoth in question, like all mammoths, was "created on the sixth day with the other beasts of the field." In fact, Bryant and fellow republican Sen. Mike Fair wanted three -- count 'em, three -- verses from the Book of Genesis added to any designation of the mammoth as the state fossil. Why not just ship it with a Bible?

The Book of Genesis also implies that the mammoth and everything else, including mankind, came into being 6000 years ago. But mammoths went extinct, probably hunted to extinction by us two-legged critters, about 10,000 years ago. Damn, that math and science thing gets tricky when you're a republican.

Eventually, the bill became law, with the sixth-day reference but without mention of any gods or God. Perhaps little Olivia McConnell should have just proposed that Senator Bryant be named the state fossil.


Nuttier than a Columbian mammoth? That's our Kevin.


2. Pat Robertson and his magic asteroid
(Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 6)


Any chance that the age in question
is the Age of Republican Crazy?

Again, let us not think that the über-crazy Pat Robertson is some sort of fringe republican. No, this loon has quite a legion of followers within his party. In fact, he has frequently been put forward as "presidential material" in republican primaries and in discussions of top republican leaders. So, with that in mind, I give you yet another Great Moment In Pat Robertson. The man is a Crazyspeak Award nomination machine!
I wrote a book. I wrote a book. It's called The End of the Age and it deals with an asteroid hitting the Earth.
OK. So far, not so bad. But then --
I don't see anything else that fulfills the prophetic words of Jesus Christ other than an asteroid strike. There isn't anything that will cause the seas to roil, that will cause the skies to darken, the moon and sun not to give their light, the nations terrified on Earth saying "what's happening?"
And then Mr. Doomsday said, as Mr. Doomsdays have been saying for thousands of years, always recalculating the date of our doom when the big day doesn't come:
Hey, just get ready. Get right and stay right with the Lord. It could be next week. . . .
Yeah! It's Chicken Little yelling, "The sky is falling. The sky is falling." But in that story, people stopped believing Chicken Little. In this story, they send him money.


It's almost unfair to the other contenders to consider the Reverend Pat for the Crazyspeak of the Year Award. As long as he draws breath, won't he have to be a favorite?


3. I'll have a pack of Twizzlers and an IUD to go!



2014 was the year that New York's reactionary Cardinal Timothy Dolan and his FOX "News" disciples, among others on the right, informed us that women can obtain birth control by walking into "any shop on any street in America."

This was all about the Hobby Lobby case. Hobby Lobby objected to a provision in Obamacare that said employers had to include contraception in their benefits packages. To Hobby Lobby, that ran against their religious beliefs and it was off-to-the-courts time. The idea that women might want birth control for health reasons was ignored, but, hey, they're women and there's a war on. Eventually, the so-called Supreme Court sided with Hobby Lobby.

But, every shop in town? Who knew? This is wonderful news! Dolan says 7-Eleven is an example. Who else? Dunkin' Donuts? The Dollar Store? Will shoe stores, now that we have Obamacare eating away at the moral fiber of America, be luring in women with offers of contraceptives with each pair of shoes purchased? All I can say is, it's about time!

Dolan's side won this one. Chalk one up for the nosy morality police. So, with them now emboldened, will we have to worry that the next complaint from Dolan will be that batteries are so readily available and that women should not be allowed to purchase batteries without a note from their priest?


COMING UP: Speaking of batteries, right now Noah is recharging his. He says he's not done, though, that there's more 2014 Republican crazy to come. Isn't there always more Republican crazy to come?

NOAH'S 2014 IN REVIEW --
Crackpot Utopia: The Year in Republican Crazy


Part 1: Princess Liz Cheney tries for the Smoothie of the Year Award; "Miss Beck regrets" -- Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 1: Glenn Beck; and the Crackpot Party reacts to President Obama’s State of the Union speech [12/19/2014]
Part 2: Republicans wonder why normal people call them racists; Sean Hannity wants to self-deport; and the First Annual Mr. Burns Award, to ABC "shark" Kevin O'Leary [12/20/2014]
Part 3: Using fear, loathing, and paranoia to sell stuff; Arizona legalizes crack!; and Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 3: Bill O’Reilly [12/21/2014]
Part 4: A celebration of Michele Bachmann: Pray away the crazy?; What "War on Women"?; and the "Obama angle" on Malaysian Flight 370 [12/22/2014]
Part 5: The GOP and the kiss heard 'round the world; Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 5: Joe the Plumber [12/23/2014]
Part 6: A word about South Carolina; Pat Robertson and his magic asteroid; and I'll have a pack of Twizzlers and an IUD to go, please [12/24/2014]
Part 7: And so it begins: The running of the buffoons; Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 7, George Will has no idea what rape is; and Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 8, Rick Wiles calls for a coup [12/29/2014]
Part 8: Things to come: Forward into the past! (11 Presidential Dream Tickets); Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 9: Former republican VP nominee Paul "Crazy Eyes" Ryan; Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 10: Bryan Fischer of the American Family Association [12/30/2014]
Part 9: Pompous Blowhard of the Year Award: Bill O’Reilly; FOX "News" announces new spinoff: the "FOX Benghazi™" Shopping Channel!; Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 11: DiGiorno Pizza [12/31/2014]
Part 10: Newsmax -- Beyond Drudgery; and Crazyspeak of the Year nominees Nos. 12 and 13: Michele Bachmann, Kimberly Guilfoyle [1/1/2015]
Part 11: GOP and FOX whip up the hate over a POW exchange; and Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 14: Iowa asylum escapee Rep. Steve King [1/3/2015]
Part 12: Arizona Republican protests busload of YMCA campers; Crazyspeak of the Year nominee(s) No. 15: the Impeachment Variations (group nomination); Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 16: NM Rep. Steve Pearce [1/4/2015]
Part 13 (and last): TV for Dummies: Sarah Palin launches her own channel; Crazyspeak of the Year nominee No. 17: Arizona schools superintendent John Huppenthal (rhymes with Neanderthal); and the final Crazyspeak of the Year nominee -- and also the winner! [1/5/2015]

NOAH'S 2013 IN REVIEW --
A Prayer to the Janitor of Lunacy


For listings and links, see Part 1 of this year's series.
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Friday, September 26, 2014

Would you trust your delicate Constitution to a marauding band of thug-justices? (Do we have a choice?)

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For the full version of the infographic, visit the Center for American Progress website.

by Ken

For people who continue to cling forlornly to what remains of the Constitution and American values, there aren't many words scarier than "The Supreme Court is headed back to town." We all remember the phrase "First Monday in October," which is when the new Court term always begins. Ahead of that date the gang will do some conferencing.

And in this term, a lot is hanging on the preliminaries. As ThinkProgress's Ian Millhiser and Nicole Flatow wrote in a much-circulated piece earlier this week, "What To Expect When The Supreme Court Returns To Work Next Week": "Much of the drama that will unfold in this coming term . . . is likely to come from cases the justices have yet to agree to hear." And they have a fair amount to say about six cases that the Court has already accepted as well as the more conspicuous possibilities among cases that could yet find their way onto the docket.


BEFORE WE GET TO THE FORECAST, LET'S RECALL
WHAT OUR SUPREME DUNDERHEADS DID LAST TIME


Two words: Hobby Lobby. The Court's Band of Thug-Justices ruled that these fine Christian folk who run the company are so danged God-lovin' and God-fearin' that it would just be a shame to make them follow the law as it applies to providing employees with contraception under the ACA, the kind of a shame that these good Christian thug-justices could stand idly by and allow to happen to such, you know, God-lovin' and God-fearin' folks.

(This is, by the way, a stunt that committed religionists of a non-Christian persuasion might want to think twice before attempting to emulate. The heartland of America is filled with a lot of gullible dimwits jest itchin' fer a fight, 'specially with damn furriners -- and a lot of them have guns and an itch to use 'em.)

Besides, the thug-justices ruled, the relevant government bureaus already have a plan in place designed for actual religious organizations that were exempted from ACA requirements whereby their employees will get their legally mandated medical coverage, just not paid for by their religious institutions. Since there's already a simple, efficient plan in place, it's hardly a big deal to apply the same plan to a few private employers who are just as God-lovin' and God-fearin' as, you know, those religious institutions.

Of course this turned out to be almost entirely lies. (Among the recommended texts: Ian's own "Obama Administration Calls The Supreme Court’s Bluff In Hobby Lobby" (Sept. 9) and "Religious Conservatives Finally Admit What They Really Want Out Of Hobby Lobby" (Sept. 22); and CAP Action War Room's "Hobby Lobby Grows: Hobby Lobby's Effects Are Being Felt Beyond Birth Control" (Sept. 23).)

• It turned out to be untrue that it would be just a tiny handful of similarly God-lovin' and God-fearin' folks in need of relief from this horrible religious oppression. In fact, to the surprise of no one except apparently some of the thug-justices, God-lovin' and God-fearin' folks have been crawling out of the woodwork all over the country sayin' how they shouldn't hafta follow no goddamn law if it gets in the way of their God-lovin' and God-fearin'.

• it turned out to be untrue that this tiny bit of judicial relief would apply just to this tiny goddamn matter of providing contraceptives under the ACA. In fact again, to the surprise of no one except apparently some of the thug-justices, the case is already being made that any goddamn law that's viewed as hurtful to their God-lovin' and God-fearin' by good God-lovin' and God-fearin' Christian folk should be shoved up the gummint's constitutional ass -- and judges are startin' to say so too.

• And, most delicious of all, it turned out to be untrue that the thug-justices would have the minimum level of honesty and decency to pay heed to their own lies. You remember those already-under-construction simple and efficient federal procedures that made it possible for the thug-justices to extend relief for the Hobby Lobby God-lovers and God-fearers and maybe a couple of others, well, no sooner had the thug-justices pronounced their verdict than they turned right around and, three days later, faced with other God-lovers and God-fearers saying those stinin' procedures, whatever they are, aren't no damn good no how, and the thug-justices said, you're right, and thank God for such God-lovin' and God-fearin' folks like you. Fuck those procedures! As I put it at the time, "The Supreme Court opens a drive-through window for right-wing zealots with (right-wing Christian) religious objections to the law."


RETURNING TO IAN AND NICOLE'S
FIRST MONDAY FEARLESS FORECAST


As noted, the authors look at six cases the justices have already agreed to hear, listing them according to the legal issues likely to be at stake. I'm using their categorizations to head my paraphrases of the cases.

"Pregnancy Discrimination"

Peggy Young's complaint involves the refusal of her employer, UPS, to put her on "light duty" while she was pregnant -- lifting cartons no more than 20 pounds, rather than up to 70 pounds, as the job normally called for. Rather amazingly, UPS got a federal appeals court to agree that doing so would put the company in violation of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, which of course was enacted to protect women against being unreasonably discriminated against.

"Despite all of the support and very little public opposition for enforcing pregnancy discrimination laws," say Ian and Nicole (links onsite),
the five justices on the Roberts Court most likely to vote against Young are known for having what Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg referred to as a “blind spot” when it comes to women. In 2007, these five men rejected Lilly Ledbetter’s fair pay lawsuit, in a decision later overturned by an act of Congress. In 2011, they turned back the largest-ever class of women alleging gender discrimination by Wal-Mart. And in 2013, that same voting bloc held that many corporations get to decide when their female employees should have access to contraception. Commenting on this blind spot, Ginsburg said in an interview recently, “[T]he justices continue to think and change so I am ever hopeful that if the court has a blind spot today, its ey"es will be open tomorrow.”
"Racial Gerrymandering"

This is the case of the Alabama congressional districting plan that pretended to be following the letter of the Voting Rights Act by seeking to retain or even increase black representation -- by the now-popular Republican redistricting trick of packing as many "them" voters as possible into the fewest districts possible. In fact they assured that no black candidate could compete anywhere except the ghetto districts.

Ironically for the Alabama racists, the Roberts Court hates the Voting Rights Act and has been whittling away at it. As Ian and Nicole note: "The thrust of the Court’s recent affirmative action cases has been that “racial categories or classifications” are subject to the most skeptical level of constitutional scrutiny. If the Court treats Alabama’s racially conscious redistricting process with similar skepticism, it is difficult to see how it survives."

"When What You Say On Facebook Lands You In Jail"

What constitutes a legally definable "true threat"? When Anthony Elonis's wife left him, taking their children with him, he wrote on Facebook:
There’s one way to love you but a thousand ways to kill you. I’m not going to rest until your body is a mess, soaked in blood and dying from all the little cuts. Hurry up and die, bitch, so I can bust this nut all over your corpse from atop your shallow grave. I used to be a nice guy but then you became a slut. Guess it’s not your fault you liked your daddy raped you. So hurry up and die, bitch, so I can forgive you.
Even Mr. Elonis seemed to grasp that this might be problematic if taken literally, and claimed that it wasn't meant to be taken literally. It's like rap lyrics, he says. Which has opened a giant can of worms, with the little pretties slithering in wildly various patterns. Just think what would happen, various purported defenders of the First Amendment are saying, if we were to try to apply an "objective standard" to everything people say in public. Ian and Nicole note, "No domestic violence or other groups have weighed in to defend the objective standard."

This is a difficult and perplexing case, but if anybody can make it more difficult and perplexing, it's our Supremes.

"Religious Liberty in Prison"

"There's no question," say Ian and Nicole, that Arkansas inmate Abdul Maalik Muhammad "is a very dangerous man," but can his "history of violent behavior" be grounds for "strip[ping] him of his right to practice his relious faith"? Arkansas authorities won't even let him grow a half-inch beard, arguging that he could hide a razor blade in it, or that it could conceal a facial bulge that might otherwise suggest the presence of contraband in his mouth.

"Israel and Palestine"

The plaintiff is trying to force the State Dept. to follow a portion of a 2002 law that says U.S. citizens born in Jerusalem can have Israel listed as birthplace on their passports, even though "Every president since Harry Truman, the president who was in office when the State of Israel was formed, has maintained a policy of neutrality over the question of whether the city of Jerusalem is part of Israel — or, indeed, whether it is part of any other nation." The DC Circuit Court of Appeals bought the position argued by both the Bush and Obama administrations that the law is unconstitutional, since it would infringe on the president's foreign-policy powers. The question, say Ian and Nicole, "is whether Congress can, in effect, trump the president's judgment on a matter of foreign policy such as this one, or whether the executive branch's authority in this area is truly exclusive."

"When Cops Stop You By Mistake"

Ian and Nicole take note of the well-established legal principle that "when someone violates the law, it doesn't matter whether or not they knew what the law said" -- if the case against them can be proved, they're guilty. But what about a law-enforcement officer who fucks up on the law?
Nicholas Heien was pulled over on a North Carolina interstate for having a broken tail light. But it turns out that one broken tail light is not a violation of North Carolina law so long as one of the two lights are working. Nonetheless, the cops used that purported violation as a reason for pulling Heien over, and then found cocaine once they searched his car.
But if the stop was illegal, says the plaintiff, isn't the search as well? But the law is ambiguous, and the North Carolina Supreme Court by a 4-3 vote backed up the cop. "The ruling gives the justices an opportunity," say Ian and Nicole, "to re-examine the leeway of officers to make traffic stops, at a time when stops continue to fall disproportionately on African Americans and other minorities." What's more, they say, "Underlying this case is a larger question: Will justices draw the line?"


WHICH STILL LEAVES ALL THOSE CASES
THE COURT CAN STILL AGREE TO HEAR


Ian and Nicole list three "high-profile issues that could come before the justices in the coming months":

• Will the justices "agree with nearly every single federal judge who has considered the issue that the Constitution forbids marriage discrimination against same-sex couples"?

• They think it "fairly likely that the Court will need to clarify just how far its recent Hobby Lobby decision cuts into the ability of workers to obtain birth control coverage.

• "There is also an unusually high chance that the justices could take a major abortion case this term," and they sketch the kinds of cases that could be available to the Court if it chooses to take them on.

There's also '"a small-but-not-zero chance that the justices could take a lawsuit seeking to gut the Affordable Care Act by cutting off subsidies to millions of Americans who currently enjoy subsidized health insurance under the law." You'll recall, though, that the full Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals withdrew the ruling by two far-right judges on a three-judge panel that accepted the right-wing talking point here. (See my September 4 post "The full DC Circuit Court of Appeals pulls back from the brink of health-care loony-tune-itude.") It would be a huge stretch for the Court to take this case on, but the Court needs to take a case is four votes for doing so.
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Wednesday, July 09, 2014

Can Women Compete?

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You probably missed the article in the Daily Mail, a bottom tier London tabloid, about how rich boys are more competitive than girls. In a Norwegian study of 15 year olds shows that "boys really are more competitive than girls... but only if they come from rich families…[A]mong the well-off participants boys were much more aggressive… A similar American study from 2007 found 73 per cent of the men were competitive, against just 35 per cent of the women."

The Professor conducting the Norwegian study was quoted saying that a lack of competitiveness may be a reason why women do not become top leaders. "This does not necessarily mean they ought to compete more. Perhaps we need to think differently about the way we recruit top leaders. The most competitive candidate is not necessarily the best leader." Interestingly enough, Forbes took a look at how women the 51 CEOs among the top 1,000 U.S. companies have performed. So these are also wealthy people-- but they are certainly not taking a back seat to their male peers.
Texas boasts the most Fortune 1000 companies (103), but New York has the most big corporations led by women (seven). California comes in second, with six women-led companies, followed by Illinois with five.

Specialty retailers lead the list of companies with women chiefs… Only 5% of Fortune 1000 companies have female CEOs, but those giants generate 7% of the Fortune 1000′s total revenue. The biggest woman-led company: Mary Barra’s General Motors.

…Fortune 1000 companies with female chiefs outperformed the S&P 500 index over their respective tenures.

Women-led companies tend to reward investors well. Home Shopping Network’s Mindy Grossman and TJX’s Carol Meyrowitz are among the CEOs who generated the highest returns during their respective tenures.
Now, when you turn to politics, I'd bet on one woman to compete for my team any day-- Elizabeth Warren, the most talented woman in Congress. Like many of us, she was stunned by the Hobby Lobby ruling. And along with most of her colleagues, she's taking action to as a countervailing force against the 5 right-wing old men who made the decision. "This is 2014, not 1914-- and we've had enough," she reminded her supporters. She spoke for millions of Americans when she said she is "stunned that the Court would establish precedent for one enormous slippery slope on letting employers deny individuals health coverage for any medical treatment."
Today, my Democratic colleagues and I are fighting to do what the Supreme Court failed to do: to protect the basic rights of American women and families.

Led by Senators Patty Murray and Mark Udall, we've just introduced a new bill-- the Protect Women's Health from Corporate Interference Act. The bill reverses the Supreme Court's decision by making it clear that employers cannot deny access to any of the health benefits required by the ACA-- not immunizations, not blood transfusions, not HIV treatments, and not birth control-- while preserving reasonable accommodations for religiously exempt employers.

If we're going to respond to Hobby Lobby, it's got to be through a legislative fix. And if the Republicans won't fight for the women they represent, then we're going to take that fight to them. Let them explain why they think employers should decide what health care a woman can get covered by her insurance.

...The Republican Party has made it clear: They want to spend their time working to deny women access to birth control and punch as many holes in the Affordable Care Act as they can.

Just look at the facts:
In 2012, Republicans tried to pass the Blunt Amendment-- legislation that would allow employers and insurance companies to deny women's health care services-- even birth control-- based on any vague moral objection.
When the Blunt Amendment failed, the Republicans resorted to hostage-taking. Remember last year's government shutdown that nearly tanked our economy? That all started with a GOP threat to get Democrats to change the law so employers could deny coverage for birth control.
When Democrats wouldn't cave and the government shutdown backfired, the Republicans turned to their conservative friends on the United States Supreme Court-- five justices who are among the top ten most pro-corporate justices to serve in the last half-century-- to do what Congress and the American people would not: give corporations rights to determine women's access to health care coverage.

We cannot stand by while the radical right of our country conducts a full-scale assault on women's rights and basic health care.
Ultimately, the stinking corpses of Scalia, Roberts, Thomas, Alito, Kennedy and the Koch brothers will be rotting in hell-- and Elizabeth Warren's progressive vision of fairness and equality will have prevailed.

Murray's and Udall's Protect Women’s Health from Corporate Interference Act has been co-sponsored by 40 senators-- although, naturally enough, Susan Collins of Maine is not one of them. These are: Tammy Baldwin (D-WI), Mark Begich (D-AK), Michael Bennet (D-CO), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Cory Booker (D-NJ), Barbara Boxer (D-CA), Sherrod Brown (D-OH), Maria Cantwell (D-WA), Ben Cardin (D-MD), Richard Durbin (D-IL), Dianne Feinstein (D-CA), Al Franken (D-MN), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Kay Hagan (D-NC), Tom Harkin (D-IA), Martin Heinrich (D-NM), Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Tim Johnson (D-SD), Tim Kaine (D-VA), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), Carl Levin (D-MI), Ed Markey (D-MA), Robert Menendez (D-NJ), Jeff Merkley (D-OR), Barbara Mikulski (D-MD), Chris Murphy (D-CT), Brian Schatz (D-HI), Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), Debbie Stabenow (D-MI), Tom Udall (D-NM), John Walsh (D-MT), Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), and Ron Wyden (D-OR).

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