Khross wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Oh quit your whining.
First of all, I am not the issue. Stick to the issue at hand, Khross. You're acting like a petulant child.
I am sticking to the issue at hand.
No Khross, you are not sticking to the issue at hand. So far all you have do is make the whiny, and totally absurd assertion that only "cops and politicians" don't hold the idea that the Amendment is some sort of absolute, and complain that I personally don't belong in law enforcement. You are not discussing the issue; you are whining.
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You spend a lot of time flouting your law enforcement connections and status.
You spend a lot of time flouting your academic credentials
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Consequently, when you say the Constitution (and particularly the Bill of Rights) should not be subject to a literal interpretation, this indicates you have a flawed understanding of law and legality. Indeed, your positions on such things are why people question your viability as a law enforcement officer.
Except that they are only flawed in the views of certain people here on the Glade, who do not represent the public at large. Indeed, the average viewpoint here is one of pointless opposition to authority simply because it is authority more often than not - yours included.
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The Constitution, and any other valid law, are not meant to be interpreted.
False.
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Defining them as loose documents in the sense you're now arguing makes them meaningless and useless as law.
On the contrary, it is the only way to make them useful. Absolute uninterpretables lead only to absurdity.
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I'm not sure who taught you Constitutional Law; I'm not sure how much of the Federalist and Anti-Federalist Papers you've read (or of the diaries from both Continental Congresses and such); but I can assure you that you have some patently ridiculous notions on the nature of law and legality.
No, Khross, I really don't. My views are based ont he ways the courts have been interpreting law since our founding.
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Likewise, you have some seriously poor reading skills today, seeing as how I pointed out that even if we accept the current juridical position on what constitutes "speech", the Courts have regularly defended the actions in question here. That's kind of how conditionals work:
Khross wrote:
If Dancing is Speech when it comes to performing Hairspray in Central Park, it's Speech when it comes to dancing at the Jefferson Memorial. We can play that game, if you want ...
Making a statement about the status quo does not mean I necessarily agree with the status quo. However, Hairspray's open air performances in public venues were held up in the courts as "speech" and "protected speech" at that ...
Sorry, but all you're doing here is acknowledging the court's ability to accept something as speech in one place, while rejecting the court's ability to decide other things - one of which is the nature of different public forums and what level of restriction the government may impose in each. Had you bothered to read the case Joseficus referred to you would realize that the Jefferson memorial (mening the interior of the actual structure) is not an open forum for speech and debate. The area outside it is.
You're committing a stolen concept fallacy; acknowledging the court's authority when it works for you and ignoring it when it does not. I do not have a reading comprehension problem at all; the problem here is your cherry-picking and stolenc concept fallacy.
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Pointing out the inconsistencies in juridical policy merely serves to strengthen my argument: that anything but a strict, literal reading of the First Amendment is meaningless for purposes of law. In fact, that pretty much goes for every law ...
First of all, judicial inconsistency in no way supports a literal interpretation; that simply does not follow. Second, you have not shown any inconsistency; you have created an inconsistency out of thin air by focusing only on dance as speech while totally ignoring other areas of jurisprudence that are relevant.
So, if you really want to discuss the issue, shut the **** up about my reading comprehension and my law enforcement status, and I'll shut up about your academic status. Or is it just too **** difficult for you to discuss anything anymore without having to make it about the other person?