4 comments

  • elmerfud 10 hours ago

    Generally if you're using the term 'the gospel' in relation to something not the Bible you're making analogous comparison. If you look at the analogy then 'the gospel' in this context would be the law. Court precedence would actually be analogous to theological leaders and commentaries. They do carry some weight but they are not themselves 'the gospel'. They are the understanding of what 'the gospel' means and that understanding can change and is subject to review.

    I do think it's a fair point to say that precedence should be reviewed in some circumstances to examine why they were set and if it was correctly set. We do not have an immutable constitution and we do not have an immutable set of laws, why would we think that court precedence all of a sudden become immutable for all of time?

    There have been, in recent memory, rulings that have been brand new and are overarching. Oftentimes the precedents set prior only dealt with very specific and narrow issues that could be encompassed by this new ruling. The new ruling doesn't automatically invalidate those earlier ones but it does call into question if they are still valid.

  • AfterHIA 10 hours ago

    Man I wish it was the olden days when my grandfather was a kid so that we could just deal with Clarence, "the old fashioned way."

    ...you know with a spirited good-faith public discourse with a high availability of evidence.

  • bediger4000 10 hours ago

    That means the US isn't a common law nation any more. It's definitely not a civil law nation. So what is it? How does an honest citizen stay on the right side of the law? Without some guidance, you're not able to anticipate how to act legally in new situations.

    Seems like a bad idea on that basis.

    • fabianholzer 10 hours ago

      > So what is it?

      The term you might be looking for is plutocracy.