Hopper
Banned
Kicky, and others, have argued that this was a very sound and clever legal ploy used by an activist judge to attempt to "bind" the supreme court to accept his opinion. It aint gunna work on that basis, and it aint "clever;" it's merely a transparent attempt to unfairly "stack the deck," if you ask me. Do these politically motivated people feel any need to put the slightest restraints involving honesty and decency on their attempts to forcibly implement their political agenda? Sometimes I wonder, ya know?
By the way, I have NEVER implied that I thought the "standing" issue was, or was gunna be, necessary to "save" prop 8. It's simply another question that gets raised when a "defendant" refuses to defend because he wants the same result as the plaintiff. The courts certainly don't need to rely on standing issues to dispose of attempts to overturn voter initiatives, as has been amply demonstrated in the Nebraska case, for one.
I also find it utterly hypocritical for the trial judge to contend that his ruling cannot be appealed by the only parties who made any attempt whatsover to present a case opposing his pre-established conclusions. Why did he even think he had a "controversy" before him if those parties don't even have standing (in his view) to appeal his decision?
As I said at the outset (an observation to which you have never responded) this view would seem to say that collusive suits where the defendant "defaults" to achieve an end desired by him, too, are totally beyond challenge. That would definitely be contradictory to the Supreme Court's holdings on the topic, wouldn't it?
By the way, I have NEVER implied that I thought the "standing" issue was, or was gunna be, necessary to "save" prop 8. It's simply another question that gets raised when a "defendant" refuses to defend because he wants the same result as the plaintiff. The courts certainly don't need to rely on standing issues to dispose of attempts to overturn voter initiatives, as has been amply demonstrated in the Nebraska case, for one.
I also find it utterly hypocritical for the trial judge to contend that his ruling cannot be appealed by the only parties who made any attempt whatsover to present a case opposing his pre-established conclusions. Why did he even think he had a "controversy" before him if those parties don't even have standing (in his view) to appeal his decision?
As I said at the outset (an observation to which you have never responded) this view would seem to say that collusive suits where the defendant "defaults" to achieve an end desired by him, too, are totally beyond challenge. That would definitely be contradictory to the Supreme Court's holdings on the topic, wouldn't it?
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