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#89 | |
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May 2003
7×13×17 Posts |
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Apparently, it is a little more complicated than that. If wikipedia is to be believed, there was a ratification deadline on the ERA, which was not met. The supreme court ruled that the rescinding was moot because "the Amendment has failed of adoption no matter what the resolution of the legal issues presented here" due to the deadline. In other words, the ratifications were for an amendment with a deadline, which is now passed. So, while you might be right that the ratifications remain in effect (that issue was never decided formally), it can be argued that they may remain in effect only for the *original* amendment, with its *original* timeline--and hence are completely moot. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Article...s_Constitution Apparently, the issue of extending the deadline was decided by a district court in the negative, but was vacated and then decided as moot. So, I'm not sure exactly what the legal standing is. I'm unsure if the vacated decision is the current precedent or not. (The supreme court could of course overrule this. But even if they did, it could be argued that the states only ratified the amendment with the original timeline, and the court might agree with that, or of course they might not.) More background is available at the wiki under "Rescinding a ratification" Last fiddled with by Zeta-Flux on 2010-12-04 at 01:42 |
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#90 |
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"Lucan"
Dec 2006
England
647410 Posts |
In the rest of the world (i.e.(sic) Europe), red denotes socialism and
blue denotes conservatism. Similar to Aussies interpreting 0 for 2 as 2 for 0 through their upside down cricketing spectacles. David Last fiddled with by davieddy on 2010-12-04 at 13:47 |
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#91 | |||||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
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Compare amendments 18 and 20-22, which do contain their own ratification deadlines, with 1-17, 19, and 23-27, which don't. The ERA is in the latter category. Quote:
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Of course, if Congress never re-extends the deadline, the existing 35 ratifications will not be enough to cause the legal status of the amendment to change, so their remaining in effect has no immediate practical value until the extension happens. But that's quite a different matter from never having ratified, or having ratified something with a deadline. Quote:
Also see http://www.equalrightsamendment.org/ Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2010-12-04 at 20:02 |
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#92 |
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"Gang aft agley"
Sep 2002
2·1,877 Posts |
Regardless whether some Americans are dumb as rocks and how one would draw demarcations betweens polarized groupings an overriding fact is that someone that looks foreign or speaks a foreign language in the United States will undoubtedly receive some mistreatment at some point.
To say that the there are nice or good people that don't do this doesn't change the facts on the ground. I have some Asian friends who, upon driving through the midwest pulled over to investigate a loud sound. Someone had tied and lit a firecracker on their car. Another time I met a young Japanese man at LAX and had a halting conversation with him in Japanese and English about the music scene that he was visiting in Los Angeles. I stepped on a bus with him to tell the bus driver where he was getting off. Someone on the bus shouted out "English in America!" Those are facts. All of this is off the topic of offensive language and it doesn't seem worthwhile to carry more water up this hill. The political and economic climate is pernicious and it is taking its toll on hospitality. Hospitality is demonstrated in the ways we treat each other; how we act or react upon hearing each other speak, or in so many other ways. Offensive language is not really the problem. The problem is an overbearing lack of good will and the ease that people are taking offense. |
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#93 | |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
7×467 Posts |
Quote:
The rise of this movement and its political success have meant a shifting of the goal posts in Dutch society: racist and generally divisive attitudes which were previously unacceptable have suddenly become commonplace amongst a substantial minority of the public. What you describe, only_human, is just as rife here in Holland. And other European countries have similar movements which are causing (or reflecting, if you like) the same brutal downgrading of human values there. Last fiddled with by Brian-E on 2010-12-05 at 19:07 Reason: punctuation |
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#94 | |
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May 2010
1F316 Posts |
Quote:
Whites can be muslims, and so can blacks, asians, and any other racial or ethnic group. |
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#95 |
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"(^r'°:.:)^n;e'e"
Nov 2008
;t:.:;^
3E716 Posts |
a small insignificant question ...
what color to be the water? cmd-u |
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#96 |
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"Brian"
Jul 2007
The Netherlands
326910 Posts |
You are pointing out one of the fallacies in the populist thinking that is rife. I am, needless to say, in complete agreement.
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#97 | |
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May 2003
7×13×17 Posts |
Quote:
However, remember that the district court ruled that such an extension was invalid. This was subsequently appealed to the supreme court, who (as I mentioned) ruled the point was moot. You are right that the ratification deadline could be extended, but you are ignoring the fact that (1) such an extension could be found invalid (again) by the courts, or (2) the courts might rule that the original ratifications were valid only for the original timeline, because they might view the preamble (which as you rightly point out is not a part of the amendment) was a significant part of the ratification process, and was understood by the states to be a part of the ratification process. But this is all but moot as the ratification deadline most likely won't be extended, as such an extension would be viewed as trying to change the constitution against the will of the people. Edited to add: you said: "Not one single state ever ratified the part of legislation containing a deadline..." I was under the impression (from reading the wiki articles) that this was incorrect. That a majority of the ratifications specifically mentioned the timeline. Was the wiki wrong on that point? Did the states NOT put their own timelines on their ratifications? [Note: This issue is different than unratification.] Last fiddled with by Zeta-Flux on 2010-12-09 at 16:13 |
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#98 | |||||||
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22×3×641 Posts |
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Last fiddled with by cheesehead on 2010-12-09 at 19:17 |
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#99 | |
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Dec 2003
22·41 Posts |
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Wilders is often quoted as saying he has a problem with Islam, not Muslims per se. I'm north of you, in Sweden. The anti-immigration party, Sweden Democrats, took about 6% of the recent vote and won 20 parliamentary seats. I know Germans who tell me that "they like their coffee brown". It is going to hit the fan in Europe, maybe in my lifetime. As to the original topic of this thread "What is offensive language?" the answer is "anything that offends my mother." |
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